Yoga day function at Phugewadi Metro station; joy ride for visitors

Yoga day function at Phugewadi Metro station; joy ride for visitors

AS PART of the eighth International Yoga Day on June 21, the Union government is organising special programmes across the country. Nearly 75 special and historically important locations have been identified for the Yoga Day celebrations.
The Yoga Day celebration in Pune will be inaugurated in the presence of Union Minister for MSME Narayan Rane. The celebrations will be organised at Phugewadi Metro station in PCMC limits. Director, Maharashtra Region, Ministry of Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises, P M Parlewar said this during a press conference at Patrakar Bhavan on Saturday.
Ministry of MSME, National Institute of Naturopathy (NIN) Pune, AYUSH Ministry, Pune, Central Communication Bureau (Maharashtra & Goa), Ministry of Information and Broadcasting and Pune Metro will jointly organise the Yoga Day celebrations in Pune on June 21.
Union Minister Narayan Rane will inaugurate a three-day painting exhibition on various Yoga gurus at 6.30 am. The exhibition is organised by Central Bureau of Communication, Pune. After the inauguration, from 6.40 am to 7 am there will be live telecast of Yoga day programme from Mysore, Karnataka, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be the chief guest.Best of Express PremiumBJP looks to topple Azam Khan in his citadel but has its work cut outPremiumWhy experts say India does not need a population policyPremiumMonsoon so far: heavy rainfall in parts of Northeast, hardly any elsewherePremiumAgnipath scheme: Why age relaxation can also become a problemPremium
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General yoga session with regular simple yoga practices will be held from 7 am to 7.45 am. Palewar said that arrangements have been made for more than 1,000 citizens at the venue.
“This year, yoga day is being celebrated in a unique manner in Pune – at Metro station. The Yoga sessions will be held with the participation of the citizens present, at parking space, entrance, near ticket counters and Metro platform of Phugewadi Metro station on June 21,” said Director, NIN, Prof Dr K Satyalakshmi. NIN will provide Yoga mats and healthy snacks to the people, said Prof Dr Satyalakshmi.

Manoj Kumar Daniel, an official of Pune Metro, appealed people to participate in the Yoga festival and see the work of Metro as well. First 1,000 visitors will get a joy ride from Phugewadi to Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corporation headquarters and back. “The free ride is sponsored by the Union Ministry of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises,” he said.
A three-day ‘Yoga-painting Exhibition’ is also organized by the Central Bureau of Communications, Maharashtra & Goa. Deputy Director, CBC, Nikhil Deshmukh, said that the exhibition is free and there is no need to buy platform tickets either.

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From coercion to swindle to China link: The menace of rising loan app scams

From coercion to swindle to China link: The menace of rising loan app scams

When a 22-year-old Zepto employee Sohail Shaikh recently needed some money, a “Magicloan” ad on YouTube for instant micro loans came to his mind. On April 24, he ended up taking a loan of Rs 6,000 from two apps, “Magicloan” and “cashmarket”.
“I was supposed to pay them back on April 30. I would get my salary on May 1, so I thought I would return it a day later. Their (loan apps) people however started calling me on April 29. I told them about the payment deadline but it didn’t matter — they were abusive,” Shaikh told The Indian Express.

His ordeal had just started, though. “A day later, some of my colleagues and relatives called me saying they received a photograph of my wife with obscene things scrawled on it. I was shocked as to how could they get her photo and their numbers. And then I realised they had access to all my phone data. I had to explain to everyone that I had taken a small loan and these people were loan agents. It was traumatic,” he said.
On April 14, a 24-year-old woman from Mumbai’s Charkop lodged an FIR in the Kandivali (West) police station, alleging that cyber fraudsters called her from 25 different mobile numbers and threatened to defame her if she did not repay a loan, which she had never taken, and forced her to pay Rs 4.50 lakh. They also sent obscene messages about her to many people in her contacts list including her family members and friends. Her cousin sister even received a WhatsApp message which tagged her number and photo as that of a sex worker.Best of Express PremiumDelhi Confidential: UP DilemmaPremiumExplained: Puri Heritage Corridor casePremiumExplained: How ‘Use and File’ system will bring new health insurance prod...PremiumGST Council must uphold fiscal federalismPremium
“Those 15-20 days were most horrible days of my life. Police asked me to switch off my phone but fraudsters sent obscene messages to 150 people in my contacts list, mostly family members. They only made WhatsApp calls. When my uncle tried to make a normal call to them, an old woman in Karnataka took it. They were using her number for their WhatsApp,” she said.
Mumbai Police has lodged 47 loan app fraud cases during March-April, of which it could crack only 1 case. It had filed 42 such cases during the entire last year, cracking 5 of them.
While the loan app scam cases have been reported from across the country, there have been cases in Maharashtra and Telangana of their victims being driven to even suicide. At least 8 such victims killed themselves in Telangana over the last one-and-a-half years.
The modus operandi of these scamsters has been that they offer “hassle free” micro loans through online apps, which do not check a borrower’s credit worthiness or seek any documents while immediately transferring money to his account. It is this “no questions asked” method of these apps as against traditional lending institutions seeking rigorous verification and background checks that have made them popular among people.

Their popularity rose especially during the Covid pandemic, when many people lost their livelihood and were in desperate need of money to meet their day-to-day expenses. However, according to several police officers and cyber experts, those seeking loans through these apps now include corporate employees looking for additional money at the end of a month or youngsters needing money to buy virtual currency.
Cyber expert Ritesh Bhatia said that since the demand for micro credit has dipped now, there have been several cases where these operators have demanded money from people even if they have just downloaded their apps. “In some cases, if you have taken a loan once, they will push another loan from some other app. Also, on occasions, they demand money once you have downloaded the app, since they have access to your contacts now. The app is developed in such a way that once you download it, it gives the loan companies complete access to the phone data. It doesn’t matter if you haven’t availed of a loan from the app,” Bhatia said.
What many who are lured by the easy credit availability do not know or fail to check is the fudge relating to the interest rates charged and the recovery mechanism. In some cases, when people read the interest rate on their loans as 0.8%, they miss that it is a daily rate, Bhatia said. “There have been cases where people have ended up paying as much as 66% interest.”
A Mumbai cyber police officer said even the GST is deducted from the loan amount. “And within a week, you start getting calls seeking repayment of these loans,” he said. This is where the victims’ harassment begins as recovery agents enter the scene.
An officer said that when people install these apps on their phones, they generally do not realise that they are also giving access to their phone data to them. “So, when the person is not able to make the payment, the recovery agents have access to the numbers of their family members, relatives, colleagues and friends. They call them up claiming that they were appointed the loan guarantor. It is to pressure them to ensure the borrower makes the payment.”

However, Bhatia said some recovery agents have resorted to “dirty tricks” now. They use nude pictures or porn clips to morph the borrower’s image and then send it to the victim’s family members, relatives and friends.
It was such a murky operation that allegedly forced the Malad-based imitation jewellery businessman Sandeep Koregaonkar, 38, to die by suicide on May 4 after he found that his morphed photos were sent to his loved ones, the police said. His family said he had not taken any loans and just downloaded the apps.
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It was Koregaonkar’s suicide that forced Mumbai Police to wake up to severe harassment involved in these cases. Its preliminary investigations led them to some call centres, linked to such apps, operating primarily out of Delhi and Noida among other places across the country.
In another recent case of sexual harassment being probed by the Andheri railway police, there were 170 calls made to a Dombivli-based victim. After she could not make the loan payment, her morphed video was sent to her cousin sister on WhatsApp, who then approached the police. A 19-year-old man was picked up from Karnataka as his phone was used to send this obscene content. The police later learnt that the fraudsters had used his number to activate their WhatsApp and that the loan app, owned by two Kerala businessmen, had outsourced their database of borrowers to a Delhi-based call centre for recovering loans for a commission.
The police have also found that some of these micro loan apps are “Chinese loan apps developed by Chinese nationals”. In such cases busted across the country, it was found that the accused, after collecting money from victims, would convert it into cryptocurrency and send it to China, said a cyber police officer.
In several cases, the victims end up taking money from one loan app to save themselves from other app’s harassment. In a case being probed by Mumbai’s BKC cyber police station, a company’s senior executive took a total of Rs 1 lakh loan from 10 apps. Within days she received 80 calls from Delhi, Noida and other places in states like Meghalaya and Andhra Pradesh. In her case too, the fraudsters sent her obscene videos and threatened to defame her, forcing her to cough up Rs 12 lakh.

What has made the police investigations more challenging is that in most of these cases the scamsters have taken “precautions” to cover their tracks. In the senior company executive case, when the police tried to trace the account where she was asked to make a payment, they found it belonged to another borrower.
An independent director at the Fintech Association for Consumer Empowerment (FACE), Srinath Sridharan, said that for common people it is “very difficult” to distinguish between the genuine RBI-affiliated loan apps and fraudulent ones. “RBI has complicated the rules so much that it is confusing to differentiate between authorised and unauthorised apps,” he said.
Sridharan said in its 2021 report the RBI’s working group on digital lending had made several recommendations to curb this menace, which were however not implemented. “The only solution is that RBI conduct digital supervision of NBFCs to ensure that none of them are involved in lending through these unauthorised apps,” he added.
Recently, with such frauds on the rise, Google came out with more stringent guidelines (see Box) allowing only those loan apps on its Play Store that are registered with the RBI. Bhatia, however, said it would not make much of a difference as the accused would create apps and put up links on their websites and send them to their victims’ WhatsApp or Telegram accounts to be downloaded. The police as well as cyber experts stressed on the need for raising public awareness against such dubious loan apps.

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Airport-like super premium liquor shops in cities of Maharashtra soon | Mumbai News

Airport-like super premium liquor shops in cities of Maharashtra soon | Mumbai News

They will have self-service, tasting, bar room and trade facility too
MUMBAI: You will soon have a facility to taste, drink and trade premium liquor brands from ‘Super Premium’ liquor shops or markets in the state besides the walk-in and self-service facilities. For this, the area of the shop has to be 601 sq meter and above.
In the ‘Elite’ shops with areas between 71 sq meter to 600 sq meter, only walk-in, self service and tasting areas will be available. However, to set up such super premium and elite facilities, the existing shop holders have to go for an upgrade in their existing licenses by paying the additional excise duty.
Thus the experience of buying liquor within the city would be akin to the present duty-free imported liquor markets inside airports, revealed state excise officials.
Similarly, the niche category liquor made from fruits and flowers such as Mohua and green Cashew cover (kaju bond) will be called ‘indigenous’ Indian made foreign liquor (IIMFL) instead of their earlier country liquor category and will thus be available at a wide range of shops to gain a large customer base.
These major decisions related to excise were taken at the Maharashtra cabinet meeting held on Wednesday.
“The decision to create a new category of fruit and flower-based liquor will not only encourage entrepreneurship, but will also bring the niche products in the upscale market for larger customers to buy from a range of premium shops. While states like MP have branded them as heritage liquors, we have named them as ‘indigenous’ IMFL,” explained principal secretary of excise department Valsa Nair Singh.
Besides locally home-based processing units, the farmers and labourers in horticulture and floriculture will benefit immensely due to the decision as such liquors will fetch better prices for them, revealed excise officials. Already, the state has allowed such liquors to be used for blending with other fruit-based liquors.
However, Singh said the duty that was earlier charged on fruit and flower based liquor will now change to Rs 50 per bulk litre from earlier Rs 10 per bulk litre. The retailers said with this new branding premium fruit and flower liquors will be available more reliably and at legitimate costs in the upscale city markets. Moreover, all these decisions will earn a bigger revenue for the state.
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Mumbai to host ‘Sunday Streets’ each week, some roads to remain shut for few hours

Mumbai to host ‘Sunday Streets’ each week, some roads to remain shut for few hours

From coming Sunday, March 27, for four hours every Sunday morning between 6 am and 10 am, some of the roads in Mumbai will remain completely or partially shut for vehicular traffic as a part of ‘Sunday Streets’, an initiative started by Mumbai Police Commissioner Sanjay Pandey to allow the public to spend some quality time on the roads for recreational activities such as yoga, skating, cycling and other cultural sports.
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Pandey announced the development through social media on March 25. Here’s the tweet.

It’s final. #SundayStreets from this Sunday 6am to 10 am. 6 locations -marine drive, Linking Road, mindspace, Carter Road, Mulund and bkc. Look forward to #mumbaikars joining in large numbers Details will follow. Enjoy 😊 pic.twitter.com/gAtiPPpyRi
— Sanjay Pandey (@sanjayp_1) March 24, 2022
While replying to the people’s comments on social media, Pandey said, “Sunday Streets is to make streets available to citizens with no moving traffic. You can come with families. Play games. Play music. Ride bikes. Do yoga. With streets being totally free. From our side we are going to display our percussion band. Citizens are welcome to have their own.” This Sunday only six locations have been chosen and Pandey said they will try to add more locations every Sunday.
The six roads that have been earmarked for this Sunday are at Marine Drive — a 1.7 km stretch on the Dorabhai Tata Road, Nariman Point, between Murli Deora Chowk and NCPA dead end. In Bandra on the Carter Road, the 2 km stretch between Otters Club and CCD will host the Sunday Street.

In Goregaon, a 500 metre stretch on the Mind Space Back Road between electric pole no. CHCU 085/018 and Jimmy Yogiraj Marg will host the event.
Similarly in D N Nagar in Andheri west, a 600 metre stretch at Lokhandwala Marg, the stretch between Samarth Nagar Mhada Tower and Joggers Park will be blocked. On the Mulund Goregaon Link Road, the 2.5 km stretch from Tansa pipeline to Vinanagar will be blocked.
At Vikhroli, a 2.5 km stretch between the Service Road of Vikhroli bridge south channel and Ghatkopar bridge signal.

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