Sunday, July 16, 2017

Sharad Yadav Meets Sonia Gandhi Amid Strain In Bihar Alliance

Sharad Yadav Meets Sonia Gandhi Amid Strain In Bihar Alliance

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES
Most newspapers have prominently featured three stories on its front pages - the Centre's brief to the opposition on key issues, the CBI probe into killings by security forces in Manipur and the terror alarm in the UP assembly.
"We're on the same page on China, Opposition tells government", is the DNA lead headline. The paper reports that the all party meet ended with unequivocal support for Centre. On the same story, The Tribune adds that the opposition asked the government to "Use diplomacy to defuse the China standoff" and pointed out the security lapses in the terror attack on the Amarnath Yatris.
The Hindustan Times' lead headline is "CBI will probe 97 killings by security forces in Manipur". The paper writes that the SC has ordered the CBI director to respond in two weeks while overruling objections by the government and the army.
"Explosive found in UP assembly, state seeks NIA's help" reports The Indian Express. The paper quotes the UP CM as having described it as a "dangerous terror conspiracy". The Times of India dubs it as a major security breach in the UP assembly.
The Hindu Business Line writes that the Income Tax dept has identified an additional 6.6 lakh people in the second phase of Operation Clean Money. All identified persons are being informed via email and SMS for submitting responses online, adds the paper.
The Pioneer's banner headline reads, "Kaziranga turns into watery grave for animals". The paper says that 76 animals have drowned and 60% of the park has been inundated.
The GSM versus CDMA debate seems to be over in India. "CDMA services set to hang up", headlines The Hindu Business Line. The paper expects the CDMA technology to be phased out within a year.
Business Standard reports that the Indian Railways is all set to offer last minute discounts and reduced fares in major trains like the Shatabdi Express. The new fare is expected to be introduced in two months' time.
Nobody likes whiners and complainers. Not even the Pope. The Asian Age writes that a sign board hung on the door to Pope Francis' private rooms at the Vatican clearly forbids visitors from complaining. 

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