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Money is in the journey
The mood is wanderlust after the long lockdown. But Covid still lurks. Will tourists hit the road again to revive our tourism-dependent economy?
Waiting From A Distance
Hotels and resorts accommodate fewer visitors, reduce the number of tables in restaurants, and disinfect rooms for 24-48 hours before they are re-allotted—welcome to the new normal
Till Messiah Comes
The EPS government has made a hash of the corona battle
Shunyata Under The Bodhi's shade
Hotels have reopened, but visitors stay away from the world’s holiest Buddhist site
Heaven Does Not Shut Down
From promoting local tourism to projecting Kerala as the ‘wellness destination’, the tourism sector is looking to reboot
Missing In Action
The pandemic may not be the real reason why Parliament is not in session
Must Our Hearts Break?
The horrific privations of families of fallen heroes are, thankfully, a thing of the past. While affirming the Indian Army’s great tradition of selfless duty and sacrifice, this is an anguished appeal to the political leadership to not cheaply throw away men’s lives and to the public to tend always to their morale.
Mine Your Own Business
Modi government’s push for self-sufficiency in coal revives age-old debate over the cost of development
The Crude Truth
A glut in oil production has seen prices hitting rock bottom. And the global crude war is getting interesting.
BORDER TROUBLE IN VALLEY VIEW
Tension on the China front haunts Ladakh even as the Valley witnesses a familiar spate of encounter killings
Smoke The Tso
As the difficult goal of status quo ante in Ladakh is being pursued, fresh diplomatic and military solutions to deal with China are aired. And the politicians squabble, pointlessly.
The Political Jugglenaut
Behind the first Rath Yatra without pilgrims in Puri is a nail-biting tale enmeshed in a legal tangle that puts the Naveen Patnaik government in poor light
Neighbour's ENEMY
India’s paternalistic attitude towards neighbouring countries generated resentment and created space for China. New Delhi must now shore up inner confidence, make up for past brashness and regain their trust.
Private Limited
States’ cooperation vital for success of revamped mining policy
A Wise Gardener
India is far from being isolated in the neighbourhood. But to push China back will need a symphony of strategic tasks.
Blood On The Barbed Wire
Named after Ladakhi explorer Ghulam Rasool Galwan, the Galwan river flows west from Aksai Chin to converge with the Shyok in Ladakh. It slices through high-altitude mountains and the peaks overlook the valleys and pass—especially a stretch of India’s 255-km Darbuk-Shyok-Daulat Beg Oldi road running close to Galwan valley.
Snip A Forked Tongue
The equal cost imposed on China for its escalation at Galwan should caution it against a further violation of the June 6 agreement. With matching military strength in the area, both sides must ensure peace.
Bihar Poll Theme: Fifteen Vs Fifteen
As Nitish replays old vinyl titled ‘RJD jungle raj’, Lalu’s son says— CM doesn’t have anything to show other than the Yadav family
Hot And Sour Asia Policy
China’s strategy is to keep alliances from building amongst its regional rivals, using the carrot and stick routine.
NO ONE'S GODSON
Sushant Singh’s suicide puts the spotlight on nepotism and the price outsiders pay to fit in Bollywood.
‘Hong Kong's youth are desperate. They no longer care about their lives.'
June 12 marks the first anniversary of major clashes between pro-democracy protestors and the police in Hong Kong after its government introduced a controversial extradition bill. It was later withdrawn in face of mounting opposition, but protests continue unabated. Evans Chan has traced the evolution of the city’s resistance from the 2014 Umbrella Movement to the leaderless protests of 2019 in his engaging documentary We Have Boots. He talks to Syed Saad Ahmed about the film and the struggle against Chinese authoritarianism.
Lotus Wilts in Loktak
Former CM ibobi Sigh of Congress (left) and CM N. Biren Singh, who leads the BJp alliance
Every Home A Studio Rasa
Driven by passion, enabled by technology, this is how Chennai’s musicians are serving concert-starved rasikas
‘My body is in great shape, tennis muscle memory runs deep'
To measure the contribution of the inimitable, and irreplaceable, Leander Paes to Indian tennis, one just has to look at the success percentage of his 30-year Davis Cup career: an astounding 72.65 per cent (singles/doubles, on all surfaces). Also, the 1996 Olympic bronze medallist holds the Davis Cup world record of most wins: 45 (77.58 per cent) in 58 ties played. Still, the ageless Paes, who turned 47 on June 17, is not averse to continuing, postCovid shutdown. While cleaning his Mumbai apartment during the lockdown, he spoke to Qaiser Mohammad Ali in a free-wheeling interview. Excerpts:
Change or Perish
The immediate need for infrastructure and a credible military ecosystem is all very well. But the PLA’s ability to fight a transformational, algorithm war—non-kinetic and non-contact—is the danger in the future.
Vaccine Race— The Candidates
The starting gun was sounded as far back as the weekend of January 11-12, when Chinese authorities released the full sequence of the COVID-19 genome.
Who ‘Created' Covid?
Was the Moon landing fake? Do reptiles rule us? Is Elvis alive? When conspiracy theories start proliferating like mutant viruses…
Did The Lockdown Work?
This one executive decision was deemed at first to be a no-brainer.
WHERE IS THE DATA?
So we have a bio-earthquake with shifting epicentres in Covid-19, still rumbling unpredictably over our demographic plates.
WHAT ARE VIRUSES?
A glimpse into virosphere—that mysterious cusp between life and non-life—will tell us they are part of us, within us, and wrote us into being