The Supreme Court of India has threatened paramilitary deployment in the National Chambal Gharial Sanctuary unless Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan demonstrate concrete action against illegal sand mining in the protected river corridor. The warning marks an escalation from prior judicial directives that the three states have evidently failed to satisfy. The Chambal river basin carries dual legal protection as both a gharial sanctuary and a critical ecological zone, making unauthorized extraction a violation of wildlife and environmental statutes simultaneously. The court's paramilitary threat is operationally significant: it signals readiness to invoke central enforcement mechanisms that bypass state-level compliance failures, effectively removing discretion from the concerned administrations. For the construction materials sector in the region, tighter enforcement would constrict riverbed sand supply, pressuring local aggregate prices and project timelines. The three states must now demonstrate measurable enforcement progress or risk losing jurisdictional control over the corridor to centrally deployed forces. Compliance timelines and the court's next hearing date will determine how quickly those market and operational pressures materialize.
India's Expenditure Finance Committee has cleared a Rs 1.25 lakh crore outlay for India Semiconductor Mission 2.0, up 64 percent from ISM 1.0's Rs 76,000 crore. The proposal now goes to the Cabinet, as two chip plants begin commercial output and a third, CG Semi, is set to open July 4, 2026.
The Supreme Court blocked Trump from firing Federal Reserve board member Lisa Cook, preserving the Fed's independence from presidential removal power. A separate ruling the same day gave Trump broader authority to dismiss leaders of other independent federal agencies.
The US Supreme Court has blocked President Trump's attempt to fire Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook, who faced unproven mortgage fraud allegations. The ruling preserves Fed independence for now and keeps a politically charged removal case alive in the courts.
The US Supreme Court, splitting along ideological lines, has allowed the Trump administration to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitian and Syrian immigrants.