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Tackling wildlife hazards, incl bird hits: DGCA calls meeting with airports operators on Monday
Tackling wildlife hazards, incl bird hits: DGCA calls meeting with airports operators on Monday

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • General
  • Time of India

Tackling wildlife hazards, incl bird hits: DGCA calls meeting with airports operators on Monday

NEW DELHI: In a fallout of AI 171 crash, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has summoned airport operators on Monday (June 23) to discuss the continuing menace of wildlife hazards, including bird hits. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Dirty surroundings and slaughter houses near airports, among many other factors, attract birds leading to bird hits. 'The places that have seen a spike will be discussed threadbare to see how this risk can be mitigated,' said an official. The probe is on into the AI crash and what caused the same will be known only after a report is out. But authorities are looking at all aspects to improve air safety in India, which includes tackling wildlife hazards. Bird hits increase during monsoon as waterlogged ground forces worms to the surface, attracting more birds that usual. The DGCA had exactly three years back written to airports on the issue. 'We are all aware that during monsoon season wild life (birds and animals) activity increases in and around airports. Presence of wildlife in airport vicinity poses a serious threat to aircraft operational safety. All airports are requested to review their wild life hazard management plan for any gap and ensure strict implementation of strategies for wild life hazard management within and also outside the airfield,' DGCA had said in a letter to all airport operators and airport directors in June 2022. Within the airport, the steps to be taken include: 'grass trimming and spraying of insecticides; frequent runway inspection for bird activities; deployment of bird chasers and bird scaring devices; Regular garbage disposal in the operational area and avoiding water concentration and open drains.' For tackling the issue outside airport premises, the DGCA had said: 'Airport Environment Management Committee (AMC) meetings (should) be convened to discuss and review implementation of measures to reduce bird hazard. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Frequent inspection by airport wild life hazard management team/AMC to identify sources of wild life attraction such as garbage dump, open disposal of abattoir/butcheries waste and coordination with local authorities for mitigation of sources of wild life attraction. ' Rules specifically prohibit any slaughtering or flaying of animals or dumping garbage in a way which could attract animals and birds within a 10-km radius of airports. '... airfield environment management committees at airports (which are headed by chief secretaries) should take proactive measures on time-bound basis to ensure that no illegal slaughter houses, garbage dumps exist in the vicinity of airports. (these) are source of increased bird activity and may lead to wildlife strikes to aircraft during approach/take off,' the DGCA had told states a few years ago.

Summer reading: 5 books being adapted for film, TV
Summer reading: 5 books being adapted for film, TV

UPI

time11 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • UPI

Summer reading: 5 books being adapted for film, TV

1 of 5 | Pierce Brosnan stars in a film adaptation of "The Thursday Murder Club." File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo June 20 (UPI) -- We Were Liars, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, The Rainmaker and other books are getting film and television adaptations this summer. The new adaptations will arrive on streaming platforms in June, July and August. John Slattery and Pierce Brosnan are among the stars who appear in upcoming film or TV adaptations. Read on for an overview of what to expect: 'We Were Liars' E. Lockhart's young adult suspense novel was published in 2018, followed by a prequel novel, Family of Liars, in 2022. Prime Video's adaptation stars Emily Alyn Lind as Cadence Sinclair Eastman, a wealthy girl trying to uncover secrets after an accident that she doesn't remember. The series also stars Caitlin Fitzgerald, Shubham Mahewshwari, Esther McGregor, Joseph Zada, Mamie Gummer, Candice King, Rahul Kohli and David Morse. Prime Video released a trailer for the series in June that shows Cadence returning to the scene of the incident to try and remember what happened to her. We Were Liars began streaming Wednesday. '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea' Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea was penned by Jules Verne in 1869 and follows the adventures of Captain Nemo as he helms the Nautilus submarine. AMC is delivering a series inspired by the novel, titled Nautilus. Shazad Latif stars as Nemo, a prince and East India Mercantile Company prisoner who steals the submarine and escapes captivity. His adventure sends him on a quest to find mythic treasure while outrunning his captors. Georgia Flood, Celine Menville, Thierry Fremont, Richard E. Grant, Anna Torv and Noah Taylor also star. Two episodes arrive on AMC and AMC+ on June 29. 'The Institute' The Institute, written by Stephen King, was published in 2019, and will serve as inspiration for an upcoming show of the same name. MGM+ is adapting the book, and King will also serve as an executive producer on the project. Luke Ellis (Joe Freeman) is teenager who is abducted and taken to a facility where other kidnapped children with unique abilities are living. Ben Barnes portrays the police officer Tim Jamieson, who crosses paths with Luke. Mary-Louise Parker, Simone Miller, Fionn Laird, Hannah Galway, Julian Richings, Robert Joy and Martin Roach also star. Two episodes arrive on MGM+ July 13. 'The Rainmaker' John Grisham penned the 1995 novel The Rainmaker, which was previously adapted as a 1997 film directed by Francis Ford Coppola and starring Matt Damon and Claire Danes. The story will also serve as the inspiration for a new series on USA Network. Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan) gets fired from Leo Drummond's (John Slattery) law firm on his first day of work. His new gig working for Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) forces Rudy to face his old boss and his girlfriend (Madison Iseman) in the courtroom. P.J. Byrne, Dan Fogler, Wade Briggs and Robyn Cara also star in the series, which premieres Aug. 15. 'Thursday Murder Club' Richard Osman's 2020 novel serves as the inspiration for an upcoming Netflix film starring Pierce Brosnan and Helen Mirren. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone director Chris Columbus helms the movie, and he described the cast as "the finest" since that film. Mirren portrays Elizabeth and Brosnan portrays Ron, retirees who solve cold cases as a hobby alongside Ben Kingsley's character Ibrahim and Celia Imrie's Joyce. An actual murder," however, gives the group their first "real case." The film also stars Naomi Ackie, Daniel Mays, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, Tom Ellis, Jonathan Pryce, David Tennant, Paul Freeman, Geoff Bell, Richard E. Grant and Ingrid Oliver and lands on the streamer Aug. 28. Helen Mirren turns 75: a look back Dame Helen Mirren (L) and husband, Taylor Hackford, arrive at the Directors Guild of America Honors in New York City on December 10, 2000. The couple has been married since 1997. Photo by Laura Cavanaugh/UPI | License Photo

What ‘Sinners' And Juneteenth Reveal About America's Delayed Reckonings
What ‘Sinners' And Juneteenth Reveal About America's Delayed Reckonings

Forbes

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

What ‘Sinners' And Juneteenth Reveal About America's Delayed Reckonings

Michael B. Jordan attends the European premiere of "Sinners" at Cineworld Leicester Square in ... More London, England. This Juneteenth, AMC theaters across metro Atlanta will screen Sinners and preview 40 Acres, two scalding Black films that weren't made to entertain but to indict. Both films boldly probe the costs of silence, the aftermath of racial betrayal and the impossibility of justice arriving on time. AMC's decision to offer discounted screenings is part marketing, part reckoning—a nod to the uncomfortable truth that Juneteenth remains unfinished business. There's something quietly unnerving about watching Ryan Coogler's Sinners on Juneteenth—not because the film misreads the moment, but because it affirms a truth the holiday itself has always carried: in America, freedom is rarely immediate, and justice almost always arrives late. Sinners premiered to critical acclaim and commercial success earlier this year, grossing $362 million worldwide, making it the eighth-highest-grossing film of 2025. Today, AMC theaters nationwide are offering $5 screenings of Sinners and the post-apocalyptic thriller 40 Acres as part of their Juneteenth programming. This is not a coincidence but appears to be a quiet act of curation since both films address the consequences of freedom that was promised but never fully delivered. In Sinners, Michael B. Jordan portrays twin brothers returning to the Mississippi Delta after serving in World War I, backed by Northern ambition and just enough capital to open a juke joint. They've outrun the trap of sharecropping, but what greets them back home is more sinister than poverty: white vampires offering eternal life on the condition of total submission. It was a different kind of bondage—one with better marketing but the same brutal terms. The metaphor isn't subtle, nor should it be. The fact is, Sinners is not about sin in the religious sense but more about America's most significant secular violation: its refusal to face itself. The plot is intimate but also represents a modern political parable of what happens when accountability is delayed so long that it begins to feel like mercy. If that sounds familiar, then it should because that's what Juneteenth is: a national lesson in the cost of delay. On June 19, 1865, two and a half years after Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, to inform enslaved people they were free. In the gap between law and emancipation, white landowners reaped profits, and Black families remained in bondage, unaware of the paper promises made in Washington. Freedom, technically granted, was functionally withheld. And the aftershocks still inform the framework of our economy, legal system and cultural memory. A Juneteenth flag flies on a float during the 45th annual Juneteenth National Independence Day ... More celebrations in Galveston, Texas. This pattern of delayed justice didn't end with emancipation but became ingrained in the framework of American policymaking, where the distance between what's promised and what's delivered often benefits those already positioned to win. Take housing. The GI Bill, often praised as a cornerstone of the American middle class, largely bypassed Black veterans. The Federal Housing Administration underwrote millions of home loans in the 20th century, just not in Black neighborhoods. Redlining wasn't a policy failure—it was a policy, full stop. The consequences are measurable: the racial wealth gap today remains nearly as wide as it was in 1968. Coogler has called Sinners a tribute to his Uncle James, a Mississippi bluesman who passed away during the filming of Creed. That lineage pulses through the film's juke joint scenes, where music, memory and defiance converge. And this is where the film's business lessons become most pointed. The juke joint that Jordan's characters establish is an ecosystem that controls space, talent and revenue streams. They've created what economists call 'economic sovereignty': the ability to generate wealth within their community rather than simply participating in someone else's. Discounted tickets and celebratory panels are nice. But reckoning demands more. It demands that we interrogate the original harm and the infrastructure that made it possible. That's partly why AMC's decision to screen Sinners and 40 Acres is so powerful: these films refuse to let America look away. 40 Acres—a pointed satire—revisits the failed promise of reparations with razor-sharp wit and historical fluency. It reminds us that the unpaid debt is not just financial but political and very much still on the books. J. E. Clark, a Black business owner, stands in his pineapple farm in Eatonville, Fla., 1907. For today's business leaders, the lesson isn't abstract. The companies that will define the next decade are those building new systems rather than retrofitting old ones, and the most successful diversity initiatives follow similar logic by not trying to make exclusionary systems more inclusive but creating inclusive systems from the ground up. AMC's $5 Juneteenth screenings represent more than a programming strategy; they're a recognition that liberation requires economic accessibility. But the real power of pairing Sinners and 40 Acres lies in their shared vision, one that recognizes that authentic freedom isn't granted by existing institutions but created despite them. A century and a half after Union troops reached Galveston, that choice between accommodation and self-empowerment remains the defining challenge for anyone who is serious about justice. The vampires in Coogler's film promise eternal life through submission. The freed choose mortal struggle through self-determination, and in boardrooms, classrooms, and ballot boxes, that same choice presents itself. The question is no longer whether freedom is possible—but whether we're brave enough to insist on it.

Seven yrs and 20cr later, Kathwada's waterlogging woes persist
Seven yrs and 20cr later, Kathwada's waterlogging woes persist

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Seven yrs and 20cr later, Kathwada's waterlogging woes persist

Ahmedabad: Since 2017, Ahmedabad Urban Development Authority (Auda) and Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) have spent more than Rs 20 crore to resolve persistent waterlogging issues in front of Madhumalati Apartments and nearby societies in Kathwada. Stormwater lines were laid to address the issue at Madhumalati Apartments, but it continues to plague the residents there. A moderate three-inch rainfall on Thursday morning once again left the area submerged, with water failing to recede even after 12 hours. The issue is not new. Back in July 2017, heavy water accumulation occurred in the Madhumalati Apartments area and surrounding regions in the eastern part of the city. Auda subsequently awarded a contract to Shwetasom Construction to address the problem by channelling rainwater from the Kathwada town-planning area to Singarva lake via an RCC box. Additionally, the AMC installed a stormwater line for rainwater disposal in Kathwada and Odhav, all leading to Singarva lake. However, the lake now overflows, exacerbating the waterlogging issues. In Aug 2024, heavy rain once again left Madhumalati Apartments waterlogged, necessitating the rescue of 70 residents. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch xu hướng AUD/USD? IC Markets Đăng ký Undo Sources said that while a stormwater line was laid to direct water from Madhumalati Apartments to Singarva lake, the inflow of rainwater surpasses the lake's capacity, rendering the measures ineffective. An official said, "The lake's capacity is 270 million litres, but during the monsoon, it receives 520 million litres of water. It has been seven years now since infrastructure was put in place to rid Madhumalati Apartments of its waterlogging woes, but to no avail. Even in July 2022, when the place was inundated, plans were made to lay a stormwater line for Rs 24 crore to divert rainwater to the Khari river considering the limited capacity of Singarva lake, but the implementation has been pending for three years. "

A week later, plane wreckage still at site
A week later, plane wreckage still at site

Time of India

timea day ago

  • General
  • Time of India

A week later, plane wreckage still at site

Ahmedabad: A week after the Air India crash , wreckage of the ill-fated Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, including its distinctive tail fin, continues to lie at the accident site in Meghaninagar. Investigators are sifting through the debris, hunting for crucial clues. The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB), a key division of the Ministry of Civil Aviation, is spearheading the complex probe assisted by three international investigation organisations. A closed-door meeting was held on Thursday at the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) to move the plane's wreckage. The plan involves relocating the entire debris to a large plot near Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International (SVPI) airport where it will be meticulously reassembled, allowing for a comprehensive examination of every single part. "The investigation team has sought AMC's help for cranes, vehicles, machines, and labour to shift the wreckage. They are yet to give us a date," a senior AMC official revealed. While Gujarat govt on Thursday clarified its non-involvement in the investigation, local firemen are actively assisting forensic and aviation experts, confirmed Ahmedabad's additional chief fire officer, Jayesh Khadia. The aircraft, which was reportedly descending rapidly at a high-nose angle, crashed into the medical hostel complex. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like What She Did Mid-Air Left Passengers Speechless medalmerit Learn More Undo Its tail fin became lodged on the roof of the hostel mess building and was brought down using large cranes on June 14, two days after the crash, Khadia said. "The debris, including the tail fin, is still lying at the site. There are no orders on moving the rubble to another place," he said. Meghaninagar inspector D B Basiya emphasized the limited role of the police to site protection. "The plane's wreckage is still lying there. AAIB will decide what to do with it."

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