Mamdani Says He May Still Order Netanyahu’s Arrest - The New York Times

Mamdani Says He May Still Order Netanyahu’s Arrest The New York TimesMamdani: Netanyahu should be arrested if he visits NYC; I’m discussing it but won’t rewrite laws The Times of IsraelZohran Mamdani says NYC reviewing authority to arrest Benjamin Netanyahu The Jerusalem PostMamdani in ‘active conversation’ about whether he can arrest Benjamin Netanyahu when Israel PM visits NYC New York PostMamdani plotting to arrest Netanyahu at New York UN summit The Telegraph
This summary was generated by PolitGlobe's AI pipeline from publicly available reporting at Google News. For the full original article, visit the source below.
Read full article at Google NewsRelated coverage
Using abusive language, swearing don't count as obscenity under IPC: Supreme Court
Supreme Court clarified that abusive language is not obscenity under law. Mere swear words and profanities do not constitute an offense. The court set aside a conviction for using abusive slurs during an altercation. Obscenity requires a lascivious element appealing to prurient interests. Such words must also cause annoyance to others in public places.
Cockroach Party protest intensifies after Wangchuk forcibly hospitalised
Protest by India's Cockroach Janta Party has intensified after activist Sonam Wangchuk was forcibly hospitalised.
Faith and its fallout
In Ayodhya, weeks after allegations of money being siphoned off from donations at the Ram temple surfaced, pilgrims and residents say it has triggered a crisis of trust. Devotees say their faith in Lord Ram and the temple remains intact, but many have grown cautious about donating. Locals report a dip in visitors, though they attribute part of that to seasonal factors as well. As an SIT probe seeks accountability, Ishita Mishra reports from the temple town, where faith, transparency, and the city’s religious tourism hopes hang in the balance
Another House panel defers edu reforms report adoption; move seen as part of govt's outreach to oppn for delimit bill support
Two parliamentary committees have postponed approving their reports on significant legislation. This development occurs as the government seeks opposition support for other political proposals. The anti-graft bill and higher education regulator bills face widespread protest. Both bills may not be presented during the current parliamentary session. Congress criticizes the government's handling of these controversial legislative matters.