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Shah Rukh Khanâs advice to Suhana Khan leaves Amitabh Bachchan amazed
onmynews.com

Shah Rukh Khanâs advice to Suhana Khan leaves Amitabh Bachchan amazed

Shah Rukh Khan and Gauri Khan’s daughter, Suhana Khan, marked her acting debut in the film The Archies. Directed by Zoya Akhtar, the movie, a musical adaptation from the beloved Archies comics, features Suhana portraying the character of Veronica Lodge. In a circulating clip  on social media, Suhana engages in a light-hearted banter with Amitabh Bachchan. Seated alongside her director Zoya Akhtar, the interaction unfolds as Bachchan asks Suhana about the advice she received from her father, Shah Rukh Khan, before appearing on the show. Suhana responds sweetly, “He asked me to remind you that you’ve played his father on screen, so ask me easy questions.” Her retort leaves Bachchan momentarily speechless, eliciting laughter from the audience.

While Amitabh Bachchan’s grandson Agastya Nanda also debuted in The Archies, he isn’t featured in the promo clip of the game show. The entire Bachchan family had attended the premiere of ‘The Archies’ to support Agastya. Ahead of the film’s release, Amitabh Bachchan took to social media to share a heartfelt post for his grandson. Sharing a photo capturing three generations of Bachchans – himself, son Abhishek Bachchan, and grandson Agastya – Amitabh expressed his affection, writing, “Agastya with love and more .. shine sway you are RIZZ !!!”

The Archies, a coming-of-age musical, delves into the lives of iconic characters like Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, Reggie, Ethel, and Dilton in the fictional town of Riverdale. The film explores themes of friendship, freedom, love, heartbreak, and rebellion. Apart from Suhana and Agastya, the movie features Khushi Kapoor, Vedang Raina, Mihir Ahuja, and Aditi Saigal, also known as Dot.
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Home Ministry Orders Probe Into Parliament Security Breach
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Home Ministry Orders Probe Into Parliament Security Breach

The Union Home Ministry has ordered an inquiry into today’s parliament security breach. A committee has been set up under Anish Dayal Singh, the Director General of the Central Reserve Police Forces, with members from other security agencies and experts.
 
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, the ministry said the committee will investigate the reasons for breach in security, identify lapses and recommend further action.

“It will submit its report with recommendations, including suggestions on improving security in Parliament, at the earliest,” it added.

This afternoon, two men had carried in yellow canisters evading all security. During the parliament proceedings, one of them jumped into the Lok Sabha floor from the visitors’ gallery and activated the canisters, releasing thick yellow smoke.

The breach took place despite upgraded security at the new parliament, triggering a flood of questions on lapses and loopholes.

The multi-layered security around the building involves background checks, manual frisking, baggage check-in and other processes conducted by multiple agencies including the Delhi Police and the Central Reserve Police Forces.
 
There is suspicion that the men had hid the yellow smoke canisters inside their shoes, which security personnel frisking them must have missed.

The Opposition INDIA bloc has demanded that Prathap Simha, the BJP MP who signed the pass request for men who breached parliament security, be questioned. They have declared the security breach a terrorist act.

The police have arrested five persons – two from them from inside parliament and two from outside. Another person is yet to be traced.

Manoranjan D and Sagar Sharma were the two who had got into the visitors’ gallery. Two others, Amol Shinde and Neelam Devi, were detained from outside Parliament. They were carrying coloured smoke canisters.

Preliminary investigation has indicated that the four people who went to parliament today do not belong to any terror group. Sources said the chances are that they had self-radicalised.

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Gaza War To Continue “With Or Without International Support”: Israel
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Gaza War To Continue “With Or Without International Support”: Israel

Israel declared on Wednesday its determination to continue its Gaza war “with or without international support”, after it came under mounting pressure even from key backer the United States.

Now in its third month, the war was launched in response to the unprecedented attacks on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7 that Israeli officials say killed 1,200 people.

It has left Gaza in ruins, killing more than 18,600 people, mostly women and children, according to the latest toll from the Hamas-run health ministry, and causing “unparallelled” damage to its roads, schools and hospitals.

The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly backed a non-binding resolution for a ceasefire on Tuesday.

But more air strikes hit Gaza and gun battles raged, especially in Gaza City, the biggest urban centre, and Khan Yunis and Rafah in the south, AFP correspondents said.

Cold autumn rains lashed the territory, where millions have been displaced and many are living in makeshift plastic tents, as vital supplies of food, drinking water, medicines and fuel have run low in more than two months of siege and war.

Camped with thousands of others in the grounds of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital in central Gaza, Ameen Edwan said his family was unable to sleep.

“Rainwater seeped in. We couldn’t sleep. We tried to find nylon covers but couldn’t find any, so we resorted to stones and sand” to keep the rain out, he told AFP.

Air raid sirens wailed in Sderot and other southern Israeli communities near Gaza as Palestinian militants kept firing rockets, most of which have been intercepted by air defences.

Israel’s military said sirens sounded in Ashdod city north of Gaza and in the Lakhish area. Social media footage showed a large fragment of an intercepted rocket had hit a supermarket.

The army said an air strike had hit a militant cell in Gaza City’s Shejaiya district “that was en route to launch rockets toward Israel”.

In Khan Yunis, a centre of heavy urban combat in recent days, a family gathered to mourn the death in a strike of Fayez al-Taramsi, a father of seven.

“How are we going to live after him?” one of his daughters said, crying and clutching his bloodied shirt. “He brought us to life.”

The bloodiest-ever Gaza war broke out after Hamas gunmen attacked Israel on October 7 — the deadliest in the country’s 75-year history.

They also seized around 240 hostages.

Israel, determined to destroy Hamas and bring the hostages home, launched a devastating aerial and ground offensive on Gaza.

It says it has lost 115 soldiers, including 10 in northern Gaza on Tuesday, its deadliest day since launching the ground assault on October 27.

– ‘Diminishing safe space’ –

The UN General Assembly passed a resolution Tuesday demanding a ceasefire, backed by 153 of 193 nations — surpassing the 140 or so that have routinely condemned Russia for invading Ukraine.

While the United States voted against the resolution, it was supported by allies Australia, Canada and New Zealand, who, in a rare joint statement, said they were “alarmed at the diminishing safe space for civilians in Gaza”.

Biden told a campaign event that Israel had “most of the world supporting it” immediately after the October 7 attack, but that “they’re starting to lose that support by the indiscriminate bombing that takes place”.

The US leader, who toned down his comments later, on Wednesday met with families of American hostages from among those the militants seized on October 7.

Despite the criticism from its main ally, Israel vowed to press on with its war on Hamas.

“Israel will continue the war against Hamas with or without international support,” said Foreign Minister Eli Cohen.

“A ceasefire at the current stage is a gift to the terrorist organisation Hamas, and will allow it to return and threaten the residents of Israel,” Cohen told a visiting diplomat, quoted by his ministry.

Biden’s national security advisor, Jake Sullivan, will travel to Israel on Thursday to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has said there is “disagreement” with Washington over how a post-conflict Gaza would be governed.

– Gaza City hospital raid –

The UN vote came as Philippe Lazzarini, head of its Palestinian refugee agency, said Gazans were “running out of time and options”.

The UN estimates 1.9 million of the territory’s 2.4 million people have been displaced and are receiving goods from only around 100 aid trucks per day. 

Its hospital system is in ruins, and Hamas authorities said Wednesday that vaccines for children had run out, warning of “catastrophic health repercussions”.

UN satellite analysis agency UNOSAT said Tuesday that 18 percent of Gaza’s infrastructure had been destroyed, based on an image that was already more than two weeks old.

The World Bank in a new analysis warned that “the loss of life, speed and extent of damages… are unparallelled”.

Already by mid-November, almost half of all roads and around 60 percent of communication infrastructure, health and education facilities had been damaged or destroyed, it said.

Hamas said Israeli forces raided a hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday. UN humanitarian agency OCHA had earlier reported fighting nearby and said about 3,000 displaced people were trapped inside.

The army did not comment, but Israel has repeatedly accused Hamas of using hospitals, schools, mosques and vast tunnel systems beneath them as military bases — claims the group has denied.

The UN World Health Organization’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was “extremely worried” by reports of the raid, adding that his agency “urgently calls for the protection of all persons inside the hospital”.

Fears of a wider conflict continued to grow, with daily exchanges of fire along Israel’s border with Lebanon, where Hezbollah is based, and other Iran-backed groups targeting US and allied forces in Iraq and Syria.

Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels have repeatedly launched missiles and drones toward Israel and cargo ships in nearby waters that they suspect are working with Israel.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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