The big news: Karnataka Chief Minister Kumaraswamy keeps 11 ministries, and nine other top stories
Other headlines: Haryana put on hold an order asking athletes to deposit a part of their income, and a fire at Mumbai’s Patel Chambers injured two people.
A look at the headlines right now:
- Karnataka Cabinet portfolios assigned, Kumaraswamy keeps 11 ministries for himself: The chief minister will handle the intelligence wing, but the home ministry, under which the department falls, will be headed by Deputy CM G Parameshwara.
- Haryana government puts on hold controversial order asking athletes to deposit a third of income: A circular emerged stating that state-employed sportspersons should hand over one-third of income from professional sports or endorsements.
- Massive fire breaks out at Patel Chambers in Mumbai, two firefighters reportedly injured: A part of the building in Fort area also collapsed.
- Lightning kills 18 people in Bihar, Odisha and Uttar Pradesh: The weather department has predicted light rain in the national Capital on Saturday.
- Indian scientists discover planet 600 light years away from Earth: The discovery of the planet will help researchers understand the formation of similar planets.
- US President Donald Trump calls for Russia to be readmitted into the G7: Russia was expelled in 2014 after it annexed Crimea.
- Some political parties using Maoist forces against NDA, says Finance Minister Arun Jaitley: He said ‘half Maoists’ masqueraded as activists and have led human rights movements across the country.
- Activist Mahesh Raut’s arrest is wrongful, say former fellows of PM’s rural development scheme: The group said that Raut was not named in the primary chargesheet filed in the Bhima Koregaon clashes.
- Excessive exposure to light led to VVPAT malfunction during bye-polls, says Election Commission: The poll panel has asked the manufacturers of the machine to suggest design improvement.
- Consider asking media to avoid using ‘Dalit’ in news reports, Bombay High Court tells I&B ministry: The bench cited a circular by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment directing officials to use Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribes instead.