A report finds that the Army failed to do right by some of the more than 200 bomb-sniffing dogs that served with US soldiers in Afghanistan, detecting roadside bombs and saving lives.
The Defense Department’s inspector general has determined that, after the program ended in 2014, some soldiers struggled or were unable to adopt the dogs they had handled.
This included two dogs among 13 that were given to a private company to be used as service dogs for veterans but then abandoned at a Virginia kennel.
The report says Congress amended the law in 2015 to give handlers top priority in adopting their dogs.
The inspector general also faults the military for not properly screening those adopting the dogs, including law enforcement agencies and private individuals.
A journalist was shot dead by unidentified assailants in a high-security zone in Pakistan's Rawalpindi, according to a media report. Anjum Muneer Raja, 40, was returning home on a motorcycle late on Thursday night when the bike-borne attackers waylaid him and opened fire, the police said...
Devotees from different States and abroad have started arriving here for the historical Jhanda Mela set to start on Tuesday. According to the organisers of the historical fair, as on Sunday evening a large number of devotees were arriving here from Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and other parts of the country...