logo
Kerala Lottery Result, 09-07-2025: Will The Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Result Be Announced Today?

Kerala Lottery Result, 09-07-2025: Will The Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Result Be Announced Today?

News1809-07-2025
Last Updated:
Kerala Lottery Result Today, 09-07-2025: Dhanalekshmi DL-9 lottery draw postponed to July 10 due to Bharat Bandh. No result today; all tickets remain valid.
Kerala Lottery Result Today Live, 09-07-2025: The Kerala State Lottery Department has officially postponed the Dhanalekshmi DL-9 lottery draw originally scheduled for Wednesday, July 9, 2025, in view of the nationwide Bharat Bandh. The draw will now be held on Thursday, July 10, 2025, at the usual time of 3 PM, at Gorky Bhavan, Thiruvananthapuram.
All tickets purchased for the DL-9 draw will remain valid, and participants are advised to retain them safely. The rescheduled draw will follow the same format and prize structure, including the Rs 1 crore first prize, Rs 30 lakh second prize, and Rs 5 lakh third prize.
Stay tuned for live updates and the complete list of winning numbers on July 10, starting from 2:30 PM onwards.
Why Was Kerala Lottery Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Draw Not Held Today?
The nationwide Bharat Bandh strike, called by over 25 crore workers and farmers, has brought major disruptions across India today. The protest aims to challenge what unions describe as 'pro-corporate and anti-worker" policies introduced by the Centre, including labor law changes and increasing privatization.
The strike has affected key sectors like banking, transportation, and public services, leading to significant shutdowns.
This widespread disruption forced the Kerala State Lottery Department to reschedule the Dhanalekshmi DL-9 draw. Participants are urged to stay informed as the strike's impact continues to ripple through various regions and sectors.
Kerala Lottery Result Chart Today – Dhanalekshmi DL-9
WINNING NUMBER FOR 1ST PRIZE OF RS 1 CRORE IS: To be updated
WINNING NUMBER FOR 2ND PRIZE OF RS 30 LAKH IS: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 3RD PRIZE OF RS 5 LAKH IS: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 4TH PRIZE OF RS 5,000 ARE: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 5TH PRIZE OF RS 2,000 ARE: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 6TH PRIZE OF RS 1,000 ARE: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 7TH PRIZE OF RS 500 ARE: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 8TH PRIZE OF RS 200 ARE: To be updated
WINNING NUMBERS FOR 9TH PRIZE OF RS 100 ARE: To be updated
How to Claim Kerala Lottery Prize Money?
Winners must first verify their ticket number against the official results published in the Kerala Government Gazette. If the number matches, they are required to visit the Kerala Lottery Office at Gorky Bhavan, near Bakery Junction in Thiruvananthapuram, to claim their prize.
To complete the prize claim process, the following documents must be submitted:
The original winning ticket, with both front and back sides self-attested
A passport-size photograph attested by a Gazetted Officer
A self-attested copy of the PAN card for income tax purposes
Valid identity and address proof, such as Aadhaar card, Voter ID, Ration Card, or PAN card
A duly filled prize money receipt form (available online), affixed with a revenue stamp and submitted as per official guidelines.
All prize claims must be made within 30 days from the date of the draw.
Kerala State Lottery Result Today Live – Steps to Check & Download
To check the results, visit the official Kerala Lottery websites: keralalottery.info or keralalotteryresult.net.
Find and click on the link for the Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Lottery results.
The full list of winning numbers will be displayed on the results page.
You can also download the complete list as a PDF for your records and future reference.
Kerala Lottery Winning Ticket Verification Guide
Participants can verify the Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Lottery results at the Kerala Government Gazette office.
The official list of winning numbers is also published on the Kerala Lottery website: keralalottery.info.
For added convenience, the results can be downloaded in PDF format from the website for future reference.
What to Do After Winning Kerala Lottery? Full Claim Process
Winners must submit the winning ticket within 30 days of the draw; otherwise, the claim will be rejected.
The winner should submit the original ticket along with all the required documents to the concerned authority.
The procedure to claim the prize varies depending on the prize amount:
For amounts up to Rs 5,000: Claim through ticket agents.
For amounts up to Rs 1 lakh (within Kerala): Submit the claim to the District Lottery Offices.
For amounts up to Rs 1 lakh (from other states): Submit the claim to the Directorate of State Lotteries.
For amounts above Rs 1 lakh: Submit the claim to the Director of State Lotteries.
For amounts between Rs 1 lakh and Rs 20 lakh: Submit to the Deputy Director.
For amounts above Rs 20 lakh: Submit directly to the Director of State Lotteries.
Kerala Lottery Agent Commission & Prize Claim Rules
Agents receive a commission from the prize amount, depending on the tier of the prize.
To claim the prize, winners need to present the original winning ticket along with valid ID proof.
Kerala Monsoon Bumper 2025 – BR-104 Draw Details
The Kerala State Lotteries Department has officially released the details for the much-awaited Monsoon Bumper 2025 – BR-104. With a massive first prize of Rs 10 crore, this draw stands out as one of the biggest and most exciting events of the year. Here's everything you need to know:
Draw Date: 23rd July 2025 (Wednesday, 2 PM)
Ticket Price: Rs 250 (Inclusive of GST)
Total Tickets: 45 Lakhs
Series: MA, MB, MC, MD, ME
First Prize: Rs 10 Crore
top videos
View all
Kerala Monsoon Bumper BR-104 Prize Structure
1st Prize- Rs 10 Crore
2nd Prize- R. 10 Lakhs
3rd Prize- Rs 5 Lakh
4th Prize- Rs 3 Lakh
5th Prize- Rs 5,000
6th Prize- Rs 1,000
7th Prize- Rs 500
8th Prize- Rs 250
Consolation Prize – Rs 1 Lakh.
About the Author
News Desk
The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live updates to exclusive reports to in-depth explainers, the Desk d...Read More
Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, and expert perspectives on everything from politics to crime and society. Stay informed with the latest India news only on News18. Download the News18 App to stay updated!
tags :
kerala lottery result kerala lottery result 2025 lottery
Location :
Thiruvananthapuram [Trivandrum], India, India
First Published:
July 09, 2025, 09:00 IST
News india Kerala Lottery Result, 09-07-2025: Will The Dhanalekshmi DL-9 Result Be Announced Today?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indian Army's Close-Quarter Battle Carbine Procurement Saga Poised to End with KSSL and Adani Deals
Indian Army's Close-Quarter Battle Carbine Procurement Saga Poised to End with KSSL and Adani Deals

The Wire

timea minute ago

  • The Wire

Indian Army's Close-Quarter Battle Carbine Procurement Saga Poised to End with KSSL and Adani Deals

Rahul Bedi The process has underscored a key reality – for the MoD and the Indian Army, quick reaction weapons arrive at a glacial pace, if at all. Representative image of an Indian Army soldier with a weapon. Photo: PTI. New Delhi: It has been one of the longest procurement sagas in the Indian Army's history – nearly a quarter-century of tenders floated. scrapped, 'fast-track' acquisition contracts announced and abandoned, and intermediate or 'stopgap' fixes standing in for real solutions. And, finally last month it appeared that the Indian Army's close-quarter battle (CQB) carbine requirement of 425,318 units, pending since the late 1990s is likely to be met, to replace its legacy 9mm 1A1/2A1 sub-machine guns (SMGs) – local versions of the L2A3 Sterling machine gun – developed in England in the mid-1940s, and entering British Army service in 1953. For decades, these two SMG variants were licence-built for decades by the erstwhile Small Arms Factory at Kanpur, part of the erstwhile state-run Ordnance Factory Board, but their manufacture had ceased altogether on grounds of obsolescence by the early 2000s. Thereafter, the Indian Army had largely been operating without a CQB carbine, which operationally was critical to providing troops, much like its description suggests, with a compact, lightweight weapon for rapid, accurate fire in confined or urban environments, mountainous terrain and jungle environments. Since then, every attempt to replace the carbine has marched through the Ministry of Defence's (MoD's) familiar parade – tenders announced, trials held, everything voided, before sinking into the familiar swamp of bureaucratic futility with no weapon system. But industry sources now say that this cycle of ineptness had seemingly ended with the recent shortlisting of Kalyani Strategic Systems Limited and Adani Aerospace & Defence to supply 425,213 5.56×45 mm carbines to the Army in a potential Rs 2,800-crore deal that is expected to be imminently signed. According to the putative arrangement, KSSL, which had emerged as L1, or the lowest bidder, following trials, would supply the Army 60% or 255,190 CQB carbines of the overall tender from either its small arms unit at Jejuri or at Khed, near Pune. Additionally, Adani Defence, which was L2 or the second lowest bidder, is likely to be awarded the deal to provide the remaining 170,023 carbines from its facility at Gwalior, which it had acquired in 2020 from Punj Lloyd Raksha. Industry sources said that, in all likelihood, Adani Defence would match KSSL's L1 bid for the carbines in keeping with MoD standing operating procedures in selling them to the Army. The CQB carbine delivery timelines are expected to stretch over the next few years, with initial batches likely to be employed by Indian Army counter-insurgency units in Kashmir and the Northeast, where the absence of such a compact weapon small arms system has been most acutely felt. For soldiers used to presently lugging full-length assault rifles into tight alleyways or boarding helicopters with unwieldy weapons, the arrival of lightweight, rapid-firing CQB carbines will be more than an operational boost; it will finally usher in a vast operational change in counter-insurgency (COIN) operations. Meanwhile, KSSL will series produce the Joint Venture Protective Carbine (JVPC) engineered by the Defence Research and Development Organisation's (DRDO) Armament Research & Development Establishment (ARDE) in Pune, as part of a public-private partnership (PPP), under the MoD's atmanirbharta or self-reliance rubric. This carbine will also incorporate over 60% of content sourced indigenously. Weighing around three kg, the gas-operated JVPC features an ergonomic, ambidextrous design with a retractable stock and Picatinny rails for optics and accessories. Capable of firing over 700 rounds per minute to an effective range of 200-300m, it reportedly exhibits low recoil and is believed to demonstrate high reliability across extreme temperatures and in varied environments and incorporates a 120mm bayonet for hand-to-hand combat. Its service life is engineered for a service life of 15 years or 15,000 rounds, whichever comes first. Adani Defence, on the other hand, will produce the Israel Weapon Industries (IWI) Galil ACE CQB carbines-locally named 'Jeet', meaning 'victory'. It features a 368 mm long barrel, a weight of 3.2 kg, and a rate of fire between 650-750 rounds per minute to a 300-500 m range. Jeet incorporates a rotating bolt with a short-stroke gas piston, a full-length Picatinny rail for optics, a folding/telescopic stock, ambidextrous controls for quick handling, and compatibility with standard NATO magazines. The ACE CQB has also been deployed for extended periods by the Israel Defence Forces in its numerous COIN operations and other conflicts against Palestinians and many of its neighbours where firefights often occur in confined spaces. The two carbines were shortlisted after technical evaluations and field trials involving other domestic vendors, partnering with overseas small arms makers. These included Jindal Defence and Aerospace – associating with Brazil's Taurus Armas, BSS Material in New Delhi, linking up with Indo-Russian Rifles Private Limited and Bharat Electronics, which had tied up with Italy's Beretta. Over the years, the CQB carbine procurement process has been compelling and concerning, exposing both the Army's and MoD's procurement systems at their most ineffective, bogged down by delays, indecision, and missed opportunities. After acknowledging the operational shortcomings of the aging 9mm Sterling submachine gun in the late 1990s – particularly its limited range, stopping power, and accuracy – the Indian Army adopted a stopgap solution. It employed a shortened variant of the locally developed 5.56x45mm Indian Small Arms System (INSAS) assault rifle as part of its customary jugaad, or innovative fix, which only ended up highlighting its significant limitations and rendering it relatively ineffective for such specialised roles. Senior infantry officers said the INSAS rifle was not optimised for CQB scenarios, as its relatively longer barrel and overall dimensions made manoeuvring in confined spaces cumbersome. The absence of features like a folding stock or compact design further hindered its suitability for rapid movement and handling in close and restrained urban situations. Soldiers found it challenging to quickly reposition and engage enemy targets, simply due to the rifle's size and weight. But despite these obvious limitations, these shortened INSAS alternates remained in widespread use for years and continue even today. However, in 2002-3, the first global tender was floated for 44,618 5.56x45mm CQB carbines, with under-barrel grenade launcher compatibility. Several trials took place, involving major overseas small arms makers like the US's Colt, Italy's Beretta and IWI. But in 2007-2008, after extended trials at the Infantry School at Mhow, in Madhya Pradesh, in the Rajasthan desert, Punjab's plains and high altitude regions in Sikkim and Himachal, the contract was terminated due to the Indian Army's 'overreach' in determining the carbines specifications or Qualitative Requirements (QRs) about their add-ons, like thermal-designated laser sights. A follow-on RfP was issued in December 2010 for an equal number of weapons. Then again, in 2013, after a protracted three-year trial process, the carbine procurement was once again thwarted, not by performance issues, but over a minor safety feature. One of the shortlisted carbines included a small, screw-like safety component designed to render the sights "eye safe" during low-intensity engagements, thereby preventing potential retina damage. Yet, this feature was not specified in the original tender's technical requirements, and a three-member, senior Army committee failed in resolving the 'discrepancy', leading again to the contract's cancellation, despite escalating insurgent activities in Kashmir and increasing Army casualties in COIN encounters. Industry sources noted that this time round, the tender was scrapped solely because the "safety screw" had not been included in the original specifications, irrespective of the protection it offered. Subsequently, in March 2018 the MoD issued yet one more RfP – its third in a decade, for 93,895 CQB carbines this time, in which the United Arab Emirates Caracal International's CAR 816 carbine was shortlisted, seven months later for procurement via the MoD's Fast Track Procedure (FTP), having bested its rival F60 model fielded by Thales of Australia in trials. Under the FTP route, through which the CAR 816s were to be procured, the $110 million tender was to have been completed within the mandated 12-14 months or by August 2019. But 13 months later, in September 2020, the MoD opted to arbitrarily ditch the deal for undeclared reasons. 'Processing the carbine purchase via the FTP indicated the operational urgency of the buy, but that too was bafflingly blocked,' said a senior army officer associated with the deal. The entire endeavour was simply incomprehensible and mystifying, he added, declining to be named, as he was not authorised to speak to the media. Conversely, in the ensuing years, the ARDE developed the JVPC in collaboration with KSSL, and Adani Defence partnered successfully with IWI to produce the 'Jeet', ostensibly clinching the CQB carbine buy as things presently stand. But it also underscored the reality that for the MoD and the Indian Army, quick reaction weapons arrive at a glacial pace, if at all. The Wire is now on WhatsApp. Follow our channel for sharp analysis and opinions on the latest developments. Advertisement

588 defunct excise licences to be auctioned
588 defunct excise licences to be auctioned

New Indian Express

timea minute ago

  • New Indian Express

588 defunct excise licences to be auctioned

BENGALURU: The state government is shortly going to auction around 588 defunct excise licences to scale up revenue collection and mobilise resources, informed sources told TNIE. Of the 588 odd licences that will go under the hammer 'soon', 288 are 11-C (government-owned Mysore Sales International Limited retail outlet) licences followed by 204 CL-2 (retail liquor shops) and 96 CL-9 (bars & restaurants), said sources on condition of anonymity. 'These licences have not been renewed for whatever reason, and have been lying defunct. The reason behind the auction is to bring them back into the market and generate revenue for the government. The auction is likely to fetch between Rs 500 crore and Rs 600 crore,' said sources. The Excise department is presently working out the modalities; from prospective allocation of these licences to the 40 excise districts in Karnataka to suggesting reserve or base price (minimum price of the bids) etc. The draft will soon be shared with the government to finetune it; address legal hurdles and set the base price of the bids. 'The base price may be pegged at 10 to 15 times higher than the Excise licence fee. No decision has been taken so far on this. The government will take the final decision. Majority of licences, especially CL-9, are likely to be allocated to Bengaluru,' added the sources. 'Out of the 288 MSIL licences under consideration for auction, 64 have not been renewed, rest were not utilised and are being considered to be brought back to the main pool,' said sources. Meanwhile, the liquor industry has responded to the proposed auction with caution. 'Our concern is that multinational companies may end up having an upper hand in these auctions with higher bids. They have the money power to incentivise sales of their brands, which no Indian company or brand will be able to match.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store