Controversial White House Video on Deportation Sparks Outcry in India

INIndia|

The White House recently shared a video titled “ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight,” which depicts immigrants in shackles boarding a deportation flight from Seattle. The 41-second clip highlights the handcuffing process and includes images of shackled individuals boarding the aircraft, but does not reveal their faces. This content has been met with significant backlash, particularly in India, where reports of mistreatment of Indian deportees have surfaced. According to deportees, they were shackled throughout their journey, only being unchained upon arrival in Amritsar on February 5.

The video was initially posted by the Seattle office of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) with the label “Removal Flight,” marking procedural steps for deporting undocumented immigrants. Notably, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who has been involved in federal initiatives, amplified the controversy by humorously commenting on the video after its release. The incident highlights growing tensions regarding immigration policies and human rights concerns associated with deportation practices.

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Scientists Discover Oxygen in Distant Galaxy, Revolutionizing Cosmic Understanding

Astronomers discovered traces of oxygen in the galaxy JADES-GS-z14-0, located 13.4 billion light years from Earth, according to research conducted using the ALMA radio telescope. This finding, announced on March 21, 2025, contradicts prior scientific expectations and suggests that the galaxy contains ten times more heavy elements than initially predicted for its age. Identified by the James Webb Space Telescope in 2023, JADES-GS-z14-0 existed merely 300 million years after the Big Bang during the "Cosmic Dawn" era, a formative period in the universe's timeline. Sander Schouws of Leiden Observatory remarked that this discovery is akin to finding a teenager among expected newborns, indicating rapid star formation and evolution contradicted existing theories about early galaxies. Italian astrophysicist Stefano Carniani called the discovery "incredible," emphasizing the need for updated models regarding galaxy formation. These revelations contribute to a growing body of evidence suggesting that early galaxies were more advanced than previously thought, prompting a reevaluation of the timeline for cosmic evolution.
INIndia

Pune Techie Confesses to Son's Murder Amid Marital Suspicions

In a tragic incident in Pune, a 38-year-old techie, Madhav Tiketi, allegedly murdered his three-and-a-half-year-old son, Himmat, over suspicions of infidelity regarding his wife, Swaroopa. The shocking event unfolded in the Chandan Nagar area, where Tiketi was later found intoxicated at a local lodge. According to police reports, a domestic dispute ensued Thursday afternoon, leading Tiketi to leave the house with his son. Surveillance footage tracked their movements, showing Tiketi purchasing clothes alone hours later. When Swaroopa reported her husband and son missing later that evening, police initiated a search, locating Tiketi through his mobile phone signals. After regaining consciousness, Tiketi confessed to killing Himmat, leading authorities to a nearby forest, where they discovered the child’s body with a fatal throat cut. A senior police official stated that Tiketi has been taken into custody, and a murder case has been registered. The child's remains have been sent for a post-mortem examination as investigations continue.
INIndia

Astronomers Discover Oxygen in Galaxy 13.4 Billion Light-Years Away

Scientists have detected signs of oxygen in the galaxy JADES-GS-z14-0, located 13.4 billion light-years from Earth, during research using the ALMA radio telescope. This discovery, confirmed by astronomers from the Netherlands and Italy, challenges existing theories regarding the early universe's star formation, as reported by the European Southern Observatory. First identified by the James Webb Space Telescope in 2024, JADES-GS-z14-0 existed when the universe was merely 300 million years old. The presence of oxygen suggests the galaxy contains ten times more heavy elements than expected for galaxies from the “Cosmic Dawn” era, as detailed by astronomer Sander Schouws from Leiden Observatory. He likened the finding to discovering a teenager in a region thought to be populated only by newborns. These unexpected results indicate that galaxies formed and evolved much more quickly than previously theorized, prompting scientists to reevaluate their understanding of cosmic history, according to Italian astrophysicist Stefano Carniani.
INIndia