National News
As the children of Gaza remain hungry, the hope of a ceasefire dies, as well as extinguishes.

Expressing deep concern for journalists in Gaza, who are unable to feed themselves and their families rapidly, four international media outlets issued a joint appeal on Thursday, 24 July, urging Israel to ‘allow them’ to go out and out of Gaza.
Israel, which controls entry points, has not allowed international media teams in Gaza. During the last 22 months, several hundred journalists have been killed by the Israeli army by drones, sniper fire, bombing and firing incidents. Those who have survived are not being allowed to leave.
The joint statement angered both journalists and activists as they saw it as a public relations stunt. After pleading with Israel to allow journalists to leave, the statement ends saying, “It is necessary that adequate food supply access to the people there”.
Today, we are re -designed to focus on the extremely serious impact of Engineer starvation of Palestinians in Gaza, especially on children.
If you are in America, join the call @USCPR_ACtionhttps://t.co/jhtnnmsidi pic.twitter.com/k3jtu2ovji– Visualizing Palestine (@VisualizingPal) July 24, 2025
The concluding comment was widely seen as a later.
The media circle also has an acknowledgment that outlets did not enough to report on the magnitude of a live-stream massacre. Most of the outlets have refused to condemn Israeli’s atrocities and condemn the reports and investigations emanating from Gaza.
A joint statement on Gaza from AFP, AP, BBC News and Reuters pic.twitter.com/e9b1gtydpu
– BBC News Press Team (@BBCNEWSPR) July 24, 2025
The statement provoked some barbaric comments.
“This is a PR stunt. Your deliberately biased reporting has misled the public about the Gaza massacre for 22 months. Remember the BBC, your lover coverage is that your biased coverage is that Israel is motivated to continue his massacre every day,” One read while others were not asking for the media outlets to explain the media outlets. Did not take.
Bibic – Bibi’s Small Help pic.twitter.com/bkbuftsn7o
– Osita MBA (@Drositamba) July 24, 2025
“Why don’t you take legal action against criminals of torture and murder of your journalists? Or it would be anti -social,” yet another comment was dripping with satire.
“I never felt so. Children are dying of hunger. One after the other, one like a dying flower petals. How do you sleep under our watch.
I never felt so.
Children are dying of hunger. Falling one after the other, one like a dying flower petals. Under our watch.
How do you sleep, the President, Foreign Minister, political leader, diplomat, civil servants – are doing nothing to stop the starvation of Israel … https://t.co/mqexfwyshk pic.twitter.com/okwrk7iibu– Franceska Albani, United Nations Special Report Opt (@Francskalbs) July 24, 2025
Meanwhile, more than 100 international support organizations and human rights groups are warning of large -scale starvation in Gaza and pressurizing governments to take action. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Save the Children and Oxfam are among the signators of a joint statement who say their colleagues and those they serve are “ruined”.
Israel, which controls the entry of all supply into the region, rejected the statement of the organizations and accused them of “serving the promotion of Hamas”.
"Our colleagues and people we serve are being ruined," Medecins SANS Calls Frontiers.
“Children tell their parents that they want to go to heaven, because at least there is food in heaven.” https://t.co/n3rzp2m084– Shanifa Nasar (@Shanifanasser) July 23, 2025
Meanwhile, political leaders keep making grand gestures and long promises, but rarely expect a permanent ceasefire. French President Emmanuel Macron has reiterated that he would recognize the ‘Palestine status’ (under the Palestinian National Authority) at the United Nations General Assembly in September 2025. The UK Prime Minister Kir Stmper issued a statement, asking all the parties to engage in good confidence to bring an immediate ceasefire.
The victim and starvation in Gaza is unexpected and uncertain. pic.twitter.com/ca1vl5zm3j
– Keer Stmper (@Keir_Starmer) July 24, 2025
However, a ceasefire was not seen anywhere in the horizon on Friday, July 25 as the US pulled out of the conversation in Doha. In a statement, we have announced to bring our team home from Doha for consultation after the latest response from Hamas, which clearly shows the lack of desire to reach a ceasefire in Gaza after the latest response from Hamas … Now we will consider alternative options to bring homes home and will try to create a more stable environment for the people of yard. Is.”
While Hamas is insisting at the end of the war and for the Israeli forces to leave Gaza, the US and Israel want Hamas to surrender and dissolve the units of their fighting.
A comprehensible supervisor took a pinch, “We and” Israel “offer two options in” talks “with Hamas: (A) Surrender or we will erase you (B) Surrender and we will erase you”. Hamas does not see any alternative but to keep fighting in such circumstances, Ali Abunima said, the author Fight for justice in Palestine,
And even on the streets of Tel Aviv, Israel, loaded with grain bags, looked agreed.
Watch: Thousands of people took to the streets of Tel Aviv while marching to the Israeli military headquarters to demand an immediate end of the war on Gaza and ongoing siege.
Israeli peace worker Uri Weltman spoke, warning of increasing famine in Gaza:
“People are really … pic.twitter.com/l3i3sh7gok– National Herald (@NH_India) July 24, 2025
Read this very carefully: *One of the fourths of all the people who died of starvation in Gaza in the last 22 months have died in the last 3 days * pic.twitter.com/mvrp8happx
– Prem Thakar (@prem_thakker) 25 July, 2025
National News
A toxic story now staring at Bengalis everywhere

Islam, head of the welfare board of migrant workers of the state, has also made the issue wider compared to party politics. He said, “Anti-Bengali forces will not leave anyone, whether it is a member of the Matua, Rajbanshi, or a indigenous community,” he warned, urged solidarity in communities.
For many people, these incidents echo a chronic enmity. The ‘Bongal Kheda’ campaign of Assam in the 1960s targeted Bengalis for expulsion. In 2018, ULFA militants killed five Bengali Hindu women in Tinsukia. Now what is different is the reach of the slur: from the villages of Odisha to the hotel counters in Noida, from Nirodh camps in Assam to the streets of Kolkata.
Nobel Prize winner Amtya Sen has called this trend “unfortunate”, emphasizing that the Constitution gives every Indian the right to live and work anywhere in the country. The Bengal unit of the Congress has appealed to the Governor of Haryana to protect workers in an industrial hub like Paippat. Nevertheless, this assurance has been determined against the backdrop of fresh insults and violence.
Menak’s humiliation, Besra’s beating, sealdah attack, and the incident of Noida Hotel is united, with which the ‘Bangladeshi’ tag is thrown. It is a word that collapses identity, eradicates citizenship, and changes the simple task of speaking someone’s mother tongue in a responsibility.
For Bengalis who migrate to work or study, the results are Starks: they not only carry their belongings, but also the risk of having branded outsiders. For those people in Kolkata, the shock is still sharp – that in their own capital, once a bias imported from elsewhere now finds a house.
India’s pluralism has always rested on its languages, enrich the identity of each republic. To make Bengali – Language spoken by more than 100 million in India alone – a synonym of foreignliness is to highlight that cloth.
The resistance is stirring that the Menak refuses to back down, and to formally condemn these attacks to condemn these attacks. Nevertheless, the firm question of ‘Bangladeshi’ story from Noida hotels to Kolkata markets is a cool question: Can India save its citizens from turning into strangers in their land?
With PTI and media input
National News
Sonam Wangchuk accused the strategy of ‘Banana Republic’ as the authorities retrieved the Unive. land

Two days ago on 31 August, Ladakhi Climate activist and teacher Sonam Wangchuk posted a video on X, which confirmed that the local officials were targeting their Himalayan Institute of Alternative Teaching (HIL) by canceling the lease on the land allotted to the university seven years ago.
Describing the move as a sign of ‘Banana Republic’ rule, Wangchuk said that the Ladakh administration had notices that the government would show that the government would take back the land and demolish the premises built in five years. He questioned the time of this action, given that it did not happen in the last six years, but in October there was a coincidence with the upcoming Hill Council elections.
Wangchuk said, “Ladakh’s Hill Council promised the sixth schedule security measures in its last manifesto, but now they want to win the election without fulfilling that promise. I will not let this happen to the people of Ladakh,” Wangchuk said.
He alleged that from arrests to threats ranging from arrest to cancellation of land lease, and claimed that the authorities were now considering including the ED (Enforcement Directorate). Wangchuk welcomed an ED investigation, saying that it would highlight the work of eight years of the institute without salary and their personal financial contribution.
Wangchuk said that while Hial enjoys tax exemption, he himself pays income tax as a service for the nation. He also claimed that half a million rupees have been donated to the Ladakh UT government in its formation.
Climate activist attracted national attention with him Indefinite hunger strike In March 2024, when he began talks between leaders of Civil Society of Ladakh and Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) when he came to a dead end of constitutional security measures for Ladakh.
Putting the issue forward, he and hundreds of followers also marched a leg for Delhi, forcing MHA to resume Ladakh dialogue in December 2024, although they remain inconclusive.
National News
Fadnavis ends rapidly after Jarang

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Tuesday, while facing the move of activist Manoj Zerennge to call his five -day fast on the demand of Maratha quota, said the government got a solution in the interest of the Maratha community.
Speaking to reporters in Nagpur, Fadnavis said that his government always focuses on the welfare of the Maratha community.
Jarang, who started his hunger strike on August 29, closed the protest on Tuesday afternoon when the Maharashtra government accepted most of its demands, including giving certificates of eligible Maratha Kunbi caste, which would make them eligible for reservation benefits available to other backward classes (OBCs).
The 43-year-old activist accepted a glass of fruit juice introduced by senior BJP minister Radhakrishna Vicky Patil, who heads the Cabinet Sub-Committee on Maratha reservation at Azad Maidan in South Mumbai, who mark the end of their fast.
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