Loading...
 
Skip to main content

View Articles

List Articles

MADHYA PRADESH CONGRESS GETS BATTLE READY FOR 2023 ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS

MASSIVE CAMPAIGN PLANNED AGAINST BJP BY BROADBASED COMMITTEE OF PCC
L S Herdenia - 2022-04-09 10:50
BHOPAL: As a part of preparation for the 2023 Vidhan Sabha elections, Madhya Pradesh Congress President and Leader of Opposition Kamal Nath has constituted a broad based committee of more than forty members drawn from various factions of the state Congress.

SUPREME COURT REBUKING CENTRAL AGENCIES FOR THEIR STAND ON BAIL IS WELCOME

INVESTIGATION BODIES HAVE THE HABIT OF PUTTING ALL ACCUSED BEHIND BARS
Sushil Kutty - 2022-04-09 10:47
India’s well-lit prisons are home to lakhs of under-trials languishing in them for years on end because the courts of the land have no time to spare for the mountains of cases they are saddled with. And because investigating agencies challenge all bail requests, as also all bail orders. To the defence lawyers and the families of the accused, it is frustrating, to say the least, but to the under-trials, it is more days and nights in the stifling jail conditions.

INDIA’S BOOSTER DOSE POLICY FROM APRIL 10 IS ANTI-POOR

POOR BELOW 60 WITH LESS IMMUNITY WILL SUFFER MOST
Dr. Gyan Pathak - 2022-04-09 10:43
India’s booster dose policy announced on April 8 by Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare is clearly anti-poor, since de facto they cannot get vaccinated with booster doses against COVID-19, though theoretically they are also eligible to have it at private vaccination centres along with any adult aged 18 years or above.

RBI IS TAKING HIGHER INFLATIONARY PRESSURES ON INDIAN ECONOMY SERIOUSLY

POLICIES HAVE TO BE FINETUNED TO PROTECT THE MOST VULNERABLE SECTIONS
Anjan Roy - 2022-04-09 10:40
The Reserve Bank of India sees the prospects of higher inflation in the current year against the background of a volatile global economic situation.

JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE: AN AREA WHERE PAKISTAN ENJOYS AN EDGE

IMRAN KHAN JOINS A LONG LIST OF RULERS OUSTED BY JUDICIARY
K Raveendran - 2022-04-09 10:36
The Pakistan Supreme Court has virtually shown the door to another prime minister. Apparently, it might take longer for Imran Khan’s fate to be decided for good, but the action of a five-member bench of Pakistan’s apex court to strike down the controversial decision of deputy speaker of the national assembly to reject the opposition’s no-trust motion against Imran Khan’s premiership shows yet again that the Pak judiciary can assert itself to be independent if it elects to do so at the most critical time.

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN JULY NEXT WILL TEST OPPOSITION STRENGTH AND UNITY

NARENDRA MODI WILL PICK HIS CANDIDATE TAKING 2024 LOK SABHA POLLS IN VIEW
Harihar Swarup - 2022-04-09 10:33
In July 2002, APJ Abdul Kalam became choice for President as the ruling Atal Behari Vajpayee-led National Democratic Alliance did not have enough votes to get anyone from its ideological family elected. Fifteen years later, the NDA-led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi was much better placed yet it tried for a consensus pick.
SPORTS

INDIA STUNS WORLD CHAMPION THE NETHERLANDS 2-1 IN WOMEN HOCKEY PRO LEAGUE

Harpal Singh Bedi - 2022-04-08 17:49
New Delhi: Playing with a clinical precision India stunned Netherlands 2-1 recording their first win against the defending champions in over a decade in the Women Hockey Pro League at the Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneswar, on Friday.

CENTRE’S NEW EXAMINATION SYSTEM IS NOT REFORM BUT ELITE CENTRED

AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR UNDERPRIVILEGED IN HIGHER EDUCATION IS NEEDED
Sanjay Kumar - 2022-04-08 12:09
From this academic session, all undergraduate admissions to central universities will be based on a single test, the Central University Entrance Test, rather than marks obtained in the school leaving board examinations. The University Grants Commission, the primary funding agency for central universities, announced the change barely three months before university admissions, while board examinations were on. To go by what the media reported, the UGC chairman has called the change “student friendly”, and said it will provide a “level playing field” to students writing a variety of state and central board examinations. Both arguments are hackneyed, and frankly, the institution with the mandate to regulate higher education was expected to give more cogent reasoning.