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Mumbai on high alert after Chennai train blasts

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 01 Mei 2014 | 22.23

MUMBAI: Following twin bomb blasts in a train near Chennai early on Thursday morning, the Mumbai police sounded a high alert with putting nakabandis and deploying the quick response team in various places in the city.

Police officials said that despite May 1 being a public holiday, patrolling and security was beefed up in and around important installations. "We are on alert and all the police stations and specialized units have been asked to increase the patrolling and make the police presence feel on the streets. Cops are conducting surprise checks at various places and monitoring the suspicious people to avoid any untoward incident in the city," said a senior police official.

The bomb detection and disposal squad was ready to tackle any untoward incident. Senior police officials said that they did not have any specific input about any terror outfit or terror strike in the city.


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Ransom call from plumber's phone led cops to Kalyan abductor

KALYAN: A ransom call made from a plumber's phone by Istiyaq Shaikh helped the police crack the kidnap and murder case of Rohan Gucchait (12).

Shaikh, an electrician known to the boy's father, had made a call on April 18, a day after kidnapping the child, demanding Rs 50 lakh. The boy was killed by Shaikh and his aides the same day. Shaikh, who had met the plumber at a tea stall outside a hospital, had requested him to lend his cellphone. Shaikh had said his phone was not functioning. This was captured on the hospital CCTV," an officer said. When the police traced the number and reached the plumber, the latter told them of having lent his phone to a man at the tea stall. tnn

Kalyan: A ransom call made from a plumber's phone by the prime accused helped the police crack the kidnap


22.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Four caught during coastal security mock exercise

MUMBAI: Four people were caught for trespassing from two different places during the Sagar Kavach operation—a three-day mock drill carried out to check coastal security in and around the city.

A source said that while two persons were caught near Gateway of India, two others were found in the sea near Trombay on Wednesday.

The two found near Trombay were reportedly caught in a fishing boat without valid documents and were taken to RCF police station. They were charged and let off. "The drill is still going on," said Dhananjay Kamlakar, joint commissioner (law and order). A source said the Sagar Kavach operation will conclude on Thursday. The drill is being carried out by the Mumbai police, the Indian Coast Guard, CISF and other agencies. The police said that during the mock drill, they send a decoy party to particular spot and then ask security agencies to check and catch them.

A mock drill was carried out at Gateway of India, Ferry Wharf, Trombay, Juhu Chowpatty, Bandra Worli Sea Link and Marine Drive.


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Youth robbed of Rs 4 lakh gold near CST

MUMBAI: A 22-year-old employee of a jewellery shop in Kalbadevi has claimed that he was robbed of gold ornaments worth Rs 4 lakh outside JJ School of Arts opposite CST on Tuesday night. The Azad Maidan police have registered a case of robbery.

According to the police, around 9pm on Tuesday, Jaswantsingh Sarangavat was heading towards CST with a bag containing gold ornaments to be delivered to a client. He was near JJ school when two persons pushed him from behind and took away the bag. He told the police that he didn't remember how the bag disappeared from his hands. Sarangavat than lodged a complaint with the cops. However, the police have found it hard to believe that somebody would dare to snatch a bag on a crowded stretch near CST at 9pm.


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Need hi-tech CCTV cameras: Traffic police chief

MUMBAI: The traffic police have made a proposal to the government to procure 150 enforcement cameras that could be mounted at various junctions. Traffic police chief B K Upadhyaya said this on the sidelines of an event marking the golden jubilee of the Traffic Training Institute at Byculla.

Unlike regular surveillance cameras, an enforcement camera detects traffic violations, including speeding, jumping signals, unauthorized use of a bus lane etc. It could be linked to an automated ticketing (challan) system. TOI, as part of its Mumbai Patrol campaign, had done a detailed report on the necessity of having enforcement cameras installed in city. "An enforcement camera will be of immense benefit as it will clearly capture the registration number of the offender's vehicle," Upadhyaya said. He added that the department intended to do away with traditional methods of teaching new recruits and make use of technology for a modern approach. A road traffic simulator will be brought in at the institute as a tool to study the flow of vehicles.

The institute has trained over 40,000 policemen from India and abroad including cops from Bhutan, Nepal and Sri Lanka. "New recruits hailing from small towns are not exposed to heavy traffic movement. We will train them at congested junctions like Haji Ali which will give them the necessary expertise even if they are subsequently transferred outside Mumbai," said Upadhyaya.


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Security beefed up on city railways after Chennai twin blasts

MUMBAI: Following the twin bomb blasts in the Bangalore-Guwahati Express in Tamil Nadu early on Thursday, special emphasis was given to beef up railway security in Mumbai.

The Railway Protection Force deputed 500 of their men for bandobast on the Western line. "We have sounded off a high alert and instructed staffers to conduct checks on platforms," said senior divisional security commissioner Rajendra Rupnawar, RPF (WR). On the Central line, additional men were called for from the RPF headquarters for bandobast. "Striking forces have been deployed. Dog squads have been roped in for checks. Commuter baggage is being scanned. Our appeal to commuters is to not touch suspicious objects and report them immediately," said senior divisional security commissioner Alok Bohra, RPF (CR).

"Anti sabotage checks are also being conducted on CR stations and in parking areas. Special squads have been formed at every railway police station for conducting random checks on trains. Frequent announcements are made on platforms for commuters. Minimum personnel — necessary for registering complaints — are being retained at railway police stations and the rest have been deployed on the field. Officers have been instructed to ensure maximum police presence on the railways and conduct surprise checks," said DCP Rupali Ambure, GRP (CR).
Police officials said that despite May 1 being a public holiday, patrolling and security was beefed up in and around important installations. "We are on alert and all the police station and specialized units have been asked to increase the patrolling and make the police presence feel on the streets. Cops are conducting surprise checks at various places and monitoring suspicious people to avoid any untoward incident in the city," said a senior police official.

The bomb detection and disposal squad was ready to tackle any untoward incident. Senior police officials said that they did not have any specific input about any terror outfit or terror strike in the city.


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Man cons live-in partner of Rs 50 lakh gold with DJ’s help

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 April 2014 | 22.23

MUMBAI: An unemployed man, who was in a live-in relationship with a woman, and his friend, who is a disc jockey, were arrested on Sunday for stealing gold worth Rs 50 lakh from the girlfriend's flat.

The accused, Avinash Kale, was financially dependent on his partner. In the incident, which took place on Saturday, Kale convinced his girlfriend to go out for a movie without him as he had to take care of urgent work. Kale then stole the ornaments from the woman's flat in Mahim that he also resided in.

The theft came to light after the woman returned home and found it had been ransackled. Kale's friend, Vishnu Kamble, who assisted Kale in the crime admitted to the theft after he was interrogated by the crime branch. Kamble told cops Kale had been routinely stealing from the home and cleaned out the entire booty on April 26. Police have recovered 550g of gold from the duo.

The victim lodged a complaint with the Mahim police who scanned Kale's call reports and found he had been in Kapad Bazaar itself that day. Cops also noticed that many calls had been made between Kale and Kamble that day.


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Removal of ‘VIP benches’ now may damage Five Gardens’ costly turf

MUMBAI: In clear violation of heritage laws, six park benches which are not in accordance with the heritage committee recommendations, were installed earlier this month at the D garden of the 90-year-old Five Gardens in Dadar.

This was done as per the wish of local councillor Nayana Sheth, alleged local municipal officials. They added that since the purchase was made from the corporator's fund, the wish could not be turned down. Sheth, however, denied any role in the shift in the benches' installation. "The contractor must have got confused as the two gardens are close to each other. There is nothing more," Sheth said.

The mix-up may prove costly. The benches have been installed into an astro turf and their removal may damage the expensive turf, said the Five Gardens' contractor.

The heritage violation came to light when activist Nikhil Desai filed a query under the Right to Information Act, asking for the details of the benches installed in the gardens of F-North ward. The reply noted that the BMC had paid a contractor Rs 3 lakh to install six benches in Palamkot Garden. But at the site, he noticed, there was none.

"At the BMC ward office, I was told that the benches meant for Palamkot Garden had been installed in the children's garden of Five Gardens. This is not in accordance with the plans approved for the latter by the city's heritage committee," said Desai.

The biggest open space in south-central Mumbai, Five Gardens is currently getting a makeover of its own from the BMC at a cost of Rs 5 crore. The civic body is expected to install 45 benches (each costing Rs 37,695) that complement the grade III heritage precinct. They were ordered in 2013, reportedly from the same supplier who later provided the park benches for Palamkot Garden.

After TOI spoke to several officials in the BMC's garden cell, benches meant for Five Gardens were seen being installed in Palamkot. "This is clearly a violation of the civic body's tender conditions. You cannot pick stuff meant for one garden and install it in another. More so, when there is a price difference," said Desai.

Additional municipal commissioner S V R Srinivas said he was unaware about the issue and will seek a report from the garden cell, which is implementing the project.


22.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man cons live-in partner of 50 lakh gold with DJ’s help

MUMBAI: An unemployed man, who was in a live-in relationship with a woman, and his friend, who is a disc jockey, were arrested on Sunday for stealing gold worth Rs 50 lakh from the girlfriend's flat.

The accused, Avinash Kale, was financially dependent on his partner. In the incident, which took place on Saturday, Kale convinced his girlfriend to go out for a movie without him as he had to take care of urgent work. Kale then stole the ornaments from the woman's flat in Mahim that he also resided in.

The theft came to light after the woman returned home and found it had been ransackled. Kale's friend, Vishnu Kamble, who assisted Kale in the crime admitted to the theft after he was interrogated by the crime branch. Kamble told cops Kale had been routinely stealing from the home and cleaned out the entire booty on April 26. Police have recovered 550g of gold from the duo.

The victim lodged a complaint with the Mahim police who scanned Kale's call reports and found he had been in Kapad Bazaar itself that day. Cops also noticed that many calls had been made between Kale and Kamble that day.


22.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Commuter anger rises over Mumbai's deadly trains

MUMBAI: Cricket-mad teenager Dhaval Lodaya was on his way to a temple when his Mumbai train derailed and he bled to death, becoming one of the ten people who die every day on the city's rail network.

Known as the lifeline of financial capital Mumbai, the low-fare trains have become a dangerous gamble for the millions of commuters who use them daily, with 3,506 deaths recorded last year alone.

In a city that has grown around its rail system, built by the British 160 years ago, many today are killed crossing the tracks, some have heart attacks in the overcrowded carriages, or fall from doors of moving trains and hit trackside poles.

On journeys ferrying commuters from outlying suburbs to the business districts, scores are charred to death each year while travelling on coach roofs as high-voltage electricity courses through overhead wires, say activists.

So although 17-year-old Lodaya's death on March 20 was far from rare, it was a tipping point for some Mumbai residents who, spurred on by his family and friends, marched in their hundreds to nearby train stations in anger at railway authorities.

"We lost the light of our family. We told the authorities that they had forced us to protest and they should remedy the situation," Lodaya's father told AFP at his modest family apartment in Mumbai, where the teenager's picture sits on a small television.

'Justice for Dhaval'

When Lodaya's train derailed north of the city, an ambulance took more than an hour to reach the spot and railway police failed to move the boy to safety, his father alleges. Rail officials told him traffic-clogged roads caused the delays.

A Facebook page titled "Justice for Dhaval Lodaya", set up by friends to keep a tab on the promised investigation into his death, has received nearly 30,000 "likes" pledging support.

Despite the dangers facing passengers, a leading activist says lucrative returns from the Mumbai rail network, which carries 7.5 million passengers daily, offer little incentive for reform by the state-owned Indian Railways.

Samir Zaveri, who became a rail safety campaigner after losing both his legs in a fall from a Mumbai train two decades ago, said corruption and mismanagement are main reasons for the current state of the rail system.

"Mumbai is the cash cow of Indian Railways. So even though the authorities may cry about the paucity of funds, the fact is that Mumbai is a lucrative posting" for Indian Railways officials, he said.

Zaveri accused officials of bribing their way into posts in Mumbai and shaking down station vendors.

"Indulging in corruption and not improvement of services is the focus," he told AFP.

A senior Mumbai railway official, declining to be named, said approval had been given for automatic doors on all local coaches to prevent people falling, but that these would be difficult to fit while keeping trains on schedule.

"The (safety) problem is known, but the solution is problematic," he said, declining to say whether his colleagues were involved in corruption.

Improving India's notoriously bad infrastructure, from its roads and railways to its unreliable power supply, is seen as key to kickstarting slowing economic growth. Both major parties currently contesting national elections have pledged to tackle the problem.

But complex politics and constraints on land in Mumbai have led to ambitious past projects being delayed by years and failing to significantly combat congestion.

Transport experts have criticized a partly-finished monorail project, so far only stretching for 8.8 kilometres (5.5 miles) in the city's east, for overshooting its deadline and budget, while a long-awaited and expensive Metro rail project is yet to open.

Mumbai 'out of focus'

Despite Mumbai's wealth, the city is part of the much larger, mostly rural, Maharashtra state, whose legislators are mostly more interested in their hinterland constituencies, said Uttara Sahasrabuddhe, professor in civics and politics at the Mumbai University.

"Issues of Mumbai remain out of focus," she said.

The Congress party, which has dominated Maharashtra for most of its history, created new agencies to wrest control of spending after it lost power over Mumbai's municipal corporation to a local rival in the 1990s, Sahasrabuddhe explained.

Hence Mumbai's own representatives "can do little more than plead with the Congress-led state government about city spending," she added.

One such agency, the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority or MMRDA, points to other factors causing delays.

"The biggest issue in Mumbai is securing land rights to start building your project. Land is so scarce that nobody budges even an inch," Dilip Kawathkar, MMRDA spokesman, told AFP.

Mumbai has two recent transport success stories: a swanky new international airport terminal and a "Sea Link" toll bridge connecting the city's north and south, but critics say they benefit just a wealthy fraction of the city.

As public transport options for the masses fail to improve, more and more residents are piling on to the roads on motorbikes and in cars.

"In a city which is so short on space, the focus should be on stopping more cars from getting on to the road. We seem to be consciously doing the opposite," said local transport expert Ashok Datar.

"It is like we are planning for disaster."


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