Sanjeev Khanna confesses complicity in Sheena Bora murder

August 29, 2015

Mumbai, Aug 29: Investigations into the Sheena Bora murder case picked up pace on Friday as police recovered the 24-year-old’s skeletal remains as well as her passport while Sanjeev Khanna, former husband of Indrani Mukerjea, confessed to his complicity in the crime.

SanjeevMumbai police commissioner Rakesh Maria told reporters late on Friday about Khanna’s confession and the recovery of Sheena’s passport from Dehradun, nailing the lie that she had gone to the United States for higher education.

Sources close to the investigation said what Kolkata-based businessman Khanna testifies is crucial and could send the case on another track altogether. Khanna, who was remanded to police custody till August 31, had earlier said he was sleeping when Sheena was murdered and found her dead in the vehicle.

“This morning we have recovered the skeletal remains of Sheena Bora. We have also recovered her passport from Dehradun. This would negate the theory that Sheena went to the US,” Maria said.

Maria spoke to the media after Indrani her driver Shyam Rai, who has confessed to his involvement in the grisly murder, Khanna and Sheena's brother Mikhail Bora were jointly interrogated by Mumbai Police.

Sheena’s mother, INX media co-founder Indrani Mukerjea, is in police custody since Tuesday, accused of murdering her daughter on April 24, 2012, with the help of ex-husband Khanna and the driver.

For three years, Indrani had told friends and family that Sheena, who she said was her sister, had gone to the US to study. Rai’s arrest on an informer’s tip-off had exposed the murder.

Police chief Maria did not elaborate from where in Dehradun the passport was recovered, but that is where Sheena’s boyfriend Rahul Mukerjea lives. Rahul has already been questioned by Mumbai police. He is former Star TV CEO Peter Mukerjea’s son from his first marriage.

Rahul and Sheena were engaged to be married and neither Peter nor his second wife Indrani were in favour of this.

Soon after Sheena went missing, Rahul had asked Indrani how Sheena could travel to the US when he had her passport. It is still not clear why a missing person complaint was not registered at Khar or Worli police stations when Rahul had approached them with his claims in April 2012.

Sources say Mumbai Police are now scouring the e-mail and phone call records of Indrani and Khanna to unravel the missing links in the run-up to the murder. Investigators also suspect the involvement of two more people in the murder mystery after Rai’s version of the events was found to be riddled with holes.

“Our teams have gone to other parts of the country for investigation. Further investigation is going on,” said Maria.

Indrani has gone silent since Friday afternoon and is not cooperating with Mumbai police officers. Sources said she refused to answer questions after a city court allowed her lawyer to meet her in police custody.

But police managed to record the statement of Sheena’s brother Mikhail, who landed in Mumbai from Guwahati where he lives with his maternal grandparents. Police took him to JJ Hospital where his blood samples were taken to match with Sheena’s DNA.

In the evening, Peter Mukerjea visited Khar police station to record his statement. He has denied knowledge of Sheena’s disappearance or murder but has flip-flopped on whether he knew Sheena was his wife’s daughter, and not sister – as was rumoured earlier. But police sources said he had little knowledge of the murder being plotted or executed because he was in London with adopted daughter Vidhie on the day of the murder.

Police sources say investigators are focusing on the financial or property angle that might have led to the murder. Forensic and cyber experts have been engaged to solve the three-year-old case.

A skull and some bones were exhumed from the site where Sheena’s body was dumped in Raigad, 120km south of Mumbai. These were sent to JJ Hospital, where in 2012 Raigad police had sent body parts that had been recovered from the site.

On Friday afternoon, Indrani and former driver Rai were taken to various spots to reconstruct the sequence of events on the day Sheena was killed, sources said.

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Agencies
July 15,2020

New Delhi, Jul 15: Air India has started the process of identifying employees, based on various factors like efficiency, health and redundancy, who will be sent on compulsory leave without pay (LWP) for up to five years, according to an official order.

The airline's board of directors have authorised its Chairman and Managing Director Rajiv Bansal to send employees on LWP "for six months or for a period of two years extendable upto five years, depending upon the following factors - suitability, efficiency, competence, quality of performance, health of the employee, instance of non-availability of the employee for duty in the past as a result of ill health or otherwise and redundancy", the order said on Tuesday.

The departmental heads in the headquarter as well as regional directors are required to assess each employee "on the above mentioned factors and identify the cases where option of compulsory LWP can be exercised", stated the order dated July 14.

"Names of such employees need to be forwarded to the General Manager (Personnel) in headquarter for obtaining necessary approval of CMD," the order added.

In response to queries regarding this matter, Air India spokesperson said,"We would not like to make any comment on the issue."

Aviation sector has been significantly impacted due to the travel restrictions imposed in India and other countries due to the coronavirus pandemic. All airlines in India have taken cost-cutting measures such as pay cuts, LWP and firings of employees in order to conserve cash flow.

For example, GoAir has put most of its employees on compulsory LWP since April.

India resumed domestic passenger flights from May 25 after a gap of two months due to the coronavirus pandemic.

However, the airlines have been allowed to operate only a maximum of 45 per cent of their pre-COVID domestic flights. Occupancy rate in Indian domestic flights has been around 50-60 per cent since May 25.

Scheduled international passenger flights continue to remain suspended in India since March 23.

The passenger demand for air travel will contract by 49 per cent in 2020 for Indian carriers in comparison to 2019 due to COVID-19 crisis, said global airlines body IATA on Monday.

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News Network
April 9,2020

Thiruvananthapuram, Apr 9: Kerala, which was among the first state in the country to report a Corona positive case, has turned its entire public healthcare system into a single interconnected grid to generate uninterrupted information and provide flawless services, thanks to the daily zoom or video conferences of top health authorities for chalking out a dynamic strategy to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic.

The daily zoom or remote conferences held by Health Minister K K Shailaja and top health sector officials with the medical and paramedical personnel on the ground have lent a cutting edge to the state government’s all out efforts in monitoring the situation on the ground and formulating effective responses to address the various needs and concerns of the people, an official release said on Thursday.

The Minister is joined in this meticulous exercise by top administrators and planners, including Dr Rajan N Khobragade, Principal Secretary, Health; Dr. Rathan U Kelker, State Mission Director, National Health Mission, Dr Saritha, Director of Health Services, Dr Ramla Beevi, Director of Medical Education and other senior officials.

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Agencies
June 30,2020

Seventy-seven per cent children below five years of age in Jammu and Kashmir were not able to access basic healthcare services like immunisation during the lockdown imposed to curb the spread of COVID-19, CRY said on Monday citing a study.

The 'Rapid Online Perception Study about the Effects of COVID-19 on Children' was conducted during the first and second phases of the lockdown based on responses of parents and primary caregivers from all across the country, including Jammu and Kashmir, the NGO said in a statement.

It said a total of 387 respondents from Jammu and Kashmir participated in the study.

"Seventy-seven per cent children of age 0-5 years were not able to access basic healthcare services such as immunisation during lockdown - necessarily imposed to curb the spread of COVID-19 pandemic in Jammu and Kashmir," Child Rights and You (CRY) said.

It said as immunisation programmes witnessed a major setback during the lockdown across the country, the results of the survey across 23 states and Union Territories found nearly 50 per cent of parents with children below five years of age unable to access immunisation services.

"Worryingly, the figure was considerably high in Jammu and Kashmir with 77.14 per cent children below five years unable to get immunisation services," it added.

According to the study, in Jammu and Kashmir, nearly 35 per cent of the respondents said their children did not receive medical help during the lockdown, resulting in difficulties to cope with their children's illnesses and health hazards.

The study also talks about more systemic arrangements and logistical preparedness to ensure that children with no or compromised digital reach are not deprived from their Right to Education.

With online classes introduced as a substitute of schools during the lockdown, access to education for children remained a major issue of concern, as many of them, especially the ones from marginalised and financially poorer backgrounds found it difficult without smartphones and internet access.

The survey's findings revealed that nationally only 41 per cent households with children of school-going age could access online classes on a regular basis.

"Almost 90 per cent parents and primary caregivers reported that the lockdown has increased the screen time of their child to great or some extent. About half of the households recorded an increase of children's exposure to online activities during lockdown," it said.

The NGO said around 76 per cent parents agreed that they could keep a watch of their children's online activity to some extent.

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