Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Punjab. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Punjab. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, June 03, 2015

The Inside Story Of Pakistani Pigeon Spy Arrested In India

Last week, Indian authorities “arrested” a pigeon on charges of spying for Pakistan. The bird was spotted by a teenage boy in an Indian village close to the border. Since it had a message written in Urdu on its feathers, the pigeon was detained by the police and X-rayed. While nothing suspicious turned up, the bird was reportedly registered as a “suspected spy” in police logs.

From Pakistan, here’s a caricature of what was truly a ridiculous episode of law enforcement. 

Last week, border tensions between two South Asian countries flared up once again as a Pakistani spy pigeon was apprehended in Indian territory. Police immediately sent the avian agent to a polyclinic.

Monday, September 23, 2013

'Sarhad Chaubara' At Border Provides 'Food For Thought'

By Jameel Naqvi / INN Live

Barely a kilometre-and-a-half from the international border in Punjab between neighbours India and Pakistan, a new complex by a young Indian entrepreneur is offering not only food but also the concept of peace. Sarhad, which means border, is the new frontier to highlight the cuisine and culture of the two countries. It's even come on Harvard's radar.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

WHEN 'ADAM BOMB' EXPLODED IN BANGALORE?

By M H Ahssan / Bangalore

Explosion of 'Adam Bomb' in Bangalore makes the crazy 'news hungry' people a jolt to understand.  Recently, Adam Gilcrist had hit a mere 162 runs in 10 matches - a record hardly suggestive of the explosive player he still is. But any doubts about that were dismissed with disdain on a fateful day for Royal Challengers Bangalore at home. Adam Gilchrist had finally come to the IPL party.

Having posted 175 on the board, Bangalore were reasonablly satisfied and felt even safer when old guard Zaheer Khan dismissed the in-form Shaun Marsh early. Azhar Mahmood was promoted, and what happened afterwards was a show started by Mahmood and brought to a winning end by Gilchrist.

Monday, August 03, 2015

Special Report: Did Mumbai Attacks Mastermind, Pak Terrorist Hafiz Saeed Plan 'Gurdaspur Terror Attack'?

After establishing the role of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) in the July 27 Gurdaspur terror attack, Indian intelligence agencies are trying to pinpoint the involvement of Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chief and 26/11 Mumbai attacks mastermind Hafiz Saeed.

The three terrorists killed in Dinanagar were speaking Punjabi when slain senior Punjab cop Baljit Singh had challenged them to come out in the open before they killed him. 

Thursday, June 11, 2009

World class academy set up in rural Punjab

By Kamesh Srinivasan

Indian tennis is a commercial venture these days with everyone riding on the success of Sania Mirza. Today, it is more a rich man’s game than ever before, as everything costs a lot, from getting a racquet strung to having an hour’s private training with a coach.

In such a scenario, it was quite heartening to note, as one drove through the lush green paddy fields of Punjab for the ITF men’s Futures tournament at Jassowal, 30 kilometres from Ludhiana, that somebody has actually spent a fortune, in the heart of a village in setting up a world class tennis academy so that the poor kids get a platform to play the game and hopefully excel at it.

There is no dearth of money in these parts of Punjab that boasts of more Mercedes Benz cars than anywhere else in the country. Yet, you need a big heart to set up a sporting infrastructure and provide quality coaching for nothing.

The academy, nicely spread over about three acres of land, has six synthetic courts, three clay courts apart from a gymnasium, play grounds and residential accommodation in the form of air-conditioned Swiss tents near the courts to full-fledged apartments nearby.

Five more synthetic courts are being laid out in an adjacent field, and plans are on to have a swimming pool and possibly set up an educational institution in collaboration with the Sacred Heart School, to facilitate the all-round development of the kids. Harvey Saran, the NRI businessman, who is running the academy has about 10 acres in the area to put his dream project in place, and has already spent about Rs. 10 crore.

The enthusiastic village kids reach at 4.30 a.m. even though they are called to assemble only at 5 and they are learning the game with sound basics.

“We had a coach from the Nick Bollettieri Academy for some time. We are getting two coaches from Canada soon. We have good Indian coaches also. It is common sense that you start well. The kids need to get the right start with sound basics so that they can become good players. We will also get good trainers. The kids are disciplined and work hard,” Harvey Saran said.

The coaches are well-paid and the kids are provided the best possible support. About 20 players and the director of coaching Gary O’ Brien have left for two junior tournaments in Ahmedabad and Hyderabad by flight, so that the players could gauge their growth in national level competition.

In fact, one of the tournaments was being cancelled for lack of funds, and the Academy had no hesitation in footing a part of the cost in reviving the tournament to everyone’s benefit.

“Initially, we were looking at kids in the 6 to 9 years age group, but now we are ready to take kids even three years of age, from the surrounding villages,” said Harvey, who is thrilled by the overwhelming response, as 300 kids report when 30 are required. “Whenever we are ready to take more kids for training, we make announcements in the two Gurudwaras nearby and the kids arrive in hundreds,” said the chief coach Sandeep Singh, who has been associated with the place for nearly two years.

Saturday, December 07, 2013

After Chennai Express, Rohit Shetty Plans 'Punjab Express'

By Niloufer Khan | Mumbai

Just after the success part of Chennai Express, Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan expressed his wish to work with the 100-crore director again. Now it seems like the SRK’s wish is about to come true. Rohit Shetty is planning a sequel to Chennai Express. 

If sources are to be believed, the sequel will be called Punjab Express and will start in mid 2014. Though the leading lady is yet to be finalized, sources say if all goes fine Deepika Padukone might be the first choice again.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

LUDHIANA - A MANCHESTER OF INDIA

By M H Ahssan

Global brands throng industrial town Ludhiana to get a pie of its huge consumer spending

Abustling industrial hub which takes pride in having the highest number of Mercedes Benz in the country and labelled as the ‘Manchester of India’, Ludhiana is hailed as a city that never sleep. With a plethora of malls, cafes and restaurants dotting the city, Ludhianvis, by and large, are entrepreneurial, fun loving, eager to flaunt their wealth and like to unwind at night in the city clubs over Scotch and a game of rummy.

With extravagant bungalows and largest number of vehicles in the country of every conceivable top-notch models, the industrial hub of north India represents one of the grandest success stories of Punjab. Of course money rules in this mega city and controls all aspects of life, including social hierarchy. Keen to show off their wealth even young children are choosy of making friends only upon knowing the economic background of their classmates and the possessions they have — whether it is a Merc or BMW or Skoda. Clubs such as the famous Satluj Club, Ludhiana Club, Model Town Club and Lodhi Club (and for the fairer sex, Lakshmi Ladies Club) are the best rocking hubs where the celebrations begin well past 9 in the evening on week-nights, and the Saturday Night Syndrome in the city makes it certain that the parties normally continue till the wee hours of the next morning.

Weddings in Ludhiana are now an ostentatious display of wealth and power and not merely solemn ceremonies. Decorations are a delight to watch with choicest flowers — be it orchids or tulips — imported from Singapore and Holland make marriage venues resplendent. Even invites for weddings are eye catching with card and sweets on a silver platter for the nouveau riche and for the gourmet mouth watering delicacies are in plenty. With incomes rising, the upward trend in spending is evidently visible in this city, which boasts of a population of of over 1.4 million people.

Education is now getting more attention as the youths are becoming more ambitious to reap the benefits of globalisation. With an urge to grow fast, young businessmen are focusing more on professionally managed set-ups rather than handling traditional business ventures. In tandem with the changing income patterns, there are the spas and health clubs to keep them remain fit and look younger.

While Ludhiana is known for bicycles, sewing machines, engineering goods, knitwear and hosiery industries, virtually the lavish lifestyles of its residents have made it one of the happening cities in Punjab. All new lifestyle products — be it the latest brand of Rado, Omega,Tag Haeur or Citizen watches, the Mont Blanc or Gucci sunglasses, the newest offering from the house of Polo Sports, Marks and Spencer or Hugo Boss — are concurrently available in the mega city.

Ludhiana’s industrial structure is built on three types of industries — bicycle, sewing machine and hosiery industries. Now the sewing machine industry has lost its sheen and remains as a token. Cycle industry was successful in developing other sub-sectors like machine tool, rubber industry, cotton-spinning industry, steel making and forging industry. Like wise, hosiery industry gave birth to sectors like spinning of yarn of various types and dying industry. The city which is home to known business houses such as Vardhman, Hero, Trident, Avon and Nahar also boasts of manufacturing generators, diesel engines, tyre and tubes, hand tools and many consumer goods.

Says P D Sharma, president, Apex Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Punjab): “Of about 1.15 crores cycles manufactured in the country annually, 90% production takes place in Ludhiana.” Hero Cycles Ltd has got the distinction of being the largest manufacturer of bicycles in the world. Its competitor Avon Cycles has also a unit in Ludhiana. About 500 working units are engaged in the cycle trade in the city although there are another 1,000 units working as a cottage industry. In Ludhiana, there are 43,321 registered small-scale units of all types and 154 medium and large units. Of this, about 70 units fall in the large category. The total investment in the small-scale sector is around Rs 1,265.18 crore and investment in medium and large sector is Rs 5,637.56 crore. Production in the smallscale sector is around Rs 4,000 crore and that of medium and large is Rs 15,000 crore annually.

Monday, July 11, 2016

Why Indian Army Needs To Abandon The Colonial Concept Of 'Martial Races'?

By SURJIT RANA | INNLIVE

It is time to reform recruitment to our armed forces and bring the values of the Constitution into this venerable institution.

In 2012, IS Yadav, a doctor from Haryana, filed a Public Interest Litigation in the Supreme Court, challenging the constitutionality of “caste based recruitment” to the Indian Army.

Tuesday, February 05, 2013

IAS, IPS Cadre Crunch Hits Governance

The severe shortage of IAS and IPS officers in states across India has begun to adversely impact governance everywhere. There’s a deficit of over 3000 IAS and IPS officers – about 30% -- in the country and that may continue for some more years. As of now, though, key seats are empty, officers are holding multiple assignments and police officers missing in troubled districts. It’s a wonder how official work is getting done, if at all, in large swathes of India. 
    
With fewer bureaucrats in place, many senior officers in a number of states are burdened with multiple responsibilities. For instance, “a junior IAS officer who is posted as director in one department in Jharkhand is also the secretary in another. Similarly, an IAS officer is posted in the secretariat and also has to take care of outdoor work which creates problems in the execution of work in offices,” said a source in Ranchi. The state, with an IAS cadre strength of 208, has only 114 currently. Of these 16 are on central deputation. 
    
Former Jharkhand DGP V D Ram, who had asked the Centre to return IPS officers on central deputation, added that the police face insurmountable problems due to shortage of officers. “At times we know that a particular officer is not capable enough to be posted as SP of a district, but due to shortage of IPS officers we have no option. Most of the time this deprives us of the cutting-edge that we need to maintain law and order,” said Ram. In a Naxal-affected state, that’s not good news. 
    
In MP, the shortage of police officers is probably affecting morale, too, over problems of getting leave. There are only 238 IPS officers against a strength of 291. “The shortage may look small but it’s a huge gap,” said Arvind Kumar, IG, administration, police headquarters. “The scarcity is generally at the level of SP and SSP and we don’t have a choice of officers to be posted in districts. A minimum of 10% of leave reserve is also required and this creates problems,” added a senior IPS officer. 
    
Such shortfall can lead to inefficiency and delays at work. Punjab chief secretary Rakesh Singh said it puts undue pressure on the rest of the serving officers and officials. “If you have too many portfolios with you, it gets difficult to devote as much time as you would like to in order to do full justice to each subject,” he said. The sanctioned cadre strength for Punjab is 221 IAS and 172 IPS officers. 
    
As of now, the state has 180 IAS and 142 IPS officers. Most of the IAS officers are holding multiple charges and shuttling between different offices to keep appointments. Anirudh Tewari is secretary in three departments - power, personnel and non-conventional energy. 
    
In the Chandigarh UT administration, too, certain posts like that of finance secretary are saddled with 10-12 departments. Since the UT gets officers on deputation from Punjab and Haryana and the entire process of getting a new officer’s name cleared takes months, the functioning of the administration suffers. 
    
Likewise, in Haryana, governance is now largely dependent on state cadres of civil and police officers as it has just 163 IAS officers – with 20 on deputation to the Centre – and 102 IPS officers against the sanctioned strength of 205 IAS and 137 IPS officers. The state’s additional chief secretary, home, Samir Mathur, admitted the shortage of IPS officer, adding, “We have very efficient senior officers of state cadres who have been posted as additional SP in districts as well as in the field.” 
    
With increase in fresh intake of IAS/IPS officers a distant prospect, one way forward for the states could be former Jharkhand chief secretary AK Singh’s suggestion that regular appointments of junior officers be made through the state public service commissions, so that they get timely promotions.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Delhi, Bengal Debacle: Is Modi's Novelty Factor Fading Out

Delhi is gone, West Bengal is going. Bihar looks uncertain, Punjab could be next. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s juggernaut has come to a halt, Amit Shah’s invincible army is staring at a year of tough battles and, perhaps, a few humiliating losses. The ground beneath BJP has started moving.

What Delhi thought a few months ago, Bengal thought earlier this week when its voters discarded the BJP in the civic polls, leaving its score-sheet blank.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

SPECIAL REPORT: INDIA'S SELF-INFLICTED WATER CRISIS

By Upender Dikshit / Delhi

Ultimately, a solution to the country’s water management problems lies in creating fragmented water markets regulated at the level of various states.

It is not unusual for the monsoon to play truant in one part of India or the other every year. The country’s water situation is so precarious that even a normal monsoon, spread unevenly, creates drought-like conditions in some part of the country. Very often the scarcity of water spills over into the following year. Some years ago, it was the Bundelkhand in Uttar Pradesh that was starved for water; this year, the Marathwada region of Maharashtra is confronting an acute water scarcity.

Thursday, January 08, 2015

Conjugal Visit In Indian Jails: Prisoners Wary Of Big Bro

Separation from family plays a huge part in the punishment of criminals. But those arguing for human rights feel that prisoners too should have the right to maintain familial bonds even as they undergo rigorous punishment. 

In a step towards the recognition of such rights, Punjab prison authorities have decided to allow inmates to have conjugal visits from their legal spouses. The prisoners will get to spend a few days every month with their wives and they will have a room to themselves inside the prison premises.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

The Spirit Of India: Sikhs And Hindus In A Punjab Village Joined Hands To Build A Mosque Ahead Of Ramzan

In a shining instance of communal harmony and the spirit of brotherhood, members of the Sikh and Hindu communities came together to build a mosque for their Muslim brethren in a village in Punjab.

A report mentioned that in the village of Ghalib Ran Singh Waal, which is dominated by Sikhs and Hindus, a mosque was inaugurated just as the month of Ramzan is going to begin. Earlier, the Muslim community had to visit nearby villages for their namaaz
.
The report quoted Liaqat Ali, a resident of the village, as saying that their long cherished demand has been fulfilled and that the beautiful Hazrat Abu Bakar mosque is an Eid gift for them.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

High-Profile Clashes Bring High Drama In LS Elections 2014

By Likha Veer | INNLIVE

MY INDIA, MY VOTE With the two major political parties coming out with their list of candidates for the Lok Sabha polls, the heat is really on. And like the previous years, there are some mouthwatering clashes which are going to spice up this poll season.

In the Capital, former Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy - now a BJP leader - and Congress general secretary Ajay Maken could go head to head in the prestigious New Delhi constituency, despite the fact that both parties are yet to announce the name of the candidates.

While Maken has wasted no time in having top athletes like Olympic medal winning boxers Mary Kom and Vijender Singh champion his cause, Swamy - like most BJP candidates - is basking in Modi's glory and banking on issues like price rise and corruption.

Monday, May 06, 2013

'EXPOSE REVEALS BANKS, INSURANCE NEXUS'

INN News Desk

Cobrapost alleges LIC facilitated money laundering, also alleges nexus between banks and insurance companieS.

Cobrapost has accused 23 private and public financial institutions of aiding money laundering. Life Insurance Corporation, State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank, Indian Bank, IDBI Bank, Yes Bank, Federal Bank, Reliance Capital, Birla Sunlife are among the few that have been named.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Colours, Pride, Fervour Marks Indian Republic Day In India

By Likha Veer | INN Live

The 65th Republic Day was celebrated on Sunday across the country amid tight security and hoisting of the National Tricolour in different states.

West Bengal: In Kolkata Governor M K Narayanan presided over the marchpast of armed and police forces. Colourful parade  and procession with decorated tableaux portraying the state’s culture and heritage were highlights of the programme, which was attended by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

Assam: Assam Governor Janaki Ballav Patnaik today appealed the underground militant groups to abjure violence and come to the discussion table to solve the issues for an overall development of the state. Hoisting the National Flag on the 65th Republic Day here, Patnaik also condemned the recent incidents of violence in many districts across the state.  Besides, various initiatives were started under the Multi Sectoral Development Plan in areas like agriculture, cottage industry, drinking water and education to uplift the minority communities.

Thursday, August 04, 2016

The Big Expose: RSS Funded 'Operation Shuddhikaran'

By NEWS KING | INNLIVE

Although it did not make headlines, 31 poor tribal girls, all minors, from Assam brought to Delhi on June 11 last year have ended up in RSS-run schools in Gujarat and Punjab, as INNLIVE finds, which is part of a well-orchestrated conversion programme targeting children from poor minority communities to initiate them into Hinduism at a young age. Given the resources and reach the RSS and its sister organizations command, what INNLIVE investigation reveals may just be the tip of the iceberg.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Complexity and contradiction in urban India

By M H Ahssan

A strange revolution is happening across the face of India that promises to change the way the country comes across to its own citizens and visitors. This revolution promises to transform India's cities into the new growth engines of Asia, if not the world.

Just as an example, the state of Punjab in north India is one of the most prosperous in the country, but even here the plans for its cities are nothing if not staggering in their scope. The face of Parkash Singh Badal, chief minister of Punjab, regularly appears in newspapers as he launches one new expressway after another or announces new industrial and commercial zones.

Similar stories of urban vitality continue to defy the recent economic slowdown. Near Mumbai, India's financial hub, the residents of Matheran, a hill station near the metropolis, recently asked for a train link to their town. This would have seemed an outrageous request a few years ago, but now the state government readily accedes to giving it serious thought, and approving a whole new train line with startling rapidity.

The hinterland is not far behind major cities. For previously neglected towns like Indore, Bhopal and Raipur, new airport terminals promise better connectivity to the rest of India, and by extension, to the world. Once again, the terminals are inaugurated by prominent politicians and public figures.

Whether these are election stunts or new realities, the fact is that India's cities are changing rapidly, fueled by foreign and domestic investment and a middle class hungry for modern facilities, energy and living room. But where does this hunger for expansion come from? At least part of the answers must lie in India's colonial past, and its drive to modernity in the post-colonial era.

There have been few Asian nations whose architecture has not been touched by the West, and by modernity. This in spite of the best efforts by many Asian nations to resist Western culture, and to provide alternate cultures that offer other answers to the cultural hegemony of the Western world.

In Turkey, for example, modernity and Europeanization is tinged with a very Turkish version of the meanings of these concepts, efforts that have slowed Turkey's integration into Europe. In China, modernity has meant enthusiastically joining the space race, and the race for military parity with the West.

In India, where colonialism has left many legacies, not all of which are negative, the nation's relations with the West are a curious mix of sympathy and antipathy, of cooperation and disobedience, of moves towards independence and happy coexistence. Much of this ambiguity is on display in India's urban centers, as new expressways and high-rise buildings mingle with slums, red tape and incredible poverty.

It may be worthwhile to glance at the 20th century to uncover India's fascination with bigger and better cities. In 1930, the capital of the British Raj, built at Delhi, symbolized the British Empire at its peak, with order, discipline and lavish sums of money coming together to build a ceremonial, administrative and judicial capital city.

British New Delhi was a monument to the colonial world, and to colonial Asia, symbolic of the West's hegemony over Asia: from Turkey to the Philippines, the British, French, Dutch and Americans ruled over nearly half the surface of the world. For the Europeans especially, their overseas empires meant enormous markets, sources of labor and military supplies, and a strategic reserve from which to augment their own physical resources.

Much of this world order changed after World War II, as war reparations and anti-colonial movements forced colonial powers from their previous dominions. For some, this parting was peaceful, and for others, bloodily violent. The end of colonialism was a monumental event, one that sought parallels in politics, the arts and culture.

For many previously colonial nations, architecture is a powerful expression of the will to be independent. After colonialism, an appropriate vocabulary for an independent architecture became the buzzword. From town planning to individual monuments, independent nations sought to use these new projects to create independence myths, that still endure today. But after British New Delhi, it was clear that great power status was at least in part achieved through the grand and the monumental, an urban center that set out a vision for empire.

Much of New Delhi's monumentality was transferred to the new capital for the Punjab in post-colonial India. Designed by a French-Swiss architect and town planner, Le Corbusier, Chandigarh is a curious mix of rational Beaux-Arts planning, the monumental building, wide tree-lined avenues, and sprawling residential neighborhoods. A vocabulary for an "Indian" architecture was sought in its low-cost housing using local materials.

While Chandigarh is lauded for being clean and green, it came in for criticism for its lack of future direction, an inability to provide a "vision" for Indian architecture beyond combating narrow streets and dank sanitation. "Chandigarh hits you on the head and makes you think," remarked Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first prime minister, but many might conclude that it makes you think of the West, and not necessarily of "Indian" architecture.

Still, Chandigarh has spawned many look-alikes in north India, its plan being easy to replicate and its planning principles understood and respected for their clarity and coherence. The city is criticized for increasing social stratification, and it is from this that other experiments in city planning have sprung up from India's next generation of architects.

At a more utopian level, the town of Auroville in south India has been a mystical answer to the question of Indian architecture. Posing as a city that welcomes all, Auroville has a master plan that resembles a revolving galaxy, and a concept that stems from Sri Aurobindo Ghosh's yogic conceptions of reality. Auroville has the gold-plated Matri Mandir, or Mother's Temple, at its core, and utopian communities that produce food, artifacts and export items from local resources string out from the center.

There are other towns in India that result from similar planning experiments. Jamshedpur, Gandhinagar and Bhubhaneswar also result from post-colonial urban planning schemes that sought to change society through architecture. Whether they have succeeded in doing so is debatable, but what is clear is that the majority of India's cities still suffer from a lack of planning, and grapple with providing basic services to the large percentage of their population that remains desperately poor.

If India's big cities are the theater for dollar dreams, there is another silent war being fought: that against poverty and disease, a war that is well chronicled in recent Hollywood oeuvres such as Slumdog Millionaire. This war is being fought along several fronts: governmental, as well as myriad non-governmental organizations that attempt to bring relief and succor to India's poor through education, sanitation and mass housing schemes.

The way forward for India's cities is also being debated at a professional level: at meetings of architects and urban planners who struggle to resolve multi-million dollar schemes with the reality and social responsibility of making them socially relevant.

It is thus in India's new generation of architects that the debate for what constitutes an "Indian" architecture is being contested. Is an original architecture possible in India at all? Some conclusions can be drawn from the state of architecture in India today. There is corporate architecture: the architecture of developers, retailers and the big corporation. There is architecture of the state: memorials, expressways, flyovers and monumental construction. Finally, there is architecture for the underprivileged: mass housing schemes, rural and urban poor projects, community architecture and so on.

Taken together these three signify in many ways the India of the 21st century: where big business and powerful state and social concerns vie for political and economic gains. Cities are big business, but they are also significant vote catchers.

There is yet another architecture that is becoming increasingly popular and profitable in modern India, and that is the architecture of India's heritage. As the recent attacks in Mumbai have shown, heritage buildings and landmarks are especially prone to vandalism at the global scale, and in the modern age have become international targets. Heritage architects and consultants in India are not slow to take note of, and express concern at, the ways globalization has affected India's rich heritage.

Added to renewed concerns for heritage is the race to be inscribed on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization World Heritage map, a status that brings prestige to the city or monument that achieves this complex nomination. While the city of Chandigarh's nomination is almost complete, Amritsar in Punjab and Auroville in south India are also sending out feelers to have their historic centers inscribed on the World Heritage list.

This list is not the only game in town: India's own body for art and cultural heritage, or INTACH, has made impressive moves to document and conserve the nation's built and intangible heritage.

Beneath the conflicts of which vision of urbanism to choose for the future lies a question that India is really asking itself: how to reconcile the outward trappings of modernism and the West - tall buildings and state-of-the-art facilities, with the needs of its huge middle class, and that of its desperately poor. Reconciling these three imperatives with legacies of a colonial past is not going to be easy.

But then, India has always been a land of glorious opposites and famous contradictions, and the 21st century promises many more.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Eat Your Way With These 14 Varieties Of Indian Mangoes

It’s that time of year when everything is bathed in a warm, fuzzy, honey glow and there’s a sweet fragrance in the air. That might be partly due to summer setting in across India but it’s also because the best (and India’s national) fruit is making the rounds. 

For most Indians, summer is synonymous with mangoes; climbing trees to pluck those sunshine-coloured fruits or watching our grannies prepare mango pickles for the year. Mangoes are a habit that many of us find hard to give up.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

That Part Of Indo-Pak Border Act With 'Beer & Guns' Of Joy

I couldn’t have imagined that the first time I would see someone in Pakistan drinking openly in public it would be in the Bahawalpur desert. 

Yet, there it was. The man was young, wearing a red shalwar kameez, with an unmistakable green Murree Brewery beer can. He caught me staring and offered me one, and I graciously accepted, still dumbfounded. 

There were whiffs of narcotics too, but the strong wind blew them away intermittently. We were stationed at a particularly sharp corner along with hundreds of spectators on the second day of the 10th Cholistan Desert Jeep Rally, watching massive 4×4’s struggle with the treacherous sand as they came in to the turn.