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Video: Man Snatches Mic From Greta Thunberg After She Supports Palestinians
onmynews.com

Video: Man Snatches Mic From Greta Thunberg After She Supports Palestinians

A controversy erupted at an event in Amsterdam on Sunday when a man snatched a mic from climate activist Greta Thunberg. The disruption occurred after Ms Thunberg invited a Palestinian and an Afghan woman to speak, leading the man to accuse her of introducing politics into the event.

Before inviting the Palestinian and Afghan women onto the stage, Ms Thunberg, while addressing a massive crowd, said, “As a climate justice movement, we have to listen to the voices of those who are being oppressed and those who are fighting for freedom and for justice. Otherwise, there can be no climate justice without international solidarity.” 

After the women spoke and Ms Thunberg resumed her speech, a man stormed the stage, expressing his discontent.

“Came here for a climate demonstration, not a political view,” he said while snatching the mic from Ms Thunberg.

Security then escorted the man off the stage as Ms Thunberg urged him to “calm down”.

Later, she was heard chanting “No climate justice on occupied land,” along with the crowd.

#GretaThunberg gets interrupted at a climate rally after she speaks up about #Palestine the crowd begins to chant ” let her speak” pic.twitter.com/XdrdPD4qyW

— Arthur Morgan (@ArthurM40330824) November 13, 2023

The Afghan woman, Sahar Shirzad, told the news agency Associated Press that Ms Thunberg generously allowed them to share the stage with her, stating, “Basically, she gave her time to us.”

The Palestinian activist, Sara Rachdan, who was also on stage, spoke about “death and mourning” in Gaza.

The incident came after an extensive climate march in Amsterdam, where tens of thousands of individuals paraded through the streets, advocating for increased efforts to combat climate change.

Organizers declared that 70,000 people participated in the march, labelling it the largest climate protest ever in the Netherlands.

Greta Thunberg was also among those walking through the historic heart of the Dutch capital, contributing to the substantial turnout for the event.

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Cocaine Worth Rs 15 Crore Seized In Mumbai, 2 Foreigners Arrested
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Cocaine Worth Rs 15 Crore Seized In Mumbai, 2 Foreigners Arrested

The Narcotics Control Bureau has busted an international drug syndicate and seized two kg of cocaine from a Zambian national in a hotel in Mumbai, an NCB official said on Monday.

A Tanzanian woman, who was to receive the consignment, has also been arrested from Delhi, the official said, adding the seized contraband is worth about Rs 15 crore.

Based on a specific information, the NCB Mumbai team conducted a raid in a hotel here and on Thursday apprehended Zambian national LA Gilmore, who was the drug carrier, he said.

The man had visited Addis Ababa (Ethiopia’s capital) from Lusaka in Zambia for the drug consignment. After reaching Mumbai by a flight, he checked into a hotel.

The NCB team, which was monitoring his movements, conducted a search in his hotel room. They found a bag and after cutting it recovered two packets of cocaine weighing two kg, the official said.

During questioning, the man informed the NCB sleuths about some intermediaries in the region linked with drug trafficking.

It was also observed that he was being directed by a handler, the official said.

The NCB team then tactfully monitored the communication of Gilmore’s handler, who told him to go to Delhi to deliver the drug.

The anti-drug agency’s team from Mumbai then rushed to the national capital, where they maintained surveillance in the designated area for delivery.

A Tanzanian woman, named MR Augustino, who was to receive the consignment from Gilmore was intercepted and later arrested in from there on Saturday, the official said.

During the probe, the international network of the syndicate was found spread across multiple cities including Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Goa, he said.

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After Moon, Sun, When Can India Reach Venus, Mars? Scientist Gives Update
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After Moon, Sun, When Can India Reach Venus, Mars? Scientist Gives Update

Soft land on Moon – Done. Mission to Sun – Done. Test flight for Gaganyaan (India’s first manned spaceflight) – Done. Next up – Venus and Mars.  India’s space research agency – ISRO – has set its sights on Earth’s planetary neighbours and expects to mark the country’s presence on Mars and Venus within five years, Dr M Sankaran, Director of the UR Rao Satellite Center in Bengaluru told NDTV on Sunday.

Dr Sankaran – who heads the the “powerhouse” unit behind the dozens of Indian satellites in orbit – identified some challenges, but revealed that internal talks on mission concepts are already underway.

Each comes with its own challenges, such as the spacecraft overheating on entry into Mars’ atmosphere and finding an optimum launch window for each mission. Then there are common logistical challenges, like developing launch vehicles capable of carrying heavier payloads – more fuel, more equipment, etc. – needed for missions to Mars, Venus or beyond.

“The past couple of years… we have been studying mission configurations for landing on Mars. There are two things that were holding us back. One was Chandrayaan-2’s unsuccessful landing, which slowed our confidence in sensors required for landing… it wasn’t that the sensors did not perform well, but since we could not achieve our final goal we were not sure if these were adequate. Now we know what can be done, we can move forward,” Dr Sankaran explained. 

“The second is about our ability to put higher mass into orbit. Now, with present LVM3 (Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III – the three-stage medium-lift launch vehicle developed by ISRO) capacity, still we have gap to meeting landing requirements because this is quite high. It has some challenges – in addition to a gravity field, like on the Moon, the atmosphere also poses a challenge. Heating (of the spacecraft) that occurs during entry into Mars’ atmosphere calls for additional thermal protection, which is again mass. (But) we are studying this…” he told NDTV.

READ | New Mars Mission Still In “Study Phase,” Says ISRO Scientist

It isn’t all doom and gloom though. Dr Sankaran said enhancements to the LVM3 are ongoing and that ISRO expects 20-30 per cent greater payload capacity within the next two years. This is crucial not only for India’s future space missions but also to allow the agency to carry more satellites for paid launches by other countries, which is a key revenue driver.

“I think we have now a possibility… with that as a target (about 20-30 per cent capacity increase in two-three years), we should be able to come up with a plan for a Mars lander mission. We have the outline.. now we need to move forward.”

The proposed Mars mission will be India’s second, after the success of Mangalyaan that was launched in November 2013; the country’s first Mars mission began orbiting the planet in September 2014 and send volumes of priceless data before ISRO lost contact with the module in October last year. The mission to Venus will be India’s first.

On the mission to Venus – unofficially dubbed Shukrayaan – Dr Sankaran had more good news to offer.

“We have actually gone up to preesenting internal reviews for concepts… this is going to be orbiter. Chandrayaan-3 success has given us confidence and the establishment also… so I think it should be possible, yes, to carry it forward,” he said.

READ | ‘Shukrayaan-1’: All About ISRO’s Big Mission To Venus

“Mars and Venus missions have cyclical opportunities in terms of energy (use). We can launch any day… but depending on relative position of Earth and Sun, some year we get chance with minimum energy requirement. For Venus the next is in two years but that is too short, so may be in four to five years…”

READ | ISRO “Very Busy” With Series Of Space Exploration Missions: S Somnath

In September ISRO chief S Somanath had confirmed the Venus mission had been configured and some payloads were under development. Speaking at an event, he also said ISRO is planning studies to analyse the climate of space.

Meanwhile, last week ISRO shared a remarkable update from the Aditya-L1 mission, which is India’s first attempt to study the Sun. The Hel1OS spectrometer – which was designed and built by Dr Sankaran’s UR Rao Satellite Center – captured the first high-energy X-ray glimpse of solar flares.

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