logo
Operation Akhal enters third day: 3 terrorists dead, one soldier injured in Jammu-Kashmir's Kulgam

Operation Akhal enters third day: 3 terrorists dead, one soldier injured in Jammu-Kashmir's Kulgam

First Post8 hours ago
This operation follows a series of successful counter-terrorism missions in the region. Just days earlier, security forces neutralised Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists responsible for the Pahalgam massacre in 'Operation Mahadev' read more
An Indian Army soldier looks out from an armoured vehicle on a highway leading to south Kashmir's Pahalgam, in Marhama village, in Kashmir. Reuters
In a significant escalation in counter-terrorism efforts, three terrorists were killed, and one soldier was injured in Jammu and Kashmir's Kulgam district as 'Operation Akhal' stretched into its third day on Sunday (August 3).
The operation, which has already resulted in the death of six terrorists, has put the spotlight on the relentless efforts of security forces to curb militancy in the region.
Operation based on precise intelligence inputs
The operation began on Friday when security forces, acting on precise intelligence inputs, launched a cordon and search operation in the dense Akhal forest area of south Kashmir.
The situation quickly escalated when a group of terrorists, concealed by the forest cover, opened fire on the joint team comprising the Jammu and Kashmir Police, the Indian Army, and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF).
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
An initial exchange of fire ensued, but operations were paused on Friday night due to challenging conditions.
On Saturday, the operation resumed with renewed intensity, resulting in the elimination of three terrorists.
According to reports, these individuals were affiliated with the Resistance Front (TRF), a splinter group of Pakistan-based outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT). The TRF had previously claimed responsibility for the devastating Pahalgam terror attack, which tragically claimed the lives of '26 civilians.'
As the operation entered its third day, the Akhal forest area reverberated with the sounds of 'blasts and firing' throughout the night.
High-tech surveillance systems and elite paramilitary units have been deployed to neutralise the remaining threats. The operation is being closely overseen by the Director General of Police (DGP) and the 15 Corps Commander.
This operation follows a series of successful counter-terrorism missions in the region. Just days earlier, security forces neutralised Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists responsible for the Pahalgam massacre in ' Operation Mahadev' near Srinagar's Dachigam area. On July 29, another operation, dubbed 'Shiv Shakti,' resulted in the killing of two additional terrorists by the Indian Army.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Since the April 22 attack, security forces have made significant progress, eliminating approximately '20 high-profile terrorists' in Jammu and Kashmir.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dev Anand made her star, Dawood Ibrahim was madly in love with her, producer was murdered, she left India, went to Pakistan due to..., name is...
Dev Anand made her star, Dawood Ibrahim was madly in love with her, producer was murdered, she left India, went to Pakistan due to..., name is...

India.com

timea minute ago

  • India.com

Dev Anand made her star, Dawood Ibrahim was madly in love with her, producer was murdered, she left India, went to Pakistan due to..., name is...

The most memorable era of Bollywood was from the 80s to the 90s when many new faces tried their luck in the industry. While some sustained, others had to leave as they couldn't make a mark. Then there were those actors and actresses who were allegedly known for their connection with the underworld. Today, we will discuss an actress who was Pakistani but wanted to become a big name in Bollywood. However, she had to leave the industry soon, and the reason was fugitive Dawood Ibrahim. If you are wondering who we are talking about, this actress is Anita Ayub. Who is Anita Ayub? Born in Karachi, Pakistan, Anita studied in an all-girls college. She earned a master's degree in English Literature from Karachi University before moving to India to pursue acting. Anita enrolled at the Roshan Taneja School of Acting in Mumbai, where Roshan Taneja became her mentor. In 1993, she returned to India to shoot an advertisement, during which she met Dev Anand. Impressed by her ad, Dev Anand cast her in his film Pyar Ka Tarana. In 1993, Anita made her in the film Pyar Ka Tarana alongside Dev Anand. After this, she again worked with Dev Anand in the film Gangster in 1995, which was a box-office success. Anita Ayub's Career Was Ruined A major turn in Anita's life came when rumors about her dating Dawood Ibrahim began to spread. Both were spotted together multiple times. In 1995, producer Javed Siddiqui turned down the actress an refused to cast her in his next Bollywood project, and shortly afterward, he was murdered. Many reports claim that Siddiqui was shot by Ibrahim's men. Later, the Pakistan-based magazine Fashion Central reported that many in the industry believed Anita Ayub to be a Pakistani spy, leading to her being banned from films. Following these allegations and controversies, her Bollywood career came to a complete halt.

Why Mortgage Lenders Are Ignoring Trump's Rollback on Home Appraisal Reviews
Why Mortgage Lenders Are Ignoring Trump's Rollback on Home Appraisal Reviews

Mint

timea minute ago

  • Mint

Why Mortgage Lenders Are Ignoring Trump's Rollback on Home Appraisal Reviews

At one midsized US mortgage lender, almost a quarter of customers who dispute property appraisals find that the value of their home had been miscalculated. It's an industrywide issue that has historically penalized minority groups, and now President Donald Trump has offered lenders the chance to ignore his predecessor's attempts to make it easier for homeowners to question the valuations assigned by property appraisers. Trump has scrapped some of the guidelines, part of his team's vow to stamp out what it sees as initiatives that support diversity, equity and inclusion. Many financial professionals agree that home appraisals can be unreliable, and that Black homeowners and other minorities are often put at a significant disadvantage. This can be especially damaging given that home ownership is the top wealth-creation tool in the US — and an appraisal is a key determinant of how much, if anything, someone can borrow. With their decision to end some of the requirements related to home valuations, however, Trump and his cabinet members may have little impact on lenders' practices. That's because there's fresh evidence that the changes the Biden administration put in place are supported by the industry. Some of the country's biggest lenders, including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and U.S. Bancorp, said they would make no policy changes as a result of the rollback. New American Funding, which also isn't planning to change its approach, was the only financial institution of more than 10 contacted by Bloomberg to disclose information about disputed home valuations. The Tustin, California-based mortgage lender, which provided roughly $14 billion of mortgage loans last year, said an average 2.5% of its customers request new valuations each month. Of those contested, roughly 22% are found to need an adjustment. New American didn't share a breakdown of borrowers' requests by race. 'The changes have made it much easier for the borrower,' said Michelle Rogers, New American's chief valuation officer. 'It's more transparent and the borrower knows they can initiate it.' The appraisal directives were put in place following a deep dive by the Biden administration into prejudices in the business. One of Trump's housing regulators, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner, said rolling them back was part of an attempt by the president to put an end to the 'obsession' with DEI. The administration also has vowed to make deep cuts to the federal apparatus that enforced fair housing and fair lending laws, from slashing Consumer Financial Protection Bureau staff to gutting the Justice Department's Civil Rights division. A HUD official who spoke on background said the department's recent reforms simply reverted its stance to the way things were before Biden-era regulators imposed their standards. Lenders aren't being barred from letting borrowers dispute their appraisals, said the official who declined to be identified. The White House hasn't responded to a request for comment. Black homeowners have long reported having their homes valued more highly after taking down all evidence of their race. Research from the Brookings Institution and the federally controlled housing finance agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, has shown that home appraisals can be affected by racial bias, which in turn affects the value of homes in entire neighborhoods. Brookings found, for example, that homes in neighborhoods where the majority of residents are Black are valued between 21% and 23% lower than comparable homes in white neighborhoods, with appraisal bias as one of several contributing factors. Economists at Freddie Mac reported in 2021 that greater percentages of homes in majority Black and Latino census tracts were undervalued compared with those in white census tracts, leading them to conclude that there was a 'valuation gap' between homes in different neighborhoods. The appraisal problem for minority borrowers also is a problem for lenders, since having low appraisals can prevent a homeowner from qualifying for a mortgage refinancing or a new home loan. That means the lender loses out on valuable business. Banks also suffer when appraisers make mistakes in the opposite direction, valuing properties too highly, because it means the bank can't safely rely on the value of a property as collateral for a loan. The reforms that the mortgage industry recently adopted to try to make the appraisal process fairer originated with a Biden administration task force called PAVE , which was formed in 2021. The group consisted of public officials from 13 different agencies, and its goal was to produce a report with recommended changes to a suite of different mortgage industry standards. PAVE recommended more training for home appraisers and higher standards for appraisers seeking to qualify for professional licenses. Those changes were handled by the Appraisal Foundation, a nonprofit organization that serves as the regulator for home appraisers. A spokeswoman for the foundation declined to comment on the Trump administration's recent changes, but said that new education and licensing standards put in place last year are still in effect. PAVE also called for an industrywide requirement for mortgage lenders to let borrowers request 'a reconsideration of value' if they disagreed with an appraiser's determination. Last year, regulators began requiring mortgage lenders to decide how they would standardize their procedures and to explain them clearly to their customers. In a rare win for the government, the policy received support from the Mortgage Bankers Association. Federal housing regulation includes a web of rules issued by different agencies, including HUD and also Fannie and Freddie. The new home-appraisal guidance went into effect for all of the housing agencies. But so far, the Trump administration has only rolled back the policy for mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration, which help low- to moderate-income families attain home ownership. On July 17, Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat from Georgia, proposed a bill that would make mortgage lenders' ROV policies required by law. It also would expand public access to data on mortgage appraisals by forcing a federal housing regulator to more regularly share details. While fair-housing advocates support the proposal, the bill also has backing from a more unlikely source: the National Association of Mortgage Brokers. The group represents more than 500,000 mortgage brokers across the US. Its president, Jim Nabors, called the proposed bill 'critical' for ensuring fairness for homebuyers and added: 'Our entire board of directors and membership applaud Senator Warnock.' This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Mani Shankar Aiyar attacks Tharoor with Op Sindoor jab, Congress distances itself
Mani Shankar Aiyar attacks Tharoor with Op Sindoor jab, Congress distances itself

India Today

timean hour ago

  • India Today

Mani Shankar Aiyar attacks Tharoor with Op Sindoor jab, Congress distances itself

Former Union Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar has stoked a fresh row by attacking Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, saying that the Operation Sindoor outreach delegation led by him did not quite convey India's message to the world and claimed that none of the countries the delegation visited said that Pakistan had a role to play in the Pahalgam terror delegation led by the Congress Thiruvananthapuram MP also included Sarfaraz Ahmad (JMM), Ganti Harish Madhur Balayogi (TDP), Shashank Mani Tripathi (BJP), Bhubaneswar Kalita (BJP), Milind Deora (Shiv Sena), and Tejasvi Surya (BJP) and visited various countries, including the US, to convey to their leadership that India carried out the precision strikes on May 7 in retaliation to the terror attack in the Baisaran Valley, killing 26 civilians on April group also sought to convey that the strikes were non-escalatory and India's stand that Pakistan would get even a stronger response if any such misadventure takes place in future. "None of the 33 countries that the delegation led by Shashi Tharoor visited said that Pakistan was behind the attack. Not even the UN or the US said it. We are the only ones who are beating their chests and saying that Pakistan was indeed responsible for it," Aiyar said while speaking to news agency IANS."No one believes our version. We don't have any evidence that can convince the world as to which Pakistani agency plotted it," he the Congress has distanced itself from Aiyar's controversial statement, saying that he should not be taken seriously."Don't pay attention to these statements. They misguide the nation. He is not a Congress member," party spokesperson Randeep Surjewala said while speaking to India Today April 22, terrorists belonging to The Resistance Front (TRF), an offshoot of Pakistani terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba, stormed the Baisaran Valley in Pahalgam and gunned down 26 civilians, which included 25 a response, India carried out Operation Sindoor precision strikes on Pakistani terror infrastructure, destroying nine terror launch pads and killing over 100 terrorists on the intervening night of May after the three-day military conflict, the government dispatched seven multi-party delegations to over 30 countries to highlight India's strong stance against terrorism following Operation Sindoor. One of the delegations was led by Shashi delegations had been sent as part of India's diplomatic campaign to draw attention to the Pahalgam terror attack and India's subsequent response. Each group visited key capitals around the world to underline India's resolve against Pakistan-sponsored terrorism and reinforce the country's commitment to global the South American country Colombia, who first condoled the deaths in Pakistan and the Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK) during the Operation Sindoor strikes, backtracked following Shashi Tharoor's sharp 50 individuals were part of the outreach mission, including current and former MPs and ex-diplomats. Among the leaders who headed the delegations were BJP's Ravi Shankar Prasad and Baijayant Panda, Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, JD(U)'s Sanjay Jha, Shiv Sena's Shrikant Shinde, DMK's Kanimozhi, and NCP(SP)'s Supriya Sule.- EndsMust Watch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store