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This Happened

This Happened — July 29: Wedding Of Charles And Diana

Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer were married on this day in 1981 at St. Paul's Cathedral in London, England.

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How did Prince Charles and Princess Diana meet?

Prince Charles and Lady Diana met in 1977 when Charles was dating Diana's older sister, Sarah. Their paths crossed again in 1980 when Diana was invited to a polo match where Charles was playing. They developed a romantic relationship soon after.

How was Charles and Diana's wedding received by the public and the media?

The wedding was met with immense public and media interest. Millions of people across the globe tuned in to watch the ceremony on television. The event was seen as a fairytale wedding and captured the fascination and attention of people worldwide.

What happened to King Charles and Princess Diana's marriage?

King Charles and Lady Diana's marriage faced significant challenges leading to their divorce in 1996. Reports of extramarital relationships emerged, most notably Prince Charles’ affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, who is now his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall. Tragically, Diana passed away in a car accident in 1997, leaving a lasting impact on the British royal family and the public.

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Society

Big Brother For The People: India's CCTV Strategy For Cracking Down On Police Abuse

"There is nothing fashionable about installing so many cameras in and outside one’s house," says a lawyer from a Muslim community. And yet, doing this has helped members of the community prove unfair police action against them.

A woman is walking in the distance while a person holds a military-style gun close up

Survellance and tight security at the Lal Chowk area in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India on October 4, 2022

Sukanya Shantha

MUMBAI — When sleuths of the National Investigating Agency suddenly descended on human rights defender and school teacher Abdul Wahid Shaikh’s house on October 11, he knew exactly what he needed to do next.

He had been monitoring the three CCTVs that are installed on the front and the rear of his house — a chawl in Vikhroli, a densely populated area in suburban Mumbai. The cameras told him that a group of men and women — some dressed in Mumbai police’s uniform and a few in civil clothes — had converged outside his house. Some of them were armed and few others with batons were aggressively banging at the door asking him to immediately let them in.

This was not the first time that the police had landed at his place at 5 am.

When the policemen discovered the CCTV cameras outside his house, they began hitting it with their batons, destroying one of them mounted right over the door. This action was captured by the adjacent CCTV camera. Shaikh, holed up in his house with his wife and two children, kept pleading with the police to stop destroying his property and simply show them an official notice.

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