Why Rahul Gandhi remains a thorn in opposition unity

 
 
 
Presenting India Today Insight: Sharp analysis
on topical issues by the editors of India Today magazine.
 
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Why Rahul Gandhi remains a thorn in opposition unity
 
Opposition leaders are apprehensive about Rahul being projected as the face of the prospective anti-BJP alliance and inviting comparisons with PM Modi. His leadership skills and public position on issues remain other concerns for them
 
By Kaushik Deka
 
 
 
 
 
SPOTLIGHT: DRONE OVER PM RESIDENCE
Drone over PM residence: How an anti-UAV system could have intercepted threat
A counter-drone mechanism assumes significance for securing VVIPs in light of India’s liberalised drone-flying policy and the intrusive potential of these UAVs
 
By Pradip R. Sagar
 
 
 
 
SPECIAL REPORT: WHO IS HASMUKH ADHIA?
Why Hasmukh Adhia is keenly sought after in Gujarat’s power corridors
In the six months since he took charge as advisor to chief minister Bhupendra Patel, the former Union finance secretary has emerged as a silent power centre
 
By Jumana Shah
 
 
 
 
FROM THE STATES: MAHARASHTRA MEDICAL COLLEGES
How Maharashtra plans to boost medical education in run-up to Lok Sabha polls
The Eknath Shinde cabinet has approved the setting up of government medical colleges in nine districts, with an intake of 100 students each for the MBBS course
 
By Dhaval S. Kulkarni
 
 
 
 
HEALTH: ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE
Have Covid treatment methods increased antimicrobial resistance in India?
Experts are worried about the fallout of indiscriminate use of antibiotics, such as azithromycin and doxycycline, during the pandemic
 
By Sonali Acharjee
 
 
 
 
RECALL (1991): BOLLYWOOD VILLIAN
The return of cult villain Ajit
What was the incident that nearly took Ajit’s life and prompted him to make a comeback in films?
 
By Rahul Pathak
 
 
 
 
CINEMA: KONKONA SENSHARMA
Why Konkona Sensharma’s short in Lust Stories 2 is a celebration of female desire and bonding
The brilliance of the short is that at no point is Sensharma judging the women protagonists, who both put their needs upfront
 
By Suhani Singh
 
 
 
 
FROM THE INDIA TODAY ARCHIVES (1991): POK MILITANCY
Pakistan Occupied Kashmir: Cocking a militant snook
The support for Kashmiri militants was blatantly out in the open when the INDIA TODAY team visited training and refugee camps in PoK
 
By Kanwar Sandhu in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir
 
 
 
 
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