Jr NTR starrer ‘Devara’ teaser to be out soon, composer Anirudh Ravichander expresses excitement

In the latest update on this action saga, Anirudh who is also composing the music for Devara, added fuel to rumours and shared his reaction to the upcoming teaser.

Published Date – 05:21 PM, Wed – 27 December 23


Jr NTR starrer ‘Devara’ teaser to be out soon, composer Anirudh Ravichander expresses excitement


Mumbai: Building more anticipation about the Pan-India film ‘Devara’ starring Jr NTR, makers seem to release the much-awaited teaser soon. Music composer and singer Anirudh Ravichander shared his excitement.

Jr NTR and director Koratala Siva’s ‘Devara’ is one of the most anticipated films of 2024. Recently, rumours about the makers planning to release the teaser have gone viral.


In the latest update on this action saga, Anirudh who is also composing the music for Devara, added fuel to rumours and shared his reaction to the upcoming teaser.

To tease his fans, Anirudh took to X and wrote, “#Devara teaser @tarak9999 and #KoratalaSiva Excited #AllHailTheTiger.”

The film which is set against the costal lands is helmed by Koratala Siva the film stars Janhvi Kapoor, Jr NTR, and Saif Ali Khan in the lead roles. ‘Devara’ will be released in two parts.

The first part of the film will be released on April 5, 2024. ‘Devara’ marks the first collaboration of Janhvi with the ‘RRR’ actor.

The film’s music is done by Anirudh Ravichander with R Rathnavelu being the cinematographer. The official release date of the second part of the film is still awaited.

How Did Shaheen Become Pak T20 Captain? Afridi's "Galti Se" Reply Is Viral

File photo of Pakistan fast bowler Shaheen Afridi© AFP

The Pakistan cricket team underwent a huge transformation following a disappointing run in the Cricket World Cup 2023. The entire selection committee was revamped by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and in place of Babar Azam, fast bowler Shaheen Afridi was made the T20I captain. Legendary Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi, also the fast bowler’s father-in-law, had a funny take on Shaheen becoming the captain for the upcoming T20I series against New Zealand and he came up with an explanation involving veteran star Mohammad Rizwan.

During a recent event attended by Rizwan, Shaheen, fast bowler Haris Rauf and senior wicketkeeper-batter Sarfaraz Ahmed, Afridi was all praise for Rizwan.

He lauded the veteran star’s performance in the World Cup and said that he wanted Rizwan to be the T20 captain but Shaheen got the job “by mistake”.

“I admire Rizwan’s hard work and focus level. His best quality, which I like most, is only focusing on his game and paying no heed to who doing what and what not. He is really a fighter!” said Afridi in an event organised by the Shahid Afridi Foundation.

“I wanted to see him (Rizwan) as the T20 captain, but Shaheen became the skipper by mistake,” he added leaving the players along with the audience in splits.

Afridi’s first assignment as captain will be the five-match T20I series against New Zealand starting January 12, with matches being played on January 14, 17, 19 and 21. It will be the start of their preparation for T20 World Cup 2024 which will take place later this year.

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Case Against Ex Rajasthan Minister For Alleged Irregularities In Tenders

Case Against Ex Rajasthan Minister For Alleged Irregularities In Release Of Tenders

He is accused of illegally sanctioning tenders

Kota:

Former Rajasthan minister Pramod Jain Bhaya and Anta municipality chairman Mustafa Khan were on Monday booked for cheating, forgery and other charges in Baran district for allegedly illegally sanctioning tenders after the enforcement of the model code of conduct for state elections in September last year.

DSP Omendra Singh said that on a complaint by Anta city BJP president Rameshwar Khandelwal, the police lodged a case against Bhaya, who was the mining minister in the previous Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government, and Khan at Anta police station.

They have been booked under IPC sections 420 (cheating), 406 ( criminal breach of trust); 467, 468 and 471 (related to forgery) and 120(B) (criminal conspiracy).

It is alleged that Bhaya and Khan “sanctioned and opened tenders” of Anta municipality through forged documents with “back date” after the enforcement of the model code of conduct for election on September 9, 2023.

“The police collected necessary documents from Anta municipality and, after an initial investigation, lodged the case in the matter. A probe is on against officials involved in the tender process in the municipality,” DSP Singh, who is the Circle Officer- Anta, said. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

War Against Hamas Will Continue Throughout 2024, Warns Israeli Army

War Against Hamas Will Continue Throughout 2024, Warns Israeli Army

UN says 85 per cent of the population has been displaced in Gaza. (File)

Palestinian Territories:

Israel warned its war against Hamas will continue throughout 2024 as unrelenting strikes killed two dozen people in Gaza and the Palestinian group fired a rocket barrage at the stroke of midnight.

Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said in a New Year’s message that some of the 300,000 army reservists would get a break from the war, in order to prepare for the “prolonged fighting” ahead.

The army “must plan ahead, understanding that we will be required for additional tasks and warfare throughout this year,” Hagari said as the conflict sparked by the October 7 Hamas attacks raged on.

Heavy artillery fire again pounded targets in Hamas-run Gaza, killing at least 24 people, health ministry officials there said, with attacks reported across the length of the territory.

In the besieged Gaza Strip, where the UN says 85 percent of the population has been displaced, 20-year-old Hamdan Abu Arab said he hoped “2024 will be better”.

“We used to go out and enjoy our time on the last day of the year,” he recalled. “But this New Year’s Eve, there are only missiles and the remains of people.”

Hamas marked the start of the year by firing a rocket barrage at Israel in what it called a “response to the massacres of civilians”.

AFP journalists in Tel Aviv witnessed missile defence systems intercept rockets overhead as some revellers ran for cover and others kept up the party with a shrug.

“My heart was pounding,” said one, Gabriel Zemelman, 26, shortly after the rocket fire. “It’s terrifying. You just saw the life we live, it’s crazy.”

The bloodiest ever Gaza war was triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attacks on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of around 1,140 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

The operatives also took around 250 people hostage that day, more than half of whom remain in Gaza, according to Israeli officials.

Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas and launched a punishing offensive that has reduced vast areas of Gaza to a ruined wasteland and killed at least 21,822 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.

The Israeli army says 172 of its soldiers have been killed inside Gaza in the battle against the Islamist group which Israel, the United States and European Union have designated a “terrorist” organisation.

‘We live like animals’ 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned on Saturday that the fighting would last “many months until Hamas is eliminated and the hostages are returned”.

Hagari said “we are also currently adapting the planning of the force deployment in Gaza and the reserve system. Some of the reservists will return to their families and employment this week.

“This will significantly ease the burden on the economy and allow them to gather strength for the upcoming activities in the next year, as the fighting will continue and they will still be required.”

Since Israel imposed a siege at the outset of the war, Gazans have been facing dire shortages of food, water, fuel and medicine.

UN chief Antonio Guterres has condemned the “epic human suffering” and “collective punishment” of Palestinian civilians, while the WHO has warned of the risk of hunger and infectious disease.

“We are exhausted… We were displaced five times during this war,” said 29-year-old Bassam Hana.

“We hope things improve in 2024 and that we live just like any other human being. Currently, we live like animals.”

At least 48 Palestinians were killed in strikes on Gaza City over the weekend, the territory’s health ministry said, with many still buried under the rubble.

“After the explosion we arrived at the scene of the strike and saw martyrs everywhere,” said one resident after a building was hit. “Children are still missing, we can’t find them.”

Hagari, in a briefing on Sunday, said several operatives “were killed and subdued during the battles in Khan Yunis”, the main southern city, earlier in the day.

“We are continuing to handle the underground tunnels and to strike the rocket launching array, in order to reduce rocket fire into the State of Israel,” he said, adding that “dozens of aircrafts are in the skies of Gaza at any given moment”.

Regional fears 

International mediators have continued efforts toward a new pause in fighting.

A Hamas delegation from Qatar visited Cairo on Friday to discuss an Egyptian three-phase plan proposing renewable ceasefires, a staggered release of hostages for Palestinian prisoners, and ultimately an end to the war, sources close to Hamas said.

Their allies Islamic Jihad said on Saturday that Palestinian factions were evaluating the proposal and would give a response “within days”.

The war in Gaza has raised fears of a broader regional conflict, with hostilities flaring with mostly Iran-backed groups in nearby countries who say they are acting in support of Hamas.

The Israeli army announced Sunday night having intercepted two “hostile aircraft” launched from Syria towards northern Israel.

Earlier it had reported launches toward Israeli territory from Lebanon, where it has fought the Hezbollah group.

“Throughout the day, IDF (military) tanks and helicopters targeted three terrorist squads operating in Lebanon,” the army said in a statement.

And in the Red Sea, the US military said Sunday that Navy helicopters had fired at Iran-backed Huthi rebel boats off Yemen that were attacking a cargo ship, with Yemeni sources reporting 10 rebels killed.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Thousands of pro-Palestine protesters take to New York streets in solidarity with Gaza

Thousands of protesters marched on the streets of Manhattan, New York City, in a show of solidarity with the Palestinian people just hours ahead of New Year’s Eve celebrations to call for an immediate end to Israel’s onslaught on the Gaza Strip.

Footage shows protesters carrying signs reading, “Free Palestine,” “Stop the genocide” and “Free Gaza,” while chanting, “We won’t pay for Israel’s slaughter.”

Members of the Orthodox Jewish community were also seen joining the protest with signs reading “Judaism condemns … Israel.”

“Today, once again, the enemy wants us to believe that the Palestinian people have been defeated. Here, in the belly of the beast, they want you to believe that the movement is not important. That our protests have no impact…. If this is true why Netanyahu is crying about protests in the West?” said one of the speakers.

(Source: Ruptly)


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3-Year-Old Girl, Who Was Rescued From Borewell In Gujarat, Dies

3-Year-Old Girl, Who Was Rescued From Borewell In Gujarat, Dies

She died due to lack of oxygen, docter said.

Dwarka:

A three-year-old girl who fell into a borewell in Gujarat’s Dwarka district on Monday died while being taken to the hospital, within an hour after her rescue, officials said.

The girl, identified as Angel Sakhra, was rescued after an eight-hour-long operation and was taken to a government hospital in Khambhalia town.

“The girl was brought here today between 10:00 pm and 10:15 pm, and when she reached here, she was already dead. She died on her way to the hospital,” Resident Medical Officer (RMO) Dr. Ketan Bharti told ANI.

“We had sent our paediatrics student, who was treating the toddler after she was taken out of the borewell, but she died on her way,” he said.

RMO Bharti further said that the cause of the death of the child is asphyxia (also known as suffocation or asphyxiation), as she died due to lack of oxygen.

“The post-mortem examination has been done, and the final cause of death will be given after getting the final reports of the post-mortem,” said Dr. Ketan Bharti.

The girl was rescued earlier, at 9:48 p.m., by a team involving multiple agencies and sent to a hospital in an unconscious state.

Personnel of the Indian Army and the National Disaster Response Force were involved in the rescue operation.

Senior officials, including Dwarka District Collector Ashok Sharma, were also present during the operation.

The girl was playing in the front yard of her family’s residence in Ran village of the district when she reportedly slipped inside the open borewell around 1:00 PM on Monday.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Al-Qassam Brigades: 71 Israeli military vehicles destroyed, Tel Aviv barraged with rockets

The military wing of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas says its fighters have destroyed scores of Israeli military vehicles and killed over a dozen of the regime’s forces in their latest operations.

Abu Obaida, the spokesman for the al-Qassam Brigades, made the announcement in a statement on Monday.

Over the past four days, he said, al-Qassam’s fighters have managed to kill at least 16 Israeli forces and partially or completely destroy 71 Israeli military vehicles in 42 military missions.

The missions, Abu Obaida said, involved targeting the regime’s troops with anti-personnel ammunition and explosive devices such as booby traps and landmines, as well as engaging the enemy’s forces in close-range combat and sniper operations.

Noting that Palestinian fighters also targeted an Israeli helicopter in the skies over the Gaza Strip, Abu Obaida added, “Our fighters downed two reconnaissance drones and captured another.”

Most recently, the Israeli army reported the killing of an officer in the northern Gaza Strip, saying that the fatality brought the death toll among the regime’s forces to 507 since October 7, when Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza started.

Abu Obaida added that al-Qassam’s fighters have also targeted the coastal city of Tel Aviv in the occupied territories with a barrage of M90 rockets.

“They also shelled [Israeli forces’] headquarters, field command rooms, and military gatherings with mortar shells and short-range missiles across the Gaza Strip,” he said.

The regime began the its military aggression against Gaza following an operation by the territory’s resistance movements, dubbed Operation al-Aqsa Storm.

Close to 22,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, have been killed in the regime’s onslaught so far.

Also on Monday, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hamas’ fellow Gaza-based resistance movement, vowed that Palestinian resistance groups would not hesitate to stand up to the Israeli aggression.

“We affirm that we will continue to confront this war of extermination and displacement, and we rely on the awareness of our people and the bravery of the fighters in the field to thwart” Israel’s criminal plans, the movement said.

59% of Indian employees say ready to embrace AI: Report

An integral part of employers’ strategy to effectively adopt AI will be to ensure they follow ethical AI principles according to 42 per cent of respondents.

Published Date – 05:28 PM, Wed – 27 December 23


59% of Indian employees say ready to embrace AI: Report


New Delhi: Around 59 per cent of employees in India are confident in their ability to adapt and utilise artificial intelligence (AI) tools, indicating that there is likely to be widespread acceptance of AI at work next year, a report showed on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, only 19 per cent of surveyed employers have already implemented or are in the process of implementing next-generation technologies such as Generative AI at the workplace in 2024, according to the report by global hiring platform Indeed.


An integral part of employers’ strategy to effectively adopt AI will be to ensure they follow ethical AI principles according to 42 per cent of respondents.

Employers also believe that increasing human-AI collaboration (37 per cent) and reskilling/upskilling the workforce to meet the skill demand (25 per cent) will be key strategies they want to implement.

“The prevalence of roles like data analysts, software engineers, sales engineers, project managers and designers showcases the diverse landscape of expertise sought after by employers,” said Sashi Kumar, Head of Sales, Indeed India.

From the rise in generative AI skills to the enduring importance of programming languages and the growing demand for expertise in cybersecurity, it’s clear that adaptability and upskilling remain pivotal for success in the tech industry, he added.

This year, employees were predominantly focused on skills such as Generative AI skills (27 per cent) and programming languages (22 per cent) while employers were looking to hire for skills such as cybersecurity (37 per cent) and data science and analytics (29 per cent).

One of the important aspects for employers in 2024 will be to align Gen Z expectations with workplace strategies.

A majority of GenZ employees prefer their workplaces to have flexible work arrangements (38 per cent), purpose-driven work (23 per cent), and technology-driven environments (18 per cent), said the report.

'Had Ashes Game At…': David Warner On His Initial Test Retirement Venue

Australian opener David Warner on Monday revealed that he was ready to walk away from Test cricket following the second Ashes Test at Lord’s last year had he not scored any runs. Warner will bid farewell to the longest format of the game with the third Test against Pakistan at his home arena of Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG). At the start of the tour to the UK ahead of the ICC World Test Championship final against India, Warner had made his intentions clear to retire from whites at his home stadium but also said that form would play a part.

During that time, selectors had also named the squad for only the first two Ashes Tests initially, as per ESPNCricinfo.

Ahead of the final Test against Pakistan, Warner talked about how the Lord’s Test could have been his farewell had he felt that he was not contributing to the team.

“I said quite clearly in England before the World Test Championship, there was a lot of talk about me and my form, [and] I wanted to nip it in the bud early, I said my ideal preparation to finish would be Sydney. But I actually had Lord’s penciled in as my last Test, especially if I did not go as well as I did as a partnership with Uzzie [Usman Khawaja] at the top of the order,” said Warner as quoted by ESPNCricinfo.

In that match at Lord’s which Australia won, Warner scored 66 and 25 in both innings. He had also made an important 43 in the first innings of the WTC final, setting the tone for centuries by Travis Head and Steve Smith. But the first Ashes Test was mixed, as he could score only nine and 36 at Edgbaston.

In the first two Ashes Tests, Warner had three valuable half-century stands with Usman Khawaja and in the final Test at The Oval, he put on a 140-run stand with Khawaja. The big hundred came during the first Pakistan Test at Perth, scoring 164 and silencing all his critics.

“Then from there it just followed on that we played some good innings together. I did not have that hundred [in England] that I always wanted but eluded me. But as a team and as a whole we did our bit, so to get this ending is awesome, but it is not about me, it is about us. We have won the series, but to win 3-0 and have a whitewash here at the SCG would be a great thing for the team,” he added.

Warner said that he never doubted his abilities but wanted to make the best decision in the team’s interest.

“If you are down 2-0, and you go into that third one, and you lose that, I do not think it is the right choice to make [to keep playing]. It is an easy exit. For me, a second [reason] was if I was failing and we had not won, then it would have been an easier decision,” said Warner.

“I did not want to put the team or the selectors in a position where they had to think about, ‘mate, it is time to push on’. It was more about me just going, ‘I am content with that. I am happy with it, I have had a great career’. But if I could still do my best and bat well with Uzzie and put us into a good position…I could do that for the rest of the series,” he added.

The opener admitted that his emotions around his Test farewell have grown in recent weeks.

“When I looked at Lord’s as a potential finish, I did not really have many emotions because I was content. I might not have been scoring runs, but I still had the desire to play Test cricket. I love the game of cricket, it does not matter what format I am playing. But definitely, it has been emotional since Perth, since I have been back in Australia and knowing that I am playing [my final Test],” he said.

“Getting that 160, putting us into a great position for the team, it hit home when people in the streets were coming up and saying, ‘well done, we support you, we back you’. It really means a lot. The emotions probably started then,” added the batter.

On how he wants to be remembered as a Test player, Warner said as someone “who has given his all”.

“A boy from housing commission having a dream. I have not always fitted the mould, but I have been authentic and honest…and I think that shows you on the field in Test cricket, I have played the exact same way. I am even playing lap shots like I do in T20 cricket. I am still trying my best to get better even in this last Test. I am hungry to score runs,” said Warner.

“It is no different to any other game and I just want to leave behind that you can go out and play the way you want to play. You can play with freedom, you can play reverse sweeps like Joe Root if you want. You have got the ability to do that and you have got to trust and believe in yourself,” he concluded.

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All You Need To Know About Bangladesh's 83-Year-Old Jailed Nobel Laureate

All You Need To Know About Bangladesh's 83-Year-Old Jailed Nobel Laureate

Muhammad Yunus was awarded the Peace Prize in 2006. (File)

Dhaka, Bangladesh:

Jailed Nobel-winning microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus is celebrated around the world for helping millions of people out of poverty, but at home in Bangladesh he has a powerful enemy.

The 83-year-old, known as the “banker to the poorest of the poor”, was awarded the Peace Prize in 2006 for his work loaning small cash sums to rural women, allowing them to invest in farm tools or business equipment and boost their earnings.

Grameen Bank, the microfinance lender he founded, was lauded for helping unleash breakneck economic growth in Bangladesh, and its work has since been copied by scores of developing countries.

“Human beings are not born to suffer the misery of hunger and poverty,” Yunus said during his Nobel lecture, daring his audience to imagine a world where deprivation was confined to history museums.

But his public profile in Bangladesh has earned him the hostility of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who once accused him of “sucking blood” from the poor.

On Monday he and three colleagues from one of the companies he founded were sentenced to jail terms of six months — but immediately bailed pending appeal — by a Dhaka labour court which found they had illegally failed to create a workers’ welfare fund.

All four had denied the charges and the case has been criticised as politically moviated by watchdogs including Amnesty International.

Yunus still faces more than 100 other charges on alleged graft and labour law violations.

Hasina’s administration has been increasingly cracked down on political dissent, and Yunus’s popularity has for years earmarked him as a potential rival.

The year after winning the Nobel Prize, Yunus announced plans to set up his own “Citizen Power” party to end Bangladesh’s confrontational political culture, which has been punctuated by instability and periods of military rule.

He abandoned those ambitions within months, but the enmity aroused by his challenge to the ruling elite has persisted.

Since Hasina returned to power in 2008, Yunus has been hit with a series of criminal cases and a smear campaign by a state-led Islamic agency that accuses him of promoting homosexuality.

The government unceremoniously forced him out of Grameen Bank in 2011 — a decision fought by Yunus but upheld by Bangladesh’s top court.

A telecom firm he chairs was hit with a graft probe in 2022 over accusations it had embezzled employee funds — claims that critics say are politically motivated.

Hasina also blamed Yunus for the World Bank’s decision to cancel funding for a bridge near the capital Dhaka after the project was embroiled in a bribery scandal.

The bridge finally opened in 2022 after years of construction delays, and at its opening ceremony, Hasina said Yunus should be “dipped in the river” for jeopardising its completion.

Yunus has adamantly denied influencing the World Bank’s decision and his office has described the claims as “purely imaginary”.

‘Poverty was all around me’ 

Yunus was born into a well-to-do family — his father was a successful goldsmith — in the coastal city of Chittagong in 1940.

He credits his mother, who offered help to anyone in need who knocked on their door, as his biggest influence.

Yunus won a Fulbright scholarship to study in the United States and returned soon after Bangladesh won its independence from Pakistan in a brutal 1971 war.

When he returned, he was chosen to head Chittagong University’s economics department, but the young country was struggling through a severe famine and he felt compelled to take practical action.

“Poverty was all around me, and I could not turn away from it,” he said in 2006.

“I found it difficult to teach elegant theories of economics in the university classroom… I wanted to do something immediate to help people around me.”

After years of experimenting with ways to provide credit for people too poor to qualify for traditional bank loans, he founded Grameen Bank in 1983.

The institution now has more than nine million clients on its books, according to its most recent annual report (2020), and over 97 percent of its borrowers are women.

Yunus has won numerous high honours for his life’s work, including a US Presidential Medal of Freedom awarded by Barack Obama.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)