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FM Sitharaman Meets President For A Customary Pre-Budget Presentation Meeting | Watch

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FM Sitharaman Meets President For A Customary Pre-Budget Presentation Meeting | Watch

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday called on President Droupadi Murmu before presenting her record ninth Budget in the Lok Sabha. As per established tradition, the finance minister met the President at the Rashtrapati Bhavan before heading to Parliament.

Before going to the Rashtrapati Bhavan, Sitharaman posed with her Budget team in front of her office at Kartavya Bhavan. Wearing a magenta silk saree, she was holding a tablet in a red pouch with the national emblem, along with the Minister of State and all six Secretaries in her ministry.

Union Minister for Finance and Corporate Affairs Sitharaman, along with Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary and senior officials of the Ministry of Finance, called on the President at Rashtrapati Bhavan before presenting the Union Budget.

Following the meeting, she headed for a Cabinet meeting that will formally approve the Budget for 2026-27.

Sitharaman continues with the tradition she set in 2019, carrying the budget speech in a ‘bahi-khata’, which she used after dropping the briefcase tradition.

The Finance Minister will present her ninth straight Budget, which is expected to unveil measures to sustain growth momentum, maintain fiscal discipline, and announce reforms that could buffer the economy from global trade frictions, including US tariffs.

The FY27 Budget comes against a complex backdrop. While domestic demand has held up and inflation has moderated from recent highs, global uncertainties – including geopolitical tensions, volatile commodity prices and uneven monetary easing by major central banks – continue to cloud the outlook. At home, the government faces pressure to boost consumption, accelerate job creation and step up capital spending, while keeping the fiscal deficit on a downward path.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Democrat Christian Menefee wins special election for vacant, deep-blue House seat in Texas

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Democrat Christian Menefee wins special election for vacant, deep-blue House seat in Texas

Former Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee has won a special runoff election for a vacant, deep-blue House seat in Texas, NBC News projects, besting former Houston City Council member Amanda Edwards in a Democrat-versus-Democrat contest.

Menefee will fill an 11-month vacancy in the Houston-area congressional district formerly represented by Rep. Sylvester Turner until his death in March 2025. Menefee’s partial term will only run through the end of 2026, and he is already competing for a full term in a redrawn district.

After this election, the balance in the House will stand at 218 Republicans and 214 Democrats, with another two red seats and one blue seat still vacant with special elections pending later this year.

Menefee and Edwards advanced to the runoff after earning the most votes — but falling short of a majority — in a crowded, all-party November contest for Texas’ 18th Congressional District, which includes downtown Houston and surrounding parts of Harris County.

Democratic 18th Congressional District candidate Amanda Edwards in Houston in Aug. 2025.Elizabeth Conley / Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

There weren’t many issues separating Menefee and Edwards, who both made affordability their key issue. The Houston Chronicle endorsed Menefee, saying both were strong candidates but that his experience as county attorney prepared him better to take on “hostile government overreach.”

Although Menefee will take the seat for the remainder of Turner’s term, he won’t stop campaigning, with the midterm elections and Texas’ March 3 primary fast approaching.

The current version of the district is changing after Texas’ Republican-led redistricting last year. Texas’ new maps come into effect for the regular 2026 election cycle, which includes the upcoming primary election on March 3 and the general election on Nov. 3, but not the special runoff election that took place on Saturday.

The primary field for the new district includes Menefee as well as longtime Democratic Rep. Al Green, whose old 9th District was converted into a Republican-leaning seat. Edwards is also among the Democratic candidates who filed for the regular primary in March.

As of Jan. 11, Menefee had outraised Edwards and had $388,000 on hand. Edwards had $280,000. At the end of September 2025, the most recent period covered by his campaign finance reports, Green had $572,000 in the bank.

Menefee is stepping into a congressional seat that saw two sitting representatives die less than a year apart, leaving it vacant for most of the last two years. Longtime Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee’s death in July 2024 left it empty until her daughter Erica Lee Carter was sworn in to complete the remainder of Jackson Lee’s term in November of that year. Turner then took office in January 2025 but died only months later.

The district has had a Black representative for more than 50 years, starting with Barbara Jordan in 1973, who was the first Southern Black woman elected to the House of Representatives.

Cathy Yan sings praises of Charli xcx

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Cathy Yan sings praises of Charli xcx

Cathy Yan says Charli xcx brings a deep understanding of cinema to the screen, not just star power.

The director, who worked with the pop artist on the new film The Gallerist, praised Charli xcx’s knowledge and respect for filmmaking at the movie’s Sundance Film Festival premiere in Park City, Utah, on January 24. 

“She really knows the craft,” Yan told People about the 33-year-old singer. “She’s a cinephile through and through. She respects films, understands them, and brings a real maturity and insight to her work.”

Yan called The Gallerist, which also stars Natalie Portman and Jenna Ortega, a dark satire set in the art world and said Charli xcx felt like a natural fit for the project. According to the director, the casting aligned not only creatively but also personally, as Charli xcx previously attended art school.

“There was a role that really suited her,” Yan explained. “Once I learned about her background and interests, it made even more sense that she connected to this story.”

In the film, Portman plays a powerful art gallery owner who pressures her overworked assistant, portrayed by Ortega, to sell a highly controversial piece of art.

The Gallerist wasn’t Charli xcx’s only Sundance appearance this year. She also premiered The Moment, a mockumentary inspired by her real-life Brat Tour, on January 23. The film was directed and co-written by Aidan Zamiri.

Speaking after that screening, Charli xcx acknowledged that her character mirrored parts of her own personality.

“I’m obviously quite related to my character,” she said, joking that while she hopes she’s not as difficult as her on-screen counterpart, her real managers in the audience might disagree.

She added that the character’s emotional spirals were familiar territory, noting, “I’m a volatile person as an artist, but I’m nice too.”

This is the most expensive house in the world: Where wealth meets power – The Times of India

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This is the most expensive house in the world: Where wealth meets power - The Times of India

Can you imagine what the most expensive house in the world looks like? Is it sky-touching, is it a villa along the sea or a palace steeped in history? Well is it a futuristic tower rising above a city? The answer completely depends on your definition of luxury. However, when it comes to the price tag or scale, there’s one address that consistently stands top the chart for its value, history and architecture, among many features. And it’s none other than Buckingham Palace in London (according to a list published in architecturaldigest.in)Yes, you read that right, it’s Buckingham Palace and it belongs to the kings and queens of England! Sitting at the heart of London, the palace is known as the most expensive residential property on the planet. Though it is not privately owned or available for sale, property analysts estimate its value around $5 billion, an amount which is unmatched till date. Buckingham Palace Buckingham Palace is not an ordinary residence. Since 1837, the palace has served as the official residence of Britain’s monarch. For common public information, the palace has:775 rooms, among which there are 19 state rooms, 52 royal and guest bedrooms, 92 offices, and 78 bathrooms. It also has a post office, police station, health centre, and ballroom. Can you imagine the grandeur now?But that’s not it.

Buckingham Palace

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Buckingham Palace’s more than its gold-leaf ceilings. The palace is set in the heart of London city and is of immense historical, and political importance. The is a residence brimming with priceless artworks and antique furniture. The royal collections fill the halls, adding up to a value that can’t be measured in money. So yes, that’s why we say that there are not many “homes” in the world like Buckingham Palace. A home built on unimaginable valueIf talking about the value, the palace is built on the most valuable land in London. It is among the world’s most expensive cities. Besides, the palace is home to artworks and ancient furnishings spanning centuries. Every room, corridor, and chandelier carries cultural significance. It’s like a living museum. Buckingham Palace’s luxury and value lies in its history and heritage.Why so costly

Buckingham Palace

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Around the world, ultra-luxury homes sell for hundreds of millions of dollars, but till date none came close to Buckingham Palace. Now the reason is simple. There has been no private residence yet which combines history, politics and location, the way Buckingham Palace does. It is not just a home, it is a global landmark and national treasure! It’s not just the home of the English royals, it is also a tourist attraction. People from all over the world visit London to get a glimpse of this royal residential property. The soldiers are the highlight and the marching ceremony is a delight to watch.Talking in financial terms, the value of Buckingham Palace is unmatched. It is the most valuable residential property in the world.

A Poet who watches, believes, and remembers | The Express Tribune

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 A Poet who watches, believes, and remembers | The Express Tribune

By

Shazia Tasneem Farooqi

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PUBLISHED
February 01, 2026

Kamran Mughal’s Haan… Koi Hai is a profound exploration of the human condition, acting as a bridge between the intimate struggles of the individual and the collective pulse of humanity. It does not retreat into the abstract; rather, it finds its strength in the “soil” of our lived experiences, ensuring that every line carries the weight of truth.

In the landscape of contemporary Urdu literature, it is rare for a first venture to arrive with the gravity of a seasoned masterpiece. Yet, Mughal’s debut collection does exactly that, bolstered by the rare and prestigious endorsement of twelve distinguished Urdu scholars. Their forewords serve as a gateway to a work that performs a meticulous thematic autopsy on the collective national soul and the private human heart. Writing with a fluid, “flowy” grace and an accessible, ordinary vocabulary, Mughal bridges the gap between the high-brow scholarly tradition and the visceral, lived experience of the modern citizen.

A first book of poetry is never merely a collection of verses; it is an unveiling of the inner life.

Divine submission

The book stands as a threshold between the poet’s inner universe and the world he bravely invites into its divine space anchored by the magisterial title poem, Haan…Koi Hai is a two-page spiritual manifesto that serves as the book’s philosophical heartbeat. In these verses, Mughal establishes himself not merely as a poet, but as a sensitive diagnostic observer of a divine system. He describes a Creator who “runs the system of life,” a presence that does not remain distant but actively teaches the weary traveller how to cross the rough terrain of existence.

The poet writes as someone deeply attuned to the idea of divine presence, a singular, all-encompassing power that governs not only human destiny, but the silent rhythms of nature, the instinctive wisdom of animals, and the unseen order of existence itself. His belief in one Creator is not rigid or dogmatic; rather, it breathes through his lines like light through leaves. At times, his poetry reads as devotion, a soft, reverent, and surrendered. At other moments, it feels like a conversation with the Divine, questioning, yearning, and seeking reassurance in a world that often appears fractured and unjust.

The debt of the homeland

At a certain point, poet’s gaze shifts seamlessly from the celestial to the terrestrial. In Aao Watan Tameer Karein [let us build the homeland], he adopts the persona of a humble debtor to his soil. He views national service not as a political choice, but as a moral repayment for the identity bestowed upon him by his country. His call to action is remarkably pragmatic; he urges his readers to cast aside mayoosi [despair] and embrace tadbeer—a term implying strategic wisdom and calculated efforts to “conquer the world” and usher in a new dawn.

The paradox of intimacy

What makes this collection compelling is the way Mughal balances faith with awareness. He does not retreat into spirituality as an escape from reality. Instead, he stands firmly within the world, observing it with open eyes and a wounded heart. His poems often carry the weight of social consciousness of pain witnessed, wrongs endured, and voices silenced. There is an activist’s pulse beneath his calm tone, a quiet resistance against cruelty, apathy, and moral decay

Despite his public calls for national reconstruction, Mughal’s most haunting work lies in his private reflections. In the poem Ajeeb Larki [strange girl], he displays a vulnerable, introspective persona. He paints a lyrical portrait of a woman defined by her “wandering mood” and unpredictability. The emotional core of the piece lies in a startling admission of human fallibility: the speaker confesses to frequent lying, yet he is undone by the girl’s absolute, “word-for-word” trust in him.

Witnessing the descent

His latest piece of work Karachi Jal Raha Hai, dedicated to victims and affectees of the Gul Plaza inferno. This poem, though not in the book, is a powerful, raw piece of “witness poetry.” It captures the tragedy of the Gul Plaza fire with a focus on human cost rather than just physical destruction. Karachi is burning— not just the buildings; but human dreams and hopes too. It wasn’t the walls of Gul Plaza that fell, but a mother’s prayers, the children’s long wait, and the labourer’s entire day of toil that came crashing to the earth.

Here Mughal feels deeply, and that depth translates into verses that are fragile yet resilient, personal yet universal. His words suggest a soul that absorbs the world’s sorrow and transforms it into reflection rather than bitterness. This sensitivity allows him to move seamlessly between the personal and the cosmic—from an individual’s grief to the vast intelligence governing existence. In doing so, he reminds readers that belief, pain, and responsibility are not separate experiences, but interwoven strands of being human.

Mughal’s “autopsy” of society becomes piercing when he addresses the breakdown of communal harmony. In the pained verses of Aman Ki Fakhta Kho Gayee [The dove of peace is lost], he documents a descent into societal madness. The poem is a chilling record of mob violence, where slogans of death echo through streets once known for peace. It is a brave piece of writing, where he captures the chilling silence of those who watched but did not stop the chaos, making the poem a diagnostic of a society’s moral health.

The sanctuary of innocence

The poem Masoom [Innocent] functions as a respite from the surrounding darkness. He expresses a desperate, almost childlike longing for time to stop and for a reality where every rival becomes a friend. This poem reveals a heart that seeks refuge in the dream of universal friendship, where butterflies converse with flowers and loneliness is permanently banished. It is an essential key to understanding poet’s personality, a man who feels the “loneliness of humanity” deeply and proposes “innocence” as a radical form of resistance against a harsh world.

The final journey

The collection eventually leads the reader to a confrontation with the unforeseen end of all things. In the stark, modern imagery of Nylon Mein Lipti Lash [The corpse wrapped in nylon], Mughal treats mortality with a clinical yet compassionate eye. He describes the body as a “traveller” whose journey has abruptly shifted into a new, silent dimension.

He suggests that death is not an ending but a transformation and advises the reader, “do not fear the unforeseen” is a testament to the spiritual fortitude established in his opening poems. Even when encased in synthetic nylon, the human spirit is treated as a traveller who has simply reached a new destination.

A love for all seasons

Mughal’s journey of emotion concludes with Mujhe Mausam Se Kya Lena [Why do I care for the season], a total surrender to the constancy of love. Mughal asserts that his internal world is dictated by the presence of his beloved, not the calendar. Whether the world outside is gripped by the chill of December or the heat of September, he finds “all the colours of spring” within the person he loves.

The writer’s strength lies in his many roles as a witness. In his poem Udaas, he highlights the plight of women through customs like Vanni and the commercialisation of the noble profession of teaching. It is a critique of the middle-class gaze, where one watches the exploitation of a mother and child through the safe window of a car, trapped in their own insensitivity.

The poet balances these heavy themes with the delicate beauty of Gajra, where the touch of jasmine petals against a cheek becomes a moment of reckoning. Here Mughal emerges as not just a critic of the world, but a participant in its beauty. Conversely, Tamasha Mere Agay offers a stoic, philosophical acceptance of betrayal, where the sorrow of life is greeted with a bitter but necessary gratitude.

As a first launch, this book carries the raw honesty of beginnings. There is no pretence of mastery, only sincerity. Mughal does not claim answers; he just offers questions shaped into poetry. His work invites readers to pause, to feel, to believe, and to reconsider their relationship with the Creator, with society, and with their own conscience. This collection is not just read—it is experienced. It leaves behind a lingering stillness, urging us to listen more closely to the world, to others, and to the divine echo within ourselves.

In welcoming Mughal’s poetry into the literary space, readers are not merely discovering a new poet; witnessing the birth of a voice that dares to be vulnerable, faithful, and awake.

 

Historic recording by

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Historic recording by

Archivist and music historian Alex Palao worked to restore old tapes by “Sly and Family Stone” that gathered dust for decades. He co-produced the live album called “The First Family: Live at the Winchester Cathedral 1967.” He is now nominated for “Best Album Notes” at Sunday’s Grammy Awards. CBS News San Francisco’s Max Darrow has the story.

LPG gas prices go up: Commercial cylinder to cost Rs 49 more from February 1 – The Times of India

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LPG gas prices go up: Commercial cylinder to cost Rs 49 more from February 1 - The Times of India

Commercial LPG gas cylinder prices were hiked on Sunday after oil marketing companies revised rates upward, increasing the cost of a 19-kg cylinder by Rs 49 with effect from February 1, Sunday. Following the revision, the retail price of a 19-kg commercial LPG cylinder in Delhi has increased to Rs 1,740.50. Prices of domestic LPG cylinders, of 14.2 kg, however, remain unchanged. The latest hike comes after an earlier increase that marked a shift from a phase of price relief for commercial LPG users. In the previous revision, oil marketing companies had raised the price of a 19-kg commercial cylinder by Rs 111 across the country, taking the Delhi price to Rs 1,691.50 from Rs 1,580.50. That increase is expected to add to the cost burden of hotels, restaurants and other service providers that rely heavily on commercial cooking gas. The hospitality and catering sectors had seen some easing of expenses last month after a series of price cuts. Before the recent hikes, commercial LPG prices had been in a moderate phase. Since April 2025, rates of commercial cylinders had been reduced six times, resulting in a cumulative reduction of Rs 223 per cylinder, including minor rollbacks in November and December.

Budget 2026: Big disinvestment push likely as Govt considers 26% stake rule for PSUs

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Budget 2026: Big disinvestment push likely as Govt considers 26% stake rule for PSUs

New Delhi: As the government prepares for Union Budget 2026, one of the major policy signals from the Economic Survey is a renewed push towards deeper disinvestment in public sector companies. The survey has recommended that the definition of a government company be changed to allow the Centre to retain control even with just a 26 percent stake, instead of the current 51 percent requirement.

At present, a company is classified as a government entity only if the Centre or a state government holds a majority stake. This restricts the government’s ability to meaningfully dilute equity in listed PSUs. The Economic Survey argues that even with 26 percent ownership, the government can still exercise strategic control through veto rights on key decisions, while unlocking significant value from its holdings.

From a Budget 2026 perspective, this proposal is being seen as a strong signal that the government may shift towards large-scale equity monetisation instead of slow, one-off privatisation deals. Lowering the threshold would allow the government to raise funds by selling shares in profitable PSUs without fully exiting them.

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If implemented, this change could impact several major companies such as ONGC, SBI, Power Grid, NTPC and other listed PSUs. Stake sales through offers for sale (OFS) or market placements could generate substantial non-tax revenue, helping the government meet fiscal targets without increasing borrowing.

Economists believe this approach fits well with the government’s broader fiscal strategy — reducing dependence on debt, improving capital efficiency and attracting greater private participation in state-run enterprises. It may also improve corporate governance by increasing market discipline and professional management in PSUs.

For investors, the move could lead to higher free float, better liquidity and potentially improved valuations in select PSU stocks. For the government, it provides a sustainable and repeatable revenue stream rather than relying on asset sales or tax hikes.

As Budget 2026 approaches, markets will closely watch whether the government formally adopts this recommendation through legislative changes or new disinvestment targets. A shift to the 26 percent model could mark the biggest reform in India’s disinvestment policy in over two decades.

 

Actor Demond Wilson, star of

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Actor Demond Wilson, star of

Actor Demond Wilson died in his California home due to complications from prostate cancer, CBS News learned on Saturday. He starred alongside Redd Foxx in “Sanford and Son,” one of the biggest TV hits of the 1970s.

Darryn Peterson (18 points), Kansas outduel AJ Dybantsa (17), BYU

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Darryn Peterson (18 points), Kansas outduel AJ Dybantsa (17), BYU

Darryn Peterson scored 18 points in 20 minutes and No. 14 Kansas beat No. 13 BYU 90-82 on Saturday in the 1,000th game played at historic Allen Fieldhouse.

Bryson Tiller had career-high 21 points and seven rebounds for Kansas (16-5, 6-2 Big 12).

Although the Jayhawks led by as many as 21 points, BYU stayed within striking distance in the second half, cutting the lead to six as the clock ticked under two minutes to go. Kansas outscored the Cougars 8-4 in the final minute to withstand the late rally.

Richie Saunders scored a career-high 33 for BYU (17-4, 5-3). His six three-pointers tied a career-high.

BYU freshman AJ Dybantsa, who entered the game averaging a nation-leading 23.6 points, went without a shot until the 11:24 mark in the first half. Dybantsa scored his first basket with 7:22 left in the period, ending a 13-0 run by the Jayhawks with a 3-pointer. He finished with 17 points.

Excitement about the matchup between top prospects Peterson and Dybantsa fizzled when Peterson exited the game a little more than 3 1/2 minutes into the second half. He missed Kansas’ previous game with an ankle sprain and has been limited to just 11 appearances, battling hamstring and calf injuries.

Kansas carried a 20-point lead into halftime, shooting 64.3% from the field. That included 18 points from Peterson and the Jayhawks made 9 of 12 from beyond the arc.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.