September 18 Issue




COVER
 

Above Pain and Glory
The Olympic Games are not just about victory. They are about the tragedy, the struggle and the humanity of ordinary people...

Sydney Waits...
Top Stars To Watch
The Gift Of Gold

 
STATES
 

Battle For Bengal
As political violence engulfs the state, Jyoti Basu finds Mamata Banerjee's offensive and the threat of Central intervention serious enough to reconsider his decision to bow out as chief minister after 23 years.

 
STATES
 

Lodged In A Mess
This time Jayalalitha is charged with funding the purchase of two hotels in England.

 
Columns
 

Fifth Column
by Tavleen Singh
Villages Of Woes

 
 

Kautilya
by Jairam Ramesh
Pipedreams To Pipelines

 
  Politically Correct
by P Chidambaram
Order In The House

 
 

Right Angle
by Swapan Dasgupta
Responding To A Gesture

 
 

Flipside
by Dilip Bobb
Ill Timed

 
Other stories
  Cyber Chatter  
  Interview  
  Cinema  
  Crime  
  Nation  
  States  
  Health  
  The Arts  
  Business  
NewsNotes
 

Ill Omens
Before Yashwant Sinha set off for the US for treatment...

 
  Like Shishya, Like Guru
Naveen Patnaik is taking lessons in Oriya
 
 

Victory Bid
S.S. Dhindsa was all set to leave for Sydney...

more...

 
 



 
  Home  
 

NEWSNOTES
CAPLOOKS

Ill Omens
Delhi: Union Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha's official residence at 6 Kushak Road in the heart of the capital was choc-a-bloc last week-with priests. A couple of days before the minister set off for the US for treatment for a kidney ailment, the priests were specially flown in from Patna to propitiate the gods for Sinha's good health and longevity. With the number of BJP ministers who are down with some ailment or the other going up by the day, there are jibes aplenty about ill-health dogging the L.K. Advani camp. All ailing ministers including Sinha, Sunderlal Patwa and P.R. Kumaramangalam, who passed away last month, are followers of the home minister. Those who made a timely jump to the Vajpayee camp must be thanking their stars.

In Common Parlance
Bangalore:
One offshoot of the Rajkumar abduction drama is Karnataka Chief Minister S.M. Krishna's sudden love for Kannada. Krishna has suddenly decided to speak only in his mother tongue, particularly in his interaction with the media. The change may be due to his frequent hobnobbing with his Tamil Nadu counterpart M. Karunanidhi ever since Veerappan kidnapped the Kannada superstar. Though fluent in English, Karunanidhi always speaks in Tamil in public-and comes across as more convincing.

Like Shishya, Like Guru
Bhubaneswar: That Naveen Patnaik is taking lessons in Oriya is a known fact, but what is less known is that it's an English professor who's doing the teaching. According to sources in the chief minister's residence, two factors prompted Naveen to hire Raj Kishore Mishra as his private tutor. Mishra happens to be the principal of the local Biju Patnaik College. That apart, even to learn Oriya, the teacher needs to impart lessons in English to the English-speaking chief minister. Mishra was thus the automatic choice for the VIP.

Victory Bid
Delhi: Union Sports Minister S.S. Dhindsa was all set to leave for Sydney when the Election Commission ordered by-polls for the Sunam assembly constituency in Punjab. He promptly dropped all such plans. There's no telling how many Indians will climb the victory stand at the Olympics, but Dhindsa is determined to see son Parminder emerge the winner at Sunam.

CONFESSIONAL

Muslims won't fall for the BJP's bait, feels MAULANA SHAFI MUNIS, vice-chairman of the Jamaait-e-Islami Hind.

Q. How do you view the BJP's decision to reach out to Indian Muslims?
A. They have admitted that it is a political compulsion. They have said they cannot come to power on their own without Muslim support. But they must tell us what they have done for Muslims in the past and what they intend to do in the future. Q. Do you think Muslims will respond to the call? A. Muslims have grievances against the BJP. You cannot expect them to respond just because of some call.

Q. Is it true that the Jamaait and the RSS share a closeness?
A. We talk to political parties, but we have no communication with the RSS.

Q. But Jamaait and RSS leaders were together in jail during the Emergency and vibed well.
A. Yes, we were together during the Emergency. They saw us and understood what the Muslims really are.

Q. Do you think the BJP's attitude towards Muslims has changed?
A. We don't think so. Look at their attitude. They started thinking of us when they realised they wouldn't get power without us.


-Farzand Ahmad

Top

 
 
 
     METRO TODAY
  MetroScape  
   


The Kitsch Queen
Anjolie Ela Menon seems happy enough to be caught by the high-riding kitsch wave sweeping the subcontinent.
more...

Looking Glass
Delhi: Film Festival

Mumbai: Restaurant

Munnar: Resort

Pune: Store

 
    Web Exclusives

COLUMN  

The Government should encash at least a part of its stake in LIC and GIC before its too late, suggests INDIA TODAY associate Editor V. Shankar Aiyar in Au Contraiyar.


 
DESPATCHES  


With the failure rate rising to a dismal 70 per cent, the Uttar Pradesh High School and Intermediate Board has some accounting to do. INDIA TODAY Special Correspondent Subhash Mishra reports on the gross irregularities in
Despatches.

 
EXTRAS

Full coverages
with columns, infographics, audio reports.

» 1971: The Untold Story
» Veerappan Strikes Again
» The Tiger Catastrophe
» The SriLankan crisis
» The Kashmir jigsaw
»The Nepal Gameplan

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