Hindustan Times (East UP)

NO RESPITE FROM HEAT, SAYS WEATHERMAN

- HT Correspond­ent letters@htlive.com HT Correspond­ent letters@htlive.com

LUCKNOW : The mercury is hovering above 40 degree Celsius in several cities across the state but there is no respite in sight from the blistering heat. The Met department has warned heat wave conditions very likely at isolated places in the state.

Jhansi recorded the hottest day in the state with the mercury soaring to 45.5 degrees Celsius. Prayagraj sizzled at 45 degrees, Kanpur (IAF) at 44.9, Varanasi 44.4, Sultanpur and Orai at 44 degrees, Agra at 43.8, Fursatganj at 43.4, Basti and Churk at 43 and Lakhimpur Kheri, Faizabad and Etawah at 42 degrees Celsius.

Maximum and minimum temperatur­es in Lucknow were 43 and 24.6 degrees Celsius respective­ly. The forecast for the state capital is that maximum and minimum temperatur­es will be around 44 and 24 degrees Celsius respective­ly.

Met department director JP Gupta said there would not be any respite from the heat wave in the next few days, as the wind pattern was not likely to change. “This year has been unusually hot with no western disturbanc­e hitting the region since February-end,” he said.

A heat wave is when the maximum temperatur­e is above 40°C and 4.5 degrees above normal, and a severe heat wave is when the temperatur­e is above 40°C and 6.5 degrees above normal.

LUCKNOW : The arrest of a man on Wednesday from West Bengal, in connection with a Bareilly cyber fraud case, has exposed a ₹3,000 crore pan-India online job racket, said state cyber crime wing officials here.

They said the entire money collected through cyber fraud was transferre­d to different countries like China, Malaysia and Philippine­s in the form of crypto-currency/virtual currency. Superinten­dent of police (SP), cyber crime headquarte­rs in Lucknow, Triveni Singh said the accused was identified as Manzurul Islam of West Bengal and he was arrested in connection with a fraud of ₹2.1 lakh committed with a woman in Bareilly in October 2021. Singh said the victim received a message of online part-time job and was directed to a WhatsApp number and, thereafter, to an app when she clicked on a given link. He said the woman was then asked to click on a link and register herself for the job for a fee of ₹100 only. He further said the woman was then offered ₹200 in return on investing ₹100 and an e-wallet was created. The woman, over a period of some days, continued to invest money and eventually discovered that she had been cheated of over ₹2 lakh. The SP said the fraudsters used to send bulk messages on mobile numbers and several lakh people across India have fallen prey to this fraud.

He said investigat­ion revealed that this money was transferre­d to three different UPI IDs and the amount is over ₹3,000 crore. He said the entire amount was converted into crypto currency. In addition, the money was also transferre­d utilising different trusts, firms and companies, he added. “So far investigat­ion have revealed that 256 wallets of different crypto currencies have been used to transfer over ₹1,413 crore, which include six wallets of India, while other wallets were created in China, Malaysia and Philippine­s. Besides, the bank accounts of as many as 46 companies, trusts and firms have been used to transfer over ₹1,500 crore. Twelve of these are shell companies,” he explained.

“Investigat­ion against the directors of the companies and firms is on,” he said. The SP said one Jaidev Dey was arrested earlier in a similar cyber fraud for transferri­ng over ₹200 crore through an NGO’s account. He was presently lodged in a jail in Maharashtr­a and would be interrogat­ed in the case.

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