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WE WERE THERE EVERYWHERE
Indians fought on every front in World War II —the deserts of North Africa, the plains of Europe, the isles in the Pacific, the plantations of Malaya, the jungles of Burma, and finally the hills of Imphal and Kohima. Their valour and resilience helped the Allies win some of the fiercest battles of the war. THE WEEK looks at India’s world war—a story that is now all but forgotten
Theatres of war
A snapshot of the major battles that the Indian Army fought
On a temple's trail
These young Telugu men went hunting for a long-lost temple during the lockdown
We will avoid the politics of ‘opposing'
INTERVIEW: Hardik Patel working president, Gujarat Congress
The remembrance
A multimedia installation will spotlight the forgotten history of Indian soldiers in World War II
BROTHERS FOR LIFE
Mukesh Chhabra on making his directorial debut with Dil Bechara and his bond with its lead actor, Sushant Singh Rajput
For the country, against the crown
The INA thirsted for sacrifice but Japanese officers distrusted the prisoner-turned soldiers
Birth of a nation
How World War II started a chain reaction that resulted in India’s independence
BATTLE FOR GUAYAQUIL
How the woman mayor of Ecuador’s biggest city beat back the pandemic
Too Early To Announce Covaxin Launch Date
Very informed person Dr Krishna Ella chairman and managing director of Bharat Biotech
Thorny throne
With Scindia gaining ground and BJP loyalists upset at being overlooked, Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s fourth term as chief minister could be his toughest
THE PRESIDENTIAL PUZZLE
Pulitzer-winning author Mary Jordan on how she decoded the confounding first lady of the United States
Warrior QUEEN
What makes Charlize Theron invulnerable as an action hero is her vulnerability
Good cop, bad cop
Are the two bodies probing the police version of the Vikas Dubey encounter set up to fail?
Golden opportunity?
As the gold-smuggling case gets murkier, opposition parties in Kerala target Pinarayi Vijayan’s throne
Departure lounge
Pilot-Gehlot tussle is an all too familiar story in the Congress
Expensive bargain
With buffer zones cutting deep into Indian territory, China enjoys the upper hand in negotiations for border disengagement
Degrees of change
In the age of online courses and webinars, the chalkand-talk format must reform itself
Capital punishment
The custodial death of the father-son duo in Sathankulam has brought to the fore flaws within the home department
Bothering Heights
In Ladakh, India looks at an operational window between August and October in case disengagement plans with China fail
Besieged And Vulnerable
The unrelenting Covid-19 situation coupled with the monsoon could be too much to handle for Maharashtra’s strained health infrastructure
The August 15 Deadline Is A Gimmick
Professor Partho Sarothi Ray, a molecular biologist and associate professor at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Kolkata, is among the several medical professionals the WHO is consulting for the management of Covid-19. In an interview with THE WEEK, Ray talks about the lockdown, unlocking and why India has botched the transition. Excerpts:
WAR BY OTHER MEANS
BEING FREED OF AN EXPENSIVE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN INVOLVING CONSTANT TRAVEL BECAUSE OF COVID-19, JOE BIDEN, WITH HIS PALPABLE EMPATHY, WILL BE A TOUGH OPPONENT FOR DONALD TRUMP
Imperfect prescription
Experts question the efficacy of measures like home quarantine and argue that blindly following WHO guidelines will continue to drive up the number of Covid deaths in India
IN JOE, WE TRUST
Biden enjoys a clear edge in the opinion polls. But to win in November, he needs to further step up his campaign and tackle Trump head-on
Return game
Will Sasikala walk out of prison early and muddy the political waters of Tamil Nadu?
At sea
Families and friends of the two fishermen allegedly killed by Italian marines feel let down by the international tribunal’s verdict
KEEPING THE HOUSE
Donald Trump is badly bruised by the protests and the pandemic, but trust him to fight hard and dirty to stay on as president
All that glitters
A gold-smuggling case takes the shine off the Kerala government’s image
Shah's showtime
By being closely involved in Covid-19 relief measures in Delhi, Amit Shah is taking a swipe at the Kejriwal government