CATEGORIES
ECovid-19 Lockdown: The Economy And The Virus
Life. It's life itself that is affected, profoundly so and almost at a genetic level. And that means at every other extended level of human experience. Emotional and psychological, to begin with, and from there to what we go out about doing with our daily lives. Earning our bread, trying to survive - or thrive.
From Valentine To Quarantine
Indian bourses tanked over 37% in 25 sessions amidst sharp jump in trading volume and turnover
Heartland Heartburn
Caught between aspirations of loyalists and new entrants, Shivraj Chouhan will have to walk the tightrope as he assumes charge as MP chief minister
Our Violating Society
A screed of horrific rapes; a litany of justice miscarried. More than the closure offered by executions, society needs an overhaul.
A Case in Point
Judicial independence needs a fresh look in the context of jurisprudence of checks and balances.
Viral Shots - Life In The Time Of Coronavirus
Life in the time of coronavirus, as seen by our photographer Tribhuvan Tiwari
Coronavirus - Goliath The Germ
Imagine the whole of humanity - indoors. Instead, butterflies fluttering across wide open roads in an Indian metropolis, blue skies over China, clear water and swarms of fish and swans back in Venice's canals! The new global mantra - stay at home - is having quite an unintended consequence. The world is seeing its arteries declogged after a long, long time, like a smoker who has just quit. But utopia will have to wait. The sense right now is of an impending apocalypse. It's sheer panic, and not love, that was making the world go round - or rather, stay still - on the Ides of March 2020. From Eiffel Tower to the Taj Mahal, from Euro2020 to the IPL, there was just one buzzphrase: 'flatten the curve'. The bio-tsunami breaking over our globalised landscape has emptied malls and pubs, hacked down the population density at bustling tech parks and divided humanity between conscientious self - quarantiners, manic hypochondriacs, and plain and simple maniacs who run away from isolation wards.
Stock Market Crash - What Next?
As the market bleeds, options are limited for the spooked investor
Top Gun Pandian
CM Naveen Patnaik’s most trusted aide calls the shots
Diary
“We are Indians, we can’t help ourselves,”
The Sleep Is Showing, Your Honour
Country’s apex judiciary is caught napping as the executive goes about curtailing civil liberties of dissenters and opponents
States Cry Halt
With 12 states opposing a proposed exercise to update the National Population Register (NPR), this could be the first time India’s decennial census exercise may face some disruption.
CHANGING GEARS
EV’s may be the flavour of the month, but, as the cover of this section suggests, the SUV onslaught is showing no signs of abating whatsoever.
SGT UNIVERSITY - Crossing bridges of success over the years
SGT University, Gurugram, considered one of the best private Universities in North India is spread over 70 acres of land and is surrounded by a serene lush green environment. Situated at Chandu Budhera on the outskirts of Gurugram, it is less than five kilometres from the Delhi border at Daurala.
Can a central law be a national law with so many states against it?
A septuagenarian, Captain Amarinder Singh helms one of the most stable Congress-led state governments today. Unlike other states where internecine power struggles perennially undermine or threaten incumbent chief ministers, Singh administers his state without much opposition. He has his share of detractors, but none have succeeded in measuring up to the CM who once served in the Sikh Regiment of the Indian Army. Having completed three years of his current term as CM, Singh is now firmly focused on the remaining two. He spoke to editor-in-chief Ruben Banerjee about the challenges that confront him and the Congress.
Tech-Tonic Shift In Times Of Corona
China’s massive technology network is joining forces with the state machinery in combating a killer epidemic that has no known cure, or vaccine
Curse Of The Corona
Disaster movies sometimes seem not so far-fetched after all. We have not been short of judgement day prophecies of various hues in recent times. But this can be the scariest morality tale of them all: a mystery virus threatening humankind. The reality is more banal in its causative chain, but fear of the unknown is very much its part --- and justly so. As the novel coronavirus explodes like clusterbombs across the plane — over 80 countries have been hit, with nearly one lakh infected -- where does India stand? It's a 'known unknown'. We only know that we do not know.
‘I'm not in the race for Bihar CM, nor will I lead any electoral front'
The AAP government’s recent nod to Delhi Police to go ahead with the prosecution of Kanhaiya Kumar in a 2016 sedition case has triggered a debate, bringing the youth leader back into the spotlight. The decision came only a day after the 33-year-old former president of the JNU students’ union addressed a big rally in Patna as part of his statewide campaign against CAA-NRC-NPR in poll-bound Bihar. In an exclusive interview with Giridhar Jha, Kanhaiya talks about the sedition case, his defeat from Begusarai in last year’s general elections, and whether he is ready to head an alternative front ahead of the next assembly polls in his home state. Excerpts:
WHISPERS ON WHITE NIGHTS
The irruption of visiting sportsmen in Gulmarg is but a brief interlude. Since last August, it has lain in snowy silence, to which it is fated to return.
Playing On Your TV: Girls Aloud
The youthful Indian women’s team that took the field in the T20 World Cup turned a new corner in their game: brash, clinical, exhilarating
YES, YOU ARE IN QUEUE
The crisis in Yes Bank had been apparent for years, but regulatory oversight was lacking
‘Himachalis are honest, tough… patriotism runs in people's veins'
Shimla is bitingly cold, but Jai Ram Thakur, 55, exudes the sort of personal warmth that defines a quintessential organisational man. Pitchforked to the chief minister’s chair in Himachal Pradesh after the BJP’s chosen CM-candidate lost the elections, Thakur has been at the helm and consequent limelight for little over two years. Over steaming hot coffee, he spoke to Editor-in-Chief Ruben Banerjee about his achievements, disappointments and all that he wishes to achieve in the remaining three years of his term.
Sarkar Unhappy With India As Seen From Abroad
Foreign media coverage of the recent riots in Delhi seems to have hurt the government more than the violence itself
Royalty Shift Ruffles The Middle Kingdom
Scindia’s apostasy is a warning: in a rudderless Congress seething with disaffection, more malcontents might follow him unless corrective measures are taken. Maybe it’s too late for that.
Moonwalk At Masked Ball
A well-washed world covers up, flinches from needless contact. Entire regions are quarantined, travel suspended. And the cases pile on, relentlessly....
Kunwar KAMUNIST
There is a reason Bihat-Masnadpur is still called ‘Little Moscow’, a throwback to the times when the USSR was a Communist beacon and this village a hotbed of the Left movement in Bihar. It is the birthplace of comrade Chandrashekhar Singh (1915-76), the torchbearer of Left ideology in this region and a popular CPI leader who put BihatMasnadpur on India’s political map. It is also home to Kanhaiya Kumar. The brash, tambourine-playing, azaadi-seeking young leader loved and reviled in equal measure depending on which side of the political spectrum one stands. An upholder of secularism and democratic traditions, they say. For others, an anti-national and a leader of the ‘tukde-tukde gang’ hell bent on breaking up the country (what he will gain by this, however, they won’t tell). An icon of hope; a symbol of anarchy. A towering leader in the making; an overhyped student activist. Kanhaiya Kumar is all that and more. And he is here to stay.
Hang Your Head In Shame
A 12-year-old girl is gangraped and murdered in Assam by nine juveniles. What’s fuelling the spurt in crime against women in the state?
The Socialite Moved On And Stayed On Top
Propaganda may not always match the achievements of Naveen’s two decades as CM, but the marathon itself is a lifetime award
Rising to the Challenge
NEHA ARORA 35, FOUNDER, PLANET ABLED
Tank Tracks On A Cleared Field
Faint hope flickers after the US-Taliban deal. But a Taliban offensive, with covert Pakistani help, bodes ill for India plans in Afghanistan.