Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: The Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust has accepted the resignations of its general secretary, Champat Rai, and trustee Anil Mishra. Both stepped down on moral grounds as a review of the Trust’s donation records gets under way. Treasurer Swami Govind Dev Giri has assured devotees that all donated valuables remain safe.
Why It Matters to You: There’s a good case that this is the system working as it should. Senior figures have stepped aside so an audit can run without their shadow over it. For the millions who gave to build the temple, that says something reassuring about how their money and their faith are being looked after. The open question is whether India’s big public trusts will now adopt the kind of routine, audit-ready accounting that stops such doubts arising in the first place.
India Reopens Tourist Visas for Bangladesh
India resumes regular tourist-visa processing for Bangladeshi nationals today, after a gap of nearly two years. Applications will be accepted at five centres: Dhaka, Rajshahi, Chittagong, Sylhet and Khulna. The new High Commissioner, Dinesh Trivedi, announced the move and said he hoped it would strengthen ties between ordinary people on both sides.
Why It Matters to You: For families split across the border, this is the everyday stuff returning to normal: visits, weddings, medical trips, small trade. It also reads as a quiet vote of confidence in a relationship that has been steadying itself again. Worth watching whether those five centres soon become more.
Operation Amistad: India Sends Aid to Quake-Hit Venezuela
Two Indian Air Force C-17s have left for earthquake-hit Venezuela. On board are an Indian Army field hospital, more than 35 tonnes of relief, two BHISHM emergency-care cubes, and a 41-member team that includes nine doctors. The mission has a name: Operation Amistad, amistad being Spanish for friendship.
Why It Matters to You: Twin quakes killed hundreds in a country on the far side of the planet, and India had aircraft in the air within days. That speed is becoming a habit, and it is buying India something valuable: a name as one of the first countries the Global South can count on when the ground gives way. The thing to follow is whether this capability keeps growing.
Operation Sindoor: India Names Its Six Fallen
For the first time, the government has named the six personnel killed in Operation Sindoor. They are Subedar Major Pawan Kumar; Rifleman Sunil Kumar, awarded the Vir Chakra; Lance Naik Dinesh Kumar; Agniveer Mood Muralinaik; Havildar Sunil Kumar Singh; and Sergeant Surendra Kumar of the Air Force. Their names are being inscribed on the Tyag Chakra at the National War Memorial.
Why It Matters to You: After a long wait, these families finally have official recognition of their loss, set in stone where the whole country can see it. It is also a reminder of who pays for the operations that often pass by as headlines, the young Agniveers now counted among the fallen included.
Kota Hospital Deaths: Centre Orders Audit Over Fake Oxytocin
The Centre has ordered an urgent clinical audit of government hospitals in Rajasthan. Lab tests found that oxytocin injections supplied in Kota contained no active ingredient, and the drug has been linked to the deaths of mothers after Caesarean surgery. Regulators have cancelled the distributor’s licence and seized more than 3,500 vials. The WHO has asked India for details as part of its routine global drug-safety checks.
Why It Matters to You: The response here has been fast: bans, seizures, suspensions and a central audit, with India sharing information openly with the WHO. The real fix, though, sits upstream. Until the supply chain is tight enough that a fake life-saving drug can never reach a hospital shelf, the danger stays. For anyone who relies on a government hospital, getting that right is the whole game.
Telangana Braces for Heavy Rain as IMD Sounds Orange Alert
The India Meteorological Department has placed several Telangana districts under an orange alert, with heavy rain, thunderstorms, lightning and winds of 40 to 50 kmph expected into early July. Hyderabad sits under a lighter yellow alert and can expect light to moderate rain.
Why It Matters to You: Early, district-by-district warnings buy time, for civic bodies and commuters alike, to get ready for flooding and snarled traffic. If you are in Telangana, plan the next couple of days around the heavier spells and keep an umbrella close. It is a small case for the unglamorous work of better forecasting, the kind that makes people safer without ever making the front page.












