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Delhi HC agrees to hear plea seeking to trace ‘missing’ #BSFJawan

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Delhi High Court has agreed to hear plea seeking to trace ‘missing’ BSF Jawan, who posted video alleging that poor quality food was served to them.

The wife of a BSF jawan, who went public through the social media alleging poor quality food being served to soldiers, on Thursday filed a habeas corpus plea in the Delhi High Court claiming that her husband is untraceable and the family has been unable to contact him for last three days.

MISSING BSF JAWAN

 

BSF jawan Tej Bahadur Yadav had on January 9 posted a video on Facebook which showed a meal box comprising a watery soup-like dal, which he said had only turmeric and salt and a burnt chapatti.

He had said this is what jawans were served at mealtime on duty at places including the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan and that jawans often went to bed on empty stomach.

Pursuant to the video going viral on the social media, the Prime Minister’s Office had sought a detailed factual report on it from the Union Home Ministry and BSF.

A PIL was also filed in the Delhi High Court seeking a direction to the government to depute higher officers to supervise cooking of proper healthy food and its distribution.

Courtesy: Janta Ka Reporter
 

Mid-day meal in Telangana lands 26 school children in hospital with suspected food poisoning

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They were rushed to the hospital after complaining of stomach ache and vomiting.

School Childrens
Representation Image
 

At least 26 students were hospitalised, after eating a mid-day meal at a school in Nagula Malyala village in Telangana's Karimnagar district on Thursday.

They were rushed to the hospital after complaining of stomach ache and vomiting.

Around 67 students were reported to have been served the meal at the Government Primary School. A few hours later, around 26 students started vomiting, and showing symptoms of food poisoning.
Mandal educational officer Chukka Reddy told The Hindu that the students had been taken to Government Headquarters Hospital in Karimnagar town, out of which three students continued to complain of vomiting.

However, the condition of the other students, is said to be stable.

Reddy also told The Hindu that the cause of the food poisoning could be the tomato curry which was allegedly made with some rotten tomatoes.

Meanwhile, a food inspector who visited the school, has collected samples of the food for testing.

Last year in December, around 19 students of the National Institute of Technology in Warangal were hospitalised after suspected food poisoning, when they ate food at a restaurant near their campus.

Another incident took place in Warangal last year, when 30 nursing students of MGM School of Nursing complained about food poisoning after consuming hostel food.

Courtesy: The News Minute

Appeals Court Rules Against Trump, Keeping Ban on Hold For Now

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Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals sides with lower court ruling by saying that re-instituting ban would do more harm than keeping injunction in place

US Muslims Ban
Iranian citizen and U.S green card holder Cyrus Khosravi (L) greets his brother, Hamidreza Khosravi (C), and niece, Dena Khosravi (R), 2, after they were detained for additional screening following their arrival to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to visit Cyrus, during a pause in U.S. President Donald Trump's travel ban in SeaTac, Washington, U.S. February 6, 2017. (Photo: David Ryder)

In the latest legal blow to President Donald Trump's attempt to institute a controversial immigration and travel ban targeting seven predominantly Muslim nations, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday unanimously sided with a lower court which earlier this week imposed an injunction against Trump's executive order.

Reuters reports:
The ruling from the 9th Circuit, which followed a hearing on the case on Tuesday, does not resolve the lawsuit, but relates instead to whether Trump's order should be suspended while litigation proceeds.
Two members of the three-judge panel were appointed by former Democratic Presidents Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama, and one was appointed by former Republican President George W. Bush.
The government could ask the entire 9th Circuit court to review the decision "en banc" or appeal directly to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The three judges said the states had shown that even temporary reinstatement of the ban would cause harm.

Read the full Ninth Circuit decision here (pdf).

Omar Jadwa, director of the Immigrants' Rights Project at the ACLU, which has also challenged the policy, welcomed the decision.

"The appeals court's refusal to reinstate the Muslim ban is correct," Jadwa said in a statement. "We will keep fighting this un-American executive order until it is permanently dismantled."

Meanwhile, Sahil Kapur, national political reporter for Bloomberg, points out some key takeaways from the ruling:


And whereas President Trump himself responded to the ruling by tweeting, "SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!"" — it was ACLU attorneys who said they look forward to the opportunity:

Courtesy: CommonDreams