Joza Court asked to suspend law licenses of gun-waving couple
LEH, India AP 鈥?The remains of an Indian army soldier have been found more than 38 years after he went missing on a glacier at the highest point along the heavily militarized contested border between India and Pakista
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n in Kashmir, officials said Wednesday.The soldier and 17 other colleagues were occupying a ridge on Siachen Glacier, high in the Karakoram range in disputed Kashmir s Ladakh region, in May 1984 when they were hit by an avalanche, officials said.The bodies of 13 soldiers were recovered, but five rem
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ained missing.A team of soldiers on Monday found human remains at the glacier with an identity disc saying they belonged to Chandra Shekhar, one of the missing men, the Indian army said.Shekhar was part of Indias first army unit to occupy the 76-kilometer 47-mile -long glacier in 1984 amid pitched battles with soldiers from Pakistan, which also controls part of divided Kashmir. Both nuclear-armed neighbors claim all of the region. The glacier, considered the worlds highest battlefield, was uninhabited before Indian troops moved there.Since then, the two countries have deployed troops at elevations of up to 6,700 meters 21,982 feet . They have fought intermittent skirmishes on the glacier, but mor
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e Indian and Pakistani troops have died from the grueling conditions than from hostile fire.In 2017, at least 20 Indian soldiers were killed in three avalanches. In 2012, an avalanche in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir killed 140 people, including 129 Pakistani soldiers.Discus Fsja Flight For Life to open new base at Hartford Municipal Airport on Thursday
As COVID-19 cases surge across the country, an increasing number of couples are suddenly revamping their living wills to include specific language about what to do if someone in their fa
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mily catches the novel coronavirus and may not be able to make medical decisions for themselves. I think like a lot of people it certainly caused us to take a step back and say, wow, these types of black swan events happen, said Adam Neale, who recently updated his living will.Neale and his wife, Dorean, say the grim reality of COVID-19 pushed them to finish estate planning they had been putting off for years. But the pandemic hasn t only led to a spike in families planning out their estates,
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it s also changed the way couples are looking at end-of-life care. What weve seen is this heightened sense of awareness of peoples mortality, which has created a heightened sense of urgency in the market, explained Denise McCarthy, an estate attorney in the Boston area
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. I dont think people have thought about ventilators the way theyre thinking about them now. McCarthy is now recommending couples write in COVID-19 specific language to their wills, like what to do if one spouse ends up on a ventilator. She also says it s important to appoint a healthcare proxy, clearly putting a spouse or family member in charge of your medical care. Its something that has become more important now than ever as many hospitals are barring visitors because of COVID-19. Its one less source of stress in a very tough time, she