Latest news with #Michal


Time of India
14-06-2025
- Time of India
Truck driver flees after killing baby, injuring couple on bike in Bengaluru; nabbed from Andhra Pradesh
1 2 3 Bengaluru: What began as a joyful shopping outing to buy a sofa-cum-bed for their newborn son turned into a nightmare no parent should ever face. Thirty-year-old Michal Nithian J and his wife Sara Sherpa were returning home from IKEA in Nagasandra on their motorbike with their four-month-old baby Zeno Macadam M, their first and only child, after picking the furniture when a tragedy shattered their lives. Minutes after crossing the Kuvempu underpass on MES Road in Jalahalli at 10.45pm, a truck rammed their bike from behind. The force of the collision flung the young family onto the road. The truck didn't stop. It crushed Sara's left leg and left Michal and Zeno grievously injured. Despite the presence of bystanders, help came from only one source, a woman passing by in a car. She stopped and lifted the injured trio with help from a few reluctant onlookers, and rushed them to MS Ramaiah Hospital. But the damage was too severe. Zeno, who had suffered a critical head injury, fought for his life for hours but succumbed around 5.20am on June 9. Michal survived with injuries to his eyes and lungs. His wife, Sara, was left with severe injuries from head to toe and remains in critical condition. When police at Jalahalli traffic station were alerted through a medico-legal report, they acted swiftly. Michal, though heavily injured, could only recall a "green bus" striking their bike before everything went dark. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Thị trường có dấu hiệu suy thoái không? IC Markets Đăng ký Undo The clue seemed vague, but it was enough. Inspector Shekara G of Jalahalli traffic police assembled multiple teams. CCTV footage from the vicinity showed a green truck, not a bus, pausing for just three seconds near the crash site before speeding away. Though the registration number wasn't visible, one thing stood out: the truck had a unique decorative blinker light, flashing non-stop. That blinking light would soon become the key to cracking the case. One police team followed the truck's forward path, tracking it from Tumakuru Road to Hebbal and then onto Bengaluru-Ballari highway. At Sadahalli toll plaza, the FASTag data revealed the truck's registration number: HR-73-A-0291. Simultaneously, another team traced the truck's origin. They found it had offloaded goods in Peenya on June 7 and was en route back to Haryana on June 8, the night of the accident. With the registration number in hand, police contacted the truck owner and obtained the driver's phone number. By then, officers had sifted through over 100 CCTV camera feeds, tracing the truck's route inch by inch. Mobile tower triangulation pinpointed the driver's current location: Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh. Knowing time was running out, the Jalahalli team alerted Kurnool police, who relayed the alert to Kothakota police station. As the truck was about to cross the district border, officers moved in and detained the vehicle and its driver. That same night, Jalahalli police reached Kothakota and brought the driver back to Bengaluru, along with the truck that had ended a young life and nearly destroyed a family. The driver has since been arrested and released on station bail. Fighting back tears, Michal told TOI: "We went to buy a sofa for our baby. Now we have lost him. My wife is battling for life. That truck crushed our dreams." Follow more information on Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad here . Get real-time live updates on rescue operations and check full list of passengers onboard AI 171 .
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Estonian PM on Russian losses: Human life has no value for Putin
Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal has commented on the data from the Ukrainian General Staff indicating that Russia's losses in the war have exceeded one million troops killed and wounded. Source: Michal on X (Twitter), as reported by European Pravda Quote: "Human life has no value for Putin. Russia's casualties since 24 February 2022 have exceeded one million. Putin has rejected any meaningful peace efforts and is only pretending to negotiate." Details: Michal stressed that pressure on Russia must be maintained, as it is "the only way for just and lasting peace". Background: In its latest update on the situation in Ukraine, UK intelligence stated that since the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russia has lost around one million troops killed or wounded. Previously, UK intelligence estimated that Russia could suffer record losses in the war against Ukraine in 2025. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!


Middle East Eye
11-06-2025
- Politics
- Middle East Eye
‘Rape them with a rusty bar': Message sent to Israeli troops on coffee bag draws online support
A message containing a call to rape Palestinians, written on a coffee bag reportedly sent to Israeli soldiers in Gaza, drew widespread support from Israelis online. "To our brave soldiers," read the writing on the coffee bag, pictured in social media posts on Tuesday. "Rape them in the ass with a rusty iron bar until there is blood coming out, thank you for protecting us. Michal, second grade," the message concluded, in a way that was supposed to mimic a child's letter. Israeli independent journalist Daniel Amram said in an Instagram post that soldiers indeed received the coffee bag. He later deleted the post. Middle East Eye was unable to independently verify the authenticity of the image or the claims surrounding it. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Before the post was taken down, it drew significant engagement, including support from some social media users. 'What an education, what a language, I like it,' one comment read. Another stated, 'This is how I will educate my children,' receiving over a thousand likes. A third user added, 'From a young age, every Jew should be educated to hate them,' referring to Palestinians. אבא של מיכל מכיתה ב׳2 אני צריך לדבר איתך רגע…. — Tom Nissani (@TomNissani) June 10, 2025 Since the outbreak of the war on Gaza, Israeli civil society groups and schools have regularly sent care packages to soldiers, often including food, clothing, and handwritten letters from children. These initiatives are aimed at boosting troop morale during what has become the longest war in Israel's history. Israel's use of sexual violence Tolerance towards sexual violence against Palestinians is not uncommon in Israel. Last year, dozens of right-wing demonstrators broke into the notorious Israeli Sde Teiman detention facility after several guards at the facility were arrested on suspicion of raping a Palestinian detainee. The military police accused the guards of injecting a sharp object into the Palestinian detainee's rectum, which caused him life-threatening injury. The break-in to Sde Teiman, led by Knesset member Tzvi Succot of the Religious Zionist Party, received support from the Israeli right-wing. As of today, the trial of five guards is ongoing in a military court. "Sde Teiman, as everyone who has been there knows it, is a sadistic torture camp. Dozens of detainees entered it alive and came out in bags," wrote a reservist soldier who was in the facility. Since October 2023, more than 70 Palestinian detainees have died in Israeli jails amid widespread torture. '[In Israel there is] a pattern of sexual violence, including cases of rape and other forms of sexual violence, torture' - UN Commission of Inquiry According to an investigation by the Israeli news outlet HaMakom, since the beginning of the war, Israeli soldiers have arrested nearly 7,000 Palestinians from Gaza. The Palestinians, who include women, children and the elderly, were arrested without proof that they were involved in any military activity against Israel, according to HaMakom. Since then, just over 2,500 Palestinians have been released back to the besieged enclave. As of the end of May, 2,790 Gazans are still being held in Israel's detention facilities, 660 of them in Sde Teiman. A UN Commission of Inquiry report published in March stated that "Israel has systematically used sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence since 7 October 2023." The report found that in Israel there is "a pattern of sexual violence, including cases of rape and other forms of sexual violence, torture and other inhumane acts that amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity." "Specific forms of sexual and gender-based violence such as forced public stripping and nudity, sexual harassment including threats of rape, as well as sexual assault, de facto form part of the ISF [Israeli Security Forces] standard operating procedures towards Palestinians," the report said.


CNBC
05-06-2025
- Health
- CNBC
How twin sister triathletes doubled down on sports success to raise health-startup millions from investors
During their last year of completing work for doctoral degrees in physiology, twin sisters Michal Mor and Merav Mor started to compete in Ironman triathlon races. The demand for peak fitness led them to the realize the importance of understanding personal metabolism, and the lack of data being collected on it through devices accessible to consumers. That's how their health tech startup Lumen's first prototype was created. Initially, the sisters had no plans to turn it into a business. In the earliest days of the hand-held device iteration — which measures metabolic data points in a single breath, in under a minute — the test subjects were close to home. "We used to take it to dinner on Fridays with our family, and we would ask our sister, 'Can you come here for a sec? Just sit and breathe into the device,'" Merav recalled in a recent interview with CNBC's Julia Boorstin for the CNBC Changemakers Spotlight series. Both were named to the 2025 CNBC Changemakers list. The Mor sisters realized they had something much bigger in their hands when they made their father, who has diabetes, try the device, and the results were eye-opening. A big initial success on crowdfunding platform Indiegogo gave the sisters the push they needed to see an even bigger business opportunity, which to date has raised $77 million from investors. It wasn't a lifelong plan for the twins to become triathletes, physiology PhDs, or startup founders, but Lumen has now collected over 65 million breaths to date from more than 350,000 individuals. The Morav sisters have learned a lot about persistence, conflict and leadership along the way. The Mor sisters say being athletes helped them learn persistence in their journey as entrepreneurs, even when things get challenging. "You have to be able to wake up at 4 a.m., even when it's tough, even when it's cold, you have to do it," said Michal. "You're able to enjoy the pain, it's a part of the journey." From relentlessly working on developing a sensor for three years to getting credibility in the scientific world, they say resilience is as important as any factor in reaching success. Before Lumen, there were one million data measurements on metabolic activity. Now there are 75 million, Michal said. Being persistent was a trait the sisters hadn't mastered early in their attempts at success. In fact, when they were rejected from their original dream of attending medical school, they didn't know their next step. Michal says she felt like giving up, but their mother helped to push them to figure out a new path. "She opened our eyes to different things that we also might be passionate about," added Merav. "And she was right. We completely fell in love with research." Eventually, they were accepted to a medical school, "but we said 'nah, nah, it's too little, too late,'" recalled Merav. As close as the twins are, their relationship is not immune to conflict. When they do disagree, they say the key is to make sure the argument remains healthy and the discussion is solution-oriented. Among the habits their mother instilled was the commandment that you never go to sleep with unresolved issues. "It's like a snowball, and if you don't resolve that, it's very hard to fill the gap," said Michal. She also forced the sisters to resist digging in their heels. Even at a young age, when Michal and Merav would fight, their mother pushed them to understand the other's perspective. "'Why do you think she feels like that? Why do you think she reacted like that?'" Michal recalls her mother asking. "She still does that sometimes." Michal says that while both sisters are pursuing the same goal, even described them as being "egoless" in the relationship, they are different in terms of strengths and weaknesses. They described their relationship as being a "Yin and Yang." Both sisters have a background in cardiology from their PhD work, but in the initial stages of building Lumen, Merav focused on the molecular mechanism behind irregular heart rhythm, and Michal focused more on the clinical aspect of irregular heart rhythm. Now, Merav leads their research, and Michal leads product development. Building trust with each other is the foundation on which they build, creating what they say is a comfortable space for challenges including the inevitable disagreements, but still know that they will remain tied to the pursuit of the same goals. And that "psychological safety" as they called it, is an aspect of working relationship they have strived to bring to their company culture and employees. The Mor sisters believe that a company can only be successful if its employees work as a unit towards a common goal. Placing a high priority on work-life balance is critical, they say, especially for a company where more than 50% of Lumen leadership positions are occupied by women, and more than 50% of the total workforce is women. "The fact that we're moms also enables other women in the company," said Merav. As part of their approach to achieve a proper work-life balance, essential meetings don't take place after certain work hours, allowing employees to go back home and have more time to unwind with their families. "Having time with your family, it's something that fills you," said Michal. Their success as sisters, the lessons they learned from their mother, and those initial Lumen device tests at the family dinner table, inform their approach to leadership and Lumen's mission today. "Friends might come and go, things can come and go, but eventually the core family, that is something you should really, really embrace," said Merav. "You're having a bad day? Take a deep breath, you can fix it."


CNBC
05-06-2025
- Business
- CNBC
CNBC Changemakers: Twin sisters turn medical school rejection into game-changing health tech company
CNBC Changemakers Michal and Merav Mor speak with CNBC's Julia Boorstin about their journey from medical school rejection to building Lumen, a game-changing metabolism-tracking device with over 350,000 users. The twin sisters discuss how their athletic background competing in Ironman races shaped their business resilience and their unique approach to family business dynamics.