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Cabinet nod to amend Land Acquisition Act No.09 of 1950
Due to the considerable time spent on following the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act No. 09 of 1950, approval has been granted at the cabinet meeting held on 11-01-2021 to amend the said Land Acquisition Act appropriate to the current requirement so that the time taken for the process of acquisition of lands can be minimized, lands can be acquired under a simple procedure, and the compensation can be paid under a unified procedure. The initial draft has been prepared for that purpose, and the legal draftsman has informed that the policy approval of the Cabinet of Ministers should be taken for the completion of the activities of the preparation of the draft.
Accordingly, taking into consideration the proposal presented by the Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, Land, and Irrigation, the Cabinet of Ministers has decided to instruct the legal draftsman to prepare the draft promptly.
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Spain plans to give half a million undocumented migrants legal status
The Spanish government has announced a plan to legalise the status of undocumented migrants, a measure expected to benefit at least half a million people.
Regularisation will be available to foreign nationals who do not have a criminal record and can prove they lived in Spain for at least five months prior to 31 December 2025.
“This is an historic day for our country,” said Elma Saiz, Spain’s minister of inclusion, social security and migration.
The measure will provide beneficiaries with an initial one-year residence permit, which can then be extended. Requests for legalisation are expected to begin in April and the process will remain open until the end of June.
“We are reinforcing a migratory model based on human rights, integration, co-existence and which is compatible with economic growth and social cohesion,” Saiz said.
Spain has seen a large influx of migrants in recent years, mainly from Latin America.
The conservative think-tank Funcas found that the number of undocumented migrants in Spain had risen from 107,409 in 2017 to 837,938 in 2025 – an eight-fold increase.
The highest number of undocumented arrivals currently living in Spain are believed to be from Colombia, Peru and Honduras.
Spain’s socialist-led coalition government has been an outlier on this issue among the larger European nations, underlining the importance of migrants for the economy.
The country has been outperforming the other main EU economies in recent years, posting expected growth of close to 3% in 2025.
Unemployment, a longstanding weakness of the Spanish economy, has dipped below 10% for the first time since 2008, according to figures released on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has described immigrants as representing “wealth, development and prosperity” for Spain, pointing to their contribution to the social security system.
The government and parties on the left have also emphasised the need to treat migrants in a humane way.
“Providing rights is the answer to racism,” said Irene Montero, of the far-left Podemos party and a former minister in a coalition government with the Socialists.
She has campaigned for this measure, which followed an agreement between the party and the government. A civic legislative proposal, calling for a mass migrant regularisation, received the support of around 700,000 people but had been languishing in parliament.
This measure will be approved by royal decree, meaning it does not require parliamentary approval.
It is the first large-scale migrant regularisation in Spain for two decades.
Several such initiatives, by governments of both the Socialists and the conservative People’s Party (PP), legalised the status of an estimated half a million migrants between 1986 and 2005.
However, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, leader of the PP, said the latest mass legalisation would “increase the pull effect and overwhelm our public services”.
Pepa Millán, spokeswoman for the far-right Vox, said the initiative “attacks our identity”, adding that the party would appeal before the Supreme Court in a bid to block it.
[BBC]
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Devine denies Delhi Capitals once again in final over
It felt like deja vu for Delhi Capitals. On January 11, Sophie Devine defended six in the final over to help Gujarat Giants secure their second win. Sixteen days later, she was once again tasked with defending a small total – eight runs – in the final over in DC’s chase of 175, after conceding 23 in her previous. Devine delivered once again, removing Niki Prasad and Sneh Rana, to give GG a three-run win. It took them to second place on the points table and a big step towards the knockouts.
Before that dramatic finish, DC had looked dangerous, thanks to late cameos from Prasad and Rana. From 100 for 6, the duo put on a 70 off just 31 balls to almost pull off a miracle.
Anushka Sharma walked in at 1 for 19 after Devine fell to Marizanne Kapp in the third over and, in a brief but decisive stay, wrested momentum from DC. Nervy at first, she soon settled, trusting her bottom hand and playing the ball rather than the bowler. A backfoot punch past mid-off off Nandani Sharma brought her first boundary, followed by a wristy clip through midwicket that underlined her control.
Kapp, with the best powerplay economy in this WPL at under five, bore the brunt in the fifth over as Anushka opened her shoulders for three fours, driving and whipping through square leg with minimal fuss. She struck eight fours in all and looked set for a big score, but after being dropped by Chinelle Henry at mid-off off Shree Charani, she attempted a slog sweep the next ball and was caught by Minnu Mani at deep midwicket for 39, leaving GG 73 for 2 in the ninth over.
Mooney held the innings with a composed knock. She was 16 off 18 balls when Anushka departed and had managed just one boundary until then. At the halfway stage, GG were 80 for 2. Jemimah Rodrigues’ decision to bowl out Kapp in the 11th over, however, worked in Mooney’s favour as she smashed three fours off her. Having found her rhythm, Mooney hit two more boundaries to backward point to bring up her first fifty of this WPL, off 40 balls. Mooney’s stay was cut short in the 17th over by Nandani’s slower ball.
The innings then unravelled, with GG losing wickets in a cluster between the 15th and 18th overs, including Georgia Wareham, Bharti Fulmali, Kanika Ahuja, and Kashvee Gautam, as Charani struck twice in an over.
Just as DC seemed to pull the game back, Tanuja Kanwar – who had missed the previous game – lifted GG to a competitive 174 with an 11-ball 21. She capped it 15 runs off Henry in the final over, smoking a six over the bowler’s head after hitting two fours. Charani finished as DC’s best bowler, returning figures of 4 for 31.
DC made a brisk start to the chase, reaching 41 for 1 at the end of five overs. But Devine removed Lizelle Lee off the final ball of the powerplay with a slower delivery. From the seventh over onwards, Kanwar and Ash Gardner bowled tight lines to Laura Wolvaardt and Rodrigues, conceding just 15 runs across three overs.
Although Georgia Wareham was taken for 12 in the tenth, it prompted the captain to bring Devine back – and she struck immediately, rattling Rodrigues’ stumps as the batter attempted a scoop. Two balls later, Gardner removed Kapp, and by the end of 12 overs, DC’s required run rate had climbed to 11.37. Wolvaardt soon fell to Gayakwad, leaving DC 85 for 5, and it became 100 for 6 with 75 needed from 33 balls.
But Devine struck in the final over, removing Rana and Prasad. Despite a tense two-run attempt and frantic running between the wickets, Devine’s slower deliveries and smart field placements saw both batters caught in the deep, allowing GG to hold on for a dramatic win.
Brief scores:
Gujarat Giants Women 174 for 9 in 20 overs (Beth Mooney 58, Sophie Devine 13, Anushka Sharma 39, Georgia Wareham 11,Tanuja Kanwar 21; Marizanne Kapp 1-34, Chinell Henry 2-38, Nandani Sharma 1-26, Shree Charani 4-31, Minnu Mani 1-23) beat Delhi Capitals Women 171 for 8 (Shafali Verma 14, Lizelle Lee 11, Laura Wolvaardt 24, Jemimah Rodrigues 16, Niki Prasad 47, Sneh Rana 29; Sophie Devine 4-37, Rajeshwari Gayakwad 3-20,Ashleigh Gardner 1-37) by three runs
[Cricinfo]
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Harry Brook blasts England to 2-1 series victory
England’s batting might have arrived in scintillating style for the third ODI against Sri Lanka as Harry Brook smoked 136 not out off 65 balls, Joe Root struck 111, and England mounted a mammoth score of 357 for 3.
On a track that has historically been unkind to chasing teams, Sri Lanka made a valiant charge at the target, led by Pavan Rathnayake, who hit a maiden international hundred in his fourth ODI.
Although Sri Lanka threatened at times, staying within range of the required rate, England’s bowlers struck too frequently, and were too economical through the middle overs. Sri Lanka were ultimately all out for 304 in the 47th over. Aside from Rathnayake’s 121 off 115, Pathum Nissanka’s 50 off 25 was the only other substantial score.
This victory hands England the ODI series 2-1 – their first away series victory since beating Bangladesh in March 2023. Sri Lanka, meanwhile, have lost their first home ODI series since going down to India in 2021.
In the second innings, England’s attack hunted together – Adil Rashid, Jamie Overton, Will Jacks, and Liam Dawson all claiming two wickets apiece before Sam Curran bowled Rathnayake to bring the match to a close. But it had been their utter domination of the first innings that set up this win. Only two of the five batters who came to the crease was dismissed for less than 50 – Jacob Bethell also hitting 65 in a 126-run stand with Root.
Even that stand didn’t compare to the partnership that was to come, however – Root and Brook put on 191 together off as few as 113 deliveries. Although Root sped up towards the death, that transforming of what would have been a good total into a gargantuan one was all Brook’s doing. He crashed nine sixes and 11 fours, reaping 101 runs off the last 40 balls he faced. The final overs were a showcase of Brook’s extraordinary clean hitting; the last five overs cost Sri Lanka a dizzying 88 runs.
In cramming their attack with spinners, Sri Lanka had banked on getting wickets in the middle overs. When England arrived at the 40th over only three down, Sri Lanka were always likely to suffer in the final 10.
The three most-experienced bowlers’ figures make for the bleakest reading – Asitha Fernando went at 8.55 runs an over, while both Wanindu Hasaranga and Jeffrey Vandersay returned figures of 1 for 76 apiece from their 10 overs. Dunith Wellalage maintained an economy rate of 4.9, but this was largely a function of him having mostly bowled out before the death. In his last over – the 45th of the innings – Wellalage also conceded 13.
Before Brook’s assault, though, Root had given the innings some substance. When he arrived at the crease in the seventh over, England had made an inauspicious start – Ben Duckett and Rehan Ahmed having plodded along at less than three an over. Things did not seem to be improving when Ahmed pulled Hasaranga to short midwicket on 24, leaving England 40 for 2 in the 11th over.
But then Bethell and Root bedded down on a surface that wasn’t especially given to run scoring. As Sri Lanka unleashed its spin-heavy attack, the batters settled on spiking the scoring rate only occasionally, before returning to accumulating steadily. Root was brisker than Bethell, getting to fifty off the 54th ball he faced, but that’s only because he is a better manipulator of the field. Of those first 50 runs, only 18 came from boundaries. In fact, of his entire 111 off 108, 61 came from singles, twos, and threes.
The innings was already moving into a higher gear when Brook arrived. But Brook energized the advance, steering his first ball for four behind square, before unleashing the more powerful strokes. After 15 balls at the crease he had hit two fours and a six, but it was after the 43rd over that he really exploded.
The off-side hitting was spectacular; Brook would frequently make room to hit both spinners and seamers over the extra cover boundary to delight the thousands of England supporters who had made the trip for this series. Root completed his 20th hundred off the 100th ball he faced, and then largely just stayed out of Brook’s way.
While midwicket and cover were Brook’s favourite zones for six-hitting, he also peppered the boundary behind square on the offside with four. He faced all but two deliveries in the last two overs, and England scored 40 runs off them.
Nissanka set the hosts racing in response. He blasted five fours and three sixes inside the powerplay to get Sri Lanka ahead of the run rate, with a little help from Kamil Mishara and Kusal Mendis, who produced early cameos. But when Nissanka was dismissed in the 10th over, Sri Lanka’s chances nosedived, with two wickets having gone down already. Before long, they were 131 for 4.
Batting at No. 4 for the first time in ODIs, Rathnayake added the substance Sri Lanka’s runaway train of a chase required, however. He was severe on errors of length especially, and used his feet against spin to devastating effect, coming down the track repeatedly to hit them aerially over midwicket.
But he progressed at roughly a run-a-ball, choosing to take the game deep even as he ran out of partners. There was a 50-run stand for the seventh wicket with Dunith Wellalage, but it wasn’t enough. England continued to take Rathnayake’s partners out.
He didn’t just close up and play for the hundred. Aside from a little hesitation in moving from 99 to a first international ton, Rathnayake continued to pursue an unlikely total, even when the required rate had climbed past 12. But in the 47th over, Curran bowled a yorker that prompted a tired shot, and Rathnayake’s stumps were rattled. He’d hit 12 fours and a six in all.
Brief scores:
England 357 for 3 in 50 overs (Harry Brook 136*, Joe Root 111*, Jacob Bethell 65; Dhananjaya de Silva 1-45) beat Sri Lanka 304 in 46.4 overs (Pavan Rathnayake 121, Pathum Nissanka 50; Jamie Overton 2-48, Liam Dawson 2-48, Will Jacks 2-43, Adil Rashid 2-61) by 53 runs

Pavan Rathnayake anchored Sri Lanka’s run-chase [Cricinfo]
[Cricinfo]
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