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US passenger flights to India can resume on July 23

THE government of India has agreed to allow the US air carriers to resume passenger services in the US-India market starting July 23, the US transportation department said.

The Indian government, citing the coronavirus, had banned all scheduled services, prompting the US transportation department in June to accuse India of engaging in "unfair and discriminatory practices" on charter air carriers serving India.


The department said it was withdrawing an order it had issued requiring Indian air carriers to apply for authorization prior to conducting charter flights, and said it had approved an Air India application for passenger charter flights between the US and India.

India's Ministry of Civil Aviation said on Twitter it was moving to "further expand our international civil aviation operations" and arrangements from some flights "with US, UAE, France & Germany are being put in place while similar arrangements are also being worked out with several other countries."

"Under this arrangement," it added, "airlines from the concerned countries will be able to operate flights from and to India along with Indian carriers."

The US transportation department order was set to take effect next week. The Trump administration said in June it wanted "to restore a level playing field for US airlines" under the US-India Air Transport Agreement. The Indian government had banned all scheduled services and failed to approve US carriers for charter operations, it added.

The US government said in June that Air India had been operating "repatriation" charter flights between India and the US in both directions since May 7.

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Three Lighthouse members convicted for harassing BBC journalist over cult documentary

The case centred on their targeting of Nye after she presented programmes raising concerns about Lighthouse

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Three Lighthouse members convicted for harassing BBC journalist over cult documentary

Highlights

  • Three Lighthouse members found guilty of harassment without violence at Stratford Magistrates' Court.
  • Group hired private investigator to find BBC journalist Catrin Nye's home address.
  • Defendants staged protests at BBC offices and made multiple visits to Nye's residence.

Three members of Lighthouse have been convicted of harassing BBC journalist Catrin Nye, who investigated the group for the 2023 documentary and podcast series "A Very British Cult".

Kristofer Deichler, 47, Jatinder Kamra, 46, and Sukhraj Singh, 39, were all found guilty of harassment without violence at Stratford Magistrates' Court.

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