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The founder of a million-dollar cake company was accused of chopping down protected trees. He founded the egg-free cake company Cake Box which is now worth over $70 million. Sukh Ram Chamdal, the founder and CEO of egg-free cake company Cake Box valued at almost £58.4 million ($74 million) appeared in court on June 22 to plead not guilty to the offense. A spokesperson for MHP, the communications company that represents Cake Box, declined to comment on the situation because its an ongoing legal procedure. He founded Cake Box in 2008 after he struggled to find an egg-free cake for his daughter's birthday.
Persons: Chamdal, , Sukh Ram Chamdal Organizations: Service, The Telegraph, Council, Crown Court, LinkedIn Locations: British, Loughton, Epping Forest, London, Indian, East London
It could not immediately be determined how much Russian oil Indian refiners have bought with yuan, although Indian Oil has paid in yuan for multiple cargoes, sources said. The rise in yuan payments has given a boost to Beijing's efforts to internationalise its currency, with Chinese banks promoting its use specifically for Russian oil trade. Indian refiners have also settled some non-dollar payments for Russian oil in the United Arab Emirates' dirham, sources have said. One private refiner has also been using the same mechanism for payments for Russian oil, one of the sources said. Another state refiner, Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL.NS), is also exploring yuan payment for Russian oil, a separate source said.
Persons: IOC's, Rosneft, Nidhi Verma, Tony Munroe, Tom Hogue Organizations: U.S, Indian Oil Corp, Reliance Industries Ltd, Nayara Energy, HPCL Mittal Energy Ltd, Oil, Gazprom Neft, Reuters, United Arab, State Bank of India, NS Bora, Sun Ship Management, European Union, IOC, ICICI Bank, Bank of China, Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd, Thomson Locations: DELHI, Russia, Moscow, Ukraine, India, China, Saudi Arabia, Indian, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Iraq, United Kingdom, Bank, Rosneft, ICICI
Both countries are also investing in new light tanks designed for high altitudes and rough terrain. Consequently, India is planning to developing its own light tank to level the playing field. The Type 15A Type 15 tank on display at the Beijing Exhibition Center in October. NOEL CELIS/AFP via Getty ImagesChina has coped with these issues by deploying its Type 15 light tank, one of the few modern light tanks produced in the 21st century. India has tried on and off since 1983 to develop a new light tank but has never settled on a model.
Persons: , NOEL CELIS, Arjuna, Ajay Aggarwal, hasn't, Danish Ismail, Narendra Modi's, Toubro, Zorawar Singh Organizations: Service, US Army, Bilderwelt, Beijing Exhibition Center, Getty Images, Abrams, Getty, Hindustan Times, Indian Ministry of Defense, REUTERS, Danish, India's Ministry of Defense, Larsen, Rolls Royce Locations: India, Bologna, China, Japan, Ladakh, AFP, Getty Images China, Russia, Western, People's Republic of China, New Delhi, Pakistan, Indian, Belgian
It's part of the decades-long trend in which Americans have scaled back their charitable giving. There's evidence that this shift has impacted charitable giving. From 2000 to 2016, the share of Americans giving to religious causes fell from roughly 47% to 32%. Other donors have shifted their giving to political causes that wouldn't be classified as charitable giving either. Looking forward, Birkholz said he's optimistic the total giving figure will bounce back in 2023.
Persons: , Josh Birkholz, We've, Birkholz, Jonathan Meer, Zers, I'm Organizations: Service, Privacy, Indiana University's School, Philanthropy, Indiana University, Pew Research Locations: Texas
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday to end race-based affirmative action in college admissions. The Obamas each released a statement reflecting on the role affirmative action has played. Barack Obama wrote that it had allowed students like him and Michelle "to prove we belonged." "Like any policy, affirmative action wasn't perfect," Barack Obama, who attended Columbia University and Harvard Law School, wrote. But still, I sometimes wondered if people thought I got there because of affirmative action.
Persons: Barack Obama, Michelle, , Michelle Obama, I'd, didn't Organizations: Service, Columbia University, Harvard Law School, Hispanic, Fund, American Indian College Fund, Thurgood Marshall College Fund, Princeton, Harvard, Court, Minorities, Ivy League, Cornell Locations: Columbia
WILMINGTON, Delaware, June 29 (Reuters) - A legal case making its way through the courts could remove the abortion pill mifepristone from the market or restrict access to the drug. George Delgado - A California palliative care specialist, Delgado helped pioneer "abortion reversal" treatments for women who change their mind after taking mifepristone. Circuit Court of Appeals as an example of the harm caused by the approval of the abortion pill. The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists has said abortion reversal is not supported by science and does not meet clinical standards. Foley said in his abortion pill testimony he also treats women for abortion pill reversal.
Persons: George Delgado, Delgado, mifepristone, Gynecologists, Ingrid Skop, Skop, Donna Harrison, Harrison, Tyler Johnson, Johnson, AAPLOG, Steven Foley, Foley, CMDA, Tom Hals, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: U.S, Circuit, Appeals, American, of Obstetrics, American Association of Pro, Christian Medical, Dental, Charlotte Lozier Institute, Reuters, Indiana, Alliance, Hippocratic, Republican, FDA, Thomson Locations: WILMINGTON , Delaware, California, Texas, Florida, North Dakota, An Indiana, Indiana, Wilmington , Delaware
Simon & Schuster paid him a $1.4 million advance for the book, new documents show. In the Simon & Schuster-published book, "So Help Me God," Pence vividly described how Trump tried to pressure him against certifying President Joe Biden's 2020 victory. Hillary Clinton received an $8 million advance for her memoir "Living History," about her time as First Lady. CNN previously reported that the book advance was estimated at being somewhere between $3 million to $4 million, though that reportedly included a contract to write a second book. An Insider analysis of financial disclosures found that members of Congress together raked in $1.8 million in 2020 from book advances and royalties.
Persons: Mike Pence, Simon, Schuster, Pence, , Donald Trump, Simon & Schuster, Trump, Joe Biden's, You'll, Indiana — Pence, deferential, Hillary Clinton, GOP Sen, Tim Scott of, Sen, Elizabeth Warren of, they're Organizations: Service, Simon &, Trump, GOP, Democratic, CNN, Federal, Commission, Hoosier Heartland, Indiana Bank, Apple, Pfizer, Meta, UnitedHealth, Netflix Locations: Indiana, Tim Scott of South Carolina, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts
A video circulating online of a cardboard cutout of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a New York protest dates to October 2019 and is not linked to his U.S. visit in June 2023, contrary to some claims. U.S. President Joe Biden hosted Modi for an official state visit to the White House on June 22 (here). U.S. rights groups planned protests over what they call India's deteriorating human rights record (here). It has been circulating online since at least October 2019 (here). The video has been circulating online since October 2019.
Persons: Narendra Modi, , Joe Biden, Modi, Read Organizations: Indian PM, Facebook, White House, Reuters Locations: New York, Queens
The company, Marion Biotech, bought the ingredient — propylene glycol (PG) — from trader Maya Chemtech India, as reported by Reuters. "Marion bought commercial-grade propylene glycol," said a second source, an investigator, who declined to be named while the inquiry is ongoing. International standards allow only trace amounts of EG and DEG in pharmaceutical-grade propylene glycol. The toxins were found in cough syrups exported to Gambia by the other Indian company, Maiden Pharmaceuticals. India made it mandatory for companies to have their cough syrups tested before export from June.
Persons: Marion, Deepak Sharma, Max, Vijay Kumar, Tuhin Bhattacharya, Mool Singh, Atul Rawat, Jaya Jain, Sachin Jain, Rohan Gupta, syrups, Maiden, Saurabh Sharma, Krishna, Jennifer Rigby, Olzhas, Sara Ledwith, Michele Gershberg, Deepa Babington Organizations: Reuters, Marion Biotech, Indian, EG, World Health Organization, Authorities, . Police, Marion, Court, Maya, Maiden Pharmaceuticals, WHO, Thomson Locations: DELHI, Uzbekistan, India, Delhi, Marion, Uttar Pradesh, Allahabad, Gambia, Indonesia, London, Almaty
The case against Saint-Gobain and its local unit was filed to the Competition Commission of India (CCI) in May by a retired glass industry executive, whose name was redacted in the documents as the person sought confidentiality. Saint-Gobain has a 44% share of the float glass market in India and a 19% share of the coated one, according to the documents. The group and its India unit, Saint-Gobain India Private Limited, "conduct their activities in compliance with laws", in particular competition law, it said. The May 25 case documents allege Saint-Gobain entered into agreements with glass processors, forcing them to "exclusively" purchase glass from the company or face stopped supplies if that obligation is not fulfilled. Saint-Gobain counts India as a key market.
Persons: Gonzalo Fuentes, Gobain, Benoit Bazin, Aditya Kalra, Muralikumar Organizations: La Defense, REUTERS, India, Company, Compagnie de Saint, Reuters, Saint, Competition Commission of India, Limited, DLF, Thomson Locations: Courbevoie, Paris, France, India, DELHI
Within two years, Mr. Sands had worked with Mr. Ivory and Mr. Russell, two directors with wildly different styles. “James Ivory is like an Indian miniaturist, and Ken Russell is a graffiti artist,” Mr. Sands told The Times. “Happily, Figgis has chosen well, with Sands effortlessly carrying by far the most demanding role of a man of isolating self-absorption.”Julian Richard Morley Sands was born on Jan. 4, 1958, in Otley, England, to Richard and Brenda Sands and grew up in nearby Gargrave. He began acting as a child, inspired in part by his mother’s work in amateur theater. When he was 6, he told The Yorkshire Post in 2013, he appeared in a play; his first line was “My master, the great Aladdin.”
Persons: Sands, Ivory, Russell, “ James Ivory, Ken Russell, , Mike Figgis, Figgis, Adam, ., ” Kevin Thomas, ” Julian Richard Morley Sands, Richard, Brenda Sands Organizations: Mr, Times, Vegas, Los Angeles Times, Yorkshire Post Locations: British, Otley , England, Gargrave
REUTERS/Nathan FrandinoMOUNTAIN VIEW, California, June 26 (Reuters) - Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O) has already tried and failed to bring internet access to rural and remote areas by using high-altitude balloons in the stratosphere. But now, the company is delivering internet service to remote areas by using beams of light. It was initiated in 2016 after attempts at using stratospheric balloons to deliver internet ran into problems due to high costs, company executives said. Taara executives and Bharti Airtel (BRTI.NS), one of India's largest telecommunications and internet providers, told Reuters they are now moving toward larger-scale deployment of the new laser internet technology in India. Bharti Airtel's chief technology officer, Randeep Sekhon, said Taara will also help deliver faster internet service in urban areas in developed countries.
Persons: Nathan, Mahesh Krishnaswamy, Taara, Krishnaswamy, Astro Teller, moonshots, Teller, Bharti, Randeep Sekhon, Jane Lanhee Lee, Nathan Frandino, Kenneth Li, Matthew Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Bharti Airtel, Reuters, Econet Group, Liquid Telecom, Bluetown, Digicel, Airtel, Sciences, Bharti Airtel's, Google, Thomson Locations: Alphabet's, View , California, U.S, California, India, Australia, Kenya, Fiji, Africa, Pacific, Osur, Chennai, Mountain View
NEW DELHI, June 26 (Reuters) - Google (GOOGL.O) has urged India's Supreme Court to quash antitrust directives against it for abuse of the Android market, two sources said, as its presses its legal battle against the competition watchdog in one of its most important markets. The Competition Commission of India (CCI) said in October that Google, whose Android mobile operating system powers 97% of 600 million smartphones in India, had exploited its dominant position. Google is now asking the Supreme Court to quash the remainder of the directives, the first source with direct knowledge said. Google's Supreme Court challenge has not been previously reported. The CCI too has approached the Supreme Court, seeking to reverse the tribunal's decision to give Google partial relief, according to a third source.
Persons: India's, quashing, Aditya Kalra, Conor Humphries Organizations: of India, Google, U.S, Alphabet Inc, Supreme, Thomson Locations: DELHI, India
Opinion | Assessing Modi’s Leadership of India
  + stars: | 2023-06-23 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
But I’m totally aghast at the tirade against Prime Minister Narendra Modi in “During Modi’s Visit, Biden Plans to Focus on Common Interests” (news analysis, June 22). For the past year or so, you have published articles critical of Mr. Modi, accusing him of being authoritarian and anti-democratic. This article talks about a crackdown on dissent under Mr. Modi and India backsliding in democracy. Similar articles have pointed out large-scale incarceration of political opponents ever since Mr. Modi’s party has been voted to power. I’ve not seen any mass jailing or subversion of democracy in India as is happening in other countries like Turkey.
Persons: Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Biden, Modi, Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Viktor Orban Organizations: Mr Locations: Indian American, United States, , India, Turkey
[1/2] The Starlink logo is seen in front of the Indian flag in this illustration taken, June 21, 2023. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, OneWeb and Starlink parent SpaceX, did not respond. Deloitte says India's satellite broadband service market will grow 36% a year to reach $1.9 billion by 2030. Starlink is waiting for clarity on India's spectrum allocation before firming up its commercial strategy, another source said. "I'd expect Starlink to make high-profile free offers elsewhere in order to try and demonstrate what India could be missing out on," he said.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Starlink, India's Ambani, Elon Musk, Mukesh Ambani, Narendra Modi, Musk, Ambani, OneWeb, Tim Farrar, Aditya Kalra, Munsif Vengattil, Aditi Shah, Raju Gopalakrishnan Organizations: REUTERS, DELHI, Reliance, Indian, Ambani's, Telecom Regulatory Authority of, SpaceX, Reuters, Deloitte, Foreign, TMF Associates, Thomson Locations: India, U.S, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
He has not addressed a single press conference in India since becoming prime minister about nine years ago. In May 2019 he attended a press conference but never took questions. White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said the White House understands the press conference is a "big deal." "We are just grateful that Prime Minister Modi is participating in a press event at the end of the visit," Kirby said. The format of the press conference will include one question from the U.S. press and one from an Indian journalist, Kirby said.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Modi, Mohammed, Read, Joe Biden, John Kirby, Kirby, Biden, Katharine Jackson, Steve Holland, Kanishka Singh, Doina Chiacu, Heather Timmons, Grant McCool Organizations: Indian, United Nations General Assembly, REUTERS, White House, U.S ., White, U.S, Bharatiya Janata Party, United, Thomson Locations: New York, United States, WASHINGTON, India, U.S, Indian, backsliding
Indeed, Biden will likely be accused of hypocrisy for playing down issues of human rights and democracy erosion under Modi, both accusations that Modi claims are false. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Joe Biden meet at the Oval Office, in September 2021. Though Modi’s administration denies it, human rights organizations say discrimination against Muslims has worsened under Modi and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party. Officials say Biden will raise the issue of India’s human rights record and democracy backsliding, but it’s likely they will be downplayed. After all, putting human rights publicly at the heart of relations with Saudi Arabia did little more than open the region’s door to China.
Persons: Frida Ghitis, Narendra Modi, Modi, Joe Biden, Biden, Sarahbeth Maney, Rahul Gandhi, “ Modi, Gandhi, It’s, , Vladimir Putin, State Anthony Blinken, ” Biden, Facebook Modi – Organizations: CNN, Washington Post, Politics, Indian, Frida Ghitis CNN, United Nations, White House, White, Bharatiya Janata Party, Journalists, Freedom House, State, Twitter, Facebook, Capitol Locations: United States, India, France, South Korea, Washington, Gujarat, Ukraine, China, Australia, Japan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Pacific, New York
June 20 (Reuters) - Tesla (TSLA.O) chief executive Elon Musk will directly brief Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on plans to set up a manufacturing base there, a source with direct knowledge said. Executives of the U.S. automaker visited India and held talks with Indian bureaucrats and ministers last month on establishing a manufacturing base for cars, and also to make batteries in India. Musk will discuss investment plans and outlook with Modi, the source said, describing the planned discussion as a "high-level meeting about India's economic potential". "Tesla has very strong plans for India, including looking at manufacturing," the person added. Tesla last year shelved its India entry plans due to high import tax structures, but has renewed talks in recent weeks by sharing plans with Indian officials about a manufacturing base there, which India has long sought.
Persons: Elon Musk, Narendra Modi, Musk, Modi, Tesla, Jack Dorsey, Shivangi Acharya, Aftab Ahmed, Aditya Kalra, Aditi Shah, Hyunjoo Jin, Conor Humphries, Angus MacSwan, Mark Heinrich Our Organizations: Indian, U.S ., Apple, Twitter, Reuters, Thomson Locations: United States, India, Indian, U.S, China, Washington, Beijing
June 20 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out a lower court ruling that blocked South Carolina from ending public funding to Planned Parenthood, giving the Republican-governed state another chance to defend its bid to deprive the reproductive healthcare and abortion provider of government money. Circuit Court of Appeals had barred South Carolina from terminating funding to Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, the organization's regional affiliate, under Medicaid, because the organization provides abortions. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic operates clinics in the South Carolina cities of Charleston and Columbia, where it provides physical exams, cancer and other health screenings, as well as abortions. South Carolina is one of numerous Republican-led states that have moved to ban or restrict abortion since the Supreme Court in 2022 overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that had legalized the procedure nationwide. The law is a revised version of a previous ban that the state's highest court struck down in January.
Persons: Julie Edwards, Henry McMaster, Edwards, Roe, Wade, Andrew Chung, Nate Raymond, Will Dunham Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Republican, Circuit, Appeals, Atlantic, Medicaid, Federal Nursing Home, Thomson Locations: South Carolina, Indiana, Richmond , Virginia, Charleston, Columbia, South Carolina's, New York, Boston
Spokespeople for Micron and the Indian government, including its technology ministry, did not respond to requests for comment. A senior Biden administration official said the White House was "encouraged" by the number of U.S. firms considering India investments. An Indian industry source familiar with Micron's approvals said the so-called Assembly Testing Marking and Packaging will be built in the city of Sanand. Micron could procure and package chip for clients at the plant, or other companies could send their chips for testing before shipping. The source added that Micron's India plant would boost Modi's vision of making India a semiconductor base but true success would require actual manufacturing.
Persons: Narendra Modi's, Modi, Biden, Aditya Kalra, Aftab Ahmed, Trevor Hunnicutt, Conor Humphries, David Goodman Organizations: chipmaker Micron, U.S, Micron, FedEx, MasterCard, House, White House, Reuters, Biden, United, U.S . Commerce Department, Thomson Locations: India, DELHI, WASHINGTON, Gujarat, China, Sanand
NEW DELHI, June 20 (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi left for the U.S. on Tuesday on a state visit that has been projected as a milestone in ties between the two countries that would deepen and diversify their partnership. Modi has been to the U.S. five times since becoming prime minister in 2014 but the June 21-24 trip will be his first with the full diplomatic status of an official state visit. Washington sees India as a vital partner in its efforts to push back against China's expanding influence worldwide. Modi's visit comes amid differences in the positions of Washington and New Delhi over Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The world has full confidence that India’s top-most priority is peace," he said in the interview published on Tuesday.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Modi, Joe Biden's, Elon Musk, Tesla, Vinay Kwatra, Twitter's, Jack Dorsey, Lavanya Ahire, YP Rajesh, Raju Gopalakrishnan Organizations: Indian, U.S, Reuters, Twitter, Wall Street, Wall Street Journal, Security Council, YP, Thomson Locations: DELHI, U.S, Washington and New Delhi, India, Washington, United States, New Delhi, Ukraine, Moscow, United Nations, BENGALURU
New AI technology at the drive-thru at a Carl's Jr. location. In real-world situations, reactions to AI drive-thrus are still mixed. “We expect AI to augment the competitive advantages of restaurants with digital culture.”Short-staffed restaurants may see AI as a way to fill in the gaps. “There aren’t enough at-scale examples of voice AI in action, especially in this use case,” to say that people would prefer AI to an employee, said McAllister. By the time those examples exist, AI in drive-thrus may already be the norm.
Persons: CKE, Carl’s Jr, Wendy’s, Joel Angel Juarez, it’s, ” Thomas Kurian, , Christina McAllister, Forrester, upsells, Krishna Gupta, Presto, , Todd Penegor, Penegor, Yong Suk Lee, “ it’s, Brandon Bell, McAllister Organizations: New, New York CNN, Google, USA, Wall Street, Indiana White, Wall Street Journal, Presto Automation, CKE, Presto, Presto Voice, University of Notre Dame, Intouch Locations: New York, White, Wendy’s, Columbus , Ohio, The Republic
India's foreign ministry is consulting with departments on their appetite for fertiliser and gas from Cairo as part payment for the credit line, an Indian official said. India, the world's second-largest wheat producer, banned wheat exports in May 2022 to help control rising domestic prices, rescinding a plan to export 3 million tons of wheat to Egypt in the year 2022/23. The other sources from India and Egypt did not wish to be identified as they are not authorised to speak to the press. India's external affairs ministry, finance ministry, trade minister, and Egypt's foreign ministry and trade ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. India exported $4.11 billion of goods to Egypt in the last fiscal year, while importing $1.95 billion.
Persons: Narendra Modi's, Ali Moselhy, Moselhy, Rajendra Jadhav, Conor Humphries Organizations: Reuters, Indian, Thomson Locations: CAIRO, DELHI, India, Egypt, Delhi, Cairo, New Delhi, Russia
Maryanna Harstad was stunned and then elated when she heard that the Supreme Court had upheld a law on Thursday aimed at keeping Native American adoptees with their tribes and traditions. Adopted herself by a white family nearly two decades before the law was passed in 1978, she was worried about the effect that overturning it could have had on Native children. “You always feel that you’re kind of this impersonator,” Ms. Harstad, 63, an enrolled member of the Leech Lake Band of the Minnesota Ojibwe and a descendant of the Blackfeet Nation of Montana, said about learning about her culture later in life. She knew very little about her heritage until she majored in American Indian Studies in college, and has since met her biological family and volunteered extensively with many Indigenous groups in Minneapolis. She is now a program director for Gichitwaa Kateri, a Native American Roman Catholic Church in Minneapolis.
Persons: Maryanna, , ” Ms, Gichitwaa Kateri Organizations: Blackfeet, Indian Studies, American Roman Catholic Church Locations: Maryanna Harstad, Harstad, Minnesota, of Montana, Minneapolis, American
The justices found that the plaintiffs - the Republican-governed state of Texas and three non-Native American families - lacked the necessary legal standing to bring their challenge. They also rejected challenges to the law, known as the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978, on other grounds. Congress passed it to end a longstanding practice in the United States of removing many Native American children from their families and placing them with non-Native Americans. At the time of the law's passage, between 25% and 35% of all Native American children were removed in states with large Native American populations, according to court papers. Interior Department and federal officials by Texas and the three families who sought to adopt or foster Native American children.
Persons: Amy Coney Barrett, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Joe Biden, Biden, Jennifer, Chad Brackeen, Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, Kavanaugh, Andrew Chung, Will Dunham Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Constitution's, Republican, Indian Child Welfare, Tribal Nations, Indian Child Welfare Association, National Congress of American, Child Welfare, U.S . Interior Department, Circuit, Thomson Locations: Texas, United States, Navajo, New Orleans, New York
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