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Delhi’s oldest church, St James’, restored after 8 months | Delhi News


Eight months after it was taken up for restoration, the Capital’s oldest church, St James’ in North Delhi’s Kashmere Gate, has been restored and was rededicated Sunday.

Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena, who presided over the ceremony during which Bishop of Delhi, Reverend Dr Paul Swarup, and Presbyter of the church, Reverend Pratik Pillai were also present, commended the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) for restoring the 187-year-old church, built in 1836, in record time.

Restoration and renovation work at the church, also known as Skinner’s Church after Colonel James Skinner who got it constructed, was taken up by DDA with support from INTACH in November 2022.

“Humbled to have rededicated the Historic St James Church in the Capital. This Iconic & Grand house of faith…has stood witness to the 1st war of independence, as indeed our entire struggle against colonialism,” Saxena posted on X, formerly Twitter, following the event.

“I commend DDA officials and the curators, who, with utmost diligence, restored this heritage in a record time, while keeping the originality of the structure intact…St James’ Church is known to be the church of the British Viceroy of India in Delhi,” he added.

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The church, apart from serving its parishioners, will also serve as a major attraction for tourists visiting nearby monuments like Red Fort, Jama Masjid, and the popular Chandni Chowk among others during the G-20 Summit, LG House officials said.

Saxena, while inspecting the renovation work of the church on different occasions, had instructed the officials to strictly ensure that the originality of the heritage structure was retained.

St James’ Church, a part of the Church of North India, Diocese of Delhi, is located near several historical monuments in the Old Delhi area frequented by thousands of visitors every day.





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Yamuna level crosses danger mark again, Delhi govt issues alert


The water level in the Yamuna crossed the ‘danger’ mark once again on Friday, reaching a level of 205.34 m at the Old Railway Bridge in Delhi. This has prompted instructions from the Delhi government to ensure the safety of residents of low-lying areas — many of whom had just returned home.

Meanwhile, rainfall is predicted in the capital over the coming week.

Recorded slightly above the danger mark of 205.33 m at 6 pm, the Central Water Commission (CWC) forecast indicated it was likely to rise further to around 205.45 m by 11 pm.

A senior official of the CWC said that it was, however, likely to stabilise thereafter. “There is a slight increase. While it is likely to rise a little more by midnight, a further increase is not expected after that,” the official said.

The official attributed the rise in levels to both rainfall that may have occurred upstream, as well water from the floodplains returning to the river.

After having remained above the danger mark for a little more than a week, the water level had fallen below the danger mark on Tuesday but rose past the ‘danger’ level again on Wednesday, before falling below this mark once more on Thursday morning.

Some parts of the floodplains in Delhi remain inundated, with the water not having receded entirely yet after levels in the river rose last week, following heavy rainfall in the catchment areas of the Yamuna.

Heavy rainfall was recorded in parts of Himachal Pradesh between 8.30 am on Thursday and 8.30 am on Friday, along with thunderstorms in parts of Northwest India on Friday, including areas in Haryana, Chandigarh, Western Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).

A single weather observatory in Delhi, the one in North Delhi’s Mungeshpur, recorded 21.5 mm of rainfall on Friday. Light rainfall is expected over the weekend, going by the IMD forecast.

The forecast also indicates that light to moderate rainfall is likely on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday next week. The rainfall activity over northwest India is likely to increase around July 25 with the western end of the monsoon trough shifting northwards, according to the IMD.

Other parts of northwest India, including Jammu and Kashmir, Punjab, North Haryana and Chandigarh could see rainfall on Friday as well. Rainfall is also expected to continue over Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh till July 25.





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Once upon a river: Re-visiting the relationship between Delhi and Yamuna


“The relationship we share with Yamuna is that of a mother and son. In the last 30 years, I have seen the river change in front of my eyes. It is sad to see what it has become now,” says Randheer, a floodplain farmer who lives along the Yamuna Khadar near Delhi’s Raj Ghat. Just 15 kilometres away, 70-year-old Kalicharan, who resides along the banks of the river near Mayur Vihar, adds, “Earlier, we used to drink its water and take a bath. Now we can’t even go next to it because of how dirty it is.”

Randheer and Kalicharan are among the many residents of Delhi who have been directly affected by the depleting water quality of the Yamuna for over three decades now.

With the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government promising to enforce a six-point action plan to clean Yamuna to transform Delhi into a “clean, beautiful and modern city” by 2025, and several initiatives being taken to attempt the same, we take a look at the relationship the city shares with the river.

Yamuna — Then and Now

The Yamuna River, a major tributary of the Ganges, originates from the Yamunotri glacier in western Garhwal in Uttarakhand. Colloquially called Jamuna, the river has been a witness to the numerous civilizations and cities that came into existence, thrived, and faded away along its banks. The Yamuna has a longstanding history with the city of Delhi. Not only is it historically and culturally significant to the national capital, but the river is also central to the city’s visual imagination.

Its water is used for farming and irrigation, making it one of the highest food-yielding river basins in the country benefiting Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, NCT of Delhi, Rajasthan, and Uttarakhand.

It is also the main source of raw water for the national capital and is a breeding ground for aquatic organisms. The farming and fishing communities have lived along the banks of the river for generations now.

Suresh Kumar, once a floodplain farmer, reminisces about his childhood days spent near the Yamuna. “When we were young, we used to interact with the river daily. The water used to be so clean that we used to not just take a bath but also drink it without filtering it”.

The farming and fishing communities have lived along the banks of the Yamuna river for generations now. (Express/Varsha Sriram)

Kalicharan recalls the time when the floodplains would be lined up with lush green fields and he would cultivate fresh vegetables including tomatoes, radishes, cauliflower, and carrots. “The quality of the vegetables was extremely good and we used to make a livelihood by selling them.”

Meanwhile, Ratan Kumar, once a fisherman near the Wazirabad barrage of Yamuna, talks about the thriving marine life in the river 20 years ago.

“Back then, we used to be able to catch around 6-7 types of fish, including Rong Lai, Catla, Siren, Bachua, Mushi, and Mori. On average, we used to catch around 50 kgs and sell them in the market,” he says, adding that they now barely manage to catch about five kgs of fish every day.

“This is not enough to make money,” he says. Ratan left fishing to become a driver.

Not just farming and fishing, the Yamuna has also been a recreational and religious spot. Locals recall how the river has been an integral part of their lives.

“Back in the 90s, people used to visit the river often and interact with it in many ways,” says Randheer, adding that it was a picnic spot for many.

The Yamuna has been a religious spot for many. Locals recall how the river has been an integral part of their lives. (Express/Varsha Sriram)

Bagvathi, who resides in a temporary hut on the floodplains near Mayur Vihar, narrates stories of how women from their community would come together during festival days and perform pujas next to the river. “Every year, we celebrate Chhath Puja near the banks of the river. We get into the river and do the puja as it’s our tradition,” she says.

Kalicharan adds that during Purnima and Amavasya, people used to take a dip in the river in the evenings. Purnima or a full moon day, and Amavasya, also known as the new moon day, is considered of great religious significance in Hinduism.

A ‘dead river’

On July 2, 1979, the Indian Express published a report which said, “The Yamuna is fated to be an open sewer sooner or later. And this catastrophe may befall us in 30 years’ time, according to environmental engineers who have been watching the fast-changing water quality profile of the river”.

Today, Yamuna is one of the most polluted rivers in the country. Sewage and domestic and industrial effluents have made its water toxic and unfit for consumption. Studies have called it a “glorified drain” and a “dead river”, unable to sustain any life.

The clear blue waters in which, as Randheer recalls, one would be able to see a coin if they dropped it inside, is now covered with toxic foam.

According to a 2020 report by the now-dissolved Yamuna Monitoring Committee (YMC), which was set up by the National Green Tribunal to oversee cleaning efforts, the 22-kilometre stretch of the Yamuna which traverses Delhi is only two per cent of the length of the river but accounts for over 75 per cent of the total pollution load in the river, which comes from untreated domestic sewage, industrial and solid waste.

In her research paper What the Eye Does Not See: The Yamuna in the Imagination of Delhi, Amit Baviskar, sociologist and professor of Environmental Studies and Sociology and Anthropology at Ashoka University, talks about the visible shift of the Yamuna in the social and ecological imagination of Delhi. She explains how the riverbed has changed from being a neglected “non-place” to prized real estate for private and public corporations.

Baviskar argues that “the transformation of an urban commons into a commodity is not only embedded in processes of political economy but is also driven by aesthetic sensibilities that shape how ecological landscapes are valued.”

At the Hathni Kund barrage in Haryana, the Western Yamuna Canal and Eastern Yamuna Canal divert the river waters to Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, respectively. The remaining water reaches the Wazirabad barrage.

The 22-kilometre stretch of the Yamuna in Delhi is only two per cent of the length of the river but accounts for over 75 per cent of the total pollution load in the river. (Express/Varsha Sriram)

Speaking to indianexpress.com, Meeta Kumar, Associate Professor, Miranda House, says there are two main problems with the Yamuna water in Delhi — the solid waste and sewage is being dumped into the river, and the water flowing through the Yamuna dries out by the time it reaches Delhi.

“If you imagine the Yamuna as a channel of water that’s flowing, you tend to not see the other parts that are actually part of the river system, such as the floodplains. If you treat them as different from the river, it’s almost as if the river is encroaching on land in your imagination,” she says.

As the river heads downstream, all that’s left are the domestic and industrial effluents, except during monsoon season when excess water is released at Hathnikund and Wazirabad.

Bhim Singh Rawat, a water activist, says that over time the amount of fresh flowing water in the river has drastically reduced due to the supply of water to the Hathni Kund barrage, and west and east canals for industrial purposes.

Despite various rejuvenation plans and multiple orders by courts and government bodies, the exploitation of the Yamuna continues.

Traversing about 52 kilometres in NCT Delhi, there are three stretches to the river — Northern stretch, running over 26 kilometres from the Palla village to Wazirabad barrage, ‘Central stretch’, running over 22 km from the Wazirabad barrage till the Okhla Barrage, and ‘Southern stretch’, running over four kilometres from the Okhla barrage till Jaitpur Village.

In an article in India Water Portal, a national knowledge platform and repository for water and related issues, late environmentalist Anupam Misra wrote about why Yamuna is “Delhi’s real town planner”.

“One major river, its 18 tributaries, and some 800 big or small tanks and lakes dotted Delhi from one end to the other. Add to this layout of the city a few thousand wells and bavdhis (stepwell). This design ensured Delhi was never short of water, never had a famine, and was never ravaged by floods,” he said, adding, “Delhi was once well-planned along the course of the river Yamuna but it isn’t so any more”.

Contrary to popular perception, not the entire 22-kilometre-long stretch of the Yamuna which falls within the administrative boundaries of Delhi is polluted. The northern stretches of the river, lying in the Wazirabad-Jagatpur area, have been able to skip much of the ecological damages compared to other areas.

However, when we visited the Wazirabad barrage area, below the Signature Bridge in North Delhi, we saw people throwing waste into the river.

30-year-old Rohit, a professional diver says, “In a day, I am in the water for about 2-3 hours. I see that people throw glass items, garlands and other waste items into the river”.

Sitting by the river is Mohammad Aslam, for whom fishing is a hobby. “Don’t even ask how dirty the river has become… I’ve been coming here with my father for over 35 years now to fish and the quality and variety of the fish have reduced so much due to the effluents and sewage being thrown into the river,” he says.

Mohammad Aslam has been fishing by the Yamuna river as a hobby for over 35 years now (Express/Varsha Sriram)

“Now, I come whenever I am free…but, it’s a chance of luck…sometimes you get to catch fish, sometimes you don’t,” he adds.

Displacement of communities along Yamuna

Apart from the fact that the river is no longer the Yamuna they grew up around, it is the eviction drive that is a major cause of concern for those living alongside the floodplains.

Successive government projects such as the Akshardham temple and the Commonwealth Games Village near the floodplains have endangered the river’s course and affected the life and livelihood of people living around it.

Since March this year, the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) has been carrying out demolition drives along the Yamuna floodplains to make way for a riverfront project.

Those affected are the people who were staying near the Yamuna Khader in Mayur Vihar — In March this year, they were asked to vacate the plains and were moved further inside under a railway track.

“We don’t have a permanent house. We have stayed along the floodplains for generations now and the DDA has been moving us from one place to another,” says Brijpal, a farmer.

His wife says they now have to fight for their survival and find odd jobs to earn a living.

Meanwhile, Mamta, who was earlier working at a school built for kids in the floodplain area says, “Ever since we moved here, we have been struggling to find food and water. It takes us an hour to reach the main road and there is no livelihood for us here.”

“After the demolition drive, our kids have not gone to school,” she adds.

Fifteen kilometres from Yamuna Khader, farmers and slum dwellers of Bela Estate Moolchand Basti near Rajghat have been demanding rehabilitation.

Since March this year, the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) has been carrying out demolition drives along the Yamuna floodplains to make way for a riverfront project. (Express/Varsha Sriram)

“The government has begun several drives to make Yamuna a cleaner, greener river. Are you telling me those who have been farming here won’t keep the place clean? Is there someone who can do it better than us?” asks Randheer.

In March, the Delhi High Court dismissed a plea by an association of residents of Bela Estate seeking a stay on the eviction from the premises and rehabilitation by the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB). The court observed that no documents were adduced to prove that they were part of the board’s notified jhuggi jhopri (JJ) cluster.

“We have been staying here for generations…in fact, since before the DDA was even formed. And now, they are asking us to vacate and go somewhere else,” he says.

Has Delhi turned its back on Yamuna?

A report by the Yamuna Monitoring Committee (YMC) says how over the years citizens, civic and administrative authorities have, in different ways, neglected the river. “The challenge lies in making citizens conscious of the harm they do when they pollute the river, directly or indirectly,” it says.

Rawat and Kumar say Delhi has turned its back on the river.

Mamta and her family are one of the affected people who were asked to vacate their houses near Yamuna Khader in Mayur Vihar — In March this year.

“I wonder what kind of city we are living in and what we plan to do. We live in the era of climate change where we are looking to reduce carbon footprint. Floodplain farmers have been doing organic farming and horticulture for so long and can, in many ways, contribute to the cleanliness of the river,”says Rawat.

“When you look at the Thames River, it is an active part of life in London and you can engage with the river in many ways. But can you see that with the Yamuna? That’s what I mean by turning its back on the river,” says Kumar.

“Do we have the political and cultural will to revive the river…we must get our act together, otherwise nature will retaliate. A solution will not emerge if we speak about the issue under the carpet,” she adds.

— (With Chitral Khambhati)





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BJP pitches India’s ‘rising stature on world stage’, its Delhi chief’s refugee background to Hindu, Sikh migrants at Majnu ka Tilla


In addition to buttressing what has increasingly emerged as the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) main appeal to seek support for the 2024 Lok Sabha polls — India’s rising stature on the world stage thanks to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s efforts — the party pitched its Delhi chief’s identity as a second-generation refugee among Hindu and Sikh migrants from Pakistan on Sunday.

Speaking on the sidelines of an event in connection with the ‘Mann Ki Baat’ programme, BJP national secretary Baijayant Jay Panda, citing Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva as an example, sought to urge the refugee population settled in the Majnu ka Tilla area to join the mainstream and encourage their children to “contribute to nation building.”

“I hope that the youth, and especially the children here today, will step forward to do something for this area, for Delhi and the country worthy of recognition by the Prime Minister himself…whose efforts have earned respect for the country across the world,” he said.

Addressing the gathering, which included refugee families from Pakistan and members of the Bhil tribe community, Panda also asked them to help forge “India’s identity as a developed nation by the year 2047.”

“There was a time when his (Sachdeva’s) maternal and paternal grandfathers, even his father came to India as refugees…today too there are many like you who were trapped in neighbouring countries. There is a provision for this in the Constitution and everyone right from Bapu (Gandhi) spoke about it — but only Modiji delivered on it,” he added.

During his address, Virendra Sachdeva promised ‘Diwali celebrations’ to the area’s residents following an interaction with them. (Express photo)

During his address, Sachdeva promised ‘Diwali celebrations’ to the area’s residents following an interaction with them. “I was just talking to one of you — what connected us was stories about our respective fathers. I promised them that just like I’ve come to their house today, they have to come and meet me as well,” he said.

“Let me also tell you that we will have Diwali celebrations not just here — there are three other locations where our brothers and sisters like you are settled in the city — who will also be a part of these celebrations,” Sachdeva added.

Sachdeva belongs to the post-Partition refugee Punjabi community, which has traditionally rallied behind the BJP in the city. The party’s move to choose him is as much an indication of its intent to “reconnect” with the Punjabis as it is an admission of having lost its other core support base, the Baniya community, to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).

Virendra Sachdeva belongs to the post-Partition refugee Punjabi community, which has traditionally rallied behind the BJP in the city. (Express photo)

Apart from the demonstrated strategic proficiency of the 55-year-old “soft-spoken but firm Pratham Varsh Shikshit Swayamsevak”, i.e., someone who has passed basic RSS training, Sachdeva’s selection, sources said, marks the BJP’s return to its political roots in the capital — set deep in the psyche of Punjabi refugees who flooded the city after the Partition.

An old party hand associated with the BJP for over three decades, the former journalist was born to parents from Muzaffarpur and Peshawar, now in Pakistan, and spent his formative years in north Delhi’s Chandni Chowk, where his family set up a printing press after migrating to India.

He took over as the party’s working president following the sudden resignation of his predecessor, Adesh Gupta, in the wake of the BJP’s electoral capitulation to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in the MCD elections last December.





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Delhi News Live Updates: Manish Sisodia withdraws interim bail plea pending before Delhi HC in liquor policy case


These lines from renowned poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz’s Subh-e-Azadi (The Dawn of Freedom) exemplify the mood of the newly-opened Partition Museum at the Dara Shikoh Library in Delhi. Inaugurated by Delhi Education Minister Atishi within the Ambedkar University campus in Kashmere Gate on May 19 this year, the museum, according to Kishwar Desai, the chairperson of The Arts and Cultural Heritage Trust, is being referred to as the “people’s museum”.

MUST READ | Delhi’s Partition Museum — An attempt to show impact on common people

It took more than a dozen blood droplets splattered on the road for nearly 100 metres to trace a grievously injured 25-year-old man, accused of breaking into an Uber driver’s car and stealing his mobile at knife point along with his co-accused, hiding inside a park.

Officers said that the incident took place Monday around 4:20 AM, when Uber driver Santosh, 35, a resident of Madanpur Khadar, was inside his car in North Delhi’s Sarai Rohilla when two persons arrived on a scooty and broke the side-window glass of the vehicle by hurling a stone at it. They pointed a sharp-edged weapon at the driver and robbed him of his mobile.

CRACKING THE CASE | How blood drops helped cops reach a cellphone thief





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Delhi Head Constable, Pregnant Wife Shot At And Robbed: Police


Police are checking CCTV footage from the area. (Representational)

New Delhi:

A 35-year-old Delhi Police head constable and his pregnant wife were shot at in north Delhi’s Burari area by two people and robbed of a mobile phone and Rs 7,000 cash, police said on Saturday.

The incident took place around 9.45 pm on Friday when the head constable posted at the Special Cell Unit of the city police was walking with his wife from Burari to Jahangirpuri, they said.

The couple came under attack around 150 metres from the Burari Chowk, police said, adding two people shot at the wife first and then pointed the gun towards the head constable.

They robbed him of his mobile phone and Rs 7,000 cash before fleeing the spot, police officials said.

The woman is around seven months pregnant and her condition is stated to be fine, they said.

A case was registered under sections 394 (voluntarily causing hurt in committing robbery), 397 (robbery, or dacoity, with attempt to cause death or grievous hurt), 307 (attempt to murder) and 34 (common intension) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and the Arms Act.

Police are checking CCTV footage from the area and trying to arrest the accused, they added.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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Delhi Environment Min convenes meeting amid Delhi’s worsening air quality



Delhi Environment Minister Gopal Rai has called a meeting of the officials of his department and the city’s pollution control board on Thursday, as the national capital recorded close to ‘severe’ level air quality index (AQI).


The meeting is slated to take place at 1 pm on Thursday, an official said on Wednesday.


“The meeting of the environment department and Delhi Pollution Control Committee, to be chaired by Delhi Minister Gopal Rai, has been convened to discuss the situation as the AQI level has deteriorated,” he said.


The air quality index (AQI) in the national capital was close to the ‘severe’ level on an overcast Wednesday morning while the minimum temperature settled at 25.4 degrees Celsius, a notch below the season’s average.


Central Pollution Control Board data showed Delhi’s AQI at 395 (‘very poor’) at 9 am, just five notches short of touching the ‘severe’ level. An AQI between zero and 50 is considered ‘good’, 51 and 100 ‘satisfactory’, 101 and 200 ‘moderate’, 201 and 300 ‘poor’, 301 and 400 ‘very poor’, and 401 and 500 ‘severe’.


The weather office has predicted dust storm or thunderstorm during the day while the maximum temperature is likely to settle around 40 degrees Celsius.


Thunderstorms with light to moderate rain are likely in isolated places of north Delhi, Gohana, Gannaur, Sonipat, Rohtak and Kharkhoda of Haryana, and Baraut, Bagpat and Khekra of Uttar Pradesh, the weather office said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: May 17 2023 | 2:56 PM IST



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Chargesheet filed against 2 terror suspects arrested in North Delhi with ISI links: Police


The Delhi Police Special Cell filed a chargesheet against two terror suspects who were arrested in the National Capital this year. The police said the accused Naushad, 56, and Jagjit Singh, 29, have links to Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and were planning to attack Red Fort and kill right-wing leaders in the upcoming months.

The chargesheet filed at Patiala House Court this week states that the accused had “elaborate” plans to create a riot-like situation. The accused received funds and weapons from the handlers and were arrested with two hand grenades and three pistols, the police said. They were booked under the stringent Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).

The accused had targeted a local resident and beheaded him to prove their allegiance to ISI, the chargesheet mentions. Investigators also recovered a 21-year-old man’s chopped body near Bhalswa Dairy.

Quoting the chargesheet, an officer said, “They shot a video of him and sent it to their associates in Pakistan. We also found they were planning to kill religious leaders in Haridwar and carry out attacks near Red Fort to instigate terror and communal tension.”

“They were planning to kill another man, chop the body and place the head near Red Fort. They also wanted to carry out a firing attack at Red Fort,” added the officer.

The two were caught in January after the Special Cell received inputs about grenades in Northwest Delhi. The police said they soon found that the victim was a local resident, Raj Kumar, who was murdered after being lured with drugs and alcohol. His body was chopped into eight pieces and the whole act was filmed, said the police.

During their interrogation, the accused revealed plans to kill leaders from Shiv Sena and other organisations.

The chargesheet has put on record the blood stain samples recovered from the rented house of the accused in Jahangirpuri along with the grenades and pistols. It also mentions the chats recovered from the phones revealing their connection with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and ISI, said the police.

While Naushad is involved in two cases of murder and a case under the Explosives Act, the police said Jagjit is a member of the Bambiha gang and is a close associate of gangster Arsh Dalla.





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Opposition leaders try to march to ED HQ on Adani issue, stopped by police


As the government continued its offensive against the Congress in Parliament and sought an apology from senior Congress leader Rahul Gandhi for his remarks in London, top Opposition leaders and MPs on Wednesday tried to march to the Enforcement Directorate headquarters demanding an inquiry into allegations against the Adani Group. However, they were stopped at Vijay Chowk by the Delhi Police as they came out of the Parliament building.

Opposition leaders said MPs belonging to 18 parties were part of the protest.

The Opposition’s move to march to the ED headquarters from Parliament is seen as an attempt to put the spotlight back on the Adani matter. The Opposition has been alleging that the government’s aggressive attack on Rahul Gandhi was to deflect attention from the “Adani scam”.

Interestingly, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) was not part of the Opposition march. The TMC is also not on board with the Opposition demand for setting up a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) investigation into allegations against the Adani Group and charges of government patronage to industrialist Gautam Adani.

Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) too did not participate in the march.

Among those who led the march include Congress president and Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha Mallikarjun Kharge, Congress leader in Lok Sabha Adhir Rajan Chowdhury, CPI’s Binoy Viswam, CPM’s Elamaram Kareem, DMK’s T R Baalu, Samajwadi Party’s Ramgopal Yadav, AAP’s Sanjay Singh, Shiv Sena’s Sanjay Raut and BRS’s K Keshava Rao.

“All of us are going to the Enforcement Directorate but the government has stopped us. The government does not want us to take out a march. One individual has destroyed the LIC, SBI and other banks. People have deposited their hard-earned money in these institutions with trust. But all their money has been handed over to one person,” Kharge said.

He alleged that the Adani Group has the patronage of the government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in amassing wealth. “How has it happened? Who is responsible? Who is giving money to him? How he is allowed to make so much money… So we want an inquiry. An inquiry should be held… What is the relationship between the Prime Minister and Adani… Where he goes, he takes him,” Kharge said.

On the police stopping him and the other leaders, Kharge said while the government waxes eloquent about democracy, it has stopped a peaceful protest by Opposition leaders. “We are not jostling around. It is a peaceful protest,” he said.





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Building Collapses On Road In Delhi, People Run To Safety


A rescue operation is underway and further details are awaited.

New Delhi:

A building in the Bhajanpura area of the national capital collapsed on Wednesday, informed police officials. The police officials said that the reason for the collapse is yet to be ascertained.

According to police officials, the fire department received information at 3:05 pm. The fire department officials have reached the spot.

A rescue operation is underway and further details are awaited.

Earlier on March 1, a four-storey building collapsed after catching fire in north Delhi’s Roshanara Road but fortunately, there was no loss of life, said police.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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