Thane court convicts two Bangladeshi women for illegal entry, sentences them to period already served | Mumbai News

Thane court convicts two Bangladeshi women for illegal entry, sentences them to period already served

Thane: A Thane sessions court has convicted two Bangladeshi women for illegally entering and staying in India without valid permission and sentenced them to the period already undergone in jail after they pleaded guilty to the charges.Additional Sessions Judge MS Lone convicted Ranu Begam Abdul Rop Shaikh, 54, and Mukta Shambhudas Biswas, 35, under Rules 3 and 4 of the Passport (Entry into India) Rules, 1920, read with Sections 13 and 14(a)(b) of the Foreigners Order, 1948.According to the prosecutor, the two women were found near Riddhi Siddhi Hospital at Shivar Garden in Mira Road between 2.40 pm and 3.10 pm on Feb 3, 2025. They allegedly entered India without permission of the civil authority at the port of entry and continued to stay in the country illegally. Police subsequently filed a charge sheet before the court.The court noted that both accused pleaded guilty after the charge was framed and sought leniency, citing that they werein custody since Feb 3, 2025 — a period of over 16 months. The judge personally verified their consent to the charges via video conference before recording the plea.The court sentenced both women to simple imprisonment of one year, four months and 20 days each and directed that the period already spent in custody be set off under Section 468 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita.

Police personnel deployed outside Sachin Ahir’s residence | Mumbai News

Police personnel deployed outside Sachin Ahir’s residence

Mumbai: Police personnel were deployed outside the home of Sachin Ahir a day after he filed nomination for the election to the post of council deputy chairperson as candidate of the Shiv Sena.A police van and two constables were stationed outside Ahir’s residence at the Goolrukh building in Worli, an official said on Wednesday.Supporters had started visiting Ahir after his move on Tuesday, necessitating a police presence outside his residence, the official added.Ahir’s switching over came a week after six rebel Lok Sabha MPs of the Uddhav Thackeray-led party joined the Eknath Shinde-headed Shiv Sena.

Ahir elected council deputy chairperson unopposed after oppn nominee withdraws | Mumbai News

Ahir elected council deputy chairperson unopposed after oppn nominee withdraws

Clara.LewisMumbai: Sachin Ahir was elected unanimously as deputy chairperson of the state legislative council on Wednesday. The opposition’s candidate, Shiv Sena (UBT) MLC Jagannath Abhyankar, withdrew his nomination, paving the way for Ahir’s election unopposed.Though Ahir had been with UBT Sena, on Tuesday he filed his nomination for the post from Shiv Sena as Mahayuti candidate. Setting to rest doubts about the legality and propriety of Ahir’s nomination and election to the post, CM Devendra Fadnavis said all doubts had been set to rest on 18 July, 2023, when Neelam Gorhe became deputy chairperson. When Ahir was elected to the council in 2022, Fadnavis said it was on the Shiv Sena symbol of bow and arrow, and no change has occurred. “I am confident no one will ask those questions because when Neelam-tai became (deputy chairperson), I responded to all those questions, so there is clarity on the issue. Whether his decision is proper, improper, whether there is defection… there is no such thing. It is proper… legally he has become deputy chairperson,” said Fadnavis, who moved the resolution for election of Ahir as council deputy chairperson.Dy CM Eknath Shinde said he had broken the ‘dahi handi’ two months in advance. Ahir was the first to organise a ‘dahi handi’ competition on Janmashtami in Mumbai, and it has now become an annual feature.Ahir, after his election to the council on the Shiv Sena symbol, had always identified with Sena (UBT) and sat on the opposition benches. His nomination to the post of deputy chairperson of the council as a Shinde Sena candidate was very quietly executed and came as a shock to Sena (UBT). MLC Anil Parab of Shiv Sena (UBT) said no one got a whiff.Fadnavis said Ahir had worked under Sharad Pawar, so he knew the right time to hit a goal. “In public life it is very important to make the proper decision at the proper time,” Fadnavis said.Parab said though they are very few legislators in the opposition, five of the Sena (UBT), five from Congress and two from NCP (SP), state parliamentary affairs minister Chandrakant Patil reached out and requested the opposition to withdraw its candidate Jagannath Abhyankar. “Ahir being nominated crushed the dreams of many others and despite a majority, there was fear in the ruling party about a contest. Just as the opposition allowed the deputy chairperson to be elected unanimously, the post of opposition leader must be given,” Parab said.Ahir said though his political affiliations had changed, his commitment to the common people remained unchanged.

Min privately admitted he didn’t know TET papers were printed in Agra: BJP MLA | Mumbai News

Min privately admitted he didn’t know TET papers were printed in Agra: BJP MLA

Mumbai: BJP MLA Sudhir Mungantiwar on Wednesday claimed state school education minister Dada Bhuse privately told him he was not aware that the exam papers of the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET), which was postponed after an alleged paper leak, were printed in Agra. He said the minister’s admission exposed serious lapses in the functioning of the school education department.Bhuse, who belongs to the Shiv Sena led by Dy CM Eknath Shinde, was not available for comment.Speaking to reporters on the premises of Vidhan Bhavan, where the legislature session is currently underway, Mungantiwar said, “The school education minister privately admitted that his department never informed him that the (TET) examination papers were getting printed in Agra. Agra has a historic connection with Maharashtra as Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj escaped from there, but now the sin of an examination paper leak has also taken place there.“The minister now says the examinations will be conducted online and question papers will be prepared here,” the BJP legislator said. Bhuse’s admission exposed serious lapses in the functioning of the department, the former minister said, and underscored the need for a review of all state-level examinations.He said he had urged the minister to conduct a thorough audit of every exam organised by the state govt to ensure they were conducted fairly and peacefully and to establish a foolproof mechanism to prevent such incidents in future.During a discussion in the legislature over the alleged TET paper leak on Monday, Mungantiwar had questioned the state govt over the TET paper leak.

Man threatens co-passenger on Mumbai local train, police launch manhunt | Mumbai News

Man threatens co-passenger on Mumbai local train, police launch manhunt
A video from a Central Railway local shows a man in shabby attire threatening a fellow passenger

MUMBAI: A week after a horrific murder of a passenger in a local train between Goregaon and Malad stations, a viral video captured on a Central Railway local has captured a shabbily dressed man threatening a co-passenger following an altercation in a local train at Govandi.The Lokmanya Tilak Terminus (LTT) GRP have started a manhunt for the individual.They are yet to lodge an FIR as the complainant hasn’t come forward.Police said they are also probing if the accused was inebriated.“Cameras on CR have not been fitted with Facial Recognition System (FRS) unlike WR stations so we have to manually track down the individual. A search is on,” said a senior official.

321 trees not de-concretised: Activists; HC says submit grievance to BMC | Mumbai News

321 trees not de-concretised: Activists; HC says submit grievance to BMC
HC posted the matter after four weeks

Mumbai: Bombay HC on Tuesday asked the petitioner and the intervenor in a PIL that sought judicial intervention to prevent tree falls and any consequential injuries to submit to BMC their claim that 321 trees have yet not been de-concretised. Activist Sagar Ugale disputed BMC’s claim that only 5% of the trees in Mumbai are yet to be de-concretised. Thane resident Rohit Joshi had filed the PIL and expressed concern over trees falling during the monsoon. Ugale filed a plea for intervention stating that of over 830 trees inspected along 35 roads in seven civic wards, from Fort to Malad, Santacruz and Dahisar, 321 trees had inadequate open soil space or improperly constructed tree basins. He said 471 trees require further scientific de-concretisation. The HC division bench headed by Justice A S Gadkari gave the petitioner and the intervenor time to submit their data and grievances to BMC and posted the matter after four weeks.

‘No amount of compensation is enough’: Family seeks answers | Mumbai News

‘No amount of compensation is enough’: Family seeks answers

Mumbai: “Asato ma sad gamaya, tamaso ma jyotir gamaya, mrityor ma amritam gamaya—lead me from untruth to truth, from darkness to light, from death to immortality.” The ancient Sanskrit mantra for enlightenment and peace echoed as 11-year-old Vihan Srivastav, who died when a roadside tree fell on his school bus on Chembur’s Road No 11, began his final journey.With the grieving family’s friends and relatives gathered around them, the outrage over the lack of administrative accountability for such fatal tree collapses was palpable.As the funeral procession made its way from the family’s residence at Kukreja Heights to the waiting ambulance, Vihan’s father, an engineer with UltraTech Cement, led the gathering with stoicism while the cries of his mother and other relatives and neighbours rang through the residential society.Before the funeral, Vihan’s inconsolable mother, Juhi Srivastav, had sat silently at home, clutching her son’s cricket bat while relatives and neighbours gathered around her, her silence reflecting a loss too profound for words.At the Deonar Pada crematorium, moments before the pyre was lit, family members placed a cricket ball beside Vihan’s body—a final farewell to a child who, according to his grandfather, S. N. Srivastav, “loved cricket”.“I had bought him a bat and ball. He was a big foodie as well,” said Srivastav, an advocate from Firozabad in Uttar Pradesh, adding tearfully but with pride, “he could recite the Hanuman Chalisa word for word, completely by heart.” Srivastav said he plans to file a complaint over the incident. “I will submit a complaint, but somebody has to take it up and ensure action is taken,” he said.“Our child cannot come back,” said Anil Srivastav, Vihan’s granduncle and a retired additional secretary of the Lok Sabha who flew in from Delhi. “No amount of compensation is enough. Our boy, the only child of his parents, is gone. Before every monsoon, funds are allocated for civic works. They should be properly utilised. Something has to be done about dangerous trees and open manholes so that no more families have to suffer what we are going through.Shiv Sena (UBT) MP Anil Desai, who visited the family, said complaints about hazardous trees and civic infrastructure “must be taken seriously and attended to”. “It is criminal if complaints are lodged but no action is taken. Trees along roads must be maintained and looked after regularly,” he said. “It’s absolutely shameful. They call Mumbai an international city and this is what it does to citizens.”Also present at the funeral was local MLA Tukaram Kate who said an FIR must be registered against those responsible and accountability fixed. “What has happened is extremely unfortunate. The authorities have a responsibility to provide basic public safety. Watching the helpless parents is heartbreaking,” he said.Finally, as smoke from the funeral pyre rose into the grey sky, an overhead exhaust system drew much of it away, leaving behind only the damp scent of the monsoon. The family stood huddled together as relatives and neighbours streamed past to pay their final respects.Neighbour Vinod Malhotra recalled meeting Vihan just days before the accident. “I asked him how old he was and he smiled and said, ‘Eleven.’ I told him, ‘You’ve grown so tall.’ I was surprised how much he had grown in such a short time. He was such a kind and lovely boy,” he said.

Mumbai police bust Dehradun fake call centre that duped job aspirants | Mumbai News

Mumbai police bust Dehradun fake call centre that duped job aspirants
Eleven accused have been arrested

Mumbai: Mankhurd police have busted a fake call centre operating from Dehradun in Uttarakhand that allegedly duped unemployed youths from across the country with airline job offers in Mumbai. Eleven accused have been arrested.Police said the case was registered on February 27 under Sections 319(2) and 318(4) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, along with Sections 66(a) and 66(d) of the Information Technology Act, after the complainant alleged that he was cheated of nearly Rs 2.6 lakh on the promise of securing a job with Air India in Mumbai.During investigation, police used technical surveillance to trace the accused to Dehradun, where they were allegedly operating a fake call centre targeting job aspirants across the country.

BMC orders strict action against officers, employees skipping SIR duty in Mumbai | Mumbai News

BMC orders strict action against officers, employees  skipping SIR duty in Mumbai

Mumbai: BMC’s additional municipal commissioner Prajakta Verma-Lavangare, who is also additional district election officer, has directed that strict action will be initiated against officers and employees who fail to report immediately for the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) programme of electoral rolls. She also instructed assistant commissioners and zonal deputy commissioners of the BMC and the electoral registration officers concerned to coordinate with one another to ensure the programme is completed smoothly in the district.The directive to initiate action against errant officials comes in the wake of several booth-level officers (BLOs), including school teachers and BMC employees, failing to report for SIR work on the programme’s first day on Tuesday. BLOs are responsible for collecting enumeration forms, distributing them to every household in their assigned areas, getting them filled, and uploading the details online.The directions to take action were issued during a review meeting on the functioning of the assistant electoral registration officers held on Wednesday. Addressing the meeting, Verma-Lavangare said that while BMC officers and employees have responsibilities related to the monsoon, the SIR programme is equally important.BMC’s additional municipal commissioner and additional district election officer Vipin Sharma, additional commissioner (projects) and additional district election officer Abhijeet Bangar, additional commissioner (eastern suburbs) and additional district election officer Avinash Dhakane, and joint municipal commissioner (assessment and collection) Vishwas Shankarwar were present at the meeting.

Expert panel suggests pilot project for PoP idols, says chemical process may be economically unviable, Maharashtra government informs Bombay high court | Mumbai News

Expert panel suggests pilot project for PoP idols, says chemical process may be economically unviable, Maharashtra government informs Bombay high court
Bombay high court will hear the matter finally after two weeks

Mumbai: The state government on Wednesday submitted before the Bombay high court an expert technical panel report for eco-friendly dissolution of PoP idols, which recommended two separate artificial immersion ponds: one for idols made of environmentally unfriendly material and another for those made of traditional clay.The report also suggested more research was required as biological disintegration of PoP is very slow and not technically feasible. But it recommended that chemical or thermal processes were an option.The HC will hear the matter finally after two weeks.Proposed eco-friendly disposal methods, the committee said, could be a calcination process of dehydrating the used PoP at 150°C to convert it back into fresh PoP and the ‘chemical process’ of using ammonium bicarbonate to chemically break down the idols into ammonium sulphate and calcium carbonate.The BMC reported accumulating 2,000-2,500 tonnes of PoP idol waste following the 2025 Ganesh festival.The panel noted that chemical use could lead to air and water pollution and its economic viability needs to be checked as the amount of the bicarbonate needed is equivalent to the idol’s weight and is “10 times more expensive”.Calcination of PoP can help in reuse for new idols, plaster board, medical use for plaster for ceramic items or brick manufacturing, the panel suggested.The “expert scientific committee for suggesting methods for reuse, recycle of PoP material and its faster dissolution” was formed by the Maharashtra government last August in a pending PIL filed in 2024 and four connected petitions against the harmful effect of PoP idols. Activist Rohit Joshi had flagged concern before the HC of violations of its orders to ensure compliance with Central Pollution Control Board on PoP idol immersions.The committee, headed by Maharashtra Pollution Control Board member-secretary Devender Singh, also has Anurag Garg, professor from IIT- Bombay, and S Venkata Mohan, director, NEERI (Nagpur). It said the chemical disintegration process could be expensive and its “process optimisation and detailed economic analysis needs to be carried out”.The expert committee recommended that idols be kept in artificial tanks for at least three weeks to enable proper dissolution of paint, softening of PoP, and partial disintegration, and local bodies can transport them later to a processing facility. Devotees who wish, may send the idols directly to a pre-decided centre, where calcination can take place.The state, in its comments, noted that the panel suggested that pilot projects be implemented in 8 to 10 cities, including Mumbai, Pune, and Nagpur, to test the feasibility and costs of these recycling methods before rolling them out statewide.Joshi said, “ Maharashtra sees approximately 1.5 crore idols installed annually. If an average idol weighs 10kg, and we conservatively estimate that just 50% of them are made of PoP, we are looking at a staggering 75,000 tonnes of PoP waste generated across the state every single year.”