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WHO DECIDES COVID POLICY?
The pandemic has not been kind to Delhi. The state government, no stranger to pugilist moves in politics, is locked in a grim battle. Even since the lockdown was eased, horror stories have been escaping out of city hospitals like ghouls out to torment the populace. The city’s Covid graph is soaring; overloaded hospitals are turning away patients, letting them die without proper medical care. But what’s a crisis if not an opportunity for some extra lashings of mayhem?
WHAT IS THE PEAK?
Whe the air is vacuum-cleaned of real information, what fills it is the elements of empty anticipation. Rumour, speculation, fear…all these form a suspended particulate matter that we then breathe in. The latest talk doing the rounds was that India would duck back into hibernation—into a strict lockdown—by the middle of June or so. Since Indians are familiar with the phenomenon of a late-evening broadcast fundamentally altering their realities, appending a ‘could be’ or ‘maybe’ on that rumour is pointless. But the reason why the situation spawns such speculation is clear.
DOES INDIA (NOT) HAVE A MILDER EPIDEMIC?
This is a question that has mutated right in front of our eyes, almost as if to mock us.
PLASMA THERAPY SILVER BULLET OR NOT?
Leave, for a moment, those telescopic shots—those world maps filled with red dots, the Covid Tracker popups spinning and dancing on your screen.
OUR LIVE-IN VIRUS
Corona has settled over this landmass like a moving cryptic crossword. How do we read its clues?
Small Scale, Mega Mess
The government needs to take steps beyond the relief package for the revival of the pandemic-battered MSME sector
Indian FMCG Sector
Which way will you tilt during COVID times? Hope or Fear!
Treating A Tunnel Vision
The China-India border standoff can indeed be resolved through diplomacy. But unless the LAC is clarified beyond dispute, it would remain hostage to competing perceptions and growing Chinese intransigence.
Stand to: A Principled Command
China’s aggression is born of insecurities about India’s foreign policy and its stand on issues of mutual interest. India must make no compromise in reverting to status quo positions at LAC.
SWADESHI SWAGGER
It’s an opportunity, yes, but keeping China out is also fraught with risk in the post-COVID era
“Indian sectors must serve both domestic and global demand”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s call for self-reliance along with Union minister Nitin Gadkari’s statement about taking advantage of foreign investors leaving China has triggered a discussion about India emerging as a manufacturing superpower, which can rival China eventually. In an exclusive interview to Saibal Dasgupta and Jyotika Sood, NITIAayog CEO Amitabh Kant talks about India’s preparedness, ambition and capabilities. Edited excerpts:
Birds Of Prey Keep Us Healthy
Where Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta—he of the heated outburst against all critics of the government—is coming from
NO HAO
(SAY NAMASTE)
Bend With The Wind
The coronavirus runs wild, migrant crisis deepens, a cyclone blows in, BJP calls him a failure—Uddhav Thackeray rallies allies, steers shaky ship
A Pincer in the Making
Tensions with China may complicate India’s efforts to integrate Kashmir, but it’s too early to predict the full picture.
Driest Land, Deepest Sea
Migrant workers who returned to Hamirpur’s Jhalokhar village oscillate between hope and disillusionment. There’s little work at home, and the cities have let them down badly.
What The Otter Knows About The Cyclone
The Sunderbans is safe—as is the tiger. Nature has no intention to create disharmony within itself
Cycle Ride To Uncertainty
He cycled 1,700 km from his workplace to a home with no prospects
Silence of the Malls
Northeasterners who worked in Chennai’s malls and parlours are waiting to go back home
Patrol Bombs
Border tensions spike suddenly along the LAC, as sections in India join others in criticising China’s handling of COVID-19. Yet the two have enough reasons to resolve all issues peacefully.
Life's A Sand Bar
The pressing reasons why Ashadul is raring to get back to Bangalore
HOME BITTER HOME
A viral photo of a weeping man put the spotlight on his dire circumstances. But by then, it was too late.
AT WORLD'S END
How do you trace the outlines of pain on a gigantic, subcontinental scale…a cartography of pain, if you like? Take as your sketching ink some extremes of the human condition. As it happens, it’s available in plenty in the real world. The basic facts will do. On May 23, a 48-year-old migrant labourer died on the Shramik Express—minutes before the train from Mumbai pulled into the last station, Varanasi. A fabled last station, civilisationally. But why did Jokhan Yadav die? First, there was the heat. Then, he had gone without food or water for over 60 hours, as he moved over the northern Indian plains, like lakhs of others, trying to reach his hometown Jaunpur. No food or water was served on the train during the entire journey. And stick-wielding GRP personnel wouldn’t let anybody get down from the train. It thus became, in a perversion of how it was intended, a moving concentration camp.
As He Lay Dying
Amrit and Saiyub’s bond of friendship, forged in childhood, would break cruelly on a hot, dusty highway. This is their story.
Tour De Force
Stranded in Vishakhapatnam, the five friends wanted to go home. Their bicycle journey up the coast to Bengal displayed endurance and willpower.
Say It Again, The Bat Is A Lonely Hunter
How brothers Sarfaraz and Musheer fought darkness and came around to be regarded among Indian cricket’s brightest talents
‘Vocal-for-local will stop unfair Chinese dumping of goods'
Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM), an affiliate of the RSS, is gung-ho over Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s call for an Atmanirbhar Bharat as part of the post-pandemic economic revival. SJM national co-convenor Ashwani Mahajan tells Bhavna Vij-Aurora that it is a vindication of the organisation’s 30-year-long struggle, and it is time to repose trust in indigenous talent, resources and knowledge.
Small Screen, Big Locha
As movies release directly on streaming platforms during the lockdown, theatre owners seethe and threaten ‘retributive’ measures
Smoke On The Horizon
Anti-Muslim sentiment related to the COVID-19 outbreak was at root of the recent communal flare-ups in Bengal
Meet the Teams and Zoom Ahead
On a covided planet, almost everyone is using a virtual platform to socialise, work from home, or ‘see’ a doctor