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Iran arranges charter plane to repatriate crew of warship Iris Lavan docked in Kochi

 A chartered plane arranged by Iran took off from Kochi for Armenia late on Friday carrying most of the crew of the Iranian warship IRIS Lavan that docked at the Kerala port last week, people familiar with the matter said on Friday.. IRIS Lavan docked at Kochi on March 4 and its 183-member crew was accommodated at naval facilities. The special charter flight is also carrying the bodies of Iranian sailors who were killed when another warship, IRIS Dena, was torpedoed and sunk by a US submarine near Sri Lanka on March 4, the people said on condition of anonymity.. Also read: Trump says US struck Iran’s ‘crown jewel’ Kharg Island, warns Tehran against Hormuz blockade. The Lavan’s crew and the bodies of sailors from the Dena will be transported to Iran by road, these people said.. The Iranian side is repatriating the non-essential members of the 183-strong crew of IRIS Lavan, while a limited number of crew members will stay back to maintain the warship, the people said.. The chartered flight, likely from Turkey, travelled to Colombo to pick up the bodies of sailors killed during the sinking of IRIS Dena, the people said.. Also read: Iran allows 2 Indian-flagged LPG carriers to cross Strait of Hormuz. Reports in the Sri Lankan media said 45 bodies of crew members of IRIS Dena were transported from Galle National Hospital to Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport for the airlift.. Sri Lankan authorities recovered the bodies of 84 Iranian sailors after IRIS Dena was sunk. They also rescued 32 crew members who have been kept at a naval facility.. IRIS Dena had participated in an International Fleet Review and a multi-nation exercise hosted by the Indian Navy last month.. On March 1, India granted permission to three Iranian warships that were in regional waters – IRIS Dena, IRIS Lavan and IRIS Booshehr – to dock at the country’s ports in response to a request from Tehran. However, only IRIS Lavan docked at Kochi on March 4 and its 183-member crew was accommodated at naval facilities.. External affairs minister S Jaishankar has said that the Indian government’s decision to allow IRIS Lavan to dock at Kochi was “the right thing to do”, and that the decision was made on humanitarian grounds.. IRIS Booshehr docked in Colombo and its 204-member crew was sent to a Sri Lankan naval facility, while IRIS Dena was sunk by a US submarine in international waters off Sri Lanka’s southern coast.. Sri Lankan authorities and officials of the Iranian embassy in Colombo are engaged in discussions regarding the next steps for the Iranian sailors currently in Sri Lanka’s care. The Sri Lankan government has decided to grant one-month free visas to the Iranian sailors and to provide them necessary facilities on humanitarian grounds. 

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Politics

LPG crisis: Check city-wise cooking gas prices as supply concerns take over India

 The heat of the West Asia conflict is being felt in India as disruption of energy supplies has created panic over cooking gas stocks in the country.. Heavy rush for LPG Gas in Sector 78 in Mohali. (HT) (HT_PRINT). While the government has assured that there is no shortage, people across the countries are panic buying and queuing up outside depots and filling stations to ensure they do not fall short of cooking gas. Track updates on Iran US war. City. Domestic LPG price (14.2kg). Commercial LPG price (19 kg). Delhi ₹913 ₹1,884.50. Mumbai ₹912.50 ₹1,836. Chennai ₹928.50 ₹2,043. Kolkata ₹939 ₹1,988. Gurugram ₹921.50 ₹1,910. Noida ₹910 ₹1,884. Bengaluru ₹915.50 ₹1,958. Hyderabad ₹965 ₹2,105. Patna ₹1,002.50 ₹2,133.50. (Abovementioned data from goodreturns.in). Meanwhile, the ongoing LPG crisis, which has led to the mass closure of restaurants and hotels across Kerala and migrant workers are returning to their native places, as Ramzan approaches and elections are to be held in West Bengal and Assam, PTI reported.. Also read: Menus shrink, queues grow: How LPG shortage worry is taking over Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, other Indian cities. Restaurant and hotel operators are trying to retain their staff from other states, fearing that if migrant workers leave now, they may not return until after the election.. People stand in a queue for LPG cylinders amid reported ongoing LPG supply shortage, in Mumbai on Friday. (ANI). Amid the crisis, authorities across the country have seized hundreds of LPG cylinders from black market sellers. In Mumbai, the Food Distribution Department cracked down on a gang involved in the black marketing of domestic and commercial gas cylinders in the Worli area.. Large stock was seized as the a large stock as officials targeted illegal stockpiling and selling of gas cylinders at inflated prices in the ‘Suraj Vallabhdas Chawl’ area on Ganpatrao Kadam Road at Worli Naka, ANI reported quoting officials.. Also read: Delhi gurdwara body writes to Centre seeking steady LPG supply for langars. During the operation, authorities seized 64 filled 4-kg and 19 filled 12-kg cylinders of Super Gas Company, along with six filled and 58 empty 5-kg cylinders of HP Gas Company. Twenty five empty cylinders of various sizes – 12 kg, 4 kg, and 2 kg – were seized.. In Chhattisgarh, authorities seized 741 LPG cylinders from 102 locations across the state.. With inputs from agencies 

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Surrendered not due to fear of death, but to work for people in legal framework. Maoist Devuji

 Hyderabad, Top CPI commander and key “strategist” of the banned outfit, Thippiri Tirupati, also known as Devuji, has claimed that police arrested him and others before their surrender to the Telangana police on February 24.. Surrendered not due to fear of death, but to work for people in legal framework. Maoist Devuji. He vowed to continue fighting for people’s problems within the legal framework.. Devuji, who led an underground life for over four decades in the armed struggle, also said that he and other members did not surrender to the police due to fear of death, but to work for the public carrying their ideology Marxism, Leninism and Maoism within the legal framework.. He said on Friday that he never feared death, and if that were the case, he would have surrendered like key Maoist leaders Mallojula Venugopal Rao alias Sonu and Ashanna alias Satish before the Maharashtra government in October last year.. Devuji had no plans to leave the Maoist path, police sources earlier said.. “When Operation Kagar was going on in full fledge, under unavoidable situations, we took shelter in different places to strengthen the party. In those circumstances, the Telangana police arrested us. After the arrest, if they wanted, they could have killed us. But what they told us is that the killing was not their policy, and they will show surrender. But I was not ready to surrender,” Deviju told TV channels.. Dismissing the notion that they surrendered before the police, the former Maoist leader said that earlier they used to solve people’s problems being underground, now they will do the same openly, using legal methods.. Deviju said he would not give up the ideology of Marxism, Leninism and Maoism, and it would be the centre of their approach for solving people’s problems in future. “So it is not correct to say that we surrendered or joined the mainstream. We are always in touch with thousands of people,” he said.. Replying to a query, he said he was not the general secretary of the party, just a Central Committee member.. Had there been a Central Committee or politburo, there would have been that agenda ,” he said.. On February 24, Devuji surrendered before the Telangana police, after over four decades of underground life.. Besides Devuji, another central committee member, Malla Raji Reddy, and two other ultras Bade Chokka Rao @ Jagan and Nune Narasimha Reddy @ Ganganna also laid down their arms.. Devuji is a native of Korutla town, Jagtial district in Telangana. His father, Venkata Narsaiah, was a farmer. He joined CPI People’s War in January 1982 and has mostly operated in Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra.. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text. 

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Politics

NCERT controversy exposes gaps in text-book approval process

 The controversy over the now-withdrawn Class 8 social science textbook with a chapter on judicial corruption has highlighted inadequacies of the three-stage process followed by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to approve new books that align with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.. The row suggests gaps in the functioning of the 19-member apex National Syllabus and Teaching-Learning Material Committee (NSTC), which is expected to sign-off on the new books. (Photo for representation) (HT_PRINT). Also read: No entry or exit: Trains skip Pink line station on Delhi’s first ‘ring’ metro. It also suggests gaps in the functioning of the 19-member apex National Syllabus and Teaching-Learning Material Committee (NSTC), which is expected to sign-off on the new books. HT’s reporting shows that the members did not explicitly approve the book, with many ignoring the draft of the text that was sent to them over WhatsApp and e-mail. It also shows that the section on judicial corruption in one of the chapters was explicitly flagged to the committee.. The preparation of the new textbooks in line with the National Curriculum Framework- School Education (NCF-SE) 2023 follows a three-stage process.. Also read: 10 Indians arrested in US for staged armed robberies to claim immigration benefits. The first stage involves the Textbook Development Team or TDT –– a separate one for each subject in each class.. This is made up of experts and forms the core group writing a textbook. In its affidavit to the Supreme Court on Wednesday, NCERT said the chapter on ‘The Role of Judiciary in Our Society’ was drafted by the relevant TDT, comprising professor Michel Danino, Suparna Diwakar, and legal researcher and lawyer Alok Prasanna Kumar.. The second stage has the subject-wise Curricular Area Groups (CAGs). These oversee the TDTs and handle textbooks of several classes. Professor Danino also heads the CAG for various social sciences textbooks.. The third stage has NSTC which identifies experts and contributors for TDT and then gives final academic approval to new books, following which NCERT publishes and distributes the textbook.. According to the book development process, each chapter of a NCERT textbook is written by contributors and is finalised by the CAG of that particular subject. The draft of the chapters in the controversial social sciences textbook was placed before the 35-member CAG of social science in a hybrid meeting in September 2025 for finalisation before it could be presented to NSTC, HT learns.. “This meeting was attended by NCERT director Dinesh Prasad Saklani, along with other NCERT officials including those who happen to be members of the NSTC. Several members of the 13-member National Oversight Committee (NOC) whose job it is to ensure the book sticks to the curriculum framework, also attended the meeting,” a NCERT official said on condition of anonymity. “Saklani and few others raised concerns and obj 

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Politics

India somewhat insulated from energy crisis: Officials

 India remains somewhat insulated from the energy crisis set off by the ongoing war in West Asia largely due to steps the government took over the last decade to diversify the country’s energy imports, officials aware of the matter said on Friday, adding that several other countries have been hit by shortages and rising prices.. The government has taken steps to protect India’s supply chains by safeguarding exports and ensuring uninterrupted imports of essential commodities (Representative photo). “India has worked to change its energy source mix while strongly promoting domestically generated renewable energy. If this crisis had hit India a decade ago, the impact would have been devastating because almost all our oil and gas came from the same volatile region, with no real alternatives in place,” one of the cited officials said on condition of anonymity.. To be sure, the government has taken steps to protect India’s supply chains by safeguarding exports and ensuring uninterrupted imports of essential commodities such as energy, fertilisers and edible oils from all available sources — including Russia — so that domestic consumers do not face shortages.. “Other countries are struggling. Japan, already burdened by record-high public debt, has become one of the most vulnerable economies. The UK has seen immediate price spikes leading to renewed inflation. Egypt and Turkey are facing fresh inflationary pressures. Singapore is dealing with sharp increases in electricity and petrol costs, while South Korea has resorted to imposing a fuel price cap for the first time in nearly three decades to stabilise its economy,” said a second official, who also asked not to be named.. Oil prices have remained volatile, keeping the global energy market on the edge since US forces launched Operation Epic Fury on February 28. At the centre of global concern lies the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most critical chokepoint, through which nearly one-fifth of global crude oil passes. The strait is vital for India’s energy supplies, but the current situation looks manageable, the officials added.. In a statement in the Lok Sabha on Thursday, Union minister for petroleum and natural gas Hardeep Singh Puri said, “It should be noted that India was previously importing approximately 60% of its LPG requirements from Gulf countries such as Qatar, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait and 40% is produced domestically. Procurement has now been actively diversified, with cargoes being secured from the United States, Norway, Canada, Algeria, and Russia, in addition to available Gulf sources.” 

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Politics

Book controversy reveals gaps in NCERT process

 The controversy over the now-withdrawn Class 8 social science textbook with a chapter on judicial corruption has highlighted inadequacies of the three-stage process followed by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) to approve new books that align with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.. Book controversy reveals gaps in NCERT process. It also suggests gaps in the functioning of the 19-member apex National Syllabus and Teaching-Learning Material Committee (NSTC), which is expected to sign-off on the new books. HT’s reporting shows that the members did not explicitly approve the book, with many ignoring the draft of the text that was sent to them over WhatsApp and e-mail. It also shows that the section on judicial corruption in one of the chapters was explicitly flagged to the committee.. The preparation of the new textbooks in line with the National Curriculum Framework- School Education (NCF-SE) 2023 follows a three-stage process.. The first stage involves the Textbook Development Team or TDT –– a separate one for each subject in each class. This is made up of experts and forms the core group writing a textbook. In its affidavit to the Supreme Court on Wednesday, NCERT said the chapter on ‘The Role of Judiciary in Our Society’ was drafted by the relevant TDT, comprising professor Michel Danino, Suparna Diwakar, and legal researcher and lawyer Alok Prasanna Kumar.. The second stage has the subject-wise Curricular Area Groups (CAGs). These oversee the TDTs and handle textbooks of several classes. Professor Danino also heads the CAG for various social sciences textbooks.. The third stage has NSTC which identifies experts and contributors for TDT and then gives final academic approval to new books, following which NCERT publishes and distributes the textbook.. According to the book development process, each chapter of a NCERT textbook is written by contributors and is finalised by the CAG of that particular subject. The draft of the chapters in the controversial social sciences textbook was placed before the 35-member CAG of social science in a hybrid meeting in September 2025 for finalisation before it could be presented to NSTC, HT learns.. “This meeting was attended by NCERT director Dinesh Prasad Saklani, along with other NCERT officials including those who happen to be members of the NSTC. Several members of the 13-member National Oversight Committee (NOC) whose job it is to ensure the book sticks to the curriculum framework, also attended the meeting,” a NCERT official said on condition of anonymity. “Saklani and few others raised concerns and objections to the controversial chapter on judicial corruption in this particular meeting. But, Danino and others did not accept the suggestions and objections citing academic freedom and other justifications.”. HT reached out to Danino who said that as the matter was subjudice, he would only be responding to everything in court.. An official in the Unio 

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