Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Mecca Masjid blast case: Judge acquits accused, resigns

Mecca Masjid blast case: Judge acquits accused, resigns

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES

The outrage over the rape horror in the country continues to dominate the headlines of English dailies even today.
"Rape outrage spills over into streets across India" is the lead in the Hindustan Times."Surat faces own Kathua horror" leads the Statesman."Girl's body with 86 wounds recovered" writes the DNA.
'What has happened to us, are we still human?' asks school girl during rally for justice in rape cases, states the Hindu. The paper also reports "Retired civil servants write to PM, 'Uphold the values enshrined in the Constitution' ", The civil servants call Kathua and Unnao rape cases as the "darkest hour" post Independence.
"Kathua rape trial to start today" writes the Asian Age. DNA observes "Kathua victim's kin may approach Supreme Court for justice".
"We'll not let society break, says Rajnath" The Hindustan Times quotes Home Minister Rajnath Singh in an interview, as saying, Muslims living in India are here by choice rather than chance and cannot be viewed differently from other citizens.
"Modi to deliver global address in UK this week", from the historic Central Hall Westminster in London, notes the Asian Age.
"India protests : Pak blocking consular access to pilgrims", is the lead in The Indian Express, on Sikh yatris  being prevented from meeting Indian diplomats in Pakistan.
"Pak army chief in push for India talks" for peaceful resolution of India-Pakistan disputes, including Kashmir, reports The Asian Age.
"RBI may Loosen NPA Norms to Let Banks Breathe Easy", observes the Economic Times.

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