1) Glowing
octocorals have been around for at least 540 million years By Jake Buehler
The findings push the
earliest origin of bioluminescence back by nearly 300 million years
More than half a billion
years ago, the deep, dark ocean was aglow with the eerie light of
bioluminescent corals, new genetic and fossil analyses suggest. The findings
push the origins of bioluminescence back by nearly 300 million years,
researchers report April 24 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
“Our study presents the
oldest published record for the appearance of bioluminescence on Earth, and
more than doubles the previous record for when bioluminescence first appeared,”
says Danielle DeLeo, an integrative biologist at the National Museum of Natural
History in Washington, D.C. The previous record, reported in 2022, was set by
the 267-million-year-old ancestor of sea fireflies — small, seed-shaped
crustaceans.
The ability to produce
light has evolved at least 100 times across the tree of life, in everything
from fishes to corals to fungi (SN: 4/27/17). Chemical reactions generate the
light, which can help the organisms hunt prey, attract mates or even hide from
predators (SN: 6/7/16).
DeLeo and colleagues
wanted to understand how the trait developed in a coral subgroup called
octocorals. These species — including soft corals, sea pens and sea fans —
often live in the deep sea, have 8-fold symmetry and many are luminous.
Analyzing the DNA of 185 octocoral species revealed genetic similarities that
the team used to create an evolutionary tree, showing how the species are
related to one another. Researchers then used octocoral fossils to estimate
when lineages split into separate branches. Finally, based on when glowing
species evolved and where in the tree they reside, the team calculated the
probability of coral ancestors being bioluminescent. “It turns out the ancestor
to all octocorals was bioluminescent,” DeLeo says. That ancestral species lived
roughly 540 million years ago, the team calculates. Octocorals’ bioluminescence
is surprisingly old given the trait’s evolutionary volatility, says Todd
Oakley, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California, Santa
Barbara who led the 2022 sea fireflies study. “It seems to originate pretty
easily, and it seems to be lost pretty easily.”
Evolutionary biologist
Jessica Goodheart of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City
wants to know if the evolution of bioluminescence had a role in driving the
diversification of octocorals as a group.DeLeo says bioluminescence may have
originated as a byproduct of other, more ancient cellular chemical reactions.
These reactions could have been retained because they were co-opted into
signaling and communication, offering animals an advantage.
It’s possible that
other, more ancient bioluminescent organisms — such as bacteria, algae and comb
jellies — could have evolved their glow even earlier than octocorals. But,
DeLeo says, limitations in the fossil record make it challenging to date when
bioluminescence first arose in those groups.
2) Monkeypox virus:
dangerous strain gains ability to spread through sex, new data suggest By Max
Kozlov
A cluster of mpox cases
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo sparks worries of a wider outbreak.A
virulent strain of the monkeypox virus has gained the ability to spread through
sexual contact, new data suggest. This has alarmed researchers, who fear a
reprise of the worldwide mpox outbreak in 2022.
Evidence from past
outbreaks indicates that this strain, called clade I, is more lethal than the
one that sparked the 2022 global outbreak. Clade I has for decades caused small
outbreaks, often limited to a few households or communities, in Central Africa.
Sexually-acquired clade I infections had not been reported before 2023.
But since then, a clade
I strain with an apparent capacity for sexual transmission has caused a cluster
of infections in a conflict-ridden region of the Democratic Republic of the
Congo (DRC), in Central Africa. A preprint1 posted on 15 April reports that 241
suspected and 108 confirmed infections are connected to this outbreak — and
these numbers are probably a vast undercount because of limited testing
capacity. Almost 30% of the confirmed infections were in sex workers.
Adding to the
challenges, the region is facing a humanitarian crisis, and the DRC is
contending with the aggressive spread of other diseases, such as cholera. The
combination means there is a “substantial risk of outbreak escalation beyond
the current area”, says Anne Rimoin, an epidemiologist at the University of
California, Los Angeles, who has worked on mpox outbreaks in the DRC since
2002.
Unheeded warnings
Monkeypox virus can
cause painful, fluid-filled lesions on the skin and, in severe cases, death.
(While the disease was renamed ‘mpox’ in 2022, the virus continues to be called
‘monkeypox virus.’) The virus persists in wild animals in several African
countries, including the DRC, and occasionally spills into people.
The first large reported
outbreak with human-to-human transmission, which was in 2017 in Nigeria, caused
more than 200 confirmed and 500 suspected cases of the disease. Researchers
warned at the time that the virus might have adapted to spread through sexual
contact.Their warnings were not heeded; in 2022, a global outbreak driven in
part by sexual contact prompted the World Health Organization (WHO) to declare
it a public health emergency. That ongoing outbreak is caused by a strain of
monkeypox virus called clade II, which is less lethal than clade I, and has
infected more than 94,000 people and killed more than 180.Although mpox
infections have waned globally since 2022, they have been trending upwards in
the DRC: in 2023 alone, the country reported more than 14,600 suspected
infections and more than 650 deaths. In September, 2023, a new cluster of
suspected cases arose in the DRC’s South Kivu province. This cluster especially
concerns researchers, as it has been spreading largely among sex workers,
suggesting that the virus has adapted to transmit readily through sexual
contact.
This could lead to
faster human-to-human spread, potentially with few symptoms, says Nicaise
Ndembi, a virologist at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention
who is based in Addis Ababa. “The DRC is surrounded by nine other countries —
we’re playing with fire here,” he says.
Health officials are so
concerned that representatives of the DRC and 11 nearby countries met earlier
this month to plan a response and to commit to stepping up surveillance for the
virus. Only about 10% of the DRC’s suspected mpox cases in 2023 were tested,
due to limited testing capacity, meaning health officials “don’t have a full
picture of what’s going on”, Ndembi says.
Genetic analyses of the
virus responsible for the outbreak show mutations such as the absence of a
large chunk of the virus’s genome, which researchers have previously noted as a
sign of monkeypox viral adaptation. This has led the study’s authors to give a
new name to the strain circulating in the province: clade Ib.
Making matters more
fraught, South Kivu borders Rwanda and Burundi and is grappling with “conflict,
displacement, food insecurity, and challenges in providing adequate
humanitarian assistance”, which “might represent fertile ground for further
spread of mpox”, the WHO warned last year.
Vaccines and treatment needed
In 2022, many wealthy
countries offered vaccines against smallpox, which also protect against mpox,
to individuals at high risk of contracting the disease. But few vaccine doses
have reached African countries, where the disease’s toll has historically been
highest.
While the DRC weighs
regulatory approval for these vaccines, the United States has committed to
providing the DRC with enough doses to inoculate 25,000 people, and Japan has
said it will also provide vaccines, says Rosamund Lewis, technical lead for
mpox at the WHO in Geneva, Switzerland. But a vaccination drive in the DRC
would require hundreds of thousands — if not millions — of doses to inoculate
individuals at high risk of infection, she says.It’s not clear how much
protection these vaccines will provide against clade I mpox, but Andrea
McCollum, a poxvirus epidemiologist at the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, says that data from tests in animals are
promising. Researchers are also conducting a trial in the DRC of tecovirimat,
an antiviral that is thought to be effective against mpox. Results are expected
in the next year, McCollum says.The WHO and CDC have helped to procure equipment
that will allow for more rapid diagnosis of the disease in the DRC, especially
in rural areas, Lewis says. She adds that says the rapid mobilization of
African health officials gives her hope that the outbreak can be controlled
before clade Ib mpox starts spreading elsewhere.
3) DNA from ancient
graves reveals the culture of a mysterious nomadic people By Michael Eisenstein
Hundreds of genomes shed
light on the marriage habits and social norms of the Avar people of central
Europe.Most people know about the Huns, if only because of their infamous
warrior-ruler Attila. But the Avars, another nomadic people who subsequently
occupied roughly the same region of eastern and central Europe, have remained
obscure despite having assembled a sprawling empire that lasted from the late
sixth century to the early ninth century. Even archaeologists have struggled to
piece together their history and culture, relying on spotty and potentially
biased contemporaneous chronicles that, in many cases, were authored by the
Avars’ adversaries.
A deep dive into 424
genomes collected from hundreds of Avar graves is filling in crucial gaps in
this story, revealing a wealth of insights into the Avars’s social structure
and culture1. “These people basically didn’t have a voice in history, and we
are kind of looking into them this way — through their bodies,” says Zuzana
Hofmanová, an archaeogeneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and one of the study’s lead authors.Nine
generations
The researchers focused
on four cemeteries in Hungary that were once at the heart of the khaganate, as
the former Avar empire was known. Importantly, all four sites were fully
excavated, giving the researchers access to DNA from every grave and enabling
them to use genetic data to map relatedness for entire Avar communities.
This effort got an
important boost from a computational method called ancIBD, which can connect
even distant family members on the basis of their shared chromosomal
sequences2. Co-lead author Johannes Krause, an archaeogeneticist at Max Planck,
says that scientists have generally struggled to reassemble DNA-based family
trees that extend past third-degree relatives, such as first cousins or
great-grandparents. But by using tools such as ancIBD, Krause and colleagues
were able to chart much more convoluted Avar family trees, including a massive
nine-generation pedigree comprising 146 family members.
The data suggest that,
after migrating to Europe, the Avars retained many cultural practices from
their place of origin on the northeast Asian steppes3. For example, the Avars
were very strict about avoiding inbreeding. There were no observed instances of
marriage between relatives — even at the level of second cousins. Krasue says
that was surprising, given that unions between first cousins were not unusual
during much of European history. “It’s really remarkable that they can keep
track over nine generations who is related to whom, and who can have children
with whom,” he says.
On the other hand, there
was also limited intermarriage with non-Avar neighbors: about 20% of the
genomic sequences in the sampled Avar DNA could be traced to central European
ancestry.The researchers recorded several examples of ‘levirate unions’, in which
a widow married a male from the family of her deceased spouse, such as a
brother. Such marital patterns were atypical in much of Europe, but were
established features of Asian steppe-dwelling cultures, notes co-lead author
Tivadar Vida, an archaeologist at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest. “It was
archaeologically very interesting to see the conservativism in the Avar
society, lasting nine generations,” says Vida.
The Avars were also
strictly patrilineal, with men acting as heads of family and daughters leaving
their communities to join their husbands’ households. At the largest cemetery
sampled, in the village of Rákóczifalva, Hungary, Hofmanová notes that there
was only a single instance of both a mother and her adult daughter being
interred.
Power play
The kinship data reveal
what seems to be a shift in local political power that would have been
difficult to detect with sparse DNA sampling. In the graves at Rákóczifalva,
the researchers found that one male lineage predominated early in Avar history,
but was displaced by a different Avar bloodline by the late seventh century.
Intriguingly, archaeological evidence collected from those graves suggests that
the subsequent family had different diets and burial rituals than did the
displaced one, indicating that Avar culture shifted over time despite
relatively modest levels of intermarriage with non-Avar individuals.
Carles Lalueza-Fox, a
palaeogenomicist at the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona, Spain,
says that this work demonstrates the richness of the insights that can emerge
when researchers have the opportunity and resources to broadly survey and
analyse DNA at sites of historical interest. “Only this scale of analysis would
allow you to obtain a reliable picture of kinship and social processes,” he
says, adding that his group is now embracing a similar approach in their
archaeogenomic research. “I think ancient genomics is moving toward this
direction to obtain a more democratic and nuanced view of the past.”
4) Record-breaking
heat and humidity predicted for tropics this summer :by University of
California - Berkeley
A new statistical
analysis of the interaction between El Niño and rising global temperatures due
to climate change concludes that the approaching summer in the tropics has nearly
a 7 in 10 chance of breaking records for temperature and humidity.The
prediction, by climate scientists at the University of California, Berkeley,
applies to a broad swath of the world straddling the equator, including India
and the bulk of Africa, Central and South America and Australia, but also
includes Florida and Texas.
Long-term predictions
like this can help regions prepare for extreme heat events and protect humans,
livestock and crops, said William Boos, a UC Berkeley professor of earth and
planetary science and an author of the study, which was led by UC Berkeley
Miller Postdoctoral Fellow Yi Zhang."Humanitarian aid and outreach,
preparation for medical care and advising and distribution of crops and
agricultural equipment can all be adjusted in ways that can account for that
prediction," Boos said.While temperatures around the globe have been
setting records nearly every year, the combination of high heat and high
humidity is a double whammy that can be deadly. While most healthy people can
handle a dry heat, humid heat is much more stressful for the body. The more
humid it is, the less sweat evaporates, which reduces sweating's cooling effect
and makes it harder to keep the body's core temperature within normal range.
"If you can't cool
your body to below 98.6°F, or 37°C, then you'll die," Boos said.
"Sweat is the main way we have to cool ourselves when it gets hot. So if
sweating will not allow you to cool below your core body temperature, that's
the survivability limit."
The prediction was published
this month in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. It is based on
scientists' current understanding of El Niño's impact on tropical heat and
humidity, in particular, that atmospheric temperatures several kilometers above
the ground control how hot and humid it can get at ground level. These
upper-level temperatures are at their warmest about five months after El Niño
peaks. The most recent peak occurred in December 2023."It's commonly known
that the Earth is warming, and El Niño is a warm episode of a natural climate
oscillation, so we expect the two to constructively interfere—that El Niño will
compound the effects of global warming," Boos said.
"Over the long
term, global warming brings increased temperature, as well as increased
humidity—that is, increased water vapor content of the air. Together with El
Niño, this allows the heat and humidity to build up to greater levels at a
given location in the tropics."
The researchers
concluded from their analysis that the "strong‐to‐very‐strong El Niño" at the end of 2023, which was rated
a 2.0 on the Oceanic Niño Index, suggests a 2024 tropical land mean maximum wet
bulb temperature of 26.2°C (79.2°F) and a 68% chance of breaking existing
records.
The wet bulb
temperature—basically the temperature you can maintain when covered in sweat or
a wet T-shirt in the presence of a strong wind—is a better indication than
temperature alone of how humans feel under humid heat conditions. In warm-humid
environments like the tropics, wet bulb temperatures above 30°C could lead to
irreversible heat stress.
According to Boos, some
areas that frequently suffer under humid heat stress, such as northern India,
have a 50% chance of suffering record heat and humidity this summer. The Sahel
region in Africa, however, has a 35% chance of record humid heat.
Effects of El Niño are ratcheted up by global warming
El Niño is a periodic
weather pattern associated with a warming of the ocean surface in the eastern
Pacific Ocean, which in turn pumps heat and moist air into the upper atmosphere
that spreads around Earth's equator. El Niño conditions, which alternate with
the cooler La Niña conditions in what is called the El Niño-Southern
Oscillation (ENSO) climate pattern, are one of the major drivers of tropical
weather, Boos said. The heat and humidity in the upper atmosphere reach the
ground during thunderstorms via the gusts of air we associate with these
events.
"The gusty, cool
wind that kicks in during a thunderstorm is actually cold air coming down from
higher up in the atmosphere, cooling down the surface," Boos said.
"When El Niño happens, the upper atmosphere gets warmer, which means that
these downdrafts won't be as cold. So your surface overall will move to a
higher heat and humidity content."
For their study, Boos
and his colleagues, including lead author Zhang, took data on heat and humidity
extremes throughout the tropics over the past 45 years and correlated them with
El Niño warming in the Pacific, then combined these data with the increased
temperature and humidity accompanying global warming. The continual rise in
global average temperature compounds the effects of El Niño, Boos said.He noted
that the statistical nature of the analysis allows a long-term prediction that
is difficult to reliably make with current computer weather models, which are
good at short-term predictions but bad at predicting weather several weeks out.
"What we've done in
this work is come up with a simple statistical model, and we've validated it
well against the observational data by training it on some part of the data
while holding back other parts of the data, making sure that it performs well
on the data it wasn't trained on," he said. "I think it provides a
pretty good bar for the supercomputer models that are predicting climate on a
seasonal time scale."
Zhang noted that the
five-month lead time for the prediction is based on the current state of ENSO.
If weather centers could forecast ENSO conditions six to 12 months in advance,
the lead time for wet bulb temperature predictions could be extended to
approximately a year, allowing even more preparation time for societies across
the tropics.
Boos acknowledged that
natural events could throw the prediction off. A volcanic eruption can cool
Earth's climate, as happened after the eruptions of Mt. Pinatubo in 1991 and El
Chicon in 1982. A sudden descent into cooler La Niña conditions in the Eastern
Pacific—essentially the reverse of El Niño—could also offset temperature and
humidity increases. But barring such events, the prediction could help countries
prepare for a potentially deadly combination of high heat and high humidity.
"We're quantifying
the combined influences of El Niño and global warming on this humid heat stress
metric. That's new," Boos said. "We're also quantifying the
probability of a record-breaking event. That combination of things has not been
done before."
5) Announcing the
birth of QUIONE, a unique analog quantum processor
by ICFO
Quantum physics requires
high-precision sensing techniques to delve deeper into the microscopic properties
of materials. From the analog quantum processors that have emerged recently,
quantum-gas microscopes have proven to be powerful tools for understanding
quantum systems at the atomic level. These devices produce images of quantum
gases with very high resolution: They allow individual atoms to be detected.
Now, ICFO researchers
(Barcelona, Spain) Sandra Buob, Jonatan Höschele, Dr. Vasiliy Makhalov, and Dr.
Antonio Rubio-Abadal, led by ICREA Professor at ICFO Leticia Tarruell, explain
how they built their own quantum-gas microscope, named QUIONE after the Greek
goddess of snow. The group's quantum-gas microscope is the only one in the
world imaging individual atoms of strontium quantum gases, as well as the first
of its kind in Spain.
The team's research is published in the journal PRX
Quantum.
Beyond the impactful
images in which individual atoms can be distinguished, the goal of QUIONE is
quantum simulation. As Prof. Tarruell explains, "Quantum simulation can be
used to boil down very complicated systems into simpler models to understand
the open questions that current computers cannot answer, such as why some
materials conduct electricity without any losses even at relatively high
temperatures."
The singularity of this
experiment lies in the fact that the team has managed to bring the strontium
gas to the quantum regime, place it in an optical lattice where the atoms could
interact by collisions, and then apply the single atom imaging techniques. These
three ingredients altogether make ICFO's strontium quantum-gas microscope
unique.
Why strontium?
Until now, these
microscope setups relied on alkaline atoms, like lithium and potassium, which
have simpler properties in terms of their optical spectrum compared to
alkaline-earth atoms such as strontium. This means that strontium offers more
ingredients to play with in these experiments.
In fact, in recent
years, the unique properties of strontium have made it a very popular element
for applications in the fields of quantum computing and quantum simulation. For
example, a cloud of strontium atoms can be used as an atomic quantum processor,
which could solve problems beyond the capabilities of current classical
computers.
All in all, ICFO
researchers saw great potential for quantum simulation in strontium, and they
began to build their own quantum-gas microscope. This is how QUIONE was born.
QUIONE, a quantum simulator of real crystals
To this end, the team
first lowered the temperature of the strontium gas. Using the force of several
laser beams, they reduced the speed of atoms to a point where they remained
almost motionless, barely moving, their temperature reduced to almost absolute
zero in just a few milliseconds. After this point, the laws of quantum mechanics
ruled their behavior, and the atoms displayed new features like quantum
superposition and entanglement.
After that, with the
help of special lasers, the researchers activated the optical lattice, which
keeps the atoms arranged in a grid along space.
"You can imagine it
like an egg carton, where the individual sites are actually where you put the
eggs. But instead of eggs, we have atoms, and instead of a carton, we have the
optical lattice," explains Buob, the first author of the article.
The atoms in the egg cup
interacted with each other, sometimes experiencing quantum tunneling to move
from one place to another. This quantum dynamics between atoms mimics that of
electrons in certain materials. Therefore, the study of these systems can shed
light on the complex behavior of certain materials, which is the key idea of
quantum simulation.The researchers took the images with their microscope as
soon as the gas and the optical lattice were ready and could finally observe
their strontium quantum gas atom by atom. At this point, the construction of
QUIONE had already been a success, but its creators wanted to get even more out
of it.Thus, in addition to the pictures, they took videos of the atoms and were
able to observe that while the atoms should remain still during the imaging,
they sometimes jumped to a nearby lattice site. The phenomenon of quantum
tunneling can explain this.
"The atoms were
'hopping' from one site to another. It was something very beautiful to see, as
we were literally witnessing a direct manifestation of their inherent quantum
behavior," says Buob.
Finally, the research
group used their quantum-gas microscope to confirm that the strontium gas was a
superfluid, a quantum phase of matter that flows without viscosity.
"We suddenly
switched off the lattice laser, so that the atoms could expand in space and
interfere with each other. This generated an interference pattern due to the
wave-particle duality of the atoms in the superfluid. When our equipment
captured it, we verified the presence of superfluidity in the sample,"
explains Dr. Rubio-Abadal."It is a very exciting moment for quantum
simulation," remarks Prof. Tarruell. "Now that we have added
strontium to the list of available quantum-gas microscopes, we might be able to
simulate more complex and exotic materials soon. Then, new phases of matter are
expected to arise. And we also expect to obtain much more computational power
to use these machines as analog quantum computers."
6) Researchers
detect a new molecule in space :by Danielle Randall Doughty, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
New research from the
group of MIT Professor Brett McGuire has revealed the presence of a previously
unknown molecule in space. The team's open-access paper, "Rotational
Spectrum and First Interstellar Detection of 2-Methoxyethanol Using ALMA
Observations of NGC 6334I," was published in the April 12 issue of The
Astrophysical Journal Letters.Zachary T.P. Fried, a graduate student in the
McGuire group and the lead author of the publication, worked to assemble a
puzzle comprised of pieces collected from across the globe, extending beyond
MIT to France, Florida, Virginia, and Copenhagen, to achieve this exciting
discovery.
"Our group tries to
understand what molecules are present in regions of space where stars and solar
systems will eventually take shape," explains Fried. "This allows us
to piece together how chemistry evolves alongside the process of star and
planet formation. We do this by looking at the rotational spectra of molecules,
the unique patterns of light they give off as they tumble end-over-end in
space.
"These patterns are
fingerprints (barcodes) for molecules. To detect new molecules in space, we
first must have an idea of what molecule we want to look for, then we can
record its spectrum in the lab here on Earth, and then finally we look for that
spectrum in space using telescopes."
Searching for molecules in space
The McGuire Group has
recently begun to utilize machine learning to suggest good target molecules to
search for. In 2023, one of these machine learning models suggested the
researchers target a molecule known as 2-methoxyethanol.
"There are a number
of 'methoxy' molecules in space, like dimethyl ether, methoxymethanol, ethyl
methyl ether, and methyl formate, but 2-methoxyethanol would be the largest and
most complex ever seen," says Fried.
To detect this molecule
using radio telescope observations, the group first needed to measure and
analyze its rotational spectrum on Earth. The researchers combined experiments
from the University of Lille (Lille, France), the New College of Florida
(Sarasota, Florida), and the McGuire lab at MIT to measure this spectrum over a
broadband region of frequencies ranging from the microwave to sub-millimeter
wave regimes (approximately 8 to 500 gigahertz).
The data gleaned from
these measurements permitted a search for the molecule using Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations toward two separate
star-forming regions: NGC 6334I and IRAS 16293-2422B. Members of the McGuire
group analyzed these telescope observations alongside researchers at the
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (Charlottesville, Virginia) and the
University of Copenhagen, Denmark."Ultimately, we observed 25 rotational
lines of 2-methoxyethanol that lined up with the molecular signal observed
toward NGC 6334I (the barcode matched), thus resulting in a secure detection of
2-methoxyethanol in this source," says Fried. "This allowed us to
then derive physical parameters of the molecule toward NGC 6334I, such as its
abundance and excitation temperature. It also enabled an investigation of the
possible chemical formation pathways from known interstellar precursors."
Looking forward
Molecular discoveries
like this one help the researchers to better understand the development of
molecular complexity in space during the star formation process.
2-methoxyethanol, which contains 13 atoms, is quite large for interstellar
standards—as of 2021, only six species larger than 13 atoms were detected
outside the solar system, many by McGuire's group, and all of them existing as
ringed structures.
"Continued
observations of large molecules and subsequent derivations of their abundances
allows us to advance our knowledge of how efficiently large molecules can form
and by which specific reactions they may be produced," says Fried.
"Additionally,
since we detected this molecule in NGC 6334I but not in IRAS 16293-2422B, we
were presented with a unique opportunity to look into how the differing
physical conditions of these two sources may be affecting the chemistry that
can occur."
1) 'Rajiv Gandhi
scrapped inheritance law to save family property as...': PM Modi
Prime Minister Narendra
Modi on Thursday said that former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi scrapped the
inheritance law during his tenure to save the assets and family property that
was to be taken by the government after the death of his mother Indira Gandhi.Prime
Minister Narendra Modi accused the Gandhi family of scrapping laws and making
extensive efforts to ‘accumulate wealth over four generations’ during a poll
rally on Thursday. The Congress party, he told people in Madhya Pradesh, wanted
“to loot your wealth" if they were elected to power in the ongoing Lok
Sabha elections. The BJP leader claimed that former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi
had scrapped an inheritance law during his tenure in order to save the family's
wealth.
“The facts relating to
Inheritance Tax are eye-opening. When former PM Indira Gandhi died, her
children were going to get her property. But there was a rule earlier, that
before the property goes to the children some part of it was taken by the
government. Congress had formulated a law on this. To save the property so that
it does not go to the government, the then PM Rajiv Gandhi scrapped the
inheritance law. After accumulating wealth over four generations, now they want
to loot your wealth," Modi told people during a poll rally in Morena.
The PM insisted that he
was a 'wall' standing between the people of India and the Congress' plan to
‘loot you’. Modi has repeated accused the Congress of wanting to confiscate
people's jewellery and small savings by conducting an X-ray of their properties
and valuables.
2) Mamata Banerjee
questions 7-phase Lok Sabha Elections in 'scorching heat', prays for Nitin
Gadkari: 'Can you imagine...'
Union minister and BJP
leader Nitin Gadkari fainted while speaking during a poll campaign in
Maharashtra's Pusad on Wednesday. He said he felt “uncomfortable due to the
heat”.West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee questioned the three-month
long Lok Sabha Elections 2024 while praying for the "quick and complete
recovery of senior Union Minister and BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] leader Nitin
Gadkari".
In a post on X, Mamata
Banerjee said, "Electioneering in the scorching heat of this cruel summer
is indeed unbearable. Today is 24 April, and, can you imagine, our 7-phase
elections will continue till 1st June??!!, she tweeted.Meanwhile, speaking at
an election rally, Banerjee asked why the Lok Sabha polls are being conducted
in seven phases amid severe heatwave across the country. She said on Wednesday
that the Election Commission is conducting the polls in seven phases to help
the BJP.
She also alleged that
the schedule for the Lok Sabha elections was designed to "satisfy the
BJP", news agency PTI reported. "Earlier, the poll process used to be
over by May 2 or 3, but this year they have stretched it for three months, amid
severe weather conditions," Banerjee said while addressing the election
rally for TMC's Bolpur candidate Asit Mal.
She added, “The Election
Commission has planned the polls for three months to satisfy the BJP." She
further emphasised that her motto was "to defeat the BJP" in the Lok
Sabha Elections 2024.
3) PM Modi’s
Rajasthan rally remarks spark political firestorm
Opposition leaders
criticize PM Modi for suggesting Congress aims to redistribute wealth to
Muslims, calling it hate speech and a ploy to divert attention.A massive
political row erupted on Monday as Opposition leaders from across parties —
including Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge — targeted Prime Minister
Narendra Modi for comments that he made in a public rally on Sunday, suggesting
that the Congress intended to redistribute public wealth to Muslims.
Kharge described Modi’s
comments as “hate speech”, and said that he had “lowered the dignity of
political discourse”.The Congress complaint highlighted one part of Modi’s
speech in which he said: “When they (Congress) were in power earlier, they said
that Muslims have the first right to the country’s resources. So, who will they
redistribute resources to? Those who have more children. Those who are
infiltrators. Will your hard-earned money be given to infiltrators? Will you
accept that? The Congress manifesto says they will take stock of the gold owned
by our mothers and sisters, and then they will redistribute that wealth. And
distribute it to those who, according to the Manmohan Singh government, have
the first right on resources — Muslims. This is Urban Naxal thinking, and
mothers and sisters, they will not even spare your Mangalsutra. They will stoop
to this level.”
“Today Modi ji’s
panic-filled speech showed that INDIA is winning in the first phase results.
What Modi ji said is not only a hate speech but also a well thought out ploy to
divert attention... The 140 crore people of the country are no longer going to
fall prey to this lie. Our manifesto is for every Indian. It talks about equality
for all. It talks about justice for all. The judiciary of the Congress is based
on the foundation of truth, but it seems that the throne of the dictator in the
form of Goebbels is now shaking. In the history of India, no Prime Minister has
lowered the dignity of his post as much as Modiji has,” Kharge said on X.The
Election Commission of India (ECI) declined comment on Modi’s speech, which the
Congress said violates several sections of the Indian Penal Code and also the
Model Code of Conduct, and has prompted a flurry of complaints to the poll
panel.
Modi himself struck a
more conciliatory note on Monday in Aligarh, and said: “The Congress ‘shahzade’
(prince) says if his government comes, they will investigate who earns how much
and how much property they have. Not only this, he further says the government
will take over the property and redistribute it. This is what their election
manifesto is saying.”
However, Union home
minister Amit Shah, in a rally in Kanker, Chhattisgarh, reiterated Modi’s
Sunday comments, sharply targeting the Congress. “Congress says that the first
right over resources belongs to minorities; we say that the first right belongs
to the poor, the tribes, and Dalits,” he said, according to a statement from
his office.On Monday, a Congress delegation, led by Manu Abhishek Singhvi,
submitted to ECI that Modi’s speech was “illegal”, and accused the BJP of
repeatedly using religious iconography in its Lok Sabha campaign.
BJP spokesperson Gaurav
Bhatia said, “His remarks have resonated with people as for the opposition
INDIA bloc those who have illegally entered the country are more important than
citizens if they happen to be Muslims.” The opposition is in pain as Modi has
showed them the mirror about its past, he said.
According to the Model
Code of Conduct, a voluntary set of guidelines that all political parties have
been adhering to during the election season since 1960, “No party or candidate
shall include in any activity which may aggravate existing differences or
create mutual hatred or cause tension between different castes and communities,
religious or linguistic.”Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP Saket Gokhale called
Modi’s remarks “hateful and divisive” against the Muslim community and urged
people to lodge complaints about the speech with India’s electoral authorities.
“This is your chance to use your voice & to play your part in these
elections beyond just voting. 1 short email. 1000 Indians. They can’t ignore
your collective voices,” he said.CPI(M) has also urged individuals to send a
letter saying, “You (CEC) would agree that the latest speech of Shri Narendra
Modi is aimed at creating tension and enmity between Hindus and Muslims and
instigating Hindus to see Muslims as infiltrators and their enemies. It is a
clear violation of MCC. We request you therefore to censure Shri Narendra Modi
and impose a ban on his campaign because it has the potential of tearing apart
the social fabric of India.”
RJD leader Tejashwi
Yadav asked the Prime Minister to focus on “real issues”, talking to the media
in Patna on Monday said, “With folded hands, I appeal to him to quit politics
of hate and talk about issues. The country’s youngsters, the elderly, traders,
farmers, the women, all sections have only one issue – poverty, inflation,
unemployment and a poor economy. This is the real issue.”
Samajwadi Party chief
Akhilesh Yadav criticised PM Modi, saying, “Not only the country but the whole
world also knows Prime Minister Narendra Modi lies, the way how he spread lies
about the Congress’s ‘Nyay Patra’ and former Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh
is an example of dirt.”
All India
Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen president Asaduddin Owaisi wrote on X, “Modi
today called Muslims infiltrators and people with many children. Since 2002
till this day, the only Modi guarantee has been to abuse Muslims and get votes.
If one is talking about the country’s wealth, one should know that under Modi’s
rule the first right to India’s wealth has been of his wealthy friends. 1% of
Indians own 40% of the country’s wealth. Common Hindus are made to fear Muslims
while their wealth is being used to enrich others.”In an address at a meeting
of the National Development Council in December 2006, former PM Singh had said,
“We will have to devise innovative plans to ensure that minorities,
particularly the Muslim minority, are empowered to share equitably in the
fruits of development. They must have the first claim on our resources.”
4) Lok Sabha polls
2024: Akhilesh Yadav to contest election from Kannauj, file nomination tomorrow
Samajwadi Party (SP)
supremo Akhilesh Yadav will be contesting the Lok Sabha elections 2024 from
Uttar Pradesh's Kannauj. He will be filing his nomination papers on April
25.Speaking to India Today TV, his uncle Ram Gopal Yadav said there was no
confusion regarding Akhilesh Yadav's candidacy.
Earlier in the day, when
he was asked about the speculations on his nomination, Akhilesh said, “When
nomination happens then you will come to know. The question is of Kannauj's
historic victory...The people have made up their minds that the INDIA alliance
is coming as the future and the BJP will be history in this election…"
Akhilesh had won the
Kannauj seat in 2000. Later, he represented the seat in 2004 and 2009. He left
the seat after he became chief minister in 2012, and his wife Dimple Yadav won
the by-election unopposed. Later, Dimple won the seat in 2014 but lost to the
BJP's Subrat Pathak in 2019.Earlier, the SP had declared Tej Pratap Yadav as
its candidate for the seat.
When asked whether he
will contest from the seat or Tej Pratap will remain the party's candidate,
Akhilesh told reporters, "See, when there are nominations, you will get to
know. Maybe you will get to know before nominations also."
When asked whether party
workers of Kannauj wanted him to contest from the seat, Akhilesh said,
"The question here is of historic victory from the seat. The BJP will
become history in this election as people have made up their mind for the INDIA
bloc. People are going to vote against the NDA. PDA (picchde, Dalit, alpsankhyak)
will defeat the NDA this time."Kannauj will go to the polls on May 13.
4) Rahul Gandhi
promises multiple farmloan waivers, farmers’ commission
Loan waivers need not be
one time but can be done multiple times, Rahul Gandhi said.Nagpur: It was
raining promises for the farmers at Paratwada in Amravati district. Congress
leader Rahul Gandhi promised them multiple farmloan waivers and the setting up
of an agriculture commission to solve farmers’ problems if the INDIA bloc is
voted to power.
Addressing a massive
rally at Paratwada for the Congress candidate, Balwant Wankhede, who is pitted
against the sitting MP of Amravati, Navneet Rana of the BJP, Gandhi said that
whenever farmers in any state require loan waiver, this commission will
recommend the loan waiver to the government that will announce it. Loan waivers
need not be one time but can be done multiple times, he added. He said that
Prime Minister Modi has not waived farmers’ loans even once in the last 10
years, but when the INDIA bloc comes to power, they will immediately waive
farmers’ loans.
Gandhi continued, “There
is no dearth of wealth in this country. You look at the country’s crorepati
industrialists; see their houses, cars and you will realize that there is no
shortage of wealth in the country. If the loans of crorepati industrialists can
be waived, then the loans of poor farmers should also be waived. The central
government is waiving loans of industrialists. Loans of farmers should also be
waived off. Otherwise, nobody should be given a loan waiver in the
country.”Lashing out at the BJP government at the centre, Gandhi accused them
of making 20-25 people crorepatis. “We are going to make crores of people
lakhpatis,” said Rahul Gandhi.
Read the Congress
manifesto, he said as he explained many points from it during his 20-minute
speech. “First thing, we will bring Mahalakshmi Yojana. We will also make a
list of every poor family. Millions of people live below the poverty line in
India. Their list will be prepared. One woman’s name will be selected from each
poor family. The government of the INDIA block will directly deposit ₹1 lakh in
the bank account of this woman every year,” he said and asserted that the
government will also ensure that crores of women in the country become
lakhpatis.The Congress leader claimed that the Narendra Modi-led BJP wanted to
change the Constitution because it did not want 90% of the population, which
comprises backwards, tribals, Dalits and minorities, realize their true
potential. The 2024 general election is for the protection of democracy and
Constitution, which the BJP is eying to change. “BJP is the first political
party in India which has dared to attack the Constitution,” Gandhi said and
charged that NDA, RSS and BJP are bent on ending the Constitution. “The
Constitution is the voice of backward classes. No force in the world can change
the Constitution. I wonder what gave the BJP confidence to even think of doing
so,” he said.
Congress leader Rahul
Gandhi made a veiled attack on the prime minister Narendra Modi over the
electoral bonds scheme that was scrapped by the Supreme Court terming it
unconstitutional. Indicating action after coming to power, Gandhi said that the
theft in the scheme was to such an extent that Modi would be in trouble after
the polls.
He made the remarks
while holding a campaign rally for the Congress candidate Praniti Shinde and
NCP (SP) candidate Dhairyasheel Mohite Patil in Solapur on Wednesday.
“Theft in the electoral
bonds scheme is at such a level that after polls he (PM Modi) would be in
trouble hence he is nervous and making false claims,” Gandhi said addressing a
huge gathering. “PM Modi is scared and wants to distract your attention. He
knows that he is losing the polls. The people have understood the reality that
Modi is the leader of the crorepati and not of the poor class,” he added.
Rahul said that the
electoral bond scheme was brought in claiming that PM Modi wanted to eliminate
corruption and clean up political funding but he started misusing it as an
extortion racket. “It came to light only after the SC forced the State Bank of
India to reveal the list of donors under the scheme, which subsequently revealed
that the companies were forced to donate funds to the BJP by the means of raids
(by the central investigation agencies),” he accused.There are cases where
companies donated funds to the BJP days after a CBI raid and the case was
closed after receiving donation. He has started an extortion racket of
international level,” he further charged.
5) ECI issues
notices over MCC violation complaints against Modi, Kharge, Rahul
The notices came days
after Modi’s comments at an election rally in Rajasthan on Sunday suggesting
the Congress intended to redistribute public wealth to Muslims sparked a
political row The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Thursday issued
separate notices seeking responses by 11am on Monday to complaints of
violations of the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) against Prime Minister Narendra
Modi, Congress chief Mallikaarjun Kharge and Member of Parliament (MP) Rahul
Gandhi, underlining campaign speeches of star campaigner need to be judged “at
a higher threshold of compliance”.
The notices came days
after Modi’s comments at an election rally in Rajasthan on Sunday suggesting
the Congress intended to redistribute public wealth to Muslims sparked a
political row. Opposition leaders targeted Modi over the comments. Kharge
called the remarks “hate speech”, and said that Modi had “lowered the dignity
of political discourse”.
In the notice to the BJP
chief JP Nadda, the ECI cited the representations of the Congress, the
Communist Party of India (CPI), and the Communist Party of India
(Marxist-Leninist) Liberation or CPI (ML). “You [Nadda] are also directed, as
President of the National Party to bring to the notice of all your star
campaigners to set high standards of political discourse and observe provisions
of MCC in letter and spirit,” the notice said.The notice to Kharge referred to
the BJP’s representation. It sought a response to the complaint against Rahul
Gandhi’s speech in Kerala. The BJP accused Gandhi of “derisive and obnoxious
utterances” against Modi.
EC’s notices did not
mention relevant sections of MCC or the Indian Penal Code (IPC) that have been
violated even as the attached complaints do. Neither notice mentions Modi or
Gandhi by name.
The poll watchdog has
sent show causes to individual star campaigners, including Congress’s Priyanka
Gandhi. It has never sent such a notice to Modi individually despite the
multiple complaints against him over the years.
In its complaint, the
Congress highlighted a part of Modi’s speech in which he said when the party
was in power it said Muslims have the first right to the country’s resources.
Modi questioned who will they redistribute resources to. “Those who have more
children. Those who are infiltrators. Will your hard-earned money be given to
infiltrators? Will you accept that? The Congress manifesto says they will take
stock of the gold owned by our mothers and sisters, and then they will
redistribute that wealth. And distribute it to those who, according to the
Manmohan Singh government, have the first right to resources — Muslims. This is
Urban Naxal thinking, and mothers and sisters, they will not even spare your
Mangalsutra. They will stoop to this level.”In December 2006, then-Prime
Minister Singh said, “We will have to devise innovative plans to ensure that
minorities, particularly the Muslim minority, are empowered to share equitably
in the fruits of development. They must have the first claim on our resources.”
The Congress maintained
Modi’s comments violated sections of the IPC and the MCC, a voluntary set of
guidelines for political parties during the election season. MCC says no party
or candidate shall include in “any activity which may aggravate existing
differences or create mutual hatred or cause tension between different castes
and communities, religious or linguistic.”
Modi’s comments prompted
a flurry of complaints to the poll watchdog over the MCC violation. On Monday,
a Congress delegation submitted to ECI that Modi’s speech was “illegal”. It
accused the BJP of repeatedly using religious iconography in its Lok Sabha
campaign. The Congress focussed on Modi’s speech and use of religious
iconography. “...the Prime Minister’s statements to the voters is not only
violative of the Representation of People Act, 1951, the Model Code of Conduct,
Indian Penal Code, Hon’ble Commission’s instructions but also forms a part of
[a] larger and grossly problematic strategy of maliciously create enmity on
grounds of religion and also tarnish the principal opposition party based on
rank falsehoods with a view to adversely impact the minds of the voters.”
The Congress said coming
from a person holding the high office of the Prime Minister, any voter would be
influenced. “Hence, the gravity of the offence is even more serious/egregious
given that it is the Prime Minister of India who is making these false and reckless
statements.”
The Congress listed
Modi’s five MCC violations during the ongoing general campaign. The five
instances related to Modi accusing Congress, the opposition bloc, and Rahul
Gandhi of being against Hindu culture, and of appealing to voters to vote
against the Congress as it is a party of sinners who oppose a particular
religion.
In its complaint, the
CPI on Tuesday called Modi’s statements “inflammatory and illegal” It said they
promoted ill-feeling among communities” by referring to Muslims as “ghupetiye
(infiltrators)” and “jinke jyada bachhe hain”.The CPI (ML) in its complaint on
Sunday said that Modi “has engaged in blatant lies, crudity and communal
dog-whistling against the Muslim community”.
The ECI notices
underlined star campaigners were expected to contribute to a higher quality of
discourse by providing an all-India perspective, which sometimes gets distorted
in the heat of the contests at the local level. “Thus, the expectation from
Star Campaigners is to provide corrective action or a sort of healing touch,
when [the] intensity of local campaign disrupts or inadvertently crosses over
such boundaries.”
The ECI said that
political parties will have to take primary and increasing responsibility for
the conduct of their candidates in general and star campaigners in particular.
It added national parties were expected to be the standard bearers in political
and campaign discourse. “...as such [they] should also set high standards of
compliance of the model code of conduct. ...the individual star campaigner
would continue to remain responsible for speeches made.”
6) Lok Sabha
elections 2024 phase 2 voting on April 26: Full list of 89 constituencies going
to polls
Lok Sabha elections 2024
Phase 2 voting: As many as 89 Lok Sabha constituencies spread across 13 states
and UTs will vote in the Phase 2 of the general elections on April 26Lok Sabha
elections 2024 are underway and on April 26, as many as 89 constituencies
spread across 13 states and Union Territories (UTs) will vote in the Phase 2 of
the general elections. The voting in Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha elections across
89 seats will begin at 7 am and continue until 5 pm. A total of 109 seats had
participated in the Phase 1 of the polling, which was scheduled on April 19.
The top contenders in
the Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha elections include the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
and the Congress. A number of regional parties, too, have fielded their
candidates across the 89 constituencies.LIST CONSTITUENCIES GOING TO POLLING IN
PHASE 2
Assam:
Karimganj, Silchar, Mangaldoi, Nawgong, Kaliabor
Bihar:
Kishanganj, Katihar, Purnia, Bhagalpur
Chhattisgarh: Rajnandgaon, Mahasamund, Kanker
Jammu and Kashmir: Jammu
Karnataka: Udupi Chikamagalur, Hassan, Dakshina Kannada, Chitradurga, Tumkur, Mandya,
Mysore, Chamarajanagar, Bangalore Rural, Bangalore North, Bangalore Central,
Bangalore South, Chikballapur, Kolar
Kerala:
Kasaragod, Kannur, Vatakara, Wayanad, Kozhikode, Malappuram, Ponnani, Palakkad,
Alathur, Thrissur, Chalakudy, Ernakulam, Idukki, Kottayam, Alappuzha,
Mavelikkara, Pathanamthitta, Kollam, Attingal, Thiruvananthapuram
Manipur: Outer Manipur
Madhya Pradesh: Tikamgarh, Damoh, Khajuraho, Satna, Rewa, Hoshangabad,
Betul
Maharashtra: Buldhana, Akola, Amravati, Wardha, Yavatmal Washim, Hingoli, Nanded,
Parbhani
Rajasthan: Tonk-Sawai Madhopur, Ajmer, Pali, Jodhpur, Barmer, Jalore, Udaipur,
Banswara, Chittorgarh, Rajsamand, Bhilwara, Kota, Jhalawar-Baran
Tripura: Tripura East
Uttar Pradesh: Amroha, Meerut, Baghpat, Ghaziabad, Gautam Buddha Nagar,
Bulandshahr, Aligarh, Mathura
West Bengal: Darjeeling, Raiganj, Balurghat
KEY CANDIDATES who are
contesting in the Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha elections 2024 include Bhupesh
Baghel from Rajnandgaon, DK Suresh from Bangalore Rural, Shobha Karandlaje from
Bangalore North, Tejasvi Surya from Bangalore South, HD Kumaraswamy from
Mandya, Rahul Gandhi from Wayanad, Anil Antony from Pathanamthitta, Shashi
Tharoor and Rajeev Chandrasekhar from Thiruvananthapuram.Gajendra Singh
Shekhawat from Jodhpur, Vaibhav Gehlot from Jalore, Hema Malini from Mathura,
Arun Govil from Meerut are among the candidates contesting the Phase 2 of the
Lok Sabha elections 2024.
7) Lok Sabha
Elections 2024: BJP's K Sudhakar booked for bribery after EC seizes ₹4.8 crore
cash in Karnataka
Lok Sabha elections
2024: Bharatiya Janata party's candidate from Chikkaballapura has been booked
in an alleged bribery case after Election Commission's flying squad seized ₹4.8
crore cash The Election Commission seized ₹4.8 crore worth of cash in
Chikkaballapura Constituency a day before the second phase voting of Lok Sabha
elections 2024. An FIR has been registered against K Sudhakar, the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) candidate from from the constituency.
“The FST of
Chikkaballapura seized cash worth 4.8 Crores. An FIR also has been lodged by
the SST team of Chikkaballapura Constituency against K Sudhakar, BJP Candidate
on 25.04.2024 at Madanayakanahally Police Station," read a social media
post by Chief Electoral Officer, Karnataka on Friday, April 26.
8) SC rejects pleas
seeking 100% cross-verification of EVM votes with VVPAT slips | Highlights from
April 26
The Court has also declined
a plea to bring back paper ballots for the voting process. The Supreme Court on
April 26 rejected a batch of petitions seeking 100% cross-verification of vote
count in electronic voting machines (EVMs) with Voter Verifiable Paper Audit
Trail (VVPAT) paper slips. It has also declined a plea to bring back paper
ballots for the voting process.
The main opinion of
Justice Sanjiv Khanna was concurred with by Justice Dipankar Datta in a
separate opinion. The pronouncement of the verdict coincides with the second
phase of polling for the General Elections to the Lok Sabha. However, the Bench
has issued a series of directions to strengthen the existing system. It has
ordered sealing of the Symbol Loading Units (SLUs) after the symbol loading
process on or after May 1, 2024. The sealed SLUs will be kept in the strong
room along with the EVMs for 45 days after polling.
A recommendation to
include an electronic machine for counting paper slips and bar codes along with
symbols for political parties has also been made. However, it rejected pleas
advanced by the petitioners to give voters access to VVPAT paper slips to put
physically into the ballot boxes. Notably, candidates can get 5% of the EVMs —
ballot units, control units and VVPATs — of any given constituency verified by
the engineers of the manufacturers following a written request to this effect.
The request should be made within seven days of the declaration of the election
results.
During the proceedings,
the petitioners, including the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR),
pointed out that both EVMS and VVPATs have a “programmable chip” and that the
Election Commission of India (ECI) has previously denied sharing their “source
code” on the ground that they constitute the intellectual property of the manufacturers.
The VVPAT machine is
attached to the ballot unit of the EVM and prints out a slip of paper with the
voter’s choice once the vote is cast. The slip is visible for seven seconds for
the voter to verify if their vote was cast correctly before it falls into a
compartment kept underneath. Polling officials use these slips to verify votes
cast. However, not all votes are verified – the VVPAT slips are used to verify
votes cast only in five randomly selected polling booths per constituency.
Defending the existing
system, the ECI said that it matched EVM votes with more than 4 crore VVPAT
slips and asserted that no discrepancies have been recorded till now. It
further assured that it is impossible to manipulate EVMs.It also submitted that
counting 100% VVPAT slips would pose a “great difficulty” as it would take an
hour to count the slips from one VVPAT alone. The Court was also apprised that
the EVM manufacturers did not know which button would be allocated to which
candidate, or the constituency to which the machine would be sent.
9) Lok Sabha Election 2024 Phase 2 Voting Highlights: 70.21 pc voting in Kerala; Wayanad records 72.70 pc turnout
The Prime Minister especially urged young voters and women voters to turnount in great numbers citing ‘high voter turnout strengthens democracy’Congress leaders, including Malikarjun Kharge and Priyanka Gandhi also issued voting appeals while saying that this election was to 'save the constitution'.The voting began at 7 am and will continue until 5 pm. Till 5 pm, Tripura continued to lead the voter turnout (77.53%) charts, while Uttar Pradesh has registered the lowest turnout with 52.74 per cent, according to the data released by the Election Commission of India on Friday.
The states of Manipur (76.06 per cent), and West Bengal (71.84 per cent), Chhattisgarh (72.13 per cent) and Assam (70.66 per cent) have also registered healthy turnouts till 5 pm.
As many as 15.88 crore voters are eligible to vote in this phase. The voters include 8.08 crore men, 7.8 crore women and 5,929 third-gender electors. The voters also include 3.28 crore young voters in the age group 20-29 years. This includes 34.8 lakh first-time voters registered to cast their votes in this phase.
As many as 109 seats had gone to polling in the Phase 1 on April 19. The first phase recorded a voter turnout of around 62 per cent. The counting of votes for all seven phases of Lok Sabha Elections will be held on June 4.The seats going to polls on April 26 include all 20 Lok Sabha constituencies in Kerala, 14 in Karnataka, 13 in Rajasthan, eight each in Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra, seven in Madhya Pradesh, five each in Assam and Bihar, three each in West Bengal and Chhattisgarh and one each in Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur and Tripura.
Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi and Shashi Tharoor, the BJP's youth icon Tejasvi Surya, Union minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar, actor-turned-politicians Hema Malini and Arun Govil, and the speaker in the outgoing Lok Sabha, Om Birla are among 1,210 candidates in the fray in Phase 2 of the Lok Sabha elections.
Over 16 lakh polling officials have been deployed across 1.67 lakh polling stations in this phase. Webcasting will be done in more than 50 per cent of the polling stations along with the deployment of micro-observers in all polling stations.
Overall, voting for 543 Lok Sabha seats will be held in seven phases. The last phase will be held on June 1. The BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), which is seeking a record third term under PM Narendra Modi, has set a target of winning 400 seats this election. The ruling alliance is challenged by the opposition parties led by the Congress under the banner of the INDIA bloc.The counting of votes for all seven phases of Lok Sabha Elections will take place on June 4.
Lok Sabha Election 2024 Phase 2 Live: Total voter turnout over 63%; highest in Manipur at 77.32%
Voting for the second of seven-phase 2024 India elections began at 7 am on Friday, in 88 constituencies across 12 states and a Union territory (Jammu and Kashmir). Some high-profile names in the fray in this phase include the Congress party’s Rahul Gandhi and Shashi Tharoor, who are looking to retain Kerala’s Wayanad and Thiruvananthapuram, respectively; all 20 seats in the southern state are voting today.
From the BJP, Hema Malini will hope for a hattrick from Uttar Pradesh’s Mathura. Overall, as many as 1202 candidates are in the fray from these 88 constituencies, with 158.8 million (15.88 crore) people, including 32.8 million (3.28 crore) young voters and 3.4 million (34 lakh) first-timers, eligible to vote.
The 12 states and the Union Territory where polling is taking place in this leg are: Kerala (20/20), Karnataka (14/28), Rajasthan (13/25), Uttar Pradesh (8/80), Maharashtra (8/48), Madhya Pradesh (6/29), Assam (5/14), Bihar (5/40), Chhattisgarh (3/11), West Bengal (3/42), Manipur (1/2), Tripura (1/2), and Jammu (1/5).
In the first leg, voting for which was conducted last Friday, 102 constituencies across 21 states and Union Territories went to polls.
Phase 1: April 19
Phase 2: April 26
Phase 3: May 7
Phase 4: May 13
Phase 5: May 20
Phase 6: May 25
Phase 7: June 1
Counting (for all 543 seats): June 4
According to the EC data, the highest voting percentage was recorded in Tripura, which registered 78.53% polling, while the lowest turnout was in Uttar Pradesh at 53.80%. The turnout in ethnic violence-hit Manipur was 77.18%.
Three Bengal seats record 72% turnout in peaceful polling
With the second phase of polling, the fate of 47 candidates have been sealed. Among the candidates in the fray are State BJP president Sukanta Majumdar and State Minister Biplab Mitra
1) How ‘ambitious’
Gukesh won Candidates 2024 and got closer to conquering the world
If the men’s Candidates
winner beats Ding this year, he will become India’s second world chess
champion.For more than a decade, Viswanathan Anand remained the world chess
champion. In the space of 12 years, Anand won five times and became one of the
greatest players to have played the game. Strangely, only a handful of Indians
watched Anand in action as he went about collecting world titles in three
different formats. Even shooter Abhinav Bindra and cueist Pankaj Advani scaled
great heights in their illustrious careers in the absence of live images of
their conquests in India.
For more than a decade,
Viswanathan Anand remained the world chess champion. In the space of 12 years,
Anand won five times and became one of the greatest players to have played the
game. Strangely, only a handful of Indians watched Anand in action as he went
about collecting world titles in three different formats. Even shooter Abhinav
Bindra and cueist Pankaj Advani scaled great heights in their illustrious
careers in the absence of live images of their conquests in India.
As a welcome move, in
recent years, more and more live broadcasts of sporting disciplines have become
available, and chess is one of the biggest gainers. In fact, the COVID-19
pandemic proved a boon for chess since it caught the attention of those
confined indoors with access to the internet. As a result, young Indians like
R. Praggnanandhaa, D. Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi, and Nihal Sarin, among a few
others, benefitted immensely. The live images, coupled with their consistent
performances, have helped grow the chess community. From the 2022 Chess
Olympiad to the 2023 World Cup to the FIDE Candidates 2024, some stupendous
Indian performances were hailed.
Till the other day, the
biggest gainer was World Cup runner-up Praggnanandhaa. Today, notwithstanding
the ongoing IPL, Gukesh’s sensational triumph in the Candidates tournament
becomes the talking point. Many stayed awake all night to keep track of the
final round once it became known that Gukesh had the best chance to win, ahead
of three of the top-four players in the world. India woke up to the news of
Gukesh, 17, becoming the youngest to win the Candidates and earn the right to
challenge the reigning world champion Ding Liren in the world title clash
scheduled to begin in late November this year.
2) Gukesh wins
Candidates 2024: Social media reacts as Viswanathan Anand, Kramnik, Humpy and
others congratulate Indian youngster on title win
The media’s urge to
immediately reach out to the champion was understandable. Unlike the days when
Anand was in his prime, news and visuals travel almost in real-time. No wonder,
players like Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa, and a few others are lucky to reap the
benefits of this ever-improving technology. Gukesh, younger than Praggnanandhaa
by a year, has been in the news since he broke his Chennai mate’s record of
being the youngest Indian Grandmaster. Given his exploits in cash-rich online
chess in the past few years and his triumphs over World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen on
a few occasions, Praggnanandhaa has become the face of the new generation of
Indian chess champions. For those following the rise of these two youngsters,
it is quite evident that Gukesh steadily rose in the classical time format of
the game while Praggnanandhaa was busy sharpening his skills in the shorter
duration formats suited for online chess. Gukesh’s rise began in March 2022,
days after Praggnanandhaa hit the headlines for stunning Carlsen in online
chess. Gukesh came in second to Erigaisi in the National Championship in
Kanpur. This was the first time Gukesh played after the pandemic and showed a
glimpse of the hard work he had done during the long period of lockdown.
Interestingly, around 25 months after taking the top two spots in the country’s
flagship event, Gukesh and Arjun found themselves among the top 10 players in
the world. When the new FIDE rankings are released on May 1, 2024, Gukesh will
be ranked sixth, two ahead of Arjun. Going back to the days when Gukesh began
his ascent, he had to contend with coming second to Arjun in the 2022
International Open.
Gukesh produced a series
of title-winning performances in Spain, where he won a hat-trick of titles by
beating the field in the La Roda tournament, the Menorca Open, and the Sunway
Formentera International tournament. This boosted Gukesh’s ratings and
confidence, and soon he reached the brink of the top 50. More than the rise in
rating, what helped Gukesh catch the attention of the chess world was his
stupendous showing in the Chess Olympiad in Mamallapuram. Playing on the top
board, he won the first eight rounds, with World No. 2 Fabiano Caruana being
his most illustrious victim. He went on to win the gold medal and collect the
team bronze. Last year, Gukesh became the youngest to reach 2750 in ratings and
soon overtook Anand in the world rankings.
It was the first time in
37 years that Anand was second to an Indian in the rankings. The year also saw
Gukesh’s long-time coach, Vishnu Prasanna, assume the role of mentor and pave
the way for the youngster to take the services of Polish Grandmaster Grzegorz
Gajewski, as suggested by Anand. In the World Cup, Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa,
Vidit Gujrathi, and Erigaisi produced what was the biggest advertisement for
Indian chess by reaching the quarterfinals. Eventually, Praggnanandhaa reached
the final and qualified for the Candidates.
What followed was a tough
phase for Gukesh. His form deserted him. The youngster was desperate to meet
the rising expectations of qualifying for the Candidates, but the pressure took
its toll. Keen to take one of the qualifying spots for Candidates from the
Grand Swiss, Gukesh tried too hard, but the event proved a disaster. Starting
as the fifth seed, armed with a rating of 2758 in a very strong field, Gukesh
finished 81st. His performance rating was 2578, and he lost 26 rating points.
This was also the event where Vidit performed exceptionally well to win and
qualify for the Candidates. In the London Chess Classic, Gukesh started as the
top seed in the 10-player field and eventually finished third. By this time,
his live rating had plummeted to 2715. Finally, all the hard work with Gajewski
started bearing fruit with the hurriedly organised Chennai Grand Masters in
December.
In this eight-player
invitational event, organised to help Gukesh boost his ratings and qualify for
the Candidates based on being the highest-rated on the FIDE Circuit, he went on
to win the tournament and moved to second on the Circuit. Since topper Caruana
had already qualified by coming third in the World Cup, Gukesh got the lone
qualifying spot from the FIDE Circuit for the Candidates. What makes Gukesh such
a formidable force in world chess is his amazing ability to find the best
moves, calculate accurately in quick time, and stay ambitious in search of
victory. Unlike his peers, Gukesh did not use computer-aid or engine analysis
to find the best continuation. This helped his natural abilities to sense
danger and prepare accordingly. Armed with a ticket to the Candidates, Gukesh
produced another stellar performance in the Tata Steel Masters in Wijk aan Zee.
He punched above his weight to tie for the title and eventually finished second
to Chinese Wei Yi following tie-break games.
For more than a decade,
Viswanathan Anand remained the world chess champion. In the space of 12 years,
Anand won five times and became one of the greatest players to have played the
game. Strangely, only a handful of Indians watched Anand in action as he went
about collecting world titles in three different formats. Even shooter Abhinav
Bindra and cueist Pankaj Advani scaled great heights in their illustrious
careers in the absence of live images of their conquests in India.
As a welcome move, in
recent years, more and more live broadcasts of sporting disciplines have become
available, and chess is one of the biggest gainers. In fact, the COVID-19
pandemic proved a boon for chess since it caught the attention of those
confined indoors with access to the internet. As a result, young Indians like
R. Praggnanandhaa, D. Gukesh, Arjun Erigaisi, and Nihal Sarin, among a few
others, benefitted immensely. The live images, coupled with their consistent
performances, have helped grow the chess community. From the 2022 Chess
Olympiad to the 2023 World Cup to the FIDE Candidates 2024, some stupendous
Indian performances were hailed.
Till the other day, the
biggest gainer was World Cup runner-up Praggnanandhaa. Today, notwithstanding
the ongoing IPL, Gukesh’s sensational triumph in the Candidates tournament
becomes the talking point. Many stayed awake all night to keep track of the
final round once it became known that Gukesh had the best chance to win, ahead
of three of the top-four players in the world. India woke up to the news of
Gukesh, 17, becoming the youngest to win the Candidates and earn the right to
challenge the reigning world champion Ding Liren in the world title clash
scheduled to begin in late November this year.
The media’s urge to
immediately reach out to the champion was understandable. Unlike the days when
Anand was in his prime, news and visuals travel almost in real-time. No wonder,
players like Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa, and a few others are lucky to reap the
benefits of this ever-improving technology. Gukesh, younger than Praggnanandhaa
by a year, has been in the news since he broke his Chennai mate’s record of
being the youngest Indian Grandmaster. Given his exploits in cash-rich online
chess in the past few years and his triumphs over World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen on
a few occasions, Praggnanandhaa has become the face of the new generation of
Indian chess champions. For those following the rise of these two youngsters,
it is quite evident that Gukesh steadily rose in the classical time format of
the game while Praggnanandhaa was busy sharpening his skills in the shorter
duration formats suited for online chess.
Gukesh’s rise began in
March 2022, days after Praggnanandhaa hit the headlines for stunning Carlsen in
online chess. Gukesh came in second to Erigaisi in the National Championship in
Kanpur. This was the first time Gukesh played after the pandemic and showed a
glimpse of the hard work he had done during the long period of lockdown.
Interestingly, around 25 months after taking the top two spots in the country’s
flagship event, Gukesh and Arjun found themselves among the top 10 players in
the world. When the new FIDE rankings are released on May 1, 2024, Gukesh will
be ranked sixth, two ahead of Arjun. Going back to the days when Gukesh began
his ascent, he had to contend with coming second to Arjun in the 2022
International Open.
Gukesh produced a series
of title-winning performances in Spain, where he won a hat-trick of titles by beating
the field in the La Roda tournament, the Menorca Open, and the Sunway
Formentera International tournament. This boosted Gukesh’s ratings and
confidence, and soon he reached the brink of the top 50. More than the rise in
rating, what helped Gukesh catch the attention of the chess world was his
stupendous showing in the Chess Olympiad in Mamallapuram. Playing on the top
board, he won the first eight rounds, with World No. 2 Fabiano Caruana being
his most illustrious victim. He went on to win the gold medal and collect the
team bronze. Last year, Gukesh became the youngest to reach 2750 in ratings and
soon overtook Anand in the world rankings.
It was the first time in
37 years that Anand was second to an Indian in the rankings. The year also saw
Gukesh’s long-time coach, Vishnu Prasanna, assume the role of mentor and pave
the way for the youngster to take the services of Polish Grandmaster Grzegorz
Gajewski, as suggested by Anand. In the World Cup, Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa,
Vidit Gujrathi, and Erigaisi produced what was the biggest advertisement for
Indian chess by reaching the quarterfinals. Eventually, Praggnanandhaa reached
the final and qualified for the Candidates.
What followed was a
tough phase for Gukesh. His form deserted him. The youngster was desperate to
meet the rising expectations of qualifying for the Candidates, but the pressure
took its toll. Keen to take one of the qualifying spots for Candidates from the
Grand Swiss, Gukesh tried too hard, but the event proved a disaster. Starting
as the fifth seed, armed with a rating of 2758 in a very strong field, Gukesh
finished 81st. His performance rating was 2578, and he lost 26 rating points.
This was also the event where Vidit performed exceptionally well to win and
qualify for the Candidates. In the London Chess Classic, Gukesh started as the
top seed in the 10-player field and eventually finished third. By this time,
his live rating had plummeted to 2715. Finally, all the hard work with Gajewski
started bearing fruit with the hurriedly organised Chennai Grand Masters in
December.
In this eight-player
invitational event, organised to help Gukesh boost his ratings and qualify for
the Candidates based on being the highest-rated on the FIDE Circuit, he went on
to win the tournament and moved to second on the Circuit. Since topper Caruana
had already qualified by coming third in the World Cup, Gukesh got the lone
qualifying spot from the FIDE Circuit for the Candidates. What makes Gukesh
such a formidable force in world chess is his amazing ability to find the best
moves, calculate accurately in quick time, and stay ambitious in search of
victory. Unlike his peers, Gukesh did not use computer-aid or engine analysis
to find the best continuation. This helped his natural abilities to sense
danger and prepare accordingly. Armed with a ticket to the Candidates, Gukesh
produced another stellar performance in the Tata Steel Masters in Wijk aan Zee.
He punched above his weight to tie for the title and eventually finished second
to Chinese Wei Yi following tie-break games.
Significantly, Gukesh
bounced back from losing to world champions Liren and Anish Giri in the third
and fourth rounds to post a hat-trick of wins, beginning with the conquest of
Ian Nepomniachtchi and two Dutchmen, Jorden van Foreest and Max Warmerdam. He
continued his campaign without losing any more games. He beat German Alexander
Donchenko and Iranian Parham Maghsoodloo. The gain of 18 rating points from
this event played its part in Gukesh returning to his best. Gukesh entered the
Candidates very well prepared, but without carrying any burden of expectations.
Seeded sixth among eight players, Gukesh, at 17, was only the second youngest
to play in the Candidates. The record for the youngest player in the Candidates
Tournament stands in the name of the legendary Bobby Fischer, who played as a
16-year-old in 1959. What unfolded at Toronto’s The Grand Hall was a story for
the ages. Showing great maturity, Gukesh started slowly, was a touch lucky to
beat Praggnanandhaa in the second round, and suffered a heartbreak in the
seventh round, where he lost to Alireza Firouzja after holding a very promising
position.
“I was really
disappointed with the way I lost in time pressure. All along, I thought I was
winning after a point. After I reached my room and analysed the position, I
discovered that, though I felt I was in a winning position, with correct play,
Firouzja could still draw. I made some of the best logical moves, but as
computer analysis later suggested, it was not enough for me to win. Then I felt
a little better,” Gukesh said.
3) DC vs GT, IPL
2024: Delhi Capitals beats Gujarat Titans in high-scoring thriller to maintain
playoff chances
After the heroics of
Rishabh Pant and Axar Patel helped the host put up 224, B. Sai Sudharsan and
David Miller kept DC on its toes but the visitor fell four runs short of
scaling the total. It was a day to rejoice for the left-hand batters at the
Arun Jaitley Stadium on Wednesday where the Delhi Capitals beat the Gujarat
Titans by four runs in a nail-biting finish to maintain its playoff
qualification hopes.
It was a day to rejoice
for the left-hand batters at the Arun Jaitley Stadium on Wednesday where the
Delhi Capitals beat the Gujarat Titans by four runs in a nail-biting finish to
maintain its playoff qualification hopes.
After the heroics of
Rishabh Pant (88, 43b, 5x4, 8x6) and Axar Patel (66,43b, 5x4, 4x6) helped the
host put up 224, B. Sai Sudharsan (65, 39b, 7x4, 2x6) and David Miller (55,
23b, 6x4, 3x6) kept DC on its toes but the visitor fell agonisingly short of
scaling the total.
The Titans’ chase faced
an early setback when captain Shubman Gill lofted one to Axar at mid-on, but
Wriddhiman Saha and Sai Sudharsan kept the pressure on, scoring at a fair clip
in the PowerPlay.
Sai Sudharsan used the
favourable match-up against Axar to keep the runs flowing after the
introduction of spin. Saha perished for a 25-ball 39, trying to hit Kuldeep
Yadav over cover and Azmatullah Omarzai departed soon after, falling to Axar.
Pacer Rasikh Salam then
dented GT’s hopes further by removing Sudharsan and the dangerous Shahrukh Khan
– the latter falling to a brilliant catch by Pant. However, Miller’s blitzkrieg
and cameos from Rashid Khan and R. Sai Kishore ensured the butterflies in the
crowd’s gut remained till the last ball.Earlier in the day, DC opener Jake
Fraser-McGurk continued his modus operandi of blistering starts, taking the
attack to Sandeep Warrier.
The Tamil Nadu bowler
stuck to his plans – the astute positioning of the square leg fielder bringing
out the Australian’s downfall. Warrier ensured GT would finish the PowerPlay on
top, removing Prithvi Shaw and Shai Hope.
With the Afghan spin
twins coming into play, Pant and Axar ensured they weren’t pinned down,
counter-attacking the duo en route to the 113-run stand. Axar eventually fell
to Noor Ahmad, handing a simple catch to Sai Kishore while trying to loft one
over long-on.
4) AFC U23 Asian
Cup: Indonesia, Japan advance; South Korea out of contention for Paris Olympics
The top three teams will
qualify for the Paris Games, and Indonesia reached the last four by winning the
shootout 11-10 after the score remained tied 2-2 through extra time
South Korea will miss
the men’s football tournament at the Olympics for the first time since 1984
after losing a penalty shootout to Indonesia at the Under-23 Asian Cup
quarterfinals on Thursday.The top three teams will qualify for the Paris Games,
and Indonesia reached the last four by winning the shootout 11-10 after the
score remained tied 2-2 through extra time.
Rafael Struick put
Indonesia ahead after 15 minutes only for Komang Teguh’s own goal to level the
scoreline after 45 minutes. There was still time before the break, however, for
Struick to score again.
Jeong Sang-bin equalized
with 14 minutes remaining despite Korea being reduced to 10 men minutes earlier
when Lee Young-jun was shown a red card.Lee Kang-hee missed in the shootout,
leaving Pratama Arhan to score the winner.Earlier, Japan knocked out host Qatar
4-2 after extra time to stay on course for an eighth straight Olympic
appearance.Fuki Yamada scored early for Japan but Ahmed Al-Rawi and Jassem
Gaber netted to put Qatar ahead.
Seiji Kimura made it 2-2
midway through the second half and after the tie went into extra-time, Mao
Hosoya put Japan ahead once more and Kotaro Uchino scored after 113 minutes to
secure the win for Japan.
On Friday, defending
champion Saudi Arabia faces Uzbekistan, while Iraq meets Vietnam.
5) Who can succeed
Sunil Chhetri as India’s striker — a deep dive into what the numbers say
With Sunil Chhetri, the
leading goalscorer for the Indian national football team, now 39 years old, the
country will have to look for his replacement sooner rather than later.
The inability to score
goals has been the Indian football team’s Achilles heel for quite some time
now. The last time Igor Stimac’s men won a game with a goal off a striker from
open play was in June 2023, a 2-0 win against Nepal in the SAFF Championship
The inability to score
goals has been the Indian football team’s Achilles heel for quite some time
now. The last time Igor Stimac’s men won a game with a goal off a striker from
open play was in June 2023, a 2-0 win against Nepal in the SAFF Championship.
And now, having lost
five of its last six games, the morale of the team as well the fans has
deteriorated further after a drop in its FIFA World ranking.
At the AFC Asian Cup
2023 in Qatar, India conceded six goals but failed to score a single one.
Amongst 24 teams, it was second from bottom in the xG (expected goals) table,
just above Kazakhstan.
The most important
reason for this goal drought is the lack of Indians playing as centre-forwards
in the Indian Super League (ISL), the top division of men’s football in the
country.
With Sunil Chhetri —
India’s leading goalscorer and the regular striker for the national team —
having his playing days numbered at 39 years of age, it becomes imperative to
find his replacement sooner rather than later.This is not to say that teams without
strikers have never succeeded before. Pep Guardiola did wonders with Barcelona
and Manchester City in club football, winning league titles with both sides.
But this structure is
hard to replicate in international football, where coaches get their players
for a limited time in the national camp and depend primarily on strikers for
goals.
So has been the case
with India, which has had strikers like Mohammed Rafi, Jeje Lalpekhlua, Robin
Singh and Chhetri over the past decade.Under the previous coach, Stephen
Constantine, the Blue Tigers had taken the long-ball approach, playing with a
typical British formation of 4-4-2.The strategy seemed to have worked well
during Constantine’s second stint (2015-2019), as the team scored 72 goals in
42 matches, winning 23 of them. It also won the 2015 SAFF Championship and the
2018 Intercontinental Cup.
India also performed
relatively better at the Asian Cup during this period compared to the 2023
edition, winning one game (4-1 against Thailand) with a three-goal margin.Under
Stimac though, the team shifted to a more modern approach, adopting a 4-2-3-1
shape for most of its games. The build-up of play in this case started at the
back, with more dependency on crosses and set-pieces to find a breakthrough.
In both cases, however,
the striker’s role as the head of the attack has been paramount. But game-time
for Indian strikers in the top division has been very low as compared to that
of foreign forwards.ISL teams have started Indians as one or both strikers in
about one-fourth of their games this season (62 of 234 – total games are 117
and two teams in each game gives a sample size of 234 considering each team’s
matches individually).
That falls to one-fifth
(46) if Chhetri is taken out of the equation. On the contrary, foreign players
have started as strikers in over half of the matches (172) in the league.
6) Shanghai 2024:
Finals for both Indian compound teams at season opener
The Indian men’s and
women’s compound teams got off to a great start to the Hyundai Archery World
Cup season, both securing gold medal match appearances at the season opener in
Shanghai.
On Saturday morning the
men will face the Netherlands and the women Italy for the top step of the
podium.
“Our coordination was
good today and we read the wind well,” said the experienced Abhishek Verma,
who’s partnered with World Cup first-timer Prathamesh Bhalchandra Fuge and
reigning under-21 world champion Priyansh.
“The semifinals are
always tight matches. We were prepared to shoot well and happy to make it to
gold.”
After seeding fourth,
the squad beat the Philippines and Denmark before displaying ominous form to
upset top qualifiers Korea, 235-233. Tied at even after two ends, the Indians
grabbed a point after the third and finished with a 59 to secure the final.
“We played alongside
players that we used to watch on YouTube,” said Priyansh, who trains with Verma
in New Delhi. “We could have shot even better.”
The Indian women are the
reigning world champions – and seeded first in Shanghai.
Through two matches and
48 arrows they dropped just 10 points, defeating first Türkiye and then Estonia
to confirm their status as the leading team in the division.“We maintained our
shooting process and it worked well,” said an elated Aditi Swami, the reigning
under-18 and senior World Archery Champion. “I hope we can repeat the success
of the World Cup in Paris last year where both the Indian men and women won the
team gold medals.”But the squad is without the coach that architected so many
of their successes last season, Italian import Sergio Pagni. He is currently at
a camp in India.
In the final, the Indian
women will face Italy, who overcame Kazakhstan in a semifinal shoot-off after
the scores were tied at 227 points in regulation.“We made some errors but it
was a good match,” said Marcella Tonioli.The 10th seeded Dutch men also won a
tiebreak – against France – to book their ticket to the final. Mike Schloesser,
Sil Pater and Stef Willems shot three perfect X-ring 10s, compared to their
opponents’ standard 10s, to survive the match.“We have stepped up our game
compared to yesterday and we’re super happy,“ said world number one Schloesser,
calling the result a surprise after entering the bracket as
underdogs.Kazakhstan’s women and the Korean men’s team secured bronze medals at
the end of the session.Competition continues this afternoon in Shanghai with
recurve qualifying.
Finals: Shanghai
2024
Compound men team: India
versus Netherlands
Compound women team:
India versus Italy
TILLU SQUARE –
NETFLIX
Watch Siddhu
Jonnalagadda reprise his role of Bala Gangadhar Tilak aka Tillu in the sequel
of DJ Tillu (2022). Titled Tillu Square, the Telugu film delves into the life
of the main protagonist (Tillu) whose life takes an unexpected turn when he
becomes a part of a murder investigation. As the story progresses, he develops
feelings for a young woman (essayed by Anupama Parameswaran), a secret Special
Forces Agent, who is adamant about solving her mission. The events that unfold next
will keep you on the edge of your seat.
RUSLAAN – THEATRES
Aayush Sharma has teamed
up with Sushrii Mishraa, Jagapathi Babu and Vidya Malvade for filmmaker Karan L
Butani’s action-packed film titled Ruslaan. It will lock horns with Challengers
and
ADV. ACHINTA AICH –
HOICHOI
Adv. Achinta Aich is a
courtroom drama that follows a lawyer who defends the prime suspect of a high
society murder case that involves many renowned personalities. The Bengali
drama stars Ritwick Chakraborty, Saswata Chatterjee, and Surangana Bandopadhyay
in prominent roles. Another exciting drama on the list of new OTT releases
releasing this Friday that deserves to be on your watchlist.
CRAKK – DISNEY+
HOTSTAR
High on action, this
film centres around a stuntman who journeys from the slums of Mumbai to the
world of underground extreme sports to unravel the mystery of his brother’s
disappearance. The ensemble cast of the film includes Arjun Rampal, Vidyut
Jammwal, Nora Fatehi, and Amy Jackson.
GHOSTBUSTERS:
FROZEN EMPIRE – THEATRES
Watch the new
Ghostbusters join forces with the OG Ghostbusters to protect New York City from
an ancient evil force in the fifth film of the popular supernatural comedy
franchise. Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire serves as a sequel to Ghostbusters:
Afterlife (2021), and features Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Bill Murray, and Finn
Wolfhard, among others.
KUNG FU PANDA 4 –
BOOKMYSHOW STREAM
Apart from Tillu Square,
The Beekeeper, Crakk, and other titles, the list of new OTT releases arriving
later this week includes Kung Fu Panda 4. The film continues to focus on Po,
who embarks on a journey to search for his successor when he is chosen to
become the spiritual leader of the Valley of Peace. With an evil sorceress
willing to go to any extent to steal Po’s staff of wisdom, will Po be able to
complete his mission?
BOOK OF THIS WEEK:
Dragonfruit BY Makiia Lucier:
Hanalei of Tamarind is
the cherished daughter of an old island family. But when her father steals a
seadragon egg meant for an ailing princess, she is forced into a life of exile.
In the years that follow, Hanalei finds solace in studying the majestic
seadragons that roam the Nominomi Sea. Until, one day, an encounter with a
female dragon offers her what she desires most. A chance to return home, and to
right a terrible wrong.
Samahtitamahenele, Sam,
is the last remaining prince of Tamarind. But he can never inherit the throne,
for Tamarind is a matriarchal society. With his mother ill and his grandmother
nearing the end of her reign. Sam is left with two to marry, or to find a cure
for the sickness that has plagued his mother for ten long years. When a
childhood companion returns from exile, she brings with her something he has
not felt in a very long time - hope.
But Hanalei and Sam are
not the only ones searching for the dragonfruit. And as they battle enemies
both near and far, there is another danger they cannot escape…that of the
dragonfruit itself.
Makiia Lucier:
Makiia Lucier is the
author of Year of the Reaper, the Isle of Blood and Stone duology, and A Death-Struck
Year. Her stories are inspired by history and mythology and have been called
“brilliant” (Booklist), “moving,” (New York Times), “masterful” (Horn Book),
and “breathtaking” (School Library Journal). They can be found on many notable
lists, including the Kids’ Indie Next and the American Library Association’s
‘Best Fiction for Young Adults.’
Makiia grew up on the
Pacific island of Guam, not too far from the equator, and holds degrees in
journalism and library science.
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