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बेहतर ऑडियो परिणाम के लिए कृपया ईयरफोन/हेडफोन का उपयोग करें। धन्यवाद। मैं अपनी आवाज़ में मशहूर हस्तियों के गाने गाता हूँ, मैं उनकी आवाज़ की नकल नहीं कर सकता मुझे ऑर्केस्ट्रा में गायन करने की इच्छा है। अंधेरी से बोरिवली क्षेत्र में किसी भी मराठी या हिंदी (केवल फ़िल्मी गीत) ऑर्केस्ट्रा में यदि मुझे उनके समूह में शामिल किया जाए, तो मैं उनका बहुत आभारी रहूँगा। वर्तमान में मेरी आयु 76 वर्ष है।
-For Big View On Whatsapp Plz Press DailyMotion Link Thanks
Use Ear/Headphone For Best Audi Quality Thanks
बेहतर ऑडियो परिणाम के लिए कृपया ईयरफोन/हेडफोन का उपयोग करें। धन्यवाद। मैं अपनी आवाज़ में मशहूर हस्तियों के गाने गाता हूँ, मैं उनकी आवाज़ की नकल नहीं कर सकता मुझे ऑर्केस्ट्रा में गायन करने की इच्छा है। अंधेरी से बोरिवली क्षेत्र में किसी भी मराठी या हिंदी (केवल फ़िल्मी गीत) ऑर्केस्ट्रा में यदि मुझे उनके समूह में शामिल किया जाए, तो मैं उनका बहुत आभारी रहूँगा। वर्तमान में मेरी आयु 76 वर्ष है।
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00:02days after the buggy dam cruise tragedy in jabalpur that has claimed 13 life so far fresh
00:08accounts from those on board are shedding light on how the vessel capsized during a storm the
00:16cruise was piloted by 45 year old mahesh patel a local resident with over two decades of experience
00:22recalling the moment when tragedy struck he says the boat was nearing the docking point when sudden
00:29powerful waves enter the vessel causing it to tilt the boat is not that even though
00:59there were enough life jackets available many passengers refused to wear them during the
01:12cruise the ill-fated vessel operated by the state tourism department was carrying
01:3241 identified passengers before it overturned on Thursday 28 of those on board were rescued the
01:40government of Madhya Pradesh has ordered a probe into the incident and dismissed three crew members
01:46following allegations of negligence and safety lapses by some of the survivors
01:51operations of similar vessels have also been suspended in the state
02:29of the
02:31don't run stop stop stop auto auto auto auto stop stop stop
02:51a tense new incident has unfolded near the strait of hormuz with a commercial vessel
02:58reportedly attacked off iran's southern coast the united kingdom maritime operations uk mto
03:05said a northbound boat carrier came under assault from multiple small craft about 11 nautical miles
03:13west of syriq according to the report the ship's captain alerted authorities after the encounter
03:19despite the confrontation all crew members were confirmed
03:25the repeated
03:26incident has unfolded near the strait of hormuz with a commercial vessel reportedly attacked
03:32off iran's southern coast the united kingdom maritime operations uk mto said a northbound
03:39boat carrier came under assault from multiple small craft about 11 nautical miles west of syrick
03:46according to the report the ship's captain alerted authorities after the encounter despite the
03:52confrontation, all crew members were confirmed safe and no environmental damage was reported.
03:58However, parallel reports suggest the situation may have escalated further. Speculation is that
04:04Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, may have attacked or seized a vessel in the same
04:12area, raising fresh concerns over maritime security in one of the world's most critical
04:18shipping lanes. The incident comes amid heightened tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran has
04:24imposed stricter controls on passing vessels, insisting ships must obtain prior permission.
04:31These measures follow ongoing disputes linked to a U.S.-led maritime blockade and alleged ceasefire
04:38violations. The latest developments build on a pattern of recent confrontations. On April 22,
04:44the IRGC seized two container ships, MSC Francesca and Epimondas, accusing them of operating without
04:53permits. A third vessel was reportedly fired upon, but managed to avoid capture. With each new episode,
05:00fears are growing that the fragile stability in the region could unravel further, threatening global
05:06shipping routes and energy supplies.
05:11The U.S. naval blockade was designed to choke Iran's oil exports, but one tanker appears to have slipped
05:19through. In a major development, an Iranian supertanker carrying nearly $220 million worth of crude has
05:28reportedly evaded U.S. forces and reached the Asia-Pacific, raising fresh questions about the effectiveness of the blockade.
05:35According to tankertrackers.com, the vessel, a very large crude carrier named Huge, was transporting over
05:441.9 million barrels of Iranian oil. The monitoring firm said the vessel was last seen off Sri Lanka more
05:53than a week ago and is now moving through Indonesia's Lombok Strait toward the Riau Archipelago. The tanker's
06:01movements suggest a carefully executed stealth operation. It stopped transmitting its Automatic
06:07Identification Signals, or AIS, signals on March 20th, shortly after leaving the Strait of Malacca for Iran.
06:16By April 13th, when the U.S. Navy announced its blockade on Iranian ports, the vessel was already in
06:23Iranian waters. This comes amid broader claims from Tehran that multiple ships are breaking
06:29through. Iranian state media said on April 29th that at least 52 Iranian vessels have breached the
06:37U.S. blockade and continued operations. The United States, however, disputes the scale of these claims.
06:44U.S. military officials say the blockade is working, forcing at least 41 Iran-linked ships to turn back and
06:53costing Iran billions in lost revenue. Washington also maintains that Iran is struggling to export oil and
07:01may soon run out of storage capacity if restrictions continue. But the voyage of the tanker Huge highlights a
07:09different reality. Even under heavy surveillance, Iran appears to be finding ways to move its oil,
07:16pointing to gaps in enforcement and an evolving game of cat-and-mouse at sea.
07:26Iran is preparing draft legislation that could fundamentally change who is allowed to sail through the
07:37Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime artery through which a significant share of the world's
07:42oil and trade flows. The proposal, revealed by Iran's Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Hamid Reza
07:50Haji Babai, and reported by Al Jazeera, signals to Iran's intent to formalize wartime controls over the
07:57waterway long after the guns have quieted. According to Haji Babai, the bill would permanently bar
08:05Israeli vessels from transiting the strait. Ships from countries deemed hostile would also be denied passage
08:11unless their governments first pay what he described as war reparations. All other ships, he said, would
08:19require prior permission from Iranian authorities before entering the channel.
08:24Shipping traffic will not return to what it was before the war, he warned, indicating a shift from temporary
08:31disruption to structured regulation. The announcement comes as the U.S. raises its own red flags. In a formal alert,
08:40the U.S.
08:40Treasury's Office of Foreign Asset Control cautioned shipping firms that paying Iran for safe passage could
08:47expose them to sanctions. The notice stated that U.S. persons are broadly prohibited from making payments to
08:54Iranian government entities, while non-U.S. firms could also face penalties if such payments cause American
09:01insurers, banks or service providers to violate sanctions rules. OFAC said these payments could take many forms,
09:10including cash, digital assets, informal swaps or in-kind transfers. Iran, meanwhile, insists it has already
09:19begun collecting tolls from some vessels seeking safe transit. Haji Babai claimed the first such revenues had been
09:27deposited into the country's central bank, though no evidence or figures were provided and the claim has not
09:33been independently verified. Tehran has also accused the U.S. of piracy for intercepting ships under a naval
09:41blockade that Washington imposed on Iranian ports in mid-April. U.S. Central Command said dozens of commercial ships
09:49ships have been turned back since the blockade began, dramatically reducing traffic through a strait that
09:55normally sees thousands of transits each month. The waterways' disruption is already being felt beyond energy
10:03markets. The U.N. Refugee Agency has warned that rerouting aid shipments around Africa is doubling delivery times
10:11and sharply raising costs for humanitarian missions to conflict zones such as Sudan. This maritime
10:18standoff unfolds amid a fragile cease-file between the U.S. and Iran that began on April 8th, followed by
10:26indirect
10:27talks through regional mediators. Iran's state news agency IRNA reported that Tehran recently sent a proposal aimed at
10:35ending the war. But U.S. President Donald Trump responded coolly, saying he was unconvinced by the offer and describing
10:43Iran's leadership as disjointed. At stake is more than diplomacy. Control of the Strait of Hormuz now appears to be
10:52a central
10:53lever in Tehran's post-war strategy, one that could redefine global shipping routes, energy markets, and the balance of power
11:01in the
11:05country.
11:07Beijing has sent a clear message ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's planned visit to China. If the Strait
11:14of Hormuz
11:15is still in crisis by the time Air Force One lands in Beijing, it will be on top of the
11:21agenda. Speaking to
11:23reporters in New York, China's permanent representative to the U.N., Fu Kang, stressed that while the China-U.S.
11:31Russia's relationship goes far beyond the current crisis, the continued closure of the world's most vital energy
11:38choke point has become an unavoidable priority. Trump is scheduled to meet President Xi Jinping on May 14th, 15th,
11:47for a historic summit that was previously delayed by the outbreak of hostilities on February 28th. As the world's
11:56largest oil importer, with nearly 40 percent of its crude passing through the Strait, China views the
12:02restoration of navigation as a matter of urgent national and global interest.
12:08The responsibility for reopening the Strait lies with both sides, Fu stated, calling for a synchronized
12:15de-escalation where Iran lifts its restrictions and the United States terminates its retaliatory naval blockade.
12:23He expressed particular alarm over recent rhetoric from Washington, suggesting the current cease-fire is
12:30merely temporary, urging the international community to speak out against a resumption of kinetic operations.
12:38He also denied military assistance in the park. The bear drew a large crowd, which included park rangers and police,
12:48all of whom filmed the bear as it made its way through the branches. The bear eventually came down, prompting
12:56authorities
12:57to give chase. No one was injured. What happened to the bear is currently unknown.
13:16As giant U.S. cargo jets pour toward the Gulf again, is this just routine muscle flexing, or the first
13:22visible countdown to a new, far more dangerous
13:24way? As giant U.S. cargo jets pour toward the Gulf again, is this just routine muscle flexing, or the
13:30first visible countdown to a new, far more dangerous way?
13:33With Trump insisting he wants a deal even as planes stack up over the Middle East, is a politically cornered
13:39president now
13:40desperately rushing troops to Iran's doorstep to look tough before talks collapse? When at least a dozen massive C-17s,
13:46each able to haul 77 tons and a full company of troops, are tracked heading east, are they simply rotating
13:52stock, or quietly building a war-ready bridge into the Gulf? Does this sudden air bridge of tankers, spy planes
13:58and heavy lifters really signal calm?
14:00Calculated planning from Trump's Pentagon, or a panicked push by his war cabinet to project strength at any cost?
14:06As C-17s packed with troops and gear stream toward the Gulf, is Trump heading into the biggest test of
14:12his presidency so far? Forced to prove whether he can scare Tehran without triggering all-out war?
14:17With Iran's revolutionary guards drawing a hard red line, warning Trump he must choose an impossible war or a humiliating
14:25bad deal. How long can Washington walk this razor's edge without slipping?
14:30U.S. military air traffic is quietly surging toward the Gulf again, just as Trump publicly insists he is still
14:36weighing whether to gamble on war or double down on a fragile diplomatic track with Iran.
14:40On May 2, open-source flight radar 24 data flagged an unusual spike in U.S. military flights heading from
14:47Europe toward Gulf airspace, a pattern analysts say does not look like ordinary rotation traffic.
14:52Most of the aircraft tagged on public trackers were C-17A Globemaster III heavy cargo planes, suggesting pallets of equipment,
14:59ammunition and support vehicles are being pushed closer to Iran at speed.
15:04Each C-17A can haul around 77 tons of cargo and roughly 100 fully-kipped U.S. troops, meaning a
15:10dozen such jets can quietly move the bones of a small brigade into theater in a matter of hours.
15:15Military watchers count at least 12 U.S. transports on route in this latest wave alone, with several taking off
15:21from German bases that often serve as launch pads for Middle East deployments.
15:25That scale of mass cargo lift points to more than routine resupply, hinting Washington is quietly moving extra troops and
15:32hardware closer to Iran's coastline and the choke point of Hormuz.
15:42Alongside the C-17A, trackers have also picked up Lockheed C-5M Super Galaxy transports, the U.S. Air Force's
15:49biggest haulers, joining the stream of metal flowing toward the broader Middle East.
15:53The C-5M is the largest cargo jet in America's inventory, capable of lifting around 127 tons in one go,
16:00enough to move heavy armor, missile batteries or entire headquarters modules on a single hop.
16:05Boeing KC-46 Pegasus tankers have also been spotted in European and Middle Eastern skies, signaling that Washington is building
16:13the aerial refueling backbone needed for any long-range strike option.
16:16These tankers can refuel fighters and bombers in mid-air, dramatically extending the range and persistence of any U.S.
16:23air package that might be sent deep toward Iranian airspace.
16:26Older KC-135 stratotankers were seen orbiting near Israel and nearby regional airspace, forming gas stations in the sky that
16:34can keep Allied jets loitering near potential Iranian targets.
16:37An RC-135W rivet joint electronic spy plane was also tracked near Bahrain, vacuuming up signals traffic as planners try
16:45to map Iranian communications and radar patterns in real time.
16:55This quiet buildup comes just days after Iran sent a 14-point ceasefire proposal to Washington, outlining what Tehran says
17:03it needs to step back from the brink.
17:05The plan reportedly calls for lifting the U.S. naval blockade on Iranian shipping and ending the war on all
17:11fronts, including proxy clashes stretching from the Gulf to Lebanon.
17:14Trump has told reporters he will soon be reviewing the plan Iran has just sent, but at the same time
17:20he has openly cast doubt on whether any real deal is actually possible.
17:23The president even admitted he does not think he can make a deal, an unusually blunt line that hints the
17:28diplomatic track could stall just as U.S. lift and tanker capacity peaks in the theater.
17:32DONALD TRUMP, President of the United States": Doing very well with regard to Iran.
17:36Again, they want to make a deal.
17:38They're decimated.
17:39They're having a hard time figuring out who their leader is.
17:43They don't know who their leader is, because their leader is gone, their leader that their former leader, Khomeini.
17:49But we'll see.
17:50Any questions real fast?
17:52They told me about the concept of the deal.
17:54They're going to give me the exact wording now.
17:56Yeah.
17:56Can you restart military strikes on target?
18:00Well, I don't want to say that.
18:01I mean, I can't tell that to a reporter.
18:03If they misbehave, if they do something bad.
18:06But right now, we'll see.
18:10But it's a possibility that could happen, certainly.
18:14Well, it's a very friendly blockade.
18:16Nobody's even challenging it.
18:18Nobody at all is challenging it.
18:19Just so you understand, many presidents have been involved in things that are very big.
18:26They never had to go through anything with respect to Congress.
18:29They considered it to be totally unconstitutional.
18:32And the Democrats in Congress that pushed this, and probably a couple of Republicans,
18:38they're hurting our negotiating ability, which is infinite right now.
18:42And they shouldn't be doing it.
18:44It's never happened before.
18:46No other president's done it.
18:47And I'm not going to be the first.
18:49Why is the U.S. removing troops from Germany?
18:53We're going to cut way down.
18:54And we're cutting a lot further than 5,000.
18:57Thank you very much.
18:58Meanwhile, Iran's Revolutionary Guard intelligence arm has fired back with a stark warning,
19:02telling Trump that from Tehran's view he now faces only two ugly options.
19:07The elite force claims the room for U.S. decision-making has narrowed,
19:11arguing that shifting global support and Iran's own readiness have boxed Washington into a shrinking corner.
19:16IRGC officials say Tehran has quietly set a deadline for the U.S. to end its blockade of Iranian ports,
19:22though they refuse to spell out the date or the exact consequences of missing it.
19:26In one statement, they bluntly declared that Trump must now choose between an impossible military operation
19:31or a bad deal with the Islamic Republic, framing both paths as a win for Iran.
19:36IRGC commanders add that their forces remain on full standby for a return to war,
19:41openly warning that renewed fighting is likely if Washington misreads the buildup or lets talks implode.
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