Bad News For Pant: DC Captain On Brink Of Ban For Code of Conduct Breach

Delhi Capitals captain Rishabh Pant, who has made a great comeback to cricket after recovering from injuries sustained due to a horrific car crash, was on Wednesday fined Rs 24 lakh for a second over rate offence in the 2024 Indian Premier League. Pant was guilty of maintaining a slow-over in the game against Kolkata Knight Riders on Wednesday. The rest of his teammates were fined 25 percent of their match fees. “Rishabh Pant, the Delhi Capitals captain, has been fined after his team maintained a slow over rate during their TATA Indian Premier League (IPL) 2024 match against Kolkata Knight Riders…” said the IPL in a statement titled ‘IPL Media Advisory: Code of Conduct Breach’..

“As it was his team’s second offence of the season under the IPL’s Code of Conduct relating to minimum over rate offences, Pant was fined INR 24 lakhs.

“The rest of the members of the Playing XI, including the Impact Player, were each individually fined either INR 6 lakhs or 25 percent of their respective match fees, whichever is lesser,” it added.

Delhi Capitals lost the game to KKR by 106 runs after the latter smashed 272 for seven, the second highest total in IPL history. It was Delhi Capitals’ third loss in four games.

According to the IPL rules, in case of a third slow over-rate offense by a team in one season, the captain fined INR 30 lakh and is handed over a match ban. The rest of the team is imposed with a fine of INR 12 lakh or 50% of their match fee, whichever is lesser. So Pant needs to ensure that the offense is not repeated by his team.

Speaking on Star Sports, former Australia cricketer Michael Clarke spoke on Rishabh Pant‘s performance against KKR. He said, “Yeah look it’s great for Indian cricket, but it’s also great for Rishabh Pant. I think the work that has gone into his rehab to get back to that level of play at any standard is an amazing achievement. He’s deserves a lot of credit for his hard work and it’s great to see him on the field, captaining and playing well, batting and keeping.

“He looked a little bit sore, a little bit ginger, I saw the Delhi physio run out to the field a couple of times to check on him, so hopefully he’s pulled out okay, the positives are in the presentation he said he was fine and hopefully a day off or a couple of days off and he will be ready for the next game. He’s a wonderful player and everybody is happy that he’s back on the field and we want to see him play for Delhi, but we also want to see him come back and play for India as soon as possible.”

With PTI inputs

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TS EAPCET 2024 registration surpass last year’s count

Of the total registrations this time, 2,33,517 were for engineering, 87,819 for AP and 268 were for both streams.

Published Date – 4 April 2024, 07:01 PM


TS EAPCET 2024 registration surpass last year’s count


Hyderabad: Registrations for the Telangana State Engineering, Agriculture and Pharmacy Common Entrance Test (TS EAPCET) 2024 have surpassed last year’s count even before closure of applications without a late fee.

A total of 3,21,604 applications were received by the Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University (JNTU) – Hyderabad till the last count on Thursday as against total registrations of 3,20,683 during the last year.


Of the total registrations this time, 2,33,517 were for engineering, 87,819 for AP and 268 were for both streams.

Last year, the engineering stream received 2,05,351 applications, while the Agricultural stream attracted 1,15,332 applications. Applications for this year, according to official, will further shoot up as the last date for registration without the late fee concludes on Saturday.

As per the TS EAPCET notification, the already submitted application can be edited between April 8 and 12. The deadline to register with a late fee of Rs.250 and Rs.500 is up to April 9 and 14, respectively.

Applications will also be accepted with a late fee of Rs.2,500 and Rs.5,000 till April 19 and May 1, respectively.

The entrance test will be conducted from May 7 to 11 with AP scheduled for May 7 and 8, while the engineering stream will be held from May 9 to 11.

Saudi Crown Prince's $100 Billion Foreign Investment Quest Falters

Saudi Crown Prince's $100 Billion Foreign Investment Quest Falters

File photo

At a gleaming white hangar on Saudi Arabia’s western coast last year, the kingdom’s business and political elite gathered to applaud one of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s riskiest bets yet.

The first electric cars assembled in Saudi Arabia with Lucid Group Inc. twinkled under factory spotlights, designed to show the world how a kingdom built on oil could draw in foreign capital to become a global hub for the industries of the future.

The short-term reality is more complicated. California-based Lucid is increasingly guzzling Saudi money to stay in business. Last week it got a $1 billion cash lifeline from the kingdom, on top of the $5.4 billion Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) has already pumped in.

Lucid, which counts the PIF as its top shareholder, had been held up as an example of foreign firms investing in Saudi Arabia’s multi-trillion-dollar “Vision 2030” economic transformation plan. But Lucid’s need for Saudi money is one sign the country’s rushed attempt at reinvention is being paid for out of pocket, with the kingdom relying heavily on its oil riches to entice firms in. 

“The government had to give Lucid tremendous incentives to come,” said Karen Young, a Gulf-focused political economist at the Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy.

It also speaks of the difficulties foreign companies face in Saudi Arabia, a country with little experience of complex manufacturing or heavy industry beyond the petroleum sector.

“Lucid is fully committed to our long-term partnership with the PIF and supporting the goals of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030,”  Chief Executive Officer Peter Rawlinson said in a statement to Bloomberg. “Lucid is creating hundreds, and eventually thousands, of new employment opportunities for Saudi talent.”

The PIF did not respond to a request for comment.

Saudi Arabia has long recognized its funding requirements would mostly be backed by local capital and only partly by foreign money. Still, it wants to hit $100 billion of foreign direct investment annually by 2030, a haul roughly three times bigger than it has ever achieved and about 50% more than what India gets today. Between 2017-2022 annual FDI inflows into the kingdom averaged just over $17 billion. Preliminary data for 2023 shows FDI below target, at about $19 billion, according to a statement from the Ministry of Investment.

Scaling up to the 2030 goal seems out of reach for now as foreign investors remain cautious, according to conversations with bankers, lawyers who advise investors and people with knowledge of Saudi Arabia’s fundraising efforts.

That’s led to a reckoning for the government as it weighs up the possibility of self-funding a larger portion of its economic remake on a tight timeline. Already, it has started to cut back on megaprojects designed to revamp its $1.1 trillion economy. And it’s issuing billions of dollars in bonds to help plug a fiscal deficit that it hadn’t been forecasting until late last year.

How it wields its money carries implications for its investments at home and abroad, and for oil policies that shape global markets.

‘Insanely Expensive’

The crown prince, or MBS as he is known, wants foreign investors to transfer expertise and co-fund megaprojects like the one to develop Neom. That $500 billion plan envisions turning the remote north-western region into a carbon-free high tech hub filled with robots.

While Neom has rolled out marketing and investor roadshows, it’s not made serious progress raising capital yet, people familiar with the matter said.

It’s not just along the less-developed coastline that projects are facing headwinds. Near the capital, an entertainment city dubbed Qiddiya has more than $1 trillion of committed spending – but that’s backed entirely by the PIF and a Saudi developer it owns,  two people briefed on the project said.

“If we don’t have clear evidence of more funding by the end of the year, then it’s certainly worth asking where the money is going to come from for these projects,” said David Dawkins from London-based investment data firm Preqin, which analyzes Saudi trends. “They are insanely expensive.”

Delays approving regulations for Neom have left question marks for investors. Many say their reluctance to commit funds to the kingdom is often down to unclear and untested laws governing contracts and investment.

There are signs the push for more external capital is gaining traction. There were 232 investment deals closed in 2023, many of which have “sizable” components of foreign investments that may start “working their way” into 2024 FDI numbers, the Ministry of Investment said in a statement.

More recently, Amazon.com Inc.’s cloud unit led a group of firms that agreed to invest more than $10 billion in Saudi data centers. 

Shrinking Money Pot

But the government, burning through cash, is stepping up efforts to attract much more foreign money. It asked smaller neighbor Kuwait for over $16 billion in financing for projects including Neom as recently as this year, people familiar with the matter said.

At stake for MBS are ambitions synonymous with Vision 2030. While companies like US-based Air Products have signed on for joint ventures at Neom, Saudi Arabia is still on the hook for underwriting close to the entirety of the cost – roughly equivalent to half its current economic output.

“It’s effectively still a public sector-led development model,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank PJSC. “At the moment they’re using all their pockets of strength for this transformation plan and I think going forward it will still be predominantly a Saudi-led development plan.”

How Saudi Arabia spends its cash will resonate around the world given its investing footprint now extends from a London airport to golf and private equity, making it a critical source of funds for Wall Street and governments alike. As the kingdom fills in the financing gaps at home, it will be leaning on earning money from the way it knows best: oil.

That realization is ushering in an approach that consolidates spending power in the hands of the PIF. The kingdom recently gave the fund an additional $164 billion stake in Saudi Aramco, which will translate into a dividend payment of at least $20 billion this year. 

The move is basically “raising money from one public pocket at the expense of the other,” said Mohamed Abu Basha, head of research at Cairo-based investment bank EFG Hermes. 

It shows how the kingdom remains reliant on on high oil prices to sustain its diversification plans, he said.

Saudi Arabia is likely to advocate longer production curbs by OPEC+, the oil cartel it leads along with Russia, that have helped prop up prices, said Jean-Michel Saliba, Bank of America Corp.’s Middle East and North Africa economist.

Yet for all that the cuts have restricted supply, prices remain below what the crown price requires to fund his grand ambitions. When accounting for domestic spending by the PIF, the kingdom needs crude of at least $108 a barrel to balance its budget, according to Bloomberg Economics. Brent’s jumped in recent weeks but remains below $90.

Mind the Gap

The PIF is feeling the pinch already. It controls assets of about $900 billion but had just $15 billion in cash reserves as of September.

The fund, which previously deployed almost 30% of its capital for international investments, is now targeting an allocation of 20% to 25%, though the absolute number is still set to rise over time, according to its governor, Yasir Al-Rumayyan.

“Our deployment will continue internationally but our focus right now is on the projects that we have in Saudi Arabia,” he said in February.

Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan has also acknowledged a funding shortfall and flagged the issuance of more debt. He’s been part of a committee chaired by MBS that studied Vision 2030’s massive financing needs and set them against the kingdom’s expected revenue streams.

“There was a gap,” he told the Thmanyah’s Socrates podcast. “We called it the Gap Study.”

Postponing and scrapping some projects will plug that hole, he said, without going into detail. 

That marks a crossroads for some of Saudi Arabia’s most ambitious projects. Those in Riyadh, where Expo 2030 is due to take place, may start taking priority. And some like Lucid will see the kingdom committing even more funds, not less. The kingdom sees it as part of a wider plan to build an autos supply chain, in which the PIF is also partnering with Hyundai Motor Co. and suppliers such as Italian tire-maker Pirelli & C. SpA.

But other Vision 2030 dreams will fade or be cut back, according to people familiar with the matter.

“Some of them were strategies where we said to ourselves: we actually do not need to spend on this,” Jadaan said.

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

Tesla’s planned investment is being keenly followed, says Sridhar Babu

BRS working president and former IT Minister KT Rama Rao on Thursday had appealed to the Congress government to go all out to bring Tesla to Telangana.

Published Date – 4 April 2024, 06:46 PM


Tesla’s planned investment is being keenly followed, says Sridhar Babu


Hyderabad: After different sections appealed to the government to intensify measures to get Tesla’s investment, IT Minister D Sridhar Babu said the State Government was keenly tracking Tesla’s investment in India since December 2023.

Tesla is scouting sites in India for $2 billion-$3 billion electric car plant, according to reports. BRS working president and former IT Minister KT Rama Rao on Thursday had appealed to the Congress government to go all out to bring Tesla to Telangana.


The Telangana Industries department and other entities of the State Government were continuing the deliberations with the global automotive and clean energy giant Tesla to establish its plant in the State, said Sridhar Babu on X.

“We have been making all out efforts to bring Tesla to our State. Telangana with its industry –friendly policy, is working with a progressive and futuristic vision by creating a world-class infrastructure and hassle-free approvals system to enable best-in-class companies like Tesla to do business in Telangana,” Sridhar Babu said on X.

"Must Learn From PM Modi": Hema Malini Reacts To Congress Leader's Remark

Hema Malini today filed her nomination papers in Mathura, a seat she currently holds

New Delhi:

Responding to the row over Congress leader Randeep Surjewala’s remarks on Mathura MP Hema Malini, the actor-politician said Opposition leaders must learn how to respect women from Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Speaking to reporters before filing her nomination for the Lok Sabha election in the temple town, she said the Opposition targets only “popular people”. “They target only popular people because targeting the unpopular ones won’t do them any good. They should learn how to respect women from PM Narendra Modi.”

The BJP has launched a scathing attack on the Congress over Mr Surjewala’s remarks.

BJP leader Amit Malviya yesterday shared a video in which Mr Surjewala is seen addressing a public gathering. While saying that people elect leaders to raise their issues, he makes a remark on Ms Malini. In his post on X, Mr Malviya said it is the “most disgusting description someone can come up with”. “This is Rahul Gandhi’s Congress. It is misogynistic and abhors women,” the BJP leader said.

Under fire, Mr Surjewala said the BJP’s IT cell has developed a habit of distorting facts and spreading lies. He shared another video from the same event, in which he is heard saying, “We respect Hema Malini ji because she is married to Dharmendra ji, she is our bahu.”

Accusing the BJP of twisting facts and spreading lies, he said the ruling party’s objective is to divert attention from the Narendra Modi government’s “anti-youth, anti-farmer, anti-poor policies and its conspiracy to finish the Constitution”.

“These pawns of BJP never asked the Prime Minister why he said ’50 crore ki girlfriend’, called a woman MP ‘Surpanakha’, trolled a woman Chief Minister, used the expression ‘Congress’s widow’ and described the Congress leadership as a ‘jersey cow’,” he said.

Mr Surjewala said he only meant that every elected representative should be accountable to the people, be it him or (Haryana Chief Minister) Nayab Singh Saini and (BJP leader) Manohar Lal Khattar.

“My intention was not to insult Hema Malini ji or to hurt anybody. That’s why I clearly said we respect Hema Malini ji and she is our bahu. The BJP is anti-women, so it sees everything from its misogyny-tinted glasses and conveniently spreads lies,” he said in the post.

Among the leaders who have targeted the Congress over Mr Surjewala’s remarks are Yogi Adityanath. Mr Adityanath said Mathura is a land of art and Ms Malini is an artist who has showcased India’s culture at the global level. Without naming Mr Surjewala, he said, “If the Congress does not like this, I doubt if even God can save them.”

Ms Malini said she is very happy to be renominated from the Mathura seat. “I am very happy to get the opportunity to serve the people of Mathura for the third time. I will finish the work that could not be done in my two terms. This time, huge development projects will be launched for the people of Mathura. UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath extends all possible help for Mathura,” she told news agency ANI.

Hyderabad: Diarrhea and vomiting due to contaminated water on the rise

A large number of children are reporting sick with vomiting, diarrhea and dehydration, as temperatures rise and access to treated water becomes difficult and food becomes stale because of the summer heat.

Published Date – 4 April 2024, 06:20 PM


Hyderabad: Diarrhea and vomiting due to contaminated water on the rise


Hyderabad: It is summer time and government hospitals, private clinics and nursing homes in the city are reporting rise of acute diarrheal disease (ADD), vomiting and dehydration due to consumption of contaminated water and stale food.

A large number of children are reporting sick with vomiting, diarrhea and dehydration, as temperatures rise and access to treated water becomes difficult and food becomes stale because of the summer heat. To tackle diarrhea among children, which often leads to rehydration, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends ORS (Oral Rehydration Solution).


“These days, commercially occurring ORS juices have high sugar content, which worsens diarrhea, not only among children but even among adults. Do not use such products and make sure to read the labels properly,” advises senior pediatrician, Dr Sivaranjani Santosh.

When children vomit for the first time, calm them down and take them to a cool environment, she advises adding, “Then give sips of cool recommended liquids like coconut water, ORS, water etc. alternately. Give one sip/one spoon of the liquid every five minutes and don’t rush the fluids.”

Fever Hospital, which is the regional healthcare facility for seasonal ailments, has started receiving a large number of patients with such symptoms.

“Water-borne ailments are usually associated due to lack of access to potable drinking water, the heat strokes are due to exposure to high temperatures of over 40 degree Celsius,” says Superintendent, Fever Hospital, Dr K Shankar.

Canada Hikes Permanent Residency Fees By 12%. Check New Rates

Canada Hikes Permanent Residency Fees By 12%. Check New Rates

The biennial fee is set to increase from 515 CAD to 575 CAD (Representational)

New Delhi:

For the past two decades, Canada has been welcoming over 200,000 new permanent residents each year, a substantial amount of whom are of Indian descent. This year, those aspiring for a permanent residency (PR) will be met with a 12% increase in application fees as per a notice issued by Canada’s Department of Citizenship and Immigration. 

The notice, published in the Canadian Gazette on March 30, indicated that the new fee would go live at 9:00:00 am EDT on April 30 and that it was administered per current inflation rates.

The biennial fee changes apply to an array of programmes such as the permanent residency fee, which exempts dependent children, and is set to increase from 515 Canadian dollars (CAD) to 575 CAD.

As per the government’s immigration levels plan for 2024-2026, Canada is aiming to admit over 1.1 lakh Federal Skilled Workers and applicants under the Provincial Nominee Programme each. The cost for these applications has spiked from 850 CAD to 950 CAD and applies to accompanying spouses or common-law partners. Candidates under the Quebec Skilled Workers, Atlantic Immigration Class, and Economic Pilots are also expected to pay 950 CAD. Fees for any accompanying dependent child will be increased to 260 CAD from the existing 230 CAD.

Canada’s family reunification is a crucial immigration category that grants permanent residents 18 and over to sponsor certain family members to obtain a Canadian PR which allows them to legally live, study, and work in the country. For this, the sponsor fee charge has been increased from 75 CAD to 85 CAD, with additional increased variations of the category ranging from 175 CAD to 635 CAD. 

The boost in family reunification costs comes a month following Federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller told Canadian media that his ministry will begin to grant permanent residency to those wanting to reunite with their families in Quebec, despite the province’s cap on applicants which he deemed as “artificially low.”

Telangana Forest officers’ plea seeking weapons and establishing forest stations lies in cold storage

In the Karjelly incident on Wednesday, apart from killing a farmer, the elephant had chased a forest team for over 200 metres.

Published Date – 4 April 2024, 06:28 PM


Telangana Forest officers’ plea seeking weapons and establishing forest stations lies in cold storage

In the Karjelly incident on Wednesday, apart from killing a farmer, the elephant had chased a forest team for over 200 metres.

HYDERABAD: The forest officers’ plea seeking arms and ammunition for self-protection and establishing forest stations for effective monitoring is lying in cold storage due to dearth of funds and lack of support from the government. The elephant attack on a few villagers in Kumram Bheem Asifabad and an attempt to chase the forest officials has yet again stressed on the need for arms and ammunition for the field staff.

In the Karjelly incident on Wednesday, apart from killing a farmer, the elephant had chased a forest team for over 200 metres. The field staff managed to escape unhurt. In November 2022, Chandrugonda Forest Range Officer Ch Srinivas Rao was brutally killed by Gutti Koya tribals in Kothagudem. Since then the State Forest Service Officers Association (SFSOA) has been appealing to the department to sanction weapons to field staff. A demand for provision of pistols to Forest Range Officers (FRO) rank and above and rifles to field-staff for self-protection was made to the department.


Citing the Kerala Forest department, the SFSOA wanted establishment of forest stations at the Division Level with required staff and infrastructure. Each station should be headed by a FRO rank officer and supported by 18 personnel. The plan was to launch a pilot project in vulnerable areas of Asifabad, Adilabad, Khammam, Karimnagar and other places.

Admitting the delay, a senior forest official said the forest officials had to deposit their weapons with the police during the early 1990s in erstwhile Andhra Pradesh, following a few incidents of snatching of some weapons by Naxalites.

The senior official also said a detailed report seeking sanction of arms and ammunition and measures for setting up forest stations was submitted to the government in the past.

Under this initiative, approval for total outlay of Rs.9.90 crore was sought from the government. This includes Rs. 4 crore for arms and ammunition and Rs.5.9 crore for 20 stations and other infrastructure, besides strengthening the 64 forest check posts across the State, the official said.

“The plea was almost accepted by the past government but due to different factors things got delayed. We are keeping our fingers crossed” the official added.

Karnataka toddler in borewell: Rescue efforts underway after sighting on camera

After over 15 hours of rescue efforts, relief swept through the authorities, family, and onlookers upon hearing the toddler’s cries captured on camera. Additionally, a parallel pit to the borewell has been dug by the rescue team.

Updated On – 4 April 2024, 03:41 PM


Karnataka toddler in borewell: Rescue efforts underway after sighting on camera


Vijayapura: The operation to rescue a two-year-old boy, who fell into a borewell while playing in Karnataka’s Vijayapura district, reached the final stage on Thursday, said officials here.

The authorities, family and people heaved a sigh of relief on hearing the toddler’s cries on the camera after over 15-hour rescue operation. The team has dug a parallel pit to the borewell.


The staff confirmed that they had reached the level where the baby was stuck and needed to drill a hole horizontally to reach the toddler. The camera has also recorded the movements of the toddler’s legs.

An ambulance is stationed at the spot to carry the child to the hospital and his mother was also waiting inside the ambulance. The rescue operation was delayed as a boulder surfaced while digging a parallel hole to the borewell, said authorities.

Sources said they were confident of rescuing the toddler. The oxygen supply has been through since Wednesday evening when the rescue operation was launched.

The two-year-old boy in Karnataka’s Vijayapura district fell into a newly drilled open bore well while playing in a field on Wednesday evening.

The child was identified as Satwik Mujagonda, the son of Shankarappa Mujagonda and Pooja Mujagonda and a resident of Lachchana village in Indi taluk of Vijayapura.

According to the police, the borewell was drilled on Tuesday in the agricultural land of his parents to provide water for sugarcane and lemon crops but its opening remained unclosed.

While playing and wandering on the land, the toddler fell into the borewell around 6 p.m.

The borewell was drilled to a depth of 400 feet and authorities suspect that the boy is stuck 15 to 20 feet down it.

A large number of people gathered at the spot upon hearing the news.