Report on Recent Court Cases, National Security, and Government Investigations in India
Introduction
This report provides details on several important legal events, including court cases in the Delhi High Court, federal investigations into exam cheating and financial fraud, and security operations against terrorist groups.
Main Body
Regarding the legal system, Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma of the Delhi High Court started criminal contempt proceedings against leaders of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), including Arvind Kejriwal. The court stated that their social media posts were part of a planned effort to attack and intimidate judges after a request to change the judge in the Delhi excise policy case was rejected. Consequently, the case has been sent to the Chief Justice to be assigned to a different group of judges to ensure fairness. At the same time, the National Testing Agency (NTA) cancelled the NEET-UG 2026 exam because of reports that exam papers had been leaked. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) arrested several people in Maharashtra, Haryana, and Rajasthan, discovering a network where leaked materials were sold for money. Furthermore, there is a disagreement between the NTA and the Ministry of Health regarding the move to computer-based testing. While the ministry wants a single-shift format to keep things fair, the NTA claims they do not have enough infrastructure to do this. In terms of financial crime and security, the CBI is now investigating two large frauds in Chandigarh involving over ₹200 crore. These cases use similar methods to a separate ₹550-crore scam in Haryana. Additionally, the CBI searched Reliance Communications Ltd regarding alleged frauds of over ₹27,000 crore. Meanwhile, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) filed a massive charge sheet about a car bombing near the Red Fort, linking it to a conspiracy by radicalized medical professionals. The NIA also brought back narco-terrorist Iqbal Singh from Portugal, while the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad worked to stop networks linked to a Pakistani gangster.
Conclusion
In summary, the current situation is marked by stricter government control over professional exams, a strong judicial response to political criticism, and ongoing efforts to stop international terror and financial crime networks.
Learning
⚡ The 'Connector Leap': Moving Beyond 'And' & 'But'
To move from A2 to B2, you must stop using simple lists and start using Logical Bridges. In the text, the author doesn't just give facts; they connect ideas to show cause, contrast, and addition.
🛠 The Power-Up Table
Look at how these words from the article replace basic A2 words:
| A2 Word (Basic) | B2 Bridge (Professional) | How it functions in the text |
|---|---|---|
| And | Furthermore | Adds a new, important piece of information about the NTA. |
| But | While | Shows two opposite ideas happening at the same time. |
| So | Consequently | Shows a direct result of the court's decision. |
| Also | Additionally | Introduces another example of financial crime. |
🧠 Linguistic Logic: Why this matters
An A2 student says: "The exam was leaked. So the NTA cancelled it."
A B2 student says: "The exam papers were leaked; consequently, the NTA cancelled the test."
The secret: B2 English is about relationship. Instead of separate sentences, use these bridges to show the reader exactly how one event leads to another.
🔍 Spot the 'Contrast' Pattern
Notice this sentence:
"While the ministry wants a single-shift format... the NTA claims they do not have enough infrastructure."
Using While at the start of a sentence is a classic B2 move. It tells the listener: "I am about to give you two different opinions." Try replacing "But" with "While" to instantly sound more academic.