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The Big Battle Of Perception
As Uttar Pradesh prepares itself for the assembly polls next year, it will be down to optics. And, the government is going all out to change the way people view the state, harping on its development for all agenda. But will it be enough? THE WEEK takes a long, hard look at the four years of the Yogi Adityanath government
We Must Learn To Respect Water
When Prime Minister Narendra Modi took over the reins of the country in 2014, one of his first big plans was to clean the Ganga, for which he even created a new ministry.
Wild and dirty
A new Instagram photo project highlights the filth in which our wild animals are forced to live
New STI policy will put India among top three scientific superpowers
ASHUTOSH SHARMA, WHO is secretary to the Government of India, heading the department of science and technology, believes that India requires a robust science, technology and innovation (STI) ecosystem since it is an important enabler of economic growth, social welfare and better livelihood.
Targeted strike
With a strategic alliance and a smart manifesto, AMMK leader T.T.V. Dhinakaran could influence the results in more than 60 constituencies
We doubled UP's per capita income, made it India's second-largest economy
Yogi Adityanath was a five-time member of Parliament before he became chief minister of Uttar Pradesh—a crowning that came as a surprise to many in his own party. On March 19, 2021, exactly four years after he took oath, he spoke to THE WEEK about his government’s journey. Excerpts from an exclusive interview:
THOUGHT EXPERIMENTS
Raghava K.K. seeks to spark conversations on art and democratise it through his new project on social media
Reaping the rage
In Singur, the tide of public anger has turned against the Trinamool
Picture imperfect
Kamal Haasan is unlikely to become kingmaker in the assembly polls, but he could play spoiler in many constituencies
Fired up
The shooting World Cup in Delhi brought out the fierce competition among Indian shooters for Tokyo slots
P.V. Sindhu - Gearing Up For Tokyo
Heading into the Olympics, P.V. Sindhu is working harder than ever on court; offit, she is trying to keep interpersonal friction at bay
Sabarimala, The Sequel
The Congress and the BJP rekindle the Sabarimala issue, push the ruling LDF onto the back foot
Return Of The Native
Five years ago, Sarbananda Sonowal rose to power invoking Assamese identity. As the state goes to the polls once again, he faces the difficult task of redefining that identity in the light of the controversial new citizenship act. Also, a poll victory is no guarantee of getting back the chief minister’s chair
BJP's Brand Of Hinduism Is Like Chinese Catfish— Alien And Dangerous To Assam
Q.How is the Congress campaign different from last time?
Shadowy police
The Mumbai Police controversy highlights the need for urgent reform to free the uniformed forces from political influence
Youth icon
Udhayanidhi Stalin’s meteoric rise has put him in a strong position within a resurgent DMK
Congress and AIUDF favour foreign infiltrators
Q.Do you look at these elections differently from the previous one?
Strong on paper
Banking on strong alliance partners, the Congress is facing the assembly polls with confidence
Differential taxation is a stumbling block in making India an export hub
SKODA AUTO’S NEW mid-size SUV, Kushaq, made an international debut in India on March 18. Kushaq means king in Sanskrit. Volkswagen AG, Skoda’s parent company, is the world’s second-largest carmaker, but anything but a king in India. The group’s market share is below 2 per cent, despite selling cars in India for two decades. To recharge Indian operations, Volkswagen unveiled the India 2.0 project in 2018, with plans to bring in a brand-new product portfolio built on the localised MQBA0-IN platform. The group hopes to sell one lakh cars a year by 2025 in India and Kushaq is the first product under this project.
UNEASY ENCOUNTERS
A turf war exposes the rot in the police and the unholy nexus with politicians
Alliance arithmetic
The DMK has managed to keep its allies from 2019 together without ceding too much ground
The Name Is Khan
Meet the Kashmiri businessman who took it upon himself to give a proper burial to Covid-19 victims
Superhumans In The streets
Hyderabad's sanitation workers played multiple roles during the pandemic
India's Covid Heroes
For every Covid-19 warrior who went to battle, there was a battalion of heroes who brought succour to all and solution to pandemic-induced problems
We delivered with limited infrastructure
We delivered with limited infrastructure
We Indians realised our capabilities
The pandemic year was a time when Indian institutions and laboratories came to the fore, coming up with indigenous solutions, whether it was for developing testing kits or personal protective equipment, understanding the novel virus or creating surveillance mechanisms.
Home, help
Men and boys in Uttar Pradesh become gender equality champions to tackle rising cases of domestic violence
Veteran's battle
B.S. Yediyurappa's leadership shone through even as he fought the virus himself
Being human
A mob prevented the burial of his boss. But, Dr Pradeep Kumar fought back and proved that compassion is not heroism, but a prerequisite for being called human
For the people
How the election machinery reinvented itself ahead of the Bihar assembly polls in 2020