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NDTV
11 hours ago
- Politics
- NDTV
"When I Do Tadasana...": When Netanyahu Used Yoga To Link Indian And Israeli Democracy
The world will celebrate International Yoga Day tomorrow, with events planned across India and 190 other countries. More than 2,000 events will be hosted at 1,300 locations, covering multiple cities. In 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took the initiative during his address at the UN General Assembly, and the global body recognised June 21 as International Yoga Day. Ahead of the celebration, a statement from Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu is going viral, where he told Prime Minister Modi, during the latter's state visit to Israel, that he is inspired by Prime Minister Modi's enthusiasm for Yoga and cited yogic asanas to link the democracies. Prime Minister Modi went to Israel in 2017 on a state visit, marking 25 years of Indo-Israel Strategic Partnership. During a joint statement, Mr Netanyahu said, "I have to confess that I have been inspired by Modi's enthusiasm for Yoga," adding that Prime Minister Modi advised him to start at a lower level. "I am starting at a lower level. When I do a relaxing Tada-asana in the morning and I turn my head to the right, India is the first democracy I see, and when Modi does a relaxing Vasisthasana and he turns left, Israel is the first democracy he can see. So in fact we have India and Israel, two sister democracies," Mr Netanyahu said. Times of Israel quoted Prime Minister Modi as saying during his interview with Israel's Channel 2, "Modi was asked at one point if he would invite Netanyahu to join him in a yoga session. The prime minister laughed and noted that many Israelis appreciated the ancient Indian discipline." When his interviewer suggested Yoga could help solve the Middle East's problems, Prime Minister Modi laughed and said, "That would delight me." Yoga Day 2025 The theme for IDY 2025 is 'Yoga for One Earth, One Health'. This theme echoes a vital truth about the interconnectedness of health, sustainability, and the environment, aligning with India's "One Earth, One Family, One Future" vision highlighted during its G20 presidency, the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), the cultural arm of the Ministry of External Affairs underlined. In Delhi, yoga events will be led by these foreign yoga gurus at Jantar Mantar, Qutub Minar, Purana Quila and Humayun's Tomb, while similar 'Yoga Bandhan' programmes will be organised at iconic locations in Lucknow, Ayodhya, Varanasi, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Bhopal, Gwalior and other cities.
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Politics
- Yahoo
‘No Kings' protests expected to draw thousands across north Georgia on Saturday
Thousands of people are expected to participate in protests across north Georgia on Saturday. Organizers are planning nearly two dozen protests all across metro Atlanta and north Georgia as part of the nationwide 'No Kings' demonstrations against President Donald Trump and his policies. More than 5,000 people are expected to crowd into Liberty Plaza at the Georgia State Capitol as part of the demonstration. Channel 2 Action News will bring you LIVE coverage throughout the day on Channel 2 and on the free WSB-TV News App. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Organizers told Channel 2's Richard Elliot that they've actually been working with state and local law enforcement to make sure everything goes off peacefully. 'Because we have gotten the other permits and we're working with Atlanta police as well as Capitol police, we do want to respect and show that First Amendment rights look different to everyone,' Laura Judge of Indivisible North Metro Atlanta said. State Attorney General Chris Carr warns that if outside agitators come in and spark violence, his office will prosecute under the state's domestic terrorism statute. 'I will defend your right to peacefully protest, but again, if you are going to go after, light buildings on fire, or shoot police officers, or loot buildings, nope, we're not going to stand for it,' Carr said. Channel 2 Action News has confirmed the following protests are scheduled to take place on Saturday: U.S. 41 & East Main Street 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Capitol Ave. SW 10 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. 311 Newnan Street 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Douglas County Courthouse on Hospital Drive 10 a.m. The Griffin Auditorium - 234 E. Taylor Street 10 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. South Court Square 10 a.m. - 12 p.m. Courthouse Square 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1670 Clairmont Road 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. Tucker Recreation Center 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. McDonough City Hall - 136 Keys Ferry Street 12:30 p.m. - 2 p.m. 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. 3650 Peachtree Parkway in Suwanee 1 p.m. - 2 p.m. Johnson Ferry Road and Roswell Road 2 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. Marietta Pizza Company - 3 Whitlock Ave. SW 2 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Suwanee Town Center - 330 Town Center Ave. 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. Old Fayette County Courthouse - 204 Glynn Street 3 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Gainesville Square 3 p.m. - 4 p.m. Hwy. 92 and Jimmy Lee Smith Hwy. 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. College Square 5 p.m. - 7 p.m. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]
Yahoo
7 days ago
- Yahoo
Officer shot 6 times by YSL gang members says he kept thinking ‘I'm not dying out here'
For the first time, an Atlanta police officer is talking with Channel 2 Action News about an attack where a gunman shot him six times. YSL criminal street gang member Christian Eppinger shot Officer David Rodgers six times in 2022 as he tried to arrest Eppinger for armed robbery. Rogers spoke one-on-one with Channel 2 investigative reporter Mark Winne on Friday and walked him through the harrowing incident. 'I encountered Mr. Eppinger, gave him commands to get on the ground, let him know that he had paper. He failed to comply. I had issues getting my Taser, and at that point, he flanked me and I was shot,' Rogers said. Earlier this week, we obtained video of Eppinger firing at Rodgers. 'While I didn't know I was shot six times, I heard that sound quite a few times. Poom, poom, poom,' Rodgers said. 'You kind of feel the heat from the blood flowing out of you, and I went to go access my firearm and couldn't, and I remember turning towards him and all I could see was the white pants he had on and the muzzle of that Glock.' Rogers said that he thanks God for surviving the attack. 'I kind of talk to God for a little bit. Just kind of remember saying to myself, 'I'm not dying out here,'' Rogers said. 'I took a graze across the back of the head that cracked my skull. I think they told me I took four to the back of the shoulder, shattered my humerus. And then one to the back of my thigh, right around my hamstring.' Rodgers says he used to work for Georgia Power but was laid off. He told Winne that it was the power of God that led him to his calling: policework. RELATED STORIES: Final defendant in YSL case pleads guilty Case of mistaken identity ends with young mother killed in alleged Atlanta gang shooting Young Thug says 'he's too big for jail' as he talks about life after incarceration, new music 'I fell in love with the service. Love with the people,' Rodgers said. He said it's a miracle that he's even still alive today. 'I'm definitely a walking miracle. No doubt about it. Yeah, God gave me the gift of life in that situation, or more life. He definitely placed some angels around me throughout recovery. And he gave me these special gifts of peace. I've had peace,' Rodgers said. Rodgers credits Will Johnson, now a sergeant, who, Eppinger also shot at but didn't hit, for fast action applying a tourniquet at the scene and more. He said he got to Grady Memorial Hospital in the back of an undercover car led by a blue light escort. Rodgers said he was in the courtroom on Monday when Eppinger was sentenced for the attempted murder of Rodgers and Johnson, and a host of other crimes, to 40 years in prison and 25 years' probation. The prison time will run at the same time as a 45-year sentence from a probation revocation,who Eppinger was already serving. 'Outside of the bigger question of where's the justice, I think we have to pay particular attention to how we treat our protectors,' Rodgers said. Rodgers told Winne that more than he was angry for himself, he was upset for Johnson and other officers. 'It was maybe 30 to 40 officers within that courtroom that day. After the sentence came down, and you just look at the reactions on everyone's face, there was a lot of sadness. There's a lot a dejection. You saw tears, but you saw defeat,' Rodgers said. The judge overseeing the case told Winne that in crafting Eppinger's sentence in the YSL case, she considered the lengthy probation revocation Eppinger was already serving, was essentially already a punishment for the same crimes for which she sentenced him Monday. 'I want every member of the Atlanta Police Department to know this: I see your bravery. And I recognize it, and so do the citizens of this city,' Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said. 'I would have rather they just put in a stipulation that he got a PhD while he had to sit down, just so he could experience something else other than what he's grew up in,' Rodgers said. Rodgers said the most important part of his entire story is thankfulness. He says he is grateful to God and for the people He put around him to be strong when he couldn't be. He said they include his family, Mayor Andre Dickens, former APD officer Lois Palzolo, Sgt. Will Johnson, Officer Stacy Booker, Sgt. Jamir Denson, former APD officer Thomas Crowder, Officer Claudia Rivers, Maj. Janice Sturdivant, Dr. Stephanie Thomas, Officer Jaz Rivera, Inv. Leon Delain, Lt. David Holleman, Lt. Tim Henninger, Chris Wigginton and Billy Shoemaker of the Georgia Public Safety Training Center, Douglasville Police Sgt. Matt Underwood and his charity Hooked On Blue, Chad Wallace of Team Blue Line, Keegan Merritt from a state peer support program and local school teacher Ashley Guthrie. He says their support came in many forms—from daily phone calls to getting him out of the house before he could return to duty and much more. And he said he wants to thank countless Atlanta citizens for their prayers and well wishes.,
Yahoo
14-06-2025
- Yahoo
‘He Didn't Have to Die': Family demands answers after inmate found dead weeks before release
A Georgia prison inmate, just weeks away from his release date, is dead, and now his family wants to know why. Dominique Cole died on Sunday inside the Wilcox State Prison. 'And within nine days, my son was dead,' Resley Cole told Channel 2's Audrey Washington. Cole's family said just days after the Department of Corrections transferred Cole from a mental health facility in Johnson County to the Wilcox State Prison, south of Macon, the 37-year-old was dead. 'It's heartbreaking. It's like he was taken from us twice,' Cole's uncle John-Paul Moore said. 'If the state knew that he had a mental health problem and that he has ASPD, why was he put back in a regular facility?' Resley Cole said. ASPD stands for antisocial personality disorder. TRENDING STORIES: Manhunt underway after woman, child shot, killed at DeKalb apartment complex 'He's just out there': Grandmother very concerned about Clayton State student missing from hospital Man found guilty of killing Gwinnett County father at baby shower learns his fate Resley Cole said he learned his son died when the warden at the prison called on Sunday. 'Saying my son had an encounter with a different inmate and that he did not survive,' he said. Resley Cole said though the warden told him another inmate attacked his son, he still wants to know for sure and why. He said his pleas for information have gone unanswered. 'I have not heard from them since,' he said. Washington reached out to the Georgia Department of Corrections. A spokesperson confirmed that Cole's body was sent to the GBI crime lab to determine how he died. Channel 2 Action News has also filed an open records request to get more information about Cole's death. 'He had two beautiful daughters. Two daughters that he was going to have a future with,' Resley Moore said. 'He didn't have to die.' Representatives with the GDC said that because the investigation is ongoing, they cannot release too many details at this time.
Yahoo
13-06-2025
- Yahoo
‘That's evil': Family with jailed loved one says they lost $400 to bail scam
A family is warning people about a scam that preys on the excitement of a loved one being released from jail. But in their case, there was no happy reunion. Channel 2's Tom Jones spoke to one family that was excited their loved one was coming home and quickly forked over hundreds of dollars to someone who said they worked at the jail. It was a scam. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] 'That's evil, because we been waiting on my brother to come home almost three years,' Stephanie Rushing said. Rushing thought her and her families' dreams had come true and her brother was going to be released from the Clayton County jail that night. That's what a sergeant at the jail told them. 'And if we paid the 400 dollars he could get out,' she said. Of course, the family immediately paid the so-called sergeant at the jail. 'We paid him Cash App,' Rushing said. Then, their loved one called them. They told him he was being released. He knew nothing about it. 'So then he went to talk to the people at the desk, and they told him that we have been scammed,' Rushing said. This type of scam is happening at jails around the metro area. Someone in Paulding County emailed Channel 2 Action News, saying it happened to them. TRENDING STORIES: Man found guilty of killing Gwinnett County father at baby shower learns his fate Manhunt underway after woman, child shot, killed at DeKalb apartment complex Porch pirate 'syndicate': 10 charged with stealing $6M in electronics The scam is so pervasive, judges in Clayton County warn inmates during first appearance hearings about someone calling from the jail about a pretrial diversion program and dismissal of charges if a fee is paid. 'Please note that this is a scam. No such program exists,' Magistrate Court Judge Latrevia Kates-Johnson said from the bench recently. Rushing's family found that out after forking over $400,money they didn't have to throw away. Rushing said people can be so cruel. 'So you're tugging on somebody's heartstrings about their loved ones coming home. And knowing its just a scam,' she said. Rushing says after the scam call from the jail, she got a call from someone saying they were with a bonding company. She called the bonding company, and they told her it was a scam. Rushing thinks it has to be someone from the jail scamming people since the scammer called right after her brother was booked. Jones called the Clayton County Sheriff to see what he had to say about that, but did not hear back. [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]