Kamal Nath made such a comment about Mamata Banerjee many meanings of this stance in political circles naidunia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from naidunia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Seeman, founder of the Naam Tamizhar Katchi | NaamTamilarOrg/Twitter
In the run up to the Tamil Nadu Assembly elections, whenever there was talk of an alternative to the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the focus – at least in the English media in the state – was on actor-turned politician Kamal Haasan and Amma Makkal Munnetra Kazhagam chief TTV Dhinakaran.
On Sunday, when the results of the polls came out, both Haasan’s Makkal Neethi Maiam and Dhinakaran’s AMMK performed abysmally. An analysis of provisional results in
The Hindu revealed both MNM and AMMK had each secured a mere 2.4% of the votes.
In February, India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party passed a resolution declaring that the country had “defeated Covid under the able, sensitive, committed and visionary leadership of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi.” It hadn’t.
India has been undergoing a severe COVID resurgence since March: Infections, hospitalizations, and deaths are escalating faster than anywhere else in the world, while dire shortages of vaccines, medical ingredients, and oxygen tanks have denied countless patients the care they’ve needed. Multiple countries have restricted or banned travel from India after receiving Indian passengers with COVID symptoms, and India has stopped shipping vaccines abroad in order to prioritize its population. Yet even in the face of horrific tragedy, Narendra Modi has refused to establish necessary lockdowns to stop viral spread many individual states have instead enacted their own restrictions, like they were forced to do last year. Instead of focusing on shoring up n
Wonder woman India’s political chemistry is changing Saba Naqvi | | Published 05.05.21, 12:11 AM
The passion and conviction were all too visible in Mamata Banerjee’s first words to the media after the magnificent win registered by her party in West Bengal. She would be going to a Constitution bench, she said, because “we have faced the horrors of Election Commission and if we tolerate whatever they have done in Bengal, then in India there will be no democracy.” She invited other political parties to join her petition to the Supreme Court and said that Bengal has saved India today.
So are we getting ahead of ourselves by asking if Mamata Banerjee can save India tomorrow in a national coalition against the Bharatiya Janata Party? She does, after all, have the tem