Mumbai (TIP)- The search and rescue operation at Irshalwadi hamlet in Maharashtra’s Raigad district, where a massive landslide claimed the lives of at least 22 people, resumed for the third day on Saturday as 86 villagers are yet to be traced, officials said.
The landslide at the tribal village, situated on a hill slope under Khalapur tehsil that is located around 80 km from Mumbai, occurred on Wednesday, July 19 night.
The death toll till Thursday evening was 16, which went up to 22 on Friday as six more bodies were recovered. The deceased included nine men, as many women and four children. Nine members of a family perished in the disaster, officials said.
“The search and rescue operation by the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and other government agencies resumed for the third day on Saturday morning,” a police official said.
The search operation was suspended around 6 pm on Friday, July 21, due to heavy rain, an NDRF official said.
“Four NDRF teams and other agencies resumed the operation on Saturday morning,” he said.
At least 17 of 48 houses in the village, located on a hill slope, were fully or partially buried under the landslide debris.
As per the Raigad district disaster management office, of 229 village residents, 22 were dead, 10 were injured, 111 were safe and 86 people were yet to be traced.
Month: July 2023
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Search operation at Maharashtra landslide site resumes; 86 people yet to be traced
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India making great efforts in green growth and energy transition: PM Modi
Panaji (TIP)- Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday, July 22, said India is making great efforts in green growth and energy transition, and asserted that the country is moving ahead strongly on its climate commitments.
Addressing the G20 Energy Ministers’ Meeting via video link, PM Modi underlined that even though every nation has a different reality and pathway for energy transition, he firmly believes that the goals of every country are the same. Throwing light on India’s efforts in green growth and energy transition, he pointed out that India is the most populated nation and the fastest-growing large economy in the world and yet is strongly moving towards its climate commitments.
ThePM informed that India has achieved its non-fossil installed electric capacity target nine years in advance and set a higher target for itself. He mentioned that the nation plans to achieve 50 percent non-fossil installed capacity by 2030.
“India is also among the global leaders in solar and wind power”, the Prime Minister said as he expressed delight that the Working Group delegates got a chance to witness the level and scale of India’s commitment to clean energy by visiting the Pavagada Solar Park and Modhera Solar Village.
Highlighting the achievements of the country in the last 9 years, the Prime Minister informed that India connected more than 190 million families with LPG while also recording the historic milestone of connecting every village with electricity. He also touched upon working to provide piped cooking gas to people which has the potential to cover more than 90 percent of the population in a few years. “Our effort is to work for inclusive, resilient, equitable and sustainable energy for all”, he added.
The Prime Minister informed that in 2015, India began a small movement by launching a scheme for the use of LED lights which turned out to be the largest LED distribution program in the world saving us more than 45 billion units of energy per year.
He also touched upon starting the largest agricultural pump solarization initiative in the world and India’s domestic electric vehicle market projection of 10 million annual sales by 2030. He also highlighted commencing the rollout of 20 percent Ethanol Blended Petrol this year which aims to cover the entire country by 2025.
For decarbonizing India, the Prime Minister said that the country is working on Mission mode on Green Hydrogen as an alternative and aims to transform India into a Global Hub for the production, use and export of Green Hydrogen and its derivatives. -

Varanasi court allows survey of Gyanvapi mosque
New Delhi (TIP)- The Varanasi district court on Friday, July 21, ordered an extensive survey of the Gyanvapi Masjid by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to ascertain whether the mosque was built over a pre-existing Hindu temple, holding that the scientific investigation is “necessary” for the “true facts” to come out. Allowing an application by four Hindu women plaintiffs, district judge Ajaya Krishna Vishvesha directed ASI to conduct a comprehensive survey, using dating, excavation and ground penetrating radar (GPR) techniques, of the plot where the mosque stands, next to the Kashi Vishwanath Temple.
The court, however, ordered excluding the section which has remained sealed since the Supreme Court order in May 2022. The area under seal is where Hindus insist a Shivling has been found, while Muslims claim it is part of a fountain.
“The director of ASI is directed to conduct a detailed scientific investigation by using GPR Survey, excavation, dating method and other modern techniques of the present structure (mosque) to find out as to whether same has been constructed over a pre-existing structure of a Hindu temple,” stated the court order, seeking a report from ASI up to August 4 when the matter will be taken up next.
Dating is a method of calculating the age of very old objects while a GPR survey is a method of gathering data about what’s below the ground using ground-penetrating radar technology that sends electromagnetic energy signals into the subsurface. The order directed ASI to carry out GPR survey under the three domes of the mosque (where the plaintiffs claim there are remains of the pinnacle of a temple) and beneath the western wall (where the Hindu shrine of Shringar Gauri exists).
“The director of ASI is also directed to conduct GPR survey beneath the ground of all the cellars and conduct excavation, if required. The director of ASI is also directed to conduct dating exercise of the pillars and plinth of the building to find out the age and the nature of construction,” it added.
Permitting ASI to carry out scientific investigation of all the artefacts found in the mosque to find out their age and nature, the court further directed ASI to study all objects of historical and religious importance existing in different parts of the building and also beneath the structure which may be found during excavation. “The director of ASI is also directed to conduct GPR survey, excavation wherever required, dating exercise and other scientific methods for determining the age and nature of construction existing at the site in question,” said the court, adding that ASI must ensure that there should be no damage to the structure standing on the disputed land and that it remains intact and unharmed. Source: HT -
Congress government in Chhattisgarh survives no-trust motion moved by BJP
The Bhupesh Baghel-led Congress government in Chhattisgarh on Saturday, July 22, survived a no-trust motion moved by the BJP on the last day of the Monsoon Session of the state assembly.
The no-confidence motion was defeated by voice vote in the state assembly shortly after 1 am after a 13-hour debate. While the Congress has 71 members in the 90-member assembly, the BJP has 13 MLAs in the House.
The debate, which began shortly after noon on Friday, July 21, saw the BJP presenting a 109-point “chargesheet” against the Baghel government and accusing it of corruption and failure to keep poll promises.
During the stormy debate, the opposition members targeted the Congress government over alleged scams, non-fulfilment of its poll promises and “deteriorating” law and order situation.
The treasury bench rejected the charges claiming that the opposition failed to come up with any concrete issues and its chargesheet lacks facts. Replying to the debate, Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel said the opposition chargesheet lacks facts and by bringing it, the BJP gave a chance to the government to highlight its achievements in the assembly. -
UP man beheads sister, carries severed head to police station
A young man was arrested here on Friday as he walked into the police station with the severed head of his sister, allegedly killed by him over her relationship, police said. The incident took place at Mithwara village in Fatehpur area following an argument between Riyaz (22) and his sister Aashifa (18).
Riyaz allegedly severed the head of his sister with a sharp weapon and was on his way to the police station with her head when the police arrested him, Additional Superintendent of Police Ashutosh Mishra said.
Aashifa had recently eloped with her partner Chand Babu, a resident of the same village, Mishra said.
However, the police recovered Aashifa a few days later and sent Babu to jail based on a complaint filed by the woman’s family, he added.
A police team reached the crime spot and sent the body for post-mortem after collecting the evidence, the ASP said.
According to locals, Riyaz was opposed to his sister’s relationship and the two often quarreled over the issue, the police said.
A case had been registered and the accused arrested, the ASP said. -
Shortage of 11,266 Major, Captain-rank officers in IAF and Navy
A low intake of officers during Covid pandemic has led to a shortage of 11,266 Majors and Captains and officers of the equivalent and other ranks in the Indian Air Force and Indian Navy.
The Army has a shortage of 2,094 Major-level officers and 4,734 at the Captain level. The IAF is short of 881 Squadron Leaders and 940 Flight Lieutenants, and the Navy 2,617 officers of the rank of Lt Commander and below. The Ministry of Defence in a written reply to the Lok Sabha today said the “low intake during Covid-19 pandemic” was the main reason for the shortage. Minister of State for Defence Ajay Bhatt in a reply to a question posed by three MPs — Manish Tewari, Prof Sougata Ray and Haji Fazlur Rehman – also attributed the shortage to a low induction in supporting cadres like the Short Service Commission (SSC).
The recruitment in the forces is done through several streams. One of them is through the SSC, where cadets pass out after 11 months of training and serve in the forces for a fixed tenure of 10 to 14 years. -
Govt raises concern over Yasin Malik’s appearance In SC
Expressing displeasure over the personal appearance of Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik, the Supreme Court on Friday, July 21, questioned why he was brought to court when no such order was passed. The Central government also expressed concern over the physical appearance of Yasin Malik, in the apex court. Solicitor General of India Tushar Mehta wrote to Union Home Secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla on Friday flagging a “serious security lapse” after Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik, serving life term in Tihar jail, was brought to the Supreme Court for attending a case proceeding.
“It is my firm view that this is serious security lapse. A person with terrorist and secessionist background like Yasin Malik who is not only a convict in terror funding case but has known connections with terror organisations in Pakistan could have escaped, could have been forcibly taken away or could have been killed,” Mehta wrote.
He said that even the security of the Supreme Court would have been put to a serious risk if any untoward incident were to happen. Mehta highlighted that there is an order passed by the Ministry of Home Affairs with regard to Malik under section 268 of the Criminal Code of Procedure which prevents the jail authorities to bring the said convict out of the jail premises for security reasons. -

Imran Khan guilty of masterminding May 9 attacks: Pakistan government tells court
LAHORE (TIP): Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan has been found “guilty of inciting attacks” on military installations, including the Lahore Corps Commander House, an anti-terrorism court was told by the government prosecutor on July 21.
However, the ATC Lahore extended Khan’s pre-arrest bail in five terrorism cases till August 8.
“A special prosecutor on Friday told the ATC that a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) of Punjab police completed its probe into the May 9 attacks on military and state buildings and found Imran Khan guilty of abetment and other terrorism charges,” a court official told PTI. Khan appeared before the court amid high security.
Prosecutor Farhad Ali Shah said that Khan is guilty of masterminding the May 9 attacks and his arrest is needed for collection of evidence. He said that the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief had led a campaign and incited the party workers against the Army before the May 9 attacks.
That incitement led to the attack on the military installations, he said.
ATC Judge Abher Gul Khan extended the pre-arrest bail of Khan till August 8 and directed the prosecutor to come up with more arguments at the next hearing.
Following the arrest of Imran Khan by paramilitary Rangers unrest broke out in Pakistan on May 9 that saw the torching and vandalizing of dozens of military and state buildings, including the Army headquarters in Rawalpindi and the ISI building in Faisalabad.
Police arrested over 10,000 workers of PTI and over 100 are being tried under the Army Act.
Khan denied masterminding or inciting the attacks stating that it was a well-planned conspiracy to oust its party from upcoming elections. The military establishment managed to carve out two political parties — Istekham-i-Pakistan Party and PTI Parliamentarians — of the PTI as dozens of its leaders joined the new parties. (PTI) -

Indian-origin Singapore police officer goes on trial for role in death of maid from Myanmar
SINGAPORE (TIP): An Indian-origin police officer went on trial in Singapore on July 20 for his role in the death of a maid from Myanmar for which his former wife and mother-in-law are already serving long-term jail sentences. Kevin Chelvam, 44, the registered employer of Myanmar national Piang Ngaih Don, 24, who died following prolonged and heinous abuse while under his employment, claimed trial to four charges, The Straits Times newspaper reported.
Piang Don started working for Chelvam’s family in May 2015 and died on July 26, 2016. She just weighed 24 kg at the time of her death.
On the night of July 25, 2016, the maid was assaulted by Gaiyathiri and Prema for being too slow in doing laundry.
The next morning, Gaiyathiri and Chelvam checked on her and found her motionless on the floor.
He then left the flat for work.
Chelvam rushed home when his wife called and told him Piang Don was dead.
His charges include voluntarily causing hurt and abetment of voluntarily causing grievous hurt to Piang Don by starvation.
He is also contesting one charge of giving false information to a police officer and another of removing the closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras from his home which recorded the abuse.
Chelvam was suspended from the police force in August 2016, days after Piang Ngaih Don’s death.
Irritated that his emaciated maid was falling asleep while eating, the husband of a convicted maid abuser allegedly grabbed her by her hair and lifted her off the ground, the charge read, as reported by the Singapore Daily.
As Piang Ngaih Don’s employer, Chelvam was fully aware of the atrocities that occurred under his roof, Deputy Public Prosecutor Stephanie Koh said.
“He was complicit in Gaiyathiri’s and Prema’s offences by his conscious indifference to the deceased’s plight, which he allowed to continue unabated until her death,” Koh said.
Chelvam’s ex-wife, Gaiyathiri Murugayan, 43, was sentenced in June 2021 to 30 years in prison – the longest jail term meted out in a maid abuse case in Singapore.
His mother-in-law Prema S Naraynasamy, 64, who joined her daughter Gaiyathiri in torturing the maid, was sentenced to 14 years in January.
Prema was given three years more of jail term in June after she admitted to one charge of instigating Chelvam to cause evidence of the offences to disappear, bringing her total jail term to 17 years.
Chelvam has two children aged one and four.
He and his wife got divorced in 2020.
Gaiyathiri and Prema are expected to take the stand as prosecution witnesses during the trial.
The prosecution’s list of witnesses also includes investigation officers involved in the case and a forensic pathologist, the report added. (PTI) -
Indo-Sri Lankan talks: Treatment of Tamils, land connectivity, oil pipeline among key takeaways
Colombo (TIP): Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe had wide-ranging bilateral discussions which include an oil pipeline, ferry connectivity, UPI, trade-in rupee, a possible land route and increased air connectivity, amongst other things.
Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe arrived in New Delhi a day earlier for the official visit, his first since taking up the top job last year after an economic meltdown forced his predecessor to flee.
“Today we have adopted a vision document for our Economic Partnership. This vision is to strengthen the Maritime, Air, Energy and people-to-people connectivity between the people of both countries. The vision is to accelerate mutual cooperation in tourism, power, trade, higher education and skill development. This is the vision – of India’s long-term commitment towards Sri Lanka,” said PM Modi.
“My visit to India has provided an opportunity to review our bilateral relationship, leverage the strength of geographical and civilizational links, reinforced trust and confidence for our future prosperity in the modern world,” Wickremesinghe said.
PM Modi conveyed to President Wickremesinghe India’s expectations from Colombo to fulfil the aspirations of the Tamil community in the island nation and ensure a life of respect and dignity for it. He also sought a humane approach from Sri Lanka over conflicts involving the island nation’s navy and fishermen from Tamil Nadu.
“We hope that Sri Lankan government will fulfil aspirations of the Tamils as this would drive the process of equality, justice and peace and fulfil the commitment to the 13th Amendment and conduct the Provincial Council Elections,” PM Modi added.
The Tamil community in Sri Lanka has been demanding the implementation of the 13th Amendment that provides for devolution of power to it. The 13th Amendment had been brought in after the Indo-Sri Lankan agreement of 1987.
This year, India is celebrating its 75th anniversary of diplomatic ties with Sri Lanka. Tamil nationals have been a native of the island nation for over 200 years now and to mark this, India has earmarked Rs 75 crore for projects that cater to the development programmes of the Tamil community.
Meanwhile, talks on the Economic and Technological Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) will begin soon. (PTI) -

Russia targets Ukraine’s farm storage sites after days of hitting Black Sea port facilities
KYIV (TIP): Russia followed its withdrawal from a grain export deal by expanding its attacks from port infrastructure to farm storage buildings in Ukraine’s Odesa region on July 21, while also practising a Black Sea blockade. Other Russian missiles damaged what officials described only as an ‘important infrastructure facility’ southwest of the port city of Odesa, in what appeared to be an effort to cripple Ukraine’s food exports.
Attacks in recent days have put Odesa in Russia’s crosshairs after Moscow abandoned a wartime deal that allowed Ukraine to send grain through the key Black Sea port.
In the attack on the storage site, two low-flying cruise missiles started a blaze, then another struck during firefighting efforts, regional Gov. Oleh Kiper said.
The barrage injured two people, damaged equipment and destroyed 100 metric tons (110 tons) of peas and 20 metric tons (22 tons) of barley, Kiper said.
Russia targeted Ukrainian critical grain export infrastructure after vowing to retaliate for what it said was a Ukrainian attack that damaged a crucial bridge between Russia and the Moscow-annexed Crimean Peninsula.
“The enemy is continuing terror, and it’s undoubtedly related to the grain deal,” said Natalia Humeniuk, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian military’s Operational Command South.
Both Russia and Ukraine have announced they will treat ships travelling to each other’s Black Sea ports as potential military targets.
Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Vershinin clarified the Defense Ministry’s announcement earlier this week that Moscow has declared wide areas in the Black Sea dangerous for shipping.
The ministry said it would consider incoming vessels as laden with weapons and treat the country of its flag as a participant in the conflict on the Ukrainian side.
Vershinin said the Russian navy will inspect the vessels to make sure they aren’t carrying military cargo before taking any other action.
“There is no longer a sea humanitarian corridor, there is a zone of increased military danger,” he told a news briefing.
Vershinin added that Russia will fulfil the needs of African countries despite the deal’s termination.
President Vladimir Putin has promised to provide poor countries in Africa with free grain.
The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said the recent strikes against port and grain infrastructure and threats of escalation at sea “are likely part of a Kremlin effort to leverage Russia’s exit from the Black Sea Grain Initiative and exact extensive concessions from the West.”
In Turkey, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Western countries should address Russia’s demands to restore the Black Sea grain corridor.
“Russia has some expectations. If these are overcome, Russia is in favour of the active work of this grain corridor,” said Erdogan, who helped negotiate the deal.
“We know that (Putin) has some expectations from Western countries. Western countries need to take action on this issue.”
He reiterated he would talk to Putin by phone and hoped to meet him in Turkey next month.
In comments reported by state-run news agency Anadolu and other media, Erdogan warned that the end of the grain initiative would raise global food prices, increase famine and unleash new waves of migration.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he spoke with Erdogan by phone Friday, and they “coordinated efforts to restore the operation of the Black Sea Grain Initiative.”
“Unlocking the grain corridor is an absolute priority,” Zelenskyy said on the Telegram messaging app.
The Russian Defense Ministry said the navy conducted drills that simulated action to seal off a section of the Black Sea.
In the manoeuvres, a missile boat fired anti-ship cruise missiles at a mock target.
The ministry also said it fired long-range sea-launched weapons on facilities “used for the preparation of terror attacks against the Russian Federation involving drones,” adding that “all the designated targets have been hit.”
It didn’t elaborate. (AP) -

Swiss order hang gliders to stay away, closing air space as firefighters battle forest inferno
GENEVA (TIP): Swiss authorities have temporarily shut the airspace over a small part of southwestern Switzerland because recreational gliders have endangered the work of emergency teams battling a persistent forest fire in the area. The Federal Office of Civil Aviation said on July 21 that the restriction in an airspace of up to 8,000 feet (about 2,400 meters), over a wooded mountainside near the town of Bitsch, will last a week.
The measure affects civil aircraft and drones and is aimed “to protect the ongoing activities of response teams on the ground and in the air,” the office said on its website.
Office spokesman Christian Schubert, in an email to The Associated Press, said the closure affects about 40-50 square kilometres (about 15-20 square miles) in an area that is popular with recreational gliders.
The heads of local helicopter crews and firefighting squads requested the closure because of the dangers presented by the gliders to what was already risky work, Schubert said. No incidents or injuries have been reported, and the measure was “exclusively of a preventative nature.”
Scores of firefighters, police, troops and other emergency teams, backed by helicopters, have deployed to battle the wildfire that was first reported on Monday. The move prompted authorities to temporarily evacuate residents of four villages and hamlets in the area.
Franz Mayr, a community leader in Bitsch, said the fire remained “small” — some 107 hectares (about 265 acres) have been affected — and the situation was stable, though strong winds continued. (AP) -

One dead, three injured in Seoul stabbing rampage
SEOUL (TIP): One person was killed and three more wounded when a man went on a “stabbing rampage” near a subway station in the South Korean capital Seoul on July 21, police told AFP.
The attack took place near the Sillim subway station in southwest Seoul, police said, adding that the suspect had been detained by officers at the scene. “The suspect is a man in his 30s and he did not look intoxicated. We are questioning him as to the motive of his crime,” they said.
The Yonhap news agency reported that the attack happened near Exit 4 of the station at 2:07 pm (0507 GMT).
Video posted on local television station YTN’s YouTube channel showed orange-vested emergency responders running towards the incident carrying stretchers.
Police had cordoned off the area with yellow tape, the footage showed.
“The man shouted he didn’t want to live any more as he was being apprehended by the police,” YTN reported. Grainy footage on YTN appeared to show police apprehending the suspect, who had sat down on steps and seemed to sit passively as armed police approached him and placed him under arrest.
“People ran into my store, telling me a man with a big knife was stabbing people. We locked the door,” a store owner in the area told YTN. Eyewitnesses said the suspect stabbed a man who was talking on the phone in the back multiple times before running off and attacking more people, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported.
“All four victims are reportedly men,” it added.
‘Low crime rate’
South Korea is typically an extremely safe country, with a murder rate of just 1.3 per 100,000 people in 2021, according to official statistics.
By comparison, America has 7.8 homicide deaths per 100,000 people, according to the country’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Most South Koreans are trained shooters, as all men must perform about two years of mandatory military service.
But the country has strict gun control laws and it is extremely difficult for civilians to obtain firearms, with gun-related crime almost unheard of.
There have been a handful of high-profile stabbing crimes over the last few years.
Earlier this year in the southern city of Busan, a 23-year-old crime drama fanatic stabbed to death a woman she had met online, local media reported.
In March, a 37-year-old woman was accused of injuring three people with a knife on a subway, allegedly after someone called her “ajumma” — a way to refer to a middle-aged woman.
Last year, a man stabbed a former co-worker to death in a subway station after stalking her for years. He was later sentenced to decades in prison.
The rare incident in Seoul quickly began circulating on Korean-language social media. “Don’t come to Sillim now. There is a crazy man on a stabbing rampage. I called the police after seeing a person injured on the ground,” one user with the handle sanong_cos wrote on Twitter.(AFP) -

Muslim-majority nations express outrage and plan street protests over Quran desecration in Sweden
BAGHDAD (TIP): Muslim-majority nations expressed outrage July 21 at the desecration of a copy of the Quran in Sweden. Some prepared for street demonstrations following midday prayers to show their anger.
In Iran, Iraq and Lebanon, protesters planned demonstrations after Swedish police permitted a protest Thursday in which an Iraqi Christian living in Stockholm kicked and stood on a Quran, Islam’s holy book, outside of the Iraqi Embassy. Hours before that, demonstrators in Baghdad broke into the Swedish Embassy and lit a fire to show their anger at his threats to burn the book.
Iraqi Prime Minister Shia al-Sudani has ordered the expulsion of the Swedish ambassador from Iraq and the withdrawal of the Iraqi charge d’affaires from Sweden. But that may not be enough to calm those angered, and another protest in Baghdad is planned for Friday afternoon.
In neighboring Iran, demonstrators also planned to take to the streets. Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian has written a letter to the United Nations secretary-general over the Quran desecration and has summoned the Swedish ambassador.
“We consider the Swedish government responsible for the outcome of provocation reactions from the world’s Muslims,” Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani said.
The man in Stockholm also wiped his feet with a picture of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during his demonstration and did similar to a photo of Iraqi Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, a powerful leader there.
Lebanon’s Shiite militant group Hezbollah also called for a demonstration Friday afternoon. Khamenei and Iran’s theocracy serve as Hezbollah’s main sponsors.
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in a video address Thursday night called on Muslims to demand their governments expel Sweden’s ambassadors.
“I invite brothers and sisters in all neighbourhoods and villages to attend all mosques, carrying their Qurans and sit in them, calling on the state to take a stance toward Sweden,” Nasrallah said in the address, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.
On Friday “the whole world must see how we embrace our Quran, and the whole world must see how we protect our Quran with our blood.”
Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two Sunni-ruled Gulf Arab nations, summoned Swedish diplomats to condemn the desecration. Turkey’s Foreign Ministry also criticized it.
In Pakistan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif strongly condemned the events in Sweden. He called on the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation to play a “historic role in expressing the sentiments of Muslims and stopping this demonization.” Meanwhile, Islamists in his country have been pushing Sharif, who faces an upcoming election, to cut diplomatic ties with Sweden.
On Thursday morning, protesters in Baghdad occupied the Swedish Embassy for several hours and set a small fire. The embassy staff had been evacuated a day earlier. After protesters left the embassy, diplomats closed it to visitors without specifying when it would reopen.
Prime Minister Sudani said in a statement that Iraqi authorities would prosecute those responsible for starting the fire and referred to an investigation of “negligent security officials.” Some demonstrators stayed at the site, ignored by police, after the attack. An Associated Press photographer and two Reuters staff members were arrested while covering the protest and released several hours later without charges. (AP) -
‘Geneva patient’ declared the sixth person in HIV remission, will need to be watched closely
PARIS (TIP): A man dubbed the “Geneva patient” is the latest person with HIV to be declared in long-term remission — however he did not receive a transplant with a virus-blocking gene mutation like previous cases, researchers said on July 20. But they stopped short of saying the man was “cured” of HIV, warning there was still a chance the virus could still return.
All had bone marrow transplants to treat serious cases of cancer, receiving stem cells from a donor with a mutation of the CCR5 gene. This mutation is known to block HIV from entering the body’s cells. In 2018, the Geneva patient similarly received a stem cell transplant to treat a particularly aggressive form of leukaemia. But this time the transplant came from a donor who did not carry the CCR5 mutation, French and Swiss researchers told a press conference in the Australian city of Brisbane as part of an AIDS conference that begins at the weekend. (AFP) -
15 Indian-origin men held in Canada for running cargo theft ring; USD 9 mn worth property recovered
TORONTO (TIP): Canadian police have arrested 15 Indian-origin men for allegedly running a major organised cargo theft ring, and property worth more than 9 million dollars was recovered along with stolen goods.
A joint task force was formed in March to investigate a series of tractor-trailer and cargo thefts in Peel regional municipality and across the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), a press release by the Peels Regional Police said on July 19 .
The investigation, dubbed Project Big Rig, disrupted the criminal ring, leading to the arrests of fifteen Indian-origin individuals from different cities in the GTA.
Those arrested ranged in age from 22 to 45, and 73 charges were laid on them.
Investigators said the stolen cargo included various commercial goods, ATVs, and vehicles, which the suspects then allegedly sold at various flea markets and stores, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported.
A total value of 9.2 million Canadian dollars in property was recovered, comprising 6.9 million dollars of stolen cargo and 2.2 million dollars in value of stolen tractor-trailers, the press release said.
Officers discovered the same group of suspects had targeted cargos of various sizes and 28 tractor-trailers in six GTA locations by breaking through fences and driving away with the trucks or stealing trucks pulled over on the side of the road, Peel Regional Police Detective Mark Haywood said during a press conference.
“They were entering a lot of the facilities. [They would] cut the fence, go in, steal the product, steal a truck usually and drive over the fence,” Haywood was quoted as saying by the CBC. (PTI) -

Bank of America has been ordered to pay more than $100 million to customers
NEW YORK (TIP): Bank of America has been ordered to pay more than $100 million to customers in New York and 37 other states.
The bank was accused of “systematically double-dipping on fees imposed on customers with insufficient funds in their account, withholding reward bonuses explicitly promised to credit card customers, and misappropriating sensitive personal information to open accounts without customer knowledge or authorization,” according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.Bank of America is headquartered in North Carolina, with branches and ATMs located in 38 states and the District of Columbia. Bank of America has 262 branches in over 100 different cities and towns across New York, including Long Island, New York City and Hudson Valley. The bank also has over 3,500 more offices in thirty-seven states.
The banking giant must refund $100 million to customers, pay $90 million in penalties to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and $60 million to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, according to federal officials.
“Bank of America wrongfully withheld credit card rewards, double-dipped on fees, and opened accounts without consent,” said CFPB Director Rohit Chopra in a statement. “These practices are illegal and undermine customer trust.” The banking company has already refunded $23 million to customers who were denied rewards bonuses according to the CFPB, but owes another $80.4 million to people the bank charged “unlawful non-sufficient funds fees.” The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said that customers don’t need to take action to receive a payment, as the burden is on the bank to either put funds back in consumer accounts or send a check. Full details, including the amount of refunds for individual customers and how exactly they will be paid, have not yet been released.
The fees often came when customers had routine monthly transactions, like a gym membership. If a customer had too low a balance to cover the transaction, it would be declined and BofA would charge the customer a $35 fee. The business, who hasn’t been paid, often would recharge the customer’s account, resulting in another $35 non-sufficient funds fee. The bank ended this practice last year but will still have to repay customers who got charged before the policy was changed.
Bank of America also offered people cash rewards and bonus points when signing up for a card, but the CFPB said the bank illegally withheld promised credit card account bonuses.
In 2014 the CFPB ordered Bank of America to pay $727 million for illegal credit card practices. Last year it was ordered to pay a $10 million civil penalty over unlawful garnishments. Also in 2022, the CFPB and OCC fined Bank of America $225 million and required it to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in redress to consumers for botched disbursement of state unemployment benefits at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Kapil Verma Returns to HAB Bank
Kapil Verma, who had chosen to leave his job with HAB Bank, has made a comeback, after almost a year. The branch manager Moazzam Ali said Kapil is much loved by the patrons of the bank and is an asset. The Indian Panorama publisher Prof. Indrajit S Saluja welcomed the return of Kapil Verma to the HAB Branch in Hicksville and hoped his presence will make the branch attractive to customers.
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Gurajpal Singh Padda Marries Gurleen Kaur Hothi
Gurajpal Singh Padda, son of Sardar Charanjit Singh Padda and Sardarni Rajinder Kaur Padda, and Gurleen Kaur Hothi, daughter of Sardar Gurinder Singh Hothi and Sardarni Gurpreet Kaur Hothi, were married according to the Sikh tradition at Gurdwara Sikh Cultural Society, Richmond Hill, New York on July 21.
Present on the occasion were a large number of friends and relatives, and community leaders. Hockey Olympian and former Punjab Minister Pargat Singh also graced the occasion. -

Metropolitan Museum of Art hosts exhibition highlighting early Buddhist art in India
A repatriation ceremony was held at Indian Consulate in New York where trafficked antiquities stolen from India were handed over by the US
NEW YORK (TIP): More than 140 objects highlighting early Buddhist art in India and dating from 200 BCE to 400 CE will be on display at the prestigious Metropolitan Museum of Art (Met) here, with the exhibition presenting a series of “evocative and interlocking” themes to reveal pre-Buddhist origins of figurative sculpture in India. The exhibition ‘Tree & Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India, 200 BCE–400 CE’, made possible by Reliance Industries Limited, The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Global, and the Fred Eychaner Fund, will run from July 21 to November 13, 2023, at the Met.
A special preview and reception to celebrate the opening of the exhibition was held at the prestigious museum Monday, July 17, and was attended by India’s Ambassador to the US Taranjit Singh Sandhu, US Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti, founder and chairperson of Reliance Foundation Nita M Ambani, Consul General of India in New York Randhir Jaiswal and other prominent members of the diaspora and American community.
Featuring more than 140 objects dating from 200 BCE to 400 CE, the exhibition “presents a series of evocative and interlocking themes to reveal both the pre-Buddhist origins of figurative sculpture in India and the early narrative traditions that were central to this formative moment in early Indian art.”
Garcetti, who flew from New Delhi, especially for the opening of the exhibition, told PTI that occasions such as these highlight the strong India-US ties and said the friendship between the two countries “has never been stronger.” “Americans in the world are learning more and more about India, about its history, about the religious past, about the ways that we can connect the world better together.”
“This bridge that we’re building has never been stronger. Cross that bridge and see India here in New York, and vice versa,” he said.
The Met said that the exhibition is “the story of the origins of Buddhist art. The religious landscape of ancient India was transformed by the teachings of the Buddha, which in turn inspired art devoted to expressing his message. Sublime imagery adorned the most ancient monumental religious structures in ancient India, known as stupas. “The stupa not only housed the relics of the Buddha but also honored him through symbolic representations and visual storytelling. Original relics and reliquaries are at the heart of this exhibition, which culminates with the Buddha image itself,” it said in a statement.
With major loans from a dozen lenders across India, as well as from the United Kingdom, Europe, and the United States, the exhibition “transports visitors into the world of early Buddhist imagery that gave expression to this new religion as it grew from a core set of ethical teachings into one of the world’s great religions.”
In the exhibition, objects associated with the Indo-Roman exchange reveal India’s place in early global trade.
“The exhibition showcases objects in various media, including limestone sculptures, gold, silver, bronze, rock crystal, and ivory,” the Met said adding that highlights include “spectacular sculptures” from southern India—newly discovered and never before publicly exhibited masterpieces—that add to the world canon of early Buddhist art. Earlier in the day, a repatriation ceremony was held in the Consulate General of India in New York where a total of 105 trafficked antiquities stolen from India were handed over by the US.
Garcetti said this is a “priority” for US President Joe Biden and him and the Met has been “critical” in identifying artifacts stolen from across the world and helping in efforts to repatriate them to their rightful homes.
He said India and the US are “negotiating a permanent agreement” to have a “framework for cultural exchange, repatriation and making sure that these flows go both ways.”
“This is like a gift to America and to the world to have these pieces here. I want to thank the states in India that contributed, the government of India that contributed.”
On Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s State Visit to the US last month, Garcetti said “We are still flying high. This wasn’t a one-moment thing. This is a movement, not a moment. This is going to be for the rest of our lifetimes a deepening relationship in culture and security,” he said adding that for “peace, prosperity, planet, people, the US and India are better together.”
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India supports U.N.’s efforts in continuing Black Sea Grain Initiative
UNITED NATIONS (TIP): India has voiced support for the U.N.’s efforts in continuing the Black Sea Grain initiative and expressed hope for an early resolution to the present impasse, a day after Russia announced it was terminating implementation of the U.N.-brokered deal that allowed export of grain and related foodstuffs and fertilizers from Ukrainian ports.
Moscow on Monday, July 17, said it was terminating the implementation of the Black Sea Initiative — a U.N.-brokered deal that allowed food exports from Ukraine amid the ongoing conflict with Russia — including the withdrawal of Russian security guarantees for navigation in the North-Western part of the Black Sea.
Addressing the U.N. General Assembly’s annual debate on the ‘Situation in the Temporarily Occupied Territories of Ukraine’ on Tuesday, India’s Permanent Representative to the U.N. Ambassador, Ruchira Kamboj, said New Delhi is concerned about the recent developments in the region, which have not helped in securing the larger cause of peace and stability.
“India has supported the efforts of the U.N. Secretary-General in continuing the Black Sea Grain Initiative and hopes for an early resolution to the present impasse,” Ms. Kamboj said.
“India continues to remain concerned over the situation in Ukraine. The conflict has resulted in the loss of lives and misery for its people, particularly for the women, children and elderly, with millions becoming homeless and forced to take shelter in neighboring countries,” she said.
Ms. Kamboj asserted that India’s approach to the Ukrainian conflict will continue to be people-centric.
“We are providing both humanitarian assistance to Ukraine and economic support to some of our neighbors in the Global South under economic distress, even as they stare at the escalating cost of food, of fuel and of fertilizers — which has been a consequential fall out of the ongoing conflict,” she said.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres voiced deep regret over Moscow’s termination of the implementation of the Black Sea Initiative decision, saying the initiative ensured the safe passage of over 32 million metric tons of food commodities from Ukrainian ports.
The World Food Programme (WFP) has shipped more than 725,000 tons to support humanitarian operations — relieving hunger in some of the hardest-hit corners of the world, including Afghanistan, Horn of Africa and Yemen, Mr. Guterres said.
He added that the Black Sea Initiative and the Memorandum of Understanding on facilitating exports of Russian food products and fertilizers have been a “lifeline” for global food security and a beacon of hope in a troubled world.
“At a time when the production and availability of food are being disrupted by conflict, climate change, energy prices and more, these agreements have helped to reduce food prices by over 23 per cent since March last year,” he said. The U.N.-brokered Black Sea Initiative agreed by Russia, Turkiye, and Ukraine allowed millions of tons of grain and other foodstuffs to leave Ukraine’s ports, which Guterres said played an “indispensable role” in global food security.
The U.N. noted that nearly one year into the agreement, more than 32 million tons of food commodities have been exported from three Ukrainian Black Sea ports to 45 countries across three continents.
The partial resumption of Ukrainian sea exports enabled by the Initiative has unblocked vital food commodities and has helped reverse spiking global food prices, which reached record highs shortly before the agreement was signed, the UN said.
Ms. Kamboj underlined that it is unfortunate that as the trajectory of the Ukrainian conflict unfolds, the entire Global South has suffered substantial collateral damage.
“It is thus critical that the voice of the Global South be heard, and their legitimate concerns be duly addressed,” she said. Ms. Kamboj further said in her remarks that reports of attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure are deeply worrying.
“We have consistently advocated that no solution can ever be arrived at the cost of human lives. Escalation of hostilities and violence is in no one’s interest. We have urged that all efforts be made for an immediate cessation of hostilities and an urgent return to the path of dialogue and diplomacy,” she said.
The Indian envoy underscored that dialogue is the only answer to settling differences and disputes, however daunting that may appear at this moment. “The path to peace requires us to keep all channels of diplomacy open,” she said.
Noting Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s repeated engagements with both Russia and Ukraine, Ms. Kamboj said it is essential to emphasize that “we firmly believe that this is not an era of war. It is with this understanding and spirit that India actively participates in this debate.” She said that the global order that “we all subscribe to” is based on international law, the UN Charter and respect for the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all States. “These principles must be upheld without exception,” Ms. Kamboj said.
(Source: PTI) -

NYC Mayor Adams limits shelter stays for single adult asylum-seekers to 60 days
NEW YORK CITY (TIP): With the city’s shelter system buckling under a record number of people experiencing homelessness, New York City Mayor Eric Adams plans to implement a 60-day limit on how long single adult asylum-seekers can stay in city care before they’ll need to apply for a new shelter placement. The plan, according to city officials, is the only way to make sure there continues to be space in the city to care for families with children as more migrants arrive.
“Our goal is no child, no family is sleeping on the streets. That’s our goal. And we are getting closer and closer to being unable to fulfill even that,” Adams said from City Hall Wednesday afternoon, claiming that city shelter capacity has been stretched so far beyond its limit that the time has come for tough choices to be made.
The announcement drew immediate outcry from homeless advocates and some City Council members who argued that the move will leave more people homeless and living on the street. A spokesperson for the City Council said that members weren’t given any advance notice or details about the proposal, which they are currently reviewing. Aspects of the plan were first reported by Gothamist Wednesday morning.
City Council Deputy Speaker Diana Ayala said she thinks the policy is inhumane and incorrectly works off of the assumption that most people who are coming to the city have somewhere else to go.
“We run the risk that if they harass folks enough and make them feel unwelcome they are going to end up sleeping in city parks because people need someplace to sleep,” she said. “You’re talking about migrants that are coming in, that don’t have a work visa, that may not have family – to make them have to repeat the same tormented cycle every two weeks to me is wrong.”
City officials said the policy will be imposed in the coming days starting with asylum-seekers who’ve been staying in emergency relief centers for the longest period of time. Single adult asylum-seekers will be given a 60 days’ notice to find “alternative housing” along with “intensified casework services” to help them chart their next destination. Those who are unable to find another place to stay will be required to report to the asylum-seeker arrival center where they’ll need to reapply for shelter placement. While Adams said his goal isn’t to increase street homelessness, anyone who is unable to find an alternative placement will need to wait “wherever they can find a place” for room to become available.Sixty days is a far cry from the length of time most single adults stay in city shelters. According to the most recent Mayor’s Management Report, the average length of stay for single adults during fiscal year 2022 was 509 days. Families – who stayed in shelter an average of 534 days in the same period – would be exempt from the proposal. The city also plans to distribute physical fliers and information via social media to dispel misinformation about city capacity in an effort to discourage asylum-seekers from coming to the city. City officials say they’ve made every effort to serve the more than 90,000 asylum-seekers who’ve arrived in the city since last spring, having opened over 185 emergency shelters, including 13 large-scale Humanitarian Emergency Response and Relief Centers. Over 54,800 migrants remain in the city’s care – a population that’s continued to grow even as the overall rate of people crossing the border has slowed.
While Ayala said she’s sensitive to the sheer challenge of finding additional space for migrants to stay – especially with so little support from the federal government, which is culpable in the challenges that new arrivals are facing – she doesn’t understand how the 60 day limit would resolve anything.
“This will trigger an emergency hearing to try to figure out where the hell this administration is heading because it’s not fair,” she said.
Wednesday’s announcement comes as city attorneys prepared to face lawyers from the Legal Aid Society as well as former Department of Social Services Commissioner Steve Banks in a case conference this afternoon over Adams’ recent attempt to suspend aspects of the city’s right to shelter law.
Homeless advocates said that the 60-day notice policy also raises legal questions.
“The state and the city have a legal obligation to ensure that people who lack shelter are safe and secure, and protected from exposure to the elements,” The Legal Aid Society and the Coalition for the Homeless said in a joint statement, calling on Adams to implement policies to address the needs of shelter capacity by expanding access to housing vouchers and bolstering the number of staff in agencies that help people move from shelter into permanent housing.
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Ambassador Sandhu inaugurates India Pavilion at the Texworld Apparel and Home Textile Sourcing Show in New York
NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Ambassador of India to the United States, Shri Taranjit Singh Sandhu, inaugurated the India Pavilion at the Texworld Apparel and Home Textile Sourcing Show in New York today. There are over two dozen Indian companies from the apparel, fabric and home textile sectors participating in the Texworld fair being held over three days from 18-20 July 2023. India’s participation in the Texworld fair is being anchored by the Handloom Export Promotion Council and the Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council (TEXPROCIL).
After the inauguration, Amb. Sandhu interacted with Indian companies and visited their stalls. He encouraged them to push hard to enhance India’s textile exports to the US and, in this regard, noted that the Commercial Wing at the Embassy and Consulates stand ready to offer all possible support. He further added that the world-class textile products from India already have a large presence in the US, but there was potential to do more, especially in areas of sustainable textiles and organic products. India’s textile exports to the US in 2022-23 stood at US$ 10.4 billion, roughly accounting for 9-10% of the US textile imports.
Majority of the Indian textile companies participating in the fair are from two main clusters in India – Panipat in Haryana and Karur in Tamil Nadu. There are several new-age products made of Bhagalpuri silk, bamboo, jute and 3D prints on display at the fair.
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US Creates ‘Keep STEM Talent Act of 2023’ after Canada’s H1B work permit fills up in 2 Days
By Anil Gupta
WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): Senator Durbin re-drafted the ‘Keep STEM Talent Act of 2023‘ bill immediately after Canada’s #H1 B-based open work permit saw an unprecedented demand.
It is to be noted that this same bill was introduced in 2022 but did not move forward. As per immigrants’ popular opinion, immigration bills are always deadlocked in US Congress between Democrats and Republicans.
They have not seen any meaningful reform for the last 30+ years. That’s probably the reason Canada’s H1 B-based open work permit was received with so much enthusiasm.
Canada expected to fill up 10k spots in 1 year but filled up the quota in less than 48 hours.
Keep STEM Talent Bill of 2023
The bill aims to keep STEM graduates from US-based universities away from the dreaded yearly green card quota limits. This means that anyone who qualifies will be able to get a green card without any yearly GC quota limits.As per this bill, one can get the US green card if they have:
- STEM Degree from US-based University
- Physically present in the US to complete this education.
- Advance Degree (Masters or Higher level).
- Job offer from a US employer
- Job is directly related to STEM degree
- The pay rate is higher than the median wage level in the local area of work location.
- Have the approved labor certification (generally known as PERM)
- STEM Degree is in one of the fields of study
- Computer and information sciences and support services
- Engineering
- Mathematics and statistics
- Biological and biomedical sciences
- physical sciences
- agriculture sciences
- Natural Resources and Conservation Sciences
It is not clear if the bill will also removed the most problematic and discriminatory ‘Country of birth’ based green card numbers.
What are the chances of this Act becoming a law?
As per the past trend and the way this act has been written, the chances of passing both the House and Senate to become law are extremely low. The same Act was introduced in 2022 as well but nothing happened. It serves more as news than any substantial effect on the lives of skilled immigrants.
As per our analysis, this has a 0.5% chance of becoming law even though the act does have logical provisions.
It will most probably die in the middle of the two party’s election campaign.
People living and working in the US on an H1B visa; holding an approved i140 for US green card but staring at the multiple decades-long wait are tired and desperate to get rid of mental stress.
Business Community Opinion
Several business owners have voiced their opinion on the need to fix the US immigration law over time.
O’Leary Ventures Chairman Kevin O’Leary @kevinolearytv says bad U.S. immigration policy is resulting in a brain drain and Canada is benefitting from H1-B visa problems.
Elon Musk also praised the Canadian H1B open work permit and called it a ‘smart move’.
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Judge Cannon sets a trial date for next May in Trump’s classified documents case in Florida
WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): A federal judge in Florida has scheduled a trial date for next May for former President Donald Trump in a case charging him with illegally retaining hundreds of classified documents.
The May 20, 2024, trial date, is a compromise between a request from prosecutors to set the trial for this December and a bid by defense lawyers to put it off indefinitely until sometime after the 2024 presidential election.
If the date holds, it would follow close on the heels of a separate New York trial for Mr. Trump on dozens of state charges of falsifying business records in connection with an alleged hush money payment to a porn actor.
It also means the trial would not start until deep into the presidential nominating calendar and probably well after the Republican nominee is clear — though before that person is officially nominated at the Republican National Convention.
In pushing back the trial from the December 11 start date that the Justice Department had asked for, Judge Cannon wrote that “the government’s proposed schedule is atypically accelerated and inconsistent with ensuring a fair trial”.
She agreed with defense lawyers that the amount of evidence that would need to be sifted through before the trial, including classified information, was “voluminous and likely to increase in the normal course as trial approaches”.
“The Court finds that the interests of justice served by this continuance outweigh the best interest of the public and Defendants in a speedy trial,” Judge Cannon wrote.
In a statement referring to the Department of Justice, the Trump campaign called Judge Cannon’s order “a major setback to the DOJ’s crusade to deny President Trump a fair legal process. The extensive schedule allows President Trump and his legal team to continue fighting this empty hoax”.
Mr. Trump could yet face additional trials in the coming year. He revealed this week that he had received a letter informing him that he was a target of a separate Justice Department investigation into efforts to undo the results of the 2020 presidential election, an indication that charges could be coming soon.
The target letter referred to multiple distinct statutes Mr. Trump could be charged with violating, including conspiracy to defraud the government, according to a person familiar with the matter who insisted on anonymity to discuss private correspondence.
Mr. Trump’s new lawyer in that investigation, John Lauro, told Fox News on July 21 that prosecutors appeared to be accusing Mr. Trump of “some kind of effort to obstruct” the January 6, 2021, counting of state electoral votes and “whether or not President Trump intimidated anyone or ballot stuffed”.
He said Mr. Trump would not be appearing before a grand jury because “he did absolutely nothing wrong”.
“He’s done nothing criminal,” Mr. Lauro said. “And he’s made his case that he was entitled to take these positions as president of the United States. When he saw all these election discrepancies and irregularities going on, he did what any president was required to do because he took an oath to do exactly that.” Multiple judges appointed by Mr. Trump and Mr. Trump’s own attorney general said there was no evidence of widespread fraud that could have affected the outcome of the election.
Prosecutors in Georgia, meanwhile, plan to announce charging decisions within weeks in an investigation into attempts by Mr. Trump and his allies to subvert the vote in that state.
The trial before Cannon would take place in a federal courthouse in Fort Pierce.
It arises from a 38-count indictment last month, filed by Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith, which accused Trump of willfully hoarding classified documents, including top secret records, at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach and conspiring with his valet, Walt Nauta, to hide them from investigators who demanded them back.
Mr. Trump and Mr. Nauta have both pleaded not guilty.