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People have died after drinking tea brewed from unwashed poppy seeds. Members of the House of Representatives and Senate have proposed legislation “to prohibit the distribution and sale of contaminated poppy seeds in order to prevent harm, addiction, and further deaths from morphine-contaminated poppy seeds.” The bill was one of several on the agenda for a September 10 House hearing. On the other hand, tea made from large quantities of unwashed poppy seeds could lead to addiction and overdose, doctors said. The US Drug Enforcement Administration said unwashed poppy seeds can kill when used alone or in combination with other drugs. The US Department of Justice has brought criminal prosecutions over the sale of unwashed poppy seeds.
Persons: , “ It’s, Elke Scholiers, , Steve Hacala, Courtney Rhodes, CSPI, Eva Greenthal, It’s, Irving Haber, Benjamin Lai, Lai, , Steve Hacala’s, Stephen Hacala, Stephen Hacala’s, Betty, David Rousseau, Jamie Silakowski, Silakowski, Tim Hortons, Popeyes, Joe’s, Sen, Tom Cotton, Steve Womack Organizations: Health, Marshall, US Department of Defense, Doping, Workers, for Science, Food and Drug Administration, FDA, Mayo Clinic, Arkansas State Crime Laboratory, KFF Health, Restaurant Brands, Burger, Washington Post, US Drug Enforcement Administration, US Department of Justice, Senate, Republican, KFF Locations: Chittorgarh, India, Rochester , Minnesota, Arkansas, South Korea
On a sweltering morning at a truck yard in the northern Indian state of Haryana, he climbed into the cab of his 10-wheel tractor-trailer, started the engine and rumbled slowly onto the highway. Mr. Khan, 49, is a driver for Chetak Logistics, a major Indian trucking company. He stopped every couple of hours at roadside tea stands and restaurants, devouring snacks and chatting with other truck drivers. “I drive in a very leisurely manner,” Mr. Khan said. What’s the hurry?”For those who earn their living navigating the unpredictable highways of India, Mr. Khan was voicing an unimpeachably sensible mantra.
Persons: Ragib Khan, Khan, Mr, Organizations: Chetak Logistics Locations: Haryana, Indian, Bengaluru, India
Tuesday’s election results, in which Prime Minister Modi sealed a rare third term, only enhance the sense of gloom and doom for Indian Muslims like me. With the BJP back in power – albeit without the supermajority it had vowed – my only hope lies in a politically weakened Modi now. A weakened Modi shall, hopefully, translate into a more robust India and more secure minorities. In the days and months to come, things could get seriously tough for Indian Muslims. It could be the norm for the rest of India soon as the BJP tries to deny Indian Muslims the right to follow Islamic laws in civil matters, a right granted by the Indian Constitution.
Persons: Salam, Read, Modi, Modi’s, Mukhtar Khan, , , Narendra Modi, Elke Scholiers, Rahul Gandhi, Jawaharlal, Taj Mahal, Qutb, We’ve Organizations: , New, New Delhi CNN, Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP, India’s Independence, Indian National Congress, INC, Union Budget, SC, , OBC, Twitter, Telugu Desam, Janata Dal, Congress Locations: Hindu India, New Delhi, Narendra Modi’s India, India, , Srinagar, Rajasthan, Muslim, Pakistan, Lok, Gujarat, Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, Lower, Independence, Kerala, Mumbai, Gandhi’s, BJP, Qutb Minar, Delhi, Babri, Assam, Uttarakhand, Indian
GHAZIABAD INDIA - APRIL 06: Prime Minister Narendra Modi greets supporters at a roadshow on April 06, 2024 in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India. India's 2024 general election is set to be the world's largest democratic exercise, with over 969 million registered voters, more than the combined population of the EU, US, and Russia. (Photo by Elke Scholiers/Getty Images)India voted on Monday in the fourth phase of a seven-week long general election, as campaign rhetoric became more strident over economic disparities and religious divisions. "I appeal to all to vote for a decisive government," said Amit Shah, Modi's powerful aide and the country's interior affairs minister, as voting began. The lower turnout has raised doubts over whether BJP and its allies can win the landslide predicted by opinion polls.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Elke Scholiers, Amit Shah Organizations: EU, Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP Locations: GHAZIABAD INDIA, Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India, Russia, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh
To live in the Maldives is to live in one of two worlds. Either you belong to the capital — Malé, a micro-Manhattan in the Indian Ocean — or you are out in “the islands,” among the quietest and most remote villages this side of the Arctic tundra. It is in these places — far from the archipelago’s walled-garden resort atolls, where no Maldivians actually dwell — that the country is picking between two visions of its future, like much of the rest of Asia, but more so. The outer islands are steadily depopulating, as the appeal of making a life through tuna fishing and coconut farming along their crushed-coral seashores shrinks. The splendid isolation may be what attracts visitors, but it seems incompatible with islanders’ aspirations in a nation modernized by global tourism.
Locations: Maldives, Manhattan, Asia
Between a few flecks of coral in the Indian Ocean, a ribbon of highway more than a mile long swoops up from the blue. Since 2018, the China-Maldives Friendship Bridge has connected this archipelago’s hyper-dense capital, Malé, and the international airport — expanded by Chinese companies — one island to the east. But China is not alone in chasing friendship with the Maldives. The Maldives, a tiny tourism-dependent country of 500,000 people, barely registers as a blip alongside India and China, the world’s most populous nations. Yet every blip counts in the two giants’ competition for influence across South Asia, and that has set the Maldives on a zigzagging course between them.
Persons: Indira Gandhi Organizations: Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital Locations: China, Maldives, Malé, India, The Maldives, South Asia
Within hours, witnesses say, upper-caste landlords massacred 58 Dalits, people once known as “untouchables,” most of them farmworkers in the eastern state of Bihar who had been agitating for higher wages. The next day, he lodged a police complaint, and investigators soon filed charges. He is still waiting — after conflicting verdicts and hundreds of court hearings, with some witnesses now dead or impaired by fading eyesight — for a resolution. “A cry for justice turned into a lifelong nightmare for us,” said Mr. Paswan, 45. In a vast nation with no shortage of intractable problems, it is one of the longest-running and most far-reaching: India’s staggeringly overburdened judicial system.
Persons: Binod Paswan, Paswan’s, , Paswan Locations: Bihar
India’s Population to Surpass China’s by Midyear
  + stars: | 2023-04-19 | by ( Shan Li | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
A nurse checks on a newborn at a hospital in Patiala, India. India’s population is expected to continue growing over the next four decades. Photo: Elke Scholiers/Getty ImagesNEW DELHI—The United Nations, in a report about global population trends released Wednesday, said India would overtake China as the world’s most populous country by midyear. India will have 1.4286 billion people by July 1, surpassing China’s population of 1.4257 billion by nearly three million people, according to the U.N. report. China’s data doesn’t include the populations of Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan.
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