Sunday, January 11, 2015

Tharoor admitted to police about a tiff with Sunanda

Tharoor admitted to police about a tiff with Sunanda

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES:
Maithripala Sirisena sworn in as Sri Lanka's new president, the dual siege in Paris, Governor's rule imposed in J&K and the latest on the Sunanda Tharoor case are front page stories in most papers.
"Mighty Rajapaksa stunned, Sirisena is the new Lanka President" is the Hindustan Times headline. "Sri Lanka ends the Mahinda Raj" writes the Indian Express.
French police storm hostage sites, kill terror brothers, their associate" leads the Times of India. "Paris shooters killed as siege ends" reports the Tribune. The Pioneer says "Charlie Hebdo terrorists killed".
Most papers report of Jammu and Kashmir being put under Governor's rule - the 6th time since 1997 - after the PDP which emerged as the single largest party, and the BJP failed to cobble up the required numbers to form government.
On the latest in the Sunanda Tharoor case, the Asian Age writes "Tharoor urges police to 'probe without pressure'." While the Hindu quotes Tharoor as saying "My silence is not sinister". "Cops likely to quiz Tharoor on Sunday" states the Hindustan Times.
Muthuvel Karunanidhi became the longest serving president of a political party in India on Friday with the DMK general council 'unanimously' re-electing him as the party chief for the 11th time, reports the Pioneer.
The Supreme Court on Friday quashed a special court order summoning chairman cum managing director of Bharti Cellular Limited Sunil Bharti Mittal and Essar Group promoter Ravi Ruia as accused in a corruption case relating to the allocation of additional 2G spectrum in 2002 during the NDA rule, reports the Hindu.
Swine Flu claimed a third life in the national capital on Friday but the health department said there was no need for panic and asked people to remain vigilant, reports the Asian Age.
And finally, according to researchers from the university of Missouri, separation from the cellphone can have serious psycholgical and physiological effects on i-phone users, including poor performance in cognitive tests, reports the Times of India.

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