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Lucknow: Senior UP ATS official Rajesh Sahni commits suicide

Lucknow: Senior UP ATS official Rajesh Sahni commits suicide Lucknow: Senior UP ATS official Rajesh Sahni commits suicide News Nation Bureau | Edited By : Shashikant Sharma | Updated on: 29 May 2018, 03:19:23 PM New Delhi: A senior Uttar Pradesh Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) official on Tuesday allegedly committed suicide in his office in Lucknow, police said. Rajesh Sahni, an Additional Superintendent of Police rank official, shot himself on his temple at 12.45 pm in his office, ADG (Law and Order) Anand Kumar said, according to PTI. Sahni, a 1992-batch Provincial Police Services (PPS) officer, used his own service revolver to end his life. It was not immediately clear as to why Sahni took the extreme step and the UP police was trying to ascertain the reasons behind the alleged suicide.

Infrastructure and police service top discussion list at virtual sector meeting

Prince Albert Daily Herald Nipawin Mayor Rennie Harper/Daily Herald File Photo More than 180 representatives from Saskatchewan towns, villages, resort villages, and northern municipalities gathered online May 19 for a virtual sector meeting hosted by Municipalities of Saskatchewan. “Whether virtual or in-person, the annual Town, Village, and Northern Sector Meeting is a chance for hometown leaders to come together with others from similar-sized communities to discuss municipal issues, learn from one another, and explore solutions to our concerns,” Mayor Rennie Harper of Nipawin, Municipalities of Saskatchewan Vice-President of Towns said in a release. Items of discussion included recreation, infrastructure funding for water and wastewater, and policing. Nearly all Saskatchewan towns and villages contract RCMP services through the Provincial Police Services Agreement. RCMP collective bargaining may result in retroactive salary increases back to 2016, which would result in si

As tensions rose during N S fisheries dispute, province balked at paying for extra RCMP

Posted: May 25, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: May 25 RCMP officers stand on the wharf in Saulnierville, N.S., in front of supporters of a Mi kmaw fishery on Sept. 20, 2020.(Jeorge Sadi/CBC) A top RCMP officer requested help to pay for extra policing costs during last fall s fisheries dispute in southwest Nova Scotia, but the province s justice minister resisted for two weeks and only agreed after two lobster pounds holding Mi kmaw catch were vandalized, with one later burned to the ground. The details of the financial dispute between the province and Mounties are contained in records, newly released to CBC under provincial freedom-of-information laws, that shed light on the overtime and expenses related to pulling in officers from the rest of Atlantic Canada to help police the area.

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