Pune, Mar 7: Pune district administration Thursday granted Indian citizenship to over 40 Pakistani nationals.

"Total 45 applicants were granted Indian citizenship on Thursday. Most of these applications were from Pakistan nationals, while one or two applications were from Afghanistan and Bangladesh nationals, who all have been given the Indian citizenship," Pune District Collector Naval Kishore Ram said.

Pune district officials said these applicants had migrated to India long back and they had been staying in Pune for the past many years.

"Some of these applicants came to India 40 years ago, but they did not have the Indian citizenship. After the amendment in the Citizenship Act 1955, the district collector has been empowered to give citizenship to applicants from the minorities. As per that amendment, I have given the citizenship to these persons," Ram said.

According to the district administration officials, these applications were pending with the administration for quite a long time.

"These applications require a lot of scrutiny. Various agencies are also involved in clearing these applications.

After we got the clearance from agencies like Intelligence Bureau (IB), I called all of them and instead of giving them multiple hearings, I cleared their proposals only after one hearing," the collector said.

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Palakkad (Kerala) (PTI): Hotel and restaurant owners on Saturday held a protest march in Palakkad against the recent nearly Rs 1,000 hike in commercial gas cylinder prices.

The protesters marched through the town holding placards and images of gas cylinders. They also carried two cylinders on a stretcher with a wreath placed on top, according to visuals aired on television channels.

The hotel and restaurant owners contended that it would be difficult for them to sustain their businesses in view of the high cost of commercial gas cylinders.

They said that many of them had been forced to shut their establishments earlier due to the scarcity of commercial gas cylinders, and that most had only recently reopened.

“But the sudden increase in commercial gas cylinder prices has affected our operations,” the protesters said.

Similar concerns were raised by restaurant owners and workers from other parts of the state in response to queries from reporters.

The Kerala Hotel and Restaurant Association had on Friday announced a statewide protest strike on May 6 against the Rs 993 hike in commercial LPG cylinder prices.

KHRA state president G Jayapal said that all hotels and restaurants across Kerala would remain shut on that day in protest against what he termed an “unfair” increase in LPG prices.

He added that over the past five months, the price of a single cylinder had increased by a total of Rs 1,498.

On May 6, establishments will remain closed, and protest marches and dharnas will be held in front of district headquarters and oil company offices, he said.