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UP Crime: Viral CCTV Shows Husband Fleeing Brutal Attack By Wife's Relatives In Farrukhabad; Case Filed

· Free Press Journal

Mumbai: An incident of a family dispute between a husband and wife has come to light in Farrukhabad, Uttar Pradesh, where the in-laws launched a coordinated attack on the man. The entire incident was captured on CCTV and has since gone viral on social media.

In the video, a Thar is seen parked outside a dhaba in the city, with the husband resting after a long and exhausting journey. After some time, a woman in a yellow and black outfit approaches the vehicle, calling out and bringing along her relatives, including four men and one woman. The video suggests there was an ongoing family dispute between the husband and wife, which appeared to have taken a toll on the woman, though the impact on the man remains unclear.

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The male relatives approach the car and attempt to talk to the man inside, trying to persuade him to come outside while one of them records the situation on a phone. Surrounded by four military-aged men and two women, who appeared to be enraged, the man inside the vehicle decided to follow his instincts, start the engine, and drive away. He inserted the keys, started the engine, and pressed the pedal, attempting to escape for his safety but not without difficulty.

As he tried to leave, the woman and her relatives attacked the vehicle with stones and sticks, attempting to break the glass, force the door open, or drag the man inside through the window. Although the vehicle was damaged, the man managed to escape. There were allegations that the in-laws fired shots, but no guns or gunfire can be seen or heard in the viral footage.

The attack appeared well-coordinated and premeditated, as two of the three vehicles parked near the Thar were also involved. After the Thar escaped, the woman and her relatives got into the two other cars they had parked nearby to pursue the man, then drove away.

Based on the complainant’s written report, a case has been registered, and necessary action is being taken.

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Trump’s dire warning to Iran: ‘A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again’

· Fortune

President Donald Trump posted a dire warning on Truth Social Tuesday morning that Iran—one of the oldest civilizations on Earth, a country of 90 million people—may be destroyed within hours.

“A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” Trump wrote. “I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will.”

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The post landed a little less than 12 hours before Trump’s 8 p.m. ET deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and came after the U.S. conducted more than 50 strikes on military targets on Kharg Island early Tuesday, according to two U.S. officials cited by the Wall Street Journal. Kharg is Iran’s main oil export hub, responsible for shuttling through 20% of the world’s oil. 

Trump then pivoted in the same post to suggest that Iran’s regime has already collapsed. “Now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS?” he wrote, before landing on: “47 years of extortion, corruption, and death, will finally end. God Bless the Great People of Iran!”

Trump’s threatened targets—Iran’s power plants and bridges—would almost certainly constitute war crimes under international humanitarian law, which prohibits attacks on civilian infrastructure that isn’t directly serving a military purpose. The Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols explicitly bar strikes on objects “indispensable to the survival of the civilian population,” a category legal scholars say clearly includes electrical grids that power hospitals, water treatment, and food storage for 90 million people. But beyond the humanitarian costs, blacking out the entire nation would be economically catastrophic for the region and could trigger a global recession. 

Leaders and markets respond

Vice President JD Vance, speaking in Budapest alongside Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, insisted the strikes did not represent a change in strategy and said “fundamentally the military objectives of the United States have been completed” in Iran. The ball, he said, is now in Tehran’s court.

Even some of Trump’s closest allies expressed alarm at the apocalyptic rhetoric. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.), a firm Trump supporter, told podcaster John Solomon he was “hoping and praying” Trump was “just using this as bluster.” Johnson added, “We are not at war with the Iranian people. We are trying to liberate them.”

Qatar called for restraint on the President’s part.

“Escalations left unchecked will get us in a situation where it can’t be controlled – and we are very close to that point,” Qatar’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari said during a press conference. “There are no winners in the continuation of this war.”

Inside Iran, officials called for human chains of young people to gather around power plants and bridges to physically protect them from U.S. airstrikes. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, meanwhile, warned Gulf states that its “considerable restraint” was ending and that it would no longer hesitate to target American-linked oil and gas infrastructure in ways that could disrupt the industry for years.

Financial markets reacted immediately to the post. U.S. crude jumped another 3.2% to $116 a barrel, the VIX spiked more than 6%, and the S&P 500 opened negative.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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Nutella scores a free ad in space, thanks to NASA livestream and perfect timing

· India Today