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From childhood trauma to grown-up love: Why these two hit Chinese dramas hit different

From childhood trauma to grown-up love: Why these two hit Chinese dramas hit different

Gulf News30-04-2025

C-shows 'Go Ahead' and 'You Are My Glory' will heal your inner child like no other balm
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Ronaldo says he does not plan to play at Club World Cup
Ronaldo says he does not plan to play at Club World Cup

Reuters

time26 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Ronaldo says he does not plan to play at Club World Cup

June 7 (Reuters) - Al-Nassr and Portugal forward Cristiano Ronaldo said on Saturday he did not plan to play at the Club World Cup in the United States, despite being courted by clubs participating in the expanded 32-team tournament. Speculation over the 40-year-old's future intensified last month when FIFA President Gianni Infantino said discussions were underway about Ronaldo playing in the Club World Cup, despite Al-Nassr failing to qualify. Al-Nassr's sporting director Fernando Hierro said last month they were negotiating with Ronaldo over a contract extension but faced competition from a host of clubs eager to sign the five-times Ballon d'Or winner. Ronaldo himself added to the uncertainty after Al-Nassr's season-ending match at Al-Fateh, posting on social media: "This chapter is over. The story? Still being written." Asked about the possibility of signing for another club in the coming days in order to play at the Club World Cup later this month, Ronaldo told reporters: "It's irrelevant, at the moment it doesn't make sense to talk about things other than the national team. "There has been plenty of contact (from clubs), I see things that make sense, others that don't. You can't go to all of them (clubs), you have to think short, medium and long term. "It's something that's practically decided on my part, which is not to go to the Club World Cup, but I've had plenty of invitations." On Wednesday, Ronaldo scored the winner as Portugal beat Germany 2-1 to go into the Nations League final, where they will face Spain. Many have labelled Sunday's final as a face-off between Ronaldo and 17-year-old Barcelona sensation Lamine Yamal but the Portuguese forward said he did not see it as such. "It's always been like that, whenever I've played football, whenever I've played a big game it's always been Cristiano against this one, against that one," he said. "It's been 20-something years and it's still the same, it doesn't keep me up at night anymore, it's a normal thing. They're completely different generations, a generation that's starting out, another that's finishing, which is my case. "In reality it's not like that, it's a team against a team. It will always be like that... What I want most is for Portugal to be at a good level, confident that things can go well, that we can play a great game and win against a very good team, possibly the best in the world."

MoSPI plans to conduct sentiment, outlook surveys using proposed business register
MoSPI plans to conduct sentiment, outlook surveys using proposed business register

Indian Express

time27 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

MoSPI plans to conduct sentiment, outlook surveys using proposed business register

The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) plans to conduct surveys to gauge the sentiment among businesses using its proposed Statistical Business Register. The register – which is to be based on administrative data ranging from the Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN) to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, among others – will list all formal business entities on a dynamic basis, covering their birth, death, split, and merger. According to a presentation made at MoSPI's two-day workshop on 'Using Alternate Data Sources and Frontier Technologies for Policy Making' that concluded on Friday, the business register will also feature an artificial intelligence-based search engine. To be sure, any sentiment or business outlook survey seems to be some time away, with the statistics ministry setting up a 21-member working group to develop Integrated Official Business Statistics only on March 4, 2025. The working group, chaired by a MoSPI official, has representatives from the ministries of commerce, corporate affairs, Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises, electronics and information technology, finance, and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), among others, as per an office memorandum seen by The Indian Express. The working group has been tasked with preparing a dynamic Statistical Business Register and developing the IT infrastructure to host, maintain, and ensure security and confidentiality of the database that will contain data on all business entities of India. Any business sentiment or outlook survey done by the MoSPI will be a first for a government ministry, although the RBI does conduct multiple surveys of businesses, including an industrial outlook survey of the manufacturing sector and one relating to its order book, inventory, and capacity utilisation. The central bank also conducts a services and infrastructure outlook survey. However, any sentiment or outlook survey held by MoSPI from the proposed business register will likely have a much larger sample size than the RBI's surveys, which see responses from fewer than 1,500 companies. As per the presentation made at the two-day MoSPI workshop, the business register will contain details about an entity's nature of activity, location, demographic, and 'stratification parameters' such as number of employees and turnover, among others. The register is expected to form the 'backbone' of the Integrated Official Business Statistics, which will be a centralised data platform. Access to the platform will be tiered – aggregated for the public, detailed for policymakers, and controlled for researchers.

Solving Crime: How a woman's murder probe led Karnataka cops to a ‘Drishyam'-inspired crime that stayed hidden for 5 years
Solving Crime: How a woman's murder probe led Karnataka cops to a ‘Drishyam'-inspired crime that stayed hidden for 5 years

Indian Express

time27 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Solving Crime: How a woman's murder probe led Karnataka cops to a ‘Drishyam'-inspired crime that stayed hidden for 5 years

In 2013, the Malayalam film Drishyam, with its intricate plot of a man outwitting the police and covering up a murder, captivated audiences across India. But for a man in Karnataka, the film served as a blueprint for murder—a crime that went unnoticed until a routine missing person case in 2024 unravelled his web of deception. On August 12, 2024, a man named Balaraju walked into the Magadi police station with a worried expression. His friend Lalitha, a beautician from Madanayakanahalli on the outskirts of Bengaluru, had vanished without a trace. Known to many as Divya, the 30-year-old had been living separately from her husband, Umesh, for two years, raising their five-year-old son alone while pursuing divorce proceedings. The police later learnt that Lalitha's marriage to Umesh, a travel agency employee, had crumbled under the weight of his alcohol addiction. Her active Instagram presence was a source of constant suspicion for Umesh, who was convinced she was having an affair. The couple's separation had been bitter. That August evening, Umesh had called Lalitha to discuss the divorce, Balaraju told the police. Umesh suggested they meet near the Basavanna temple close to Magadi to discuss matters 'amicably', he allegedly said. Lalitha agreed, but sensing something amiss, she shared her live location on WhatsApp with Balaraju's wife, Uma, before she left, borrowing a two-wheeler from him. The live location that Lalitha shared told a chilling story. In the FIR, Balaraju said that at 6.17 pm, Lalitha's location signal ended abruptly near Honnapura Lake. When Uma tried calling Lalitha and Umesh, neither answered. At 8.12 pm, Balaraju told the police, Umesh returned the borrowed two-wheeler, claiming he had accompanied Lalitha and put her on a bus home. But 19 minutes later, at 8.31 pm, Umesh allegedly called Balaraju confessing that he had killed Lalitha and begged him not to tell anyone. Twelve minutes after that, he allegedly made another desperate call, pleading with Balaraju to delete the WhatsApp live location that had been shared, as per the FIR. Balaraju and Uma immediately alerted the police. Following the digital trail left by Lalitha's shared location, the police found her body buried in a forest. Umesh was arrested. So was an alleged accomplice, Kiran Kumar—a man who seemingly had no motive for the murder. What transpired later left the police shocked. During questioning, the police asked Kiran about his family. His response was allegedly matter-of-fact: his wife Pooja had eloped with another man a decade ago, leaving him to raise their seven-year-old daughter alone, he told the police. However, Inspector Giriraj G Y, who was leading the investigation, was puzzled by certain aspects of Umesh's crime. 'Why would Umesh bring his wife all the way from Madanayakanahalli to Magadi to kill her?' he remembers wondering. 'He could have done it anywhere close to his place.' When pressed, Umesh allegedly revealed that choosing the remote location had been Kiran's idea. This detail sparked Giriraj's curiosity about Kiran's background, especially since no family members had visited him after his arrest. The breakthrough came when a constable contacted Kiran's mother-in-law, Gowramma, who lived in Tavarekere, Bengaluru. When asked about her daughter Pooja, Gowramma's story differed from Kiran's narrative, the police said. She said Pooja had disappeared five years ago—not 10—and that Kiran had filed a missing person's complaint with Magadi police. A quick check of police records, however, revealed that no such missing complaint had ever been filed. When confronted with this discrepancy, Kiran allegedly claimed he had come with two friends to file the complaint. The police tracked down these alleged friends, who categorically denied accompanying Kiran to any police station. Faced with evidence of his alleged deception, Kiran's carefully constructed story began to collapse. Under intense interrogation, he allegedly confessed to a murder in Hujugallu village in Ramanagara district that had remained hidden for five years. Kiran's confession revealed a chilling parallel to the Mohanlal-starrer Drishyam that had allegedly inspired his crime. On May 1, 2019, following fights with his wife, Pooja, he strangled her to death, the police said. Taking inspiration from the film's protagonist, George Kutty, he buried her body in a forest near Magadi, creating an elaborate cover story about her eloping with another man, the police added. To maintain his deception, Kiran allegedly prepared a fake police complaint, which he would show to Gowramma whenever she inquired about the investigation's progress. Over time, Pooja's family's questions became less frequent, allowing Kiran to believe he had gotten away with murder. The story took an even more bizarre turn when Kiran revealed how Drishyam 2 also allegedly influenced his actions. Two years after the murder, forest department officials began digging trenches in the area to prevent elephants from entering nearby villages. Fearing his crime might be discovered, Kiran took inspiration from the sequel, he allegedly told the police. He allegedly secretly excavated Pooja's remains, burnt the bones and teeth, and reburied them at a farm. Like the movie's protagonist, he believed destroying evidence would eliminate any possibility of detection, the police said. On August 26, 2024, based on Gowramma's complaint, the police registered a murder case against Kiran. He led investigators to the burial site, where forensic experts and Tahsildar Sharath Kumar oversaw the excavation. The burnt bones and teeth were recovered and sent for DNA analysis, with samples from Gowramma taken for comparison. The Magadi police later filed charge sheets in both murder cases. Though Umesh and Kiran are out on bail, a police officer said that there was sufficient scientific evidence to prove the murders.

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