Saturday, April 7, 2018

Salman Khan granted bail in Blackbuck case; Bishnois to move HC

Salman Khan granted bail in Blackbuck case; Bishnois to move HC

NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES:

Various newspapers carry varied stories today but the big news dominating all is  Sanjita Chanu winning a gold at Commonwealth Games and the Parliament Session getting over without doing any substantial business.

"Session washed out, bills pending" writes Hindustan Times. "BJP, Congress announce fasts as washout session ends" says the DNA adding "PM forfeits 79 thousand rupees of salary for 23 disruption days." "BJP, Congress play politics of fast" reports the Asian Age while the Hindu writes "Tumultous Budget Session marked by disruption ends" adding "both houses of Parliament adjourned sine die; over 240 hours of work lost."
The Other major story covered most newspapers is about the possible hacking of the Ministry of Defence's Website. "Hacked? government portals locked down says the Tribune". "Cyber attack alarm as government sites crash ," writes the Hindustan Times adding "CBI, ministers' websites go down after hardware failure."
Some other stories covered today are -
SEBI tightens noose around insider trading." headlines The Business Standard.
"Look, out notices issued for Kochhars, Venugopal Dhoot? writes the Hindu Business Line while the Pioneer carries this as a lead story on its front page saying "Look out notice against ICICI Chief."
"Ayodhaya more important than Polygamy, Supreme Court told" writes the Asian Age while the Indian Express quotes Supreme Court "Will hear if entire Ayodhya matter should go to a big bench."
"US, China continue to trade threats" says the Financial Express.
Yesterdays' dust storm that lashed the capital is also widely reported with the Pioneer saying "Dust storm plunges city into darkness, "Air, road traffic hit, Metro delayed." While the Hindu also shows a picture of lightning striking after the dust storm with the headline "Sever dust storm lashes Delhi, 24 flights diverted.
Finally, Maybe to influence the politics of the newborns, the Indian Express writes about a sperm bank in Beijing that has listed loyalty to the ruling Communist Party as a prerequisite for prospective donors.

No comments:

Post a Comment