DAILY FROM: AHMEDABAD, CHANDIGARH, DELHI, JAIPUR, KOLKATA, LUCKNOW, MUMBAI, NAGPUR, PUNE, VADODARA ● REG.NO. MCS/067/2018 - 20 RNI REGN. NO. 1543/57 JOURNALISM OF COURAGE FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025, MUMBAI, LATE CITY, 16 PAGES `5.00 ● WWW.INDIANEXPRESS.COM SINCE 1932 URGES PRIVATE SECTOR TO STEP UP Projects promised but not delivered on time: IAF chief wake-up call 30/05/2025 104 132 163 76 Says can’t recall single project meeting timeline: ‘Be ready now to be future-ready’ BUSINESS AS USUAL BY UNNY AMRITA NAYAK DUTTA FIRST NDA WOMEN GRADUATES NEW DELHI, MAY 29 The first batch of 17 female cadets graduated from the National Defence Academy in Pune on Thursday and were conferred degrees at a convocation ceremony. The Passing Out Parade will be held on Friday. Arul Horizon ‘Substantial grounds’ for rejecting L&T bid, MMRDA tells top court EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE NEW DELHI, MAY 29 THE MUMBAI Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) on Thursday told the Supreme Court that there were “substantial grounds” for rejecting the technical bid of Larsen and Toubro (L&T) for the proposed approximately Rs 6,000 crore Mumbai Elevated Road Project and the Rs 8,000 crore Road Tunnel Project. “There are substantial grounds,” Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for MMRDA, told a bench of Chief Justice of India B R Gavai and A G Masih, which raised doubts about the disqualification. Hearing the matter on May 26, CJI Gavai had wondered how the company chosen by the central government for the construction of the Central Vista project had failed to pass muster for the Mumbai projects. As the bench took up the matter again on Thursday, Mehta urged the court to hear it on Friday. While agreeing to the CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 Trump crypto firm As US court blocks quiet on Shehbaz talks, most Trump tariffs, CEO of partner talks of breather for India Pak image makeover U.S. TEAM TO BE IN DELHI FOR JUNE 5-6 TALKS ahead of trade talks RAVI DUTTA MISHRA WLFI names Trump as ‘chief crypto advocate’, sons, grandson as envoys NEW DELHI, MAY 29 JAY MAZOOMDAAR WITH NEGOTIATORS from the US set to arrive in New Delhi for trade talks on June 5-6, officials intheMinistryof Commerceand Industry said they are “studying theimplications”of theUSCourt of International Trade’s Wednesday ruling that US President Donald Trump did not have the authority to impose sweepingtariffsundertheemergency economic powers law he had cited. On April 2, Trump had announcedasteep26percentreciprocal tariff on India, despite New Delhi agreeing to commence negotiations with Washington on a tradedeal.Thetariffswerepaused until July 8, and the government is keen to wrap up an interim trade deal before that. Officials are cognisant that theruling,beingviewedglobally asamajorlossof leveragetheUS EVEN AS World Liberty Financial Inc (WLFI), a cryptocurrency companymajority-ownedbyUS President Donald Trump and his family, sits on a request from a Senate sub-committee to share its communications with PakistanPrimeMinisterShehbaz Sharif thatledtoadealsignedon April 26, CEO of Pakistan Crypto Council Bilal bin Saqib Thursday drew parallels between Pakistan andBitcoinas“victimsofbadPR.” “Both Pakistan and Bitcoin have suffered from bad PR. We arelookedatasbeingdangerous, risky and unstable. But once we lookbeyondtheseheadlines,we can see a lot of potential, resourcesandtalent.SoPakistan is looking for allies,” he said at the annual gathering of the global cryptocurrency community in Las Vegas. NEW DELHI, MAY 29 A file photo of US President Donald Trump displaying the tariffs list at the White House in April. Reuters EXPLAINED WHY MANY TRUMP TARIFFS WERE STRUCK DOWN PAGE 11 had in pushing through trade deals, does offer a temporary breatherforIndiaandmoreflexibility in handling US demands CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 THE WORLD MUMBAI, MAY 29 AS MANY as 58,532 residential units and 13,468 commercial and industrial units will be constructed for the rehabilitation of eligible tenants within the existing Dharavi area, states the master plan of the Dharavi redevelopment project that was approved by the state government on Wednesday. The numbers presented are part of the initial tenement estimates made by the special purpose vehicle that is undertaking the Dharavi redevelopment on the 251.24 hectares of Dharavi Notified Area. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 RED-FLAGGING the rising rates of obesity and hypertension among school-going children, a new study by the All India Instituteof MedicalSciences(AIIMS) has found that the prevalence of obesity was as high as 24.02 per cent in private schools inDelhi,morethanfivetimesthe number for public schools. Accordingtothestudy,which lookedat3,888studentsof Delhi schoolsaged6-19years,anaverage of 13.4 per cent students werefoundtobegenerallyobese while 9.2 per cent had belly fatrelated(central)obesity.Thisisa sharp rise from the findings of a similarstudyin2006,whichhad E EXPLAINED VALLABH OZARKAR NEW DELHI, MAY 29 Raising ● awareness EARLIER THIS month, the CBSE directed affiliated schools to set up “sugar boards” to raise awareness among students by displaying information on the risks of excessive sugar consumption, and encourage healthier choices. peggedtheprevalenceof obesity at 5 per cent. The new study has found that the prevalence of obesity was much higher in private Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi, Air Chief Marshal A P Singh in New Delhi on Thursday. ANI Pak officers posed as journalists, got key info from CRPF ASI: Probe ‘Nirmam Sarkar’: PM targets Mamata govt over Bengal violence, jobs scam CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 MUSK EXITS TRUMP ADMN: ‘MY TIME... COMES TO AN END’ PAGE 12 Part of the Forbes ‘30 under 30’ list of social entrepreneurs in 2020, Bilal Bin Saqib was appointed the first CEO of the PakistanCryptoCouncil(PCC)by Prime Minister Sharif on March 26. Last week, he held a “highlevel meeting” with Chief of Army Staff Asim Munir to outline the future of Pakistan’s digital economy. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 Dharavi master plan Rising obesity, hypertension among proposes 72,000 units for students, more in pvt schools: Study rehabilitation of tenants ANKITA UPADHYAY While out of the 251.24 hectares area, 108.99 hectares of land has been deemed for redevelopment, the rest is reserved for infrastructure and public services in Dharavi. The presentation of master plan given to the state government on Wednesday, a copy of which is with The Indian Express, states that out of the 108.99 hectares, rehabilitation of Dharavi's eligible residents will be carried out on around 56.01 per cent while 43.99 per cent willbeforfuturecommercialdevelopment and sale. The Dharavi redevelopment is being carried out by Dharavi Redevelopment Project Private IN A wake-up call to the nation andthedefenceindustryoverdelay in critical projects especially deliveryof fighteraircraft,Indian Air Force chief Air Chief Marshal A P Singh said Thursday he could not recall a single instance of a project being completed within the stipulated timeline. Addressing the CII Annual Business Summit which was attended, among others, by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh andDefenceSecretaryRKSingh, Air Chief Marshal Singh said timelines (promised for military projects)area“bigissue”.Heunderlined that “we have to be ready now to be future-ready”. “Notasingleproject,thatIcan think of, has been completed on time,” he said. “So, this is something which we have to look at. Why should we promise somethingwhichcannotbeachieved? While signing the contract itself, sometimes we are sure that it is schools, which reported 24.02 per cent general obesity and 16.77 per cent central obesity, as compared to 4.48 per cent general obesity and 1.83 per cent central obesity in public schools. Both private and public schools, however, reported similarfiguresforhypertensionat7.4 percent.Butitfoundthatprivate school students were twice as likely to have high blood sugar and three times as likely to have metabolic syndrome, as comparedtotheirothercounterparts. Speaking to The Indian Express,DrMKalaivani,assistant professor of Biostatistics at AIIMS-Delhi and the principal investigatorof thestudy,explained that metabolic syndrome is identified based on five CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 MAHENDER SINGH MANRAL NEW DELHI, MAY 29 UNION HOME Minister Amit Shah’s visit to Jammu and Kashmir hours after the Pahalgam terror attack, 50 tourist spots closing down, movement and strength of CRPF troops,andsuspectedlocationof terrorists — these are some of the key inputs allegedly shared by an assistant sub-inspector of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) over the last two years with Pakistan intelligence officers, who posed as TV journalists and gave him Rs 3,500 per month, and an additional Rs 12,000 for crucial information, The Indian Express has learnt. Earlierthisweek,theNational Investigation Agency said it had arrested CRPF ASI Moti Ram Jat from Delhi and was questioning him. The Central agency alleged he shared classified information with Pakistani agents and was taking funds from them. He was posted with a CRPF battalion in J&K’s Pahalgam and was transferred to Delhi five days before the April 22 terror attack on the tourist destination. Before the case was handed over to the NIA, Jat was questionedbythecentralintelligence CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 Could have done a lot more, showed restraint: Rajnath on Op Sindoor AMRITA NAYAK DUTTA NEW DELHI, MAY 29 DEFENCE MINISTER Rajnath Singh said Thursday that India could have done “a lot more” beyond destroying terrorist hideoutsandPakistanimilitarybases in Operation Sindoor, but presented a great example of “coordinationof powerandrestraint”. Hesaidtheuseof indigenous systems during Operation SindoorprovesthatIndiahasthe power to penetrate any armour of the enemy. Addressing the inaugural plenary of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) Annual BusinessSummit,Singhalsosaid that Pakistan-occupied Kashmir is a part of India and people who got separated geographically and politically will, sooner or later, voluntarily return to India. “Even after separation, the confidence and faith of the elder brother towards his younger CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 ATRI MITRA KOLKATA, MAY 29 WITH LESS than a year to go for the West Bengal Assembly elections, Prime Minister Narendra Modi Thursday accused the Mamata Banerjee-led administrationof fosteringviolence,corruption and lawlessness, and said people were yearning to get rid of the “nirmam sarkar” (ruthless government). “Look at what happened in Murshidabad and Malda, clear examples of the government’s cruelty. In the name of appeasement, lawlessness was allowed to flourish. Just imagine the horror: members of the ruling party markouthomesandsetthemon fire, while the police stand by and do nothing,” Modi said at a publicmeetinginNorthBengal’s Alipurduarafterlayingthefoundation of a piped gas project. “Today, West Bengal is grappling with a series of crises. People don’t want ‘nirmam sarkar’. They want change and good governance. That is why the whole of Bengal is saying that they don’t want cruelty and corruption anymore,” he said, coining the slogan, “Banglar PM Narendra Modi in Alipurduar on Thursday. ANI INSIDE MODI POLITICISING OP SINDOOR, INSULT TO WOMEN: MAMATA PAGE 7 matir chitkar, chai na aar nirmam sarkar (the soil of Bengal cries CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 Curiosity, conspiracy theories as container washes up on Kerala beach PAGE 1 ANCHOR ANIL SASI PARAVUR (KOLLAM), MAY 29 A LONE, battered shipping containerthathaswasheduponthe beach in Paravur, a small fishing hamlet between Thiruvananthapuram and Kollam, is the talk of the town. The reddishbrown container, like many morethathavebeachedallalong Kerala’s coast following the recent sinking of a Liberia-registered ship, has piqued curiosity and, for now, taken a daily staple off theplatesof mosthouseholds in these parts – fish. On Sunday, May 25, MSC Elsa 3, an 184-metre-long container ship, sank while it was sailing from Vizhinjam port to Cochin port, triggering alarm in coastal hamlets all the way from Alappuzha in mid-north Kerala toKollamfurthersouth.Theship was carrying an estimated 640 containers, including 13 with “hazardous cargo”, of which 12 are said to have contained calciumcarbide.Asolidcompound, calcium carbide is not flammable by itself, but it reacts vigorously with water and moisture to produce highly flammable acetylene gas, posing a significant fire hazard. The ship also had 84 metric tonnes of diesel and367metrictonnesof furnace oil, the Coast Guard said Sunday. Around Paravur beach, men in khaki have been deployed to guard the container, lest some intrepidlocalfallspreytocuriosity and tries to prise it open. A constable has been deputed to cleartrafficaspeopleslowdown vehicles on the narrow beach road to check out the container. Taking advantage of the sudden rush of onlookers, an ice cream vendor has strategically shifted closer to this spot on the beach, The container on the beach in Paravur, Kerala. Anil Sasi adding to the problems of the constable who struggles to clear theoccasional“block”–theterm used for a traffic jam. There are a bunch of people on the beach shooting reels and shorts with the container in the backdrop, as are children in uniform, who have taken a detour on their way home from school to witness the local spectacle. In this sleepy Kerala town, where the high point of the year are the fireworks at a local temple, the coming of the container is an assured selfie moment. ValsalaSrikumar,though,has aharriedlook.“Ihavebarelysold anything. The same as Monday,” she says, standing metres away from the ice cream vendor, peddling a full stock of fish on a yard stool by the beach road. Metres away, the container bobs gently as the waves crash into it. All around the container and further south along the coast, the water is white and foamy – one reason why people are keeping off fish. Today, Valsala's husband has ventured out “to the cleaner parts” seeking a catch, but it's pointlessnow.“Whatistheuseif no one is buying,” she says. Fishing boats are moored alongthebeach,withlittleactivity at the far end where the fish- erfolk stay. A kilometre away, at OottupurayilrestaurantinParavur Kombolam,amarketwithacluster of shops, waiter Anees says clientsareshunningseafood.“This is just a phase,” he hopes. Back on the beach, there are speculative guesses on the contents of the container. The locals, helped by WhatsApp forwards and their vestigial knowledge of the periodic table, rattle off names of the multiple chemical compounds the containers ostensibly contained – all the way from arsenic to zinc, lead and mercury. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
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