Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Malta journalist Caruana Galizia: Anti-corruption warrior

Malta journalist Caruana Galizia: Anti-corruption warrior

TODAY'S NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES:
Prime Minister Narendra Modi sounding the BJP's election bugle in Gujarat makes for front page news in most of the dailies this morning. The Tribune quoting the Prime Minister writes "Development vs dynasty in Gujarat poll". "PM woos Gujarat, vows all GST hurdles will go. Dares Congress to fight polls on development plank" leads the Asian Age.
Writing on the political assets of India's seven national parties, Hindustan Times writes "BJP richest party, Congress not far behind in watchdog report."
Referring to JNU student Najeeb Ahmad who is still untraced after he mysteriously went missing from his hostel, DNA writes "Delhi High Court scolds CBI over inaction in Najeeb case."
"No berth for Shivpal, Mulayam Singh Yadav in Akhilesh's executive council" informs the Pioneer.
"This Diwali, Delhi will breathe what it bursts" leads Hindustan Times. The paper forecasts that the city can have best post Diwali air in four years if firecracker use is reduced.
Writing on the spectrum auction the Financial Express says "Inter ministerial group seeks to soften blow to telecom companies. Favours more reasonable reserve price, wants method to reflect international best practices."
"Satyarthi demands National Tribunal for children cause" says the Statesman. DNA quotes President Ram Nath Kovind as saying "Tough for kids to speak over abuse".
Referring to the Aarushi case DNA writes, "Talwars return home to sea of emotions" adding "wait of four years and 20 days finally ends for dentist couple"
"Vaastu fails, man drags agency to court" reports the Hindu. The paper says there were no positive changes even after Karnataka man spent five lakh rupees to redesign home.
Password, you said?, Wi-Fi is still unsafe! Well, the Times of India says, your password protected Wi-Fi connection could be vulnerable to trespassing. Researchers claim to have discovered a weakness in a Wi-Fi security protocol called WPA2 that leaves password-protected Wi-Fi connections open to cyber-attacks and manipulation.

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