Friday, July 10, 2026
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No Plan To Monetise Gold Held By Temples: Govt

Debunking all rumours and speculations, the government on Tuesday said it is not planning to introduce a monetisation scheme for gold held by temple trusts, or any religious institution across the country.
Such rumours are completely false, misleading and without any basis, the finance ministry said in a clarification.
It also clarified that claims suggesting gold plates on temple towers, doors, or other temple structures will be considered as ‘Strategic Gold Reserves of India’ are false, misleading, and entirely baseless.
The ministry urged citizens not to believe or circulate such rumours.
Spreading unverified information creates unnecessary confusion and may mislead the public, it said.
The government urges all citizens to rely only on official communications issued through authorised channels, it said.
Any information regarding policy decisions or government schemes will be shared through official press releases, government websites, and verified public communication platforms, it added. (Agencies)

Cash Discovery: Probe Panel Submits Report On Justice Varma To Speaker; To Be Tabled In Parl

An inquiry committee investigating allegations against Justice Yashwant Varma — against whom removal proceedings were initiated over the alleged discovery of unaccounted cash from his official residence — has submitted its report to Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla.
The report, which was presented in accordance with statutory requirements under the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, on Monday, will be laid before both Houses of Parliament in “due course”, the Lok Sabha Secretariat said.
The Monsoon Session, which usually commences in the third week of July, will be the next time Parliament is likely to meet.
The three-member inquiry committee was constituted by the speaker on August 12, 2025.
During a fire that broke out in the official residence of Justice Varma on the night of March 14, 2025, firefighters allegedly discovered massive amounts of burnt currency at a storeroom in the Delhi bungalow.
He was then a judge of the Delhi High Court and was later repatriated to his parent High Court of Allahabad.

An in-house committee constituted by then CJI Sanjiv Khanna concluded that Justice Varma had “active or tacit control” over the specific storeroom where the cash was allegedly hidden.

In July 2025, over 200 MPs signed a motion to remove the judge.
A Supreme Court or high court judge and the chief election commissioner can only be removed by Parliament by a procedure mentioned in the Judges (Inquiry) Act.
In August last year, Speaker Birla constituted a three-member Judges Inquiry Committee to look into the charges.
However, facing the prospect of being removed by Parliament, Justice Varma recently resigned as a judge of the Allahabad High Court, rendering the removal proceedings against him “infructuous”.

According to procedure, the President gives “formal acceptance,” following which it is notified by the Department of Justice in the Law Ministry.
Justice Varma’s name still appears as a sitting judge of the Allahabad High Court.

As per an SC ruling and precedence, Justice Varma has resigned and is now a private citizen. “Going by this, a former judge cannot be removed by Parliament,” a person aware of the procedure noted.
Justice Varma was to otherwise retire on January 5, 2031 on attaining the age of 62 years.

“When the panel investigates charges, it is considered judicial work. They submitted a report of their work…it is a parallel issue,” explained the domain expert.
Once the report is tabled in Parliament, it is to be seen what the Houses decide, said the person cited above. (Agencies)

Petrol, Diesel Prices Hiked For Second Time A Week, Up 90 Paise

Petrol and diesel prices were hiked by about 90 paise per litre on Tuesday, marking the second increase in fuel rates in less than a week after state-run oil firms ended a nearly four-year freeze on revisions.
The increase pushed petrol prices in New Delhi to Rs 98.64 per litre from Rs 97.77, while diesel rose to Rs 91.58 from Rs 90.67, according to industry sources.
On Friday, petrol and diesel prices were raised by Rs 3 per litre on Friday for the first time in more than four years, as surging global crude prices following the Iran war forced state-run fuel retailers to pass on part of their mounting losses after months of holding rates steady through key state elections.
Rates vary across states due to differences in value-added tax.
On May 15, compressed natural gas (CNG) prices were also raised by Rs 2 per kg in cities, including Delhi and Mumbai. On Sunday, CNG prices were again hiked by Re 1 a kg.
Global crude prices have surged more than 50 per cent since US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28 and Tehran’s retaliation, disrupting flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key artery for global oil shipments.
Despite the surge, retail fuel rates were kept frozen at two-year-old rates as part of what the government said was an effort to shield price-sensitive consumers from higher global energy costs. But the opposition parties saw political motives behind the move as key states went to polls.
The Rs 3 a litre increase on Friday followed the completion of elections and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) expanding its influence after winning three of five states, including West Bengal.
That increase covered just a fifth of the desired hike required to level rates with cost.
On Monday, Sujata Sharma, Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas, had stated that the May 15 hike had cut losses by a fourth and that oil companies were still incurring about Rs 750 crore a day loss.
After Tuesday’s increase, petrol and diesel prices are now the highest since May 2022.
Prices have remained on freeze since April 2022, but for a one-off reduction by Rs 2 a litre each on petrol and diesel in March 2024, just before Lok Sabha elections. Rates were last hiked in April 2022.
Petrol in Mumbai now costs Rs 107.59 a litre and diesel costs Rs 94.08 per litre. In Kolkata, petrol now costs Rs 109.70 per litre and diesel Rs 96.07, while in Chennai, prices increased to Rs 104.49 for petrol and Rs 96.11 for diesel.
Industry sources said the price hike is modest relative to the rise in crude prices and still leaves retailers absorbing significant losses.
According to Crisil, losses on petrol were about Rs 10 per litre and Rs 13 on diesel after May 15 increase.
The two price increases follow excise duty cuts announced in March and come as the government rolls out measures to curb fuel consumption and contain the country’s oil import bill.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week urged fuel conservation, work-from-home practices and reduced travel as higher energy prices strain India’s foreign exchange reserves and threaten to widen the current account deficit for a third straight year.
Some state governments have already instructed departments to limit travel, avoid physical meetings and operate with reduced office staffing.
Private fuel retailers had already increased pump prices. Nayara Energy, the country’s largest private fuel retailer, in March, raised petrol prices by Rs 5 per litre and diesel by Rs 3, while Shell increased petrol prices by Rs 7.41 and diesel by Rs 25 per litre from April 1. In Bengaluru, Shell sells petrol at Rs 119.85 per litre and diesel at Rs 123.52.
Domestic cooking gas LPG prices were raised in March by Rs 60 per cylinder, but they are still way lower than the actual cost. Oil companies are losing Rs 674 per 14.2-kg cylinder of LPG.
Industry sources said the price hike appears calibrated – enough to partially ease margin pressure on oil companies without creating a major inflationary shock.
The increase, however, will have some impact on inflation, they said.
India’s retail inflation, measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), rose to 3.48 per cent in April 2026 from 3.40 per cent in March, while wholesale price inflation (WPI) surged to 8.3 per cent, a 42-month high, driven by a sharp rise in fuel and energy prices amid elevated global crude oil rates. (Agencies)

J&K Govt Raises Dearness Allowance To 60% For Employees, Pensioners

The Jammu and Kashmir Government has enhanced the Dearness Allowance (DA) for Government employees and pensioners from 58 percent to 60 percent with retrospective effect from January 1, 2026.
The Finance Department issued two separate orders in this regard for employees and pensioners/family pensioners drawing pay and pension under the 7th Pay Commission recommendations.
As per the orders, the revised DA for employees will be calculated on Basic Pay, while pensioners and family pensioners will receive the enhanced allowance on Basic Pension and Family Pension respectively.
The arrears from January to April 2026 in respect of employees covered under the General Provident Fund scheme will be credited to their GPF accounts, whereas employees under the National Pension System (NPS) and pensioners will receive the arrears in cash.
The enhanced DA will form part of the monthly salary and pension from May 2026 onwards.
The Government further stated that in case of NPS employees, the employer’s contribution on DA arrears will also be deposited accordingly.
The orders also clarified that any fraction of a rupee arising during DA calculation will be rounded off to the next higher rupee.

NEET UG Paper Leak: CBI Arrests Renukai Chemistry Classes (RCC) Founder In Latur

The CBI has arrested Shivraj Raghunath Motegaonkar who runs the Renukai Chemistry Classes (RCC) in Maharashtra’s Latur city in the NEET UG paper leak case, officials said on Monday.
A leaked question paper for the medical entrance exam was found on Motengaonkar’ phone mobile during searches conducted by the agency on Sunday. He was arrested after that.
The CBI has alleged that Motegaonkar was an active member of the organised gang involved in the leakage and circulation of the NEET UG paper, the officials said.
Motegaonkar in conspiracy with other accused received the question paper and answers of NEET UG Exam, 2026 ahead of April 23, 2026 exam, they said. He allegedly circulated the paper to several persons. (AGENCIES)

LG Sinha Conducts On-Site Inspection Of SASB’S Yatri Niwas At Pantha Chowk

 Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha today conducted an on-site inspection and reviewed the ongoing construction works and pilgrim facilities at Shri Amarnathji Shrine Board (SASB) Yatri Niwas at Pantha Chowk, Srinagar.
The Lieutenant Governor interacted with the officials and directed them for expediting the progress and ensure completion of pending works well before commencement of Shri Amarnathji yatra. He also reviewed the arrangements for sound and light show dedicated to Baba Barfani.
The Lieutenant Governor was accompanied by Dr. Mandeep K. Bhandari, CEO, SASB; Mukesh Garg, Member, Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board; Rajiv Pandey, DIG CKR; Dr. GV Sundeep Chakravarthy, SSP Srinagar; Akshay Labroo; Deputy Commissioner, Srinagar and other senior officers.

Jailed MP Engineer Rashid’s Father Dies Aged 85

The father of jailed Baramulla MP Sheikh Abdul Rashid, also known as Engineer Rashid, died at a hospital in Delhi on Monday. He was 85.
“Haji Khazir Mohammad Sheikh, father of Member of Parliament, Baramulla, Engineer Rashid, is no more,” Awami Itihaad Party (AIP) chief spokesperson Inam Un Nabi said here.
Nabi appealed to the Government of India and the authorities concerned to immediately facilitate the release of the Baramulla MP so that he can participate in the last rites of his father.
“No pain can be greater than a son being deprived of bidding a final farewell to his own father,” he added.

4 Crew Members Eject Safely After 2 Navy Jets Crash During Air Show In Idaho

All four crew members ejected safely after two Navy jets collided and crashed Sunday during an air show at the Mountain Home Air Force Base in western Idaho, officials said.
The collision involved two US Navy EA18-G Growlers from the Electronic Attack Squadron 129 in Whidbey Island, Washington, said Cmdr Amelia Umayam, spokesperson for Naval Air Forces, US Pacific Fleet.
The aircraft were performing an aerial demonstration when the crash occurred, Umayam said in a statement. The four crew members from both jets safely ejected, and the crash was under investigation, she said.
The crew members were in stable condition, base officials said.
Nobody at the military base was hurt, said Kim Sykes, marketing director with Silver Wings of Idaho, which helped to plan the air show.
“Everyone is safe, and I think that’s the most important thing,” Sykes said.
The base said in a social media post that it was locked down immediately following the crash. The remainder of the air show was cancelled.
Videos posted online by spectators showed four parachutes opening in the sky as the aircraft plummeted to the ground near the base about 50 miles (80 kilometres) south of Boise.
The EA-18G Growler is a variant of the F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jet with sophisticated electronic warfare systems.
Shane Ogden said he was filming the two jets as they came close together. A video he captured shows the two aircraft appear to make contact and then spin in tandem as the crew members eject and their parachutes open. The planes then fall together, exploding into a fireball upon impact as the crew members drift to the ground nearby.
“I was just filming thinking they were going to split apart, and that happened, and I filmed the rest,” Ogden said in a text message. He said he left soon after the crash because he did not want to get in the way of emergency responders.
Organisers said the popular air show that includes flying demonstrations and parachute jumps is a celebration of aviation history and a look at modern military capabilities. The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds demonstration squadron headlined the show both days.
The National Weather Service reported good visibility and winds gusting up to 29 mph (47 kph) around the time of the crash.
It was remarkable that both crews were able to eject from their planes, and aviation safety expert Jeff Guzzetti said that may have been possible because of the way the planes collided and appeared to remain stuck together in midair before falling to Earth. Crews usually don’t have a chance to eject in a midair collision, he said.
“It’s really striking to see,” Guzzetti said. “It looks like they struck each other in a very unique fashion to cause them to remain intact and kind of stick to each other, and that very well could have saved them.”
“It appears to be a pilot issue to me. It doesn’t look like it was a mechanical malfunction,” he added. “Rendezvousing with another aeroplane in formation flight is challenging, and it has to be done just right to prevent exactly this kind of thing.”
Aviation safety expert John Cox, who is CEO of Safety Operating Systems, said the pilots who perform at air shows are among the best, but there is little room for error.
“Air show flying is demanding. It has very little tolerance,” Cox said. “The people who do it are very good, and it’s a small margin for error. I’m glad everybody was able to get out.”
This year’s Gunfighter Skies event was the first at the base since 2018, when a hang glider pilot died in a crash during an air show performance.
In 2003, a Thunderbirds aircraft crashed while attempting a manoeuvre. The pilot, who was not hurt, was able to steer the plane away from the crowd and eject less than a second before it hit the ground.
The air show industry has been working to improve safety for years at the roughly 200 events held each year in the US. The last fatal crash at an air show came in 2022 when two vintage military planes collided at an event in Dallas and killed six people.
An average of 3.8 deaths a year occurred at US air shows from 1991 to 2006, said John Cudahy, president and CEO of the International Council of Air Shows. That fatality rate has been improving, and since 2017, there have been an average of 1.1 deaths per year, even including the 2022 crash. There were no US air show deaths in 2023 or 2025, and a spectator hasn’t been killed at an air show in the US since 1952.
“Safety-wise, we’ve enjoyed really an unprecedented term of few accidents,” Cudahy said.
Investigators may be able to quickly get an idea of what happened in Sunday’s crash because the crews of both planes survived and will be able to tell investigators what they saw and experienced before the collision. The Navy will lead the investigation, so there won’t be as much information shared publicly as in civilian crashes.
The Iran war has led to the cancellation of some air shows this year at bases where military units are flying missions related to the conflict. (AP)

GMC Jammu Issues Advisory for Dengue Management, Urges Public Not to Delay Treatment

Jammu, May 17: In view of rising concerns over dengue infections, Government Medical College Jammu has issued a detailed advisory regarding prevention, diagnosis, and management of dengue fever, while assuring the public that adequate medical and laboratory facilities are available round the clock for patient care.
According to the advisory, dengue fever is caused by the bite of infected Aedes mosquitoes and symptoms generally appear within four to ten days after the bite. Common symptoms include high fever, severe headache, pain behind the eyes, muscle and joint pain, nausea, vomiting, and skin rashes.
The hospital administration warned that severe dengue cases require immediate medical attention. Symptoms such as severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, breathing difficulty, bleeding from gums or nose, and blood in vomit or stool should not be ignored.
GMC Jammu advised the public not to delay hospital visits in case of worsening symptoms, dehydration, or continuous fever. Adult patients have been asked to report at GMCH Medicine OPD between 9 AM and 2 PM and thereafter at the Emergency Department, while children can seek treatment at SMGS Hospital Paediatric OPD and Emergency Ward.
The advisory stated that dedicated dengue wards and indoor facilities have been kept ready for both adult and pediatric patients. The institution clarified that most dengue cases can be managed at home, while only severe cases require hospitalization.
To strengthen diagnosis and treatment, GMC Jammu has established 24×7 dengue testing facilities including Dengue NS1 ELISA, IgM ELISA, RT-PCR testing, complete blood counts, and platelet monitoring services. Blood sample collection counters have also been established at GMC Hospital, SMGS Hospital, and Super Specialty Hospital.
The hospital administration advised patients to maintain proper hydration, take medicines only as prescribed by doctors, monitor fever regularly, and immediately report any worsening condition. The advisory also cautioned patients against insisting on platelet transfusion unless recommended by doctors.
People suffering from diabetes, kidney diseases, or liver ailments have been urged to remain extra cautious and seek medical care without delay if symptoms develop.
The advisory further emphasized preventive measures including avoiding mosquito bites, eliminating stagnant water around homes, using mosquito nets, and keeping doors and windows closed wherever possible.
Reassuring the public, GMC Jammu stated that it is fully prepared to handle dengue cases and has adequate stock of platelets for patients whenever required.

Non-Gazetted Staff of GMC Doda Announce Indefinite Protest from May 18

Doda, May 17:

The non-gazetted employees of Government Medical College (GMC) Doda have announced an indefinite peaceful protest beginning from May 18, 2026, over the alleged delay in formulation of recruitment rules, service rules, and rectification of pay anomalies.

According to an official communication addressed to the Principal of GMC Doda, the protest will be jointly carried out by the nursing staff, paramedical staff, clerical staff, and ministerial staff, excluding those engaged in emergency duties.

The employees stated that the protest will be held at Associated Hospital, GMC Doda, and warned that OPD services and elective surgeries are likely to remain suspended during the agitation period. The staff members maintained that they would not be responsible for any disruption in patient care arising due to the protest.

In the letter, the protesting employees alleged that despite repeated representations made through proper channels over the past seven years, the administration has failed to finalize recruitment and service rules or address long-pending pay anomalies affecting the non-gazetted workforce.

The staff further claimed that several committees had been constituted for the purpose, but no concrete outcome has emerged so far. They expressed resentment over what they termed as continued neglect of non-gazetted employees since 2019.

The employees, however, stated that despite their grievances, they have continued to perform their duties with dedication in the interest of patient care and institutional functioning.