Zack Wheeler and Dominique Wheeler combined net worth in 2025: A closer look at the Philadelphia Phillies star’s earnings, salary, family life and more

Zack Wheeler and Dominique Wheeler combined net worth in 2025: A closer look at the Philadelphia Phillies star’s earnings, salary, family life and more

Zack and Dominique Wheeler with their children (Image via: IG/X) With Major League Baseball still rewarding the same old values of longevity and consistency, few pitchers would be a better representation of that trend than Zack Wheeler. In 2025, Wheeler is a regular starter in the Philadelphia Phillies community but also one of the most…

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A tigress with her cub In early 2025, a motion-sensor camera high on the hills of Purulia district, West Bengal, blinked to life. The image it captured was unremarkable in isolation: the grainy silhouette of a tiger crossing scrubland. But for residents and forest officials, it was extraordinary. Purulia had never yielded a tiger sighting before. No camera traps, no spoor, no local memory of the big cat. The photograph was more than a record; it was a signal – that the landscape had begun to shift in ways people were only beginning to comprehend. Within weeks, researchers traced the animal’s path through a series of camera traps: March 2024 in Chhattisgarh’s Balrampur forest division; summer sightings in Jharkhand’s Palamau Tiger Reserve; and by January 2025, in Bengal’s Purulia and Jhargram. The tiger had wandered roughly 500 km through human-dominated terrain, crossing administrative and ecological boundaries in search of space. The tiger’s journey is not an anomaly. It is part of a pattern. India’s wild tiger population, once on the brink of collapse, has surged from 1,411 in 2006 to approximately 3,682 in the latest estimate – almost 75% of the world’s wild tiger population. This rebound, often hailed as a conservation landmark, is the centrepiece of Project Tiger’s story. Conservationists and forest staff took pride in the numbers, even as they now grapple with the consequences of unprecedented success. Scientists at the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) estimate that nearly 30% of these 3,682 tigers – more than 1,100 animals – now roam outside notified tiger reserves, sharpening the challenge of coexistence. WII director GS Bhardwaj told TOI that a dedicated Tiger Outside Tiger Reserves (TOTR) project has already been initiated from 2025, with the focus on conserving both tigers and people. The project targets forest divisions that host dispersing tigers, aims to mitigate human-tiger conflict linked to TOTR, and envisages strengthening protection regimes beyond reserve boundaries.Testing human toleranceBut there is a paradox embedded in that success: Project Tiger became “a little too successful”, as an expert said. As core reserves fill, tigers disperse farther – into buffers, across states and into human landscapes, fuelled by instinct, not intention. Tigers are inherently territorial; adults typically range across tens to hundreds of square km depending on prey and habitat. Studies in Indian landscapes have shown female home ranges between 30 and 64 sq km, with males sometimes exceeding 170 sq km. The average, even in prey-rich forests, often approaches 90 sq km. Bhardwaj said WII has advised all states to strengthen wildlife protection outside tiger reserves and carry out intensive monitoring of tigers moving beyond them, so that encounters do not escalate into human casualties or retaliatory killings. In the central Indian landscape – the broad swath of forests, hills and plateaus that includes Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and surrounding states – pressure is particularly acute. Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve, for instance, has one of the highest tiger densities in the country. A state-level review found territorial fights to be a major cause of death among tigers there between 2021 and 2023, reflecting intense competition for space and mates. With older males holding core territories, younger animals are pushed into buffer zones and near villages, raising the frequency of conflict. Bandhavgarh registers more than 2,000 cattle kills annually – a stark indicator of how tigers are pressed against the edges of ecological and social boundaries. Not all reserves exhibit the same degree of crowding though. In Uttarakhand, Corbett and Rajaji tiger reserves are approaching saturation, but nearly half of India’s reserves remain below what scientists describe as their ecological capacity. Forest officials in the state have reported that Corbett can support about 20 tigers per 100 sq km, while eastern Rajaji’s capacity is around 14 per 100 sq km – figures that help explain why animals increasingly stray outside protected areas. As tigers move beyond core forests, their presence ripples through local communities in palpable ways. In early 2025, in several villages in Uttar Pradesh’s Pilibhit region, a prowling tiger caused schools to be closed. Children stayed home. “Exams are coming,” said a Class 5 student from Khalispur had then said, “but we haven’t even completed the syllabus.” Teachers refused to hold evening sessions. Parents stopped letting children walk alone. Tigers in Pilibhit often establish temporary bases in sugarcane fields, drawn by wild boars that feed on the sweet crop. Boars attract tigers. Sugarcane draws both. And between them lies the village. Elsewhere, the consequences have turned fatal. In Gadchiroli district of eastern Maharashtra, tiger numbers grew from zero to nearly 30 in five years – a startling shift in a landscape long considered tiger-scarce. With 12,000 sq km of forest, it appears generous on paper. But in practice, only about 7,000 sq km in two forest divisions is occupied. Human settlements, encroachments, and patchy prey base have constrained the actual carrying capacity. In 2024, 25 villagers died in tiger attacks across the Wadsa and Gadchiroli divisions. Two problem tigers were captured. A tigress was spared because she had cubs. Though technically capable of holding far more – by some estimates, up to 300 tigers – Gadchiroli cannot even accommodate 25 without triggering conflict. In one forest-fringe home in Jharkhand, a tiger entered a family’s hut, settled on a wooden cot, and waited. The family, stunned, watched in silence from a corner of the room. The tiger had wandered far from mapped territory. Its entry was a mistake. Its departure, hours later, was quiet. Nobody was hurt. The event became a story of awe and fear. These tigers are no longer sentinels of wilderness. They are migrants. Monarchs in exile. Each one a ghost of ecological success, walking into fields, hamlets and homes – not out of aggression, but because the forests behind them are full. In some landscapes, officials speak of “social carrying capacity” – not how many tigers the habitat can sustain, but how many human communities are willing to tolerate. In parts of Uttarakhand, tiger-inflicted fatalities have surpassed leopard attacks for the first time in years. In response, village volunteers called Bagh Mitras have been trained to monitor tiger movement and alert forest departments. Some report sightings through mobile apps. Others simply listen for silence – the kind that descends before a tiger appears. Translocation – moving tigers from dense parks to underpopulated reserves – has been tried. Odisha attempted it in 2018, without success. Intra-state efforts show more promise, but officials now lean toward corridor consolidation. Movement is safer when it’s natural. But for that, corridors must exist – not just on policy maps, but on the ground. In the Terai Arc, at least 10 critical corridors are under threat from habitat loss and development. In central India, linear infrastructure – railways, highways, power lines – cuts across migration routes. And yet, some reserves offer hope. In Tadoba, tiger density rose 30% over a decade, with buffer populations expanding as prey base improved. In Sundarbans, the reserve is being expanded by more than 1,000 sq km to create space for 101 tigers now crowding its mangrove heartland. India now has more than 50 tiger reserves. Some are full. Others still hold ecological potential, if prey can be restored. The key lies not just in creating new habitat, but in connecting the old – allowing dispersing tigers to move without triggering conflict. Perhaps the tiger today is not just an emblem of wilderness, but a kind of refugee of success – displaced by recovery. The Purulia tiger’s trek is both a biometric trail and a metaphor. It is the story of a tiger with nowhere to go, walking east until the land gave way to politics and fear. In the empty classrooms of Pilibhit, in the living room of a Jharkhand family, in the cattle sheds of Bandhavgarh, and in the forests of Gadchiroli now marked by claw and memory, India’s national animal is no longer confined to the forest. The tiger has returned. The question is – where can it stay?End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosKhaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In DhakaThrowback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation SindoorTerror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 2025Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UNThrowback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic MasterstrokesAyodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple EventIndia’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal’s Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan’s Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | WatchLeT Deputy Saifullah Kasuri Admits India Hit Terror Camps, Threatens Kashmir After Op Sindoor StrikeTwist in Osman Hadi Murder Case: Prime Accused Blames Jamaat From Dubai, Clears India’s Role123PhotostoriesFrom boardrooms to weddings: 5 global luxury brands Indian men are wearing right nowWhat 2025 taught us about health: The biggest lessons of the year10 best New Year traditions to celebrate the start of 2026Food poisoning vs. gastrointestinal infection: What’s the difference?10 South Indian breads that are so soulfulWalking through 2025: The year we put our best foot forwardSkip the crowds in 2026: 10 offbeat destinations in India for New Year travel5 relationship habits to inculcate in 2026 to make it the best year of your lifeFrom soldier to supermodel: 5 looks that made BTS’ V the ultimate fashion muse of 20258 traditional Bengali snacks that are best enjoyed during winter123Hot PicksSaudi Strike YemenPAN-Aadhaar link statusBank holiday New YearGold rate todayIncome Tax RefundBahrain Golden Visa 2025Bank Holidays DecemberTop TrendingJustin Thomas Net WorthWWE Star Nikki BellaCardi BCeeDee Lamb Luxury Car CollectionStefon DiggsCaitlin ClarkTom BradyMicah Parsons vs CeeDee Lamb Net WorthNHL Injury UpdateVanessa Bryant

A tigress with her cub In early 2025, a motion-sensor camera high on the hills of Purulia district, West Bengal, blinked to life. The image it captured was unremarkable in isolation: the grainy silhouette of a tiger crossing scrubland. But for residents and forest officials, it was extraordinary. Purulia had never yielded a tiger sighting before. No camera traps, no spoor, no local memory of the big cat. The photograph was more than a record; it was a signal – that the landscape had begun to shift in ways people were only beginning to comprehend. Within weeks, researchers traced the animal’s path through a series of camera traps: March 2024 in Chhattisgarh’s Balrampur forest division; summer sightings in Jharkhand’s Palamau Tiger Reserve; and by January 2025, in Bengal’s Purulia and Jhargram. The tiger had wandered roughly 500 km through human-dominated terrain, crossing administrative and ecological boundaries in search of space. The tiger’s journey is not an anomaly. It is part of a pattern. India’s wild tiger population, once on the brink of collapse, has surged from 1,411 in 2006 to approximately 3,682 in the latest estimate – almost 75% of the world’s wild tiger population. This rebound, often hailed as a conservation landmark, is the centrepiece of Project Tiger’s story. Conservationists and forest staff took pride in the numbers, even as they now grapple with the consequences of unprecedented success. Scientists at the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) estimate that nearly 30% of these 3,682 tigers – more than 1,100 animals – now roam outside notified tiger reserves, sharpening the challenge of coexistence. WII director GS Bhardwaj told TOI that a dedicated Tiger Outside Tiger Reserves (TOTR) project has already been initiated from 2025, with the focus on conserving both tigers and people. The project targets forest divisions that host dispersing tigers, aims to mitigate human-tiger conflict linked to TOTR, and envisages strengthening protection regimes beyond reserve boundaries.Testing human toleranceBut there is a paradox embedded in that success: Project Tiger became “a little too successful”, as an expert said. As core reserves fill, tigers disperse farther – into buffers, across states and into human landscapes, fuelled by instinct, not intention. Tigers are inherently territorial; adults typically range across tens to hundreds of square km depending on prey and habitat. Studies in Indian landscapes have shown female home ranges between 30 and 64 sq km, with males sometimes exceeding 170 sq km. The average, even in prey-rich forests, often approaches 90 sq km. Bhardwaj said WII has advised all states to strengthen wildlife protection outside tiger reserves and carry out intensive monitoring of tigers moving beyond them, so that encounters do not escalate into human casualties or retaliatory killings. In the central Indian landscape – the broad swath of forests, hills and plateaus that includes Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and surrounding states – pressure is particularly acute. Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve, for instance, has one of the highest tiger densities in the country. A state-level review found territorial fights to be a major cause of death among tigers there between 2021 and 2023, reflecting intense competition for space and mates. With older males holding core territories, younger animals are pushed into buffer zones and near villages, raising the frequency of conflict. Bandhavgarh registers more than 2,000 cattle kills annually – a stark indicator of how tigers are pressed against the edges of ecological and social boundaries. Not all reserves exhibit the same degree of crowding though. In Uttarakhand, Corbett and Rajaji tiger reserves are approaching saturation, but nearly half of India’s reserves remain below what scientists describe as their ecological capacity. Forest officials in the state have reported that Corbett can support about 20 tigers per 100 sq km, while eastern Rajaji’s capacity is around 14 per 100 sq km – figures that help explain why animals increasingly stray outside protected areas. As tigers move beyond core forests, their presence ripples through local communities in palpable ways. In early 2025, in several villages in Uttar Pradesh’s Pilibhit region, a prowling tiger caused schools to be closed. Children stayed home. “Exams are coming,” said a Class 5 student from Khalispur had then said, “but we haven’t even completed the syllabus.” Teachers refused to hold evening sessions. Parents stopped letting children walk alone. Tigers in Pilibhit often establish temporary bases in sugarcane fields, drawn by wild boars that feed on the sweet crop. Boars attract tigers. Sugarcane draws both. And between them lies the village. Elsewhere, the consequences have turned fatal. In Gadchiroli district of eastern Maharashtra, tiger numbers grew from zero to nearly 30 in five years – a startling shift in a landscape long considered tiger-scarce. With 12,000 sq km of forest, it appears generous on paper. But in practice, only about 7,000 sq km in two forest divisions is occupied. Human settlements, encroachments, and patchy prey base have constrained the actual carrying capacity. In 2024, 25 villagers died in tiger attacks across the Wadsa and Gadchiroli divisions. Two problem tigers were captured. A tigress was spared because she had cubs. Though technically capable of holding far more – by some estimates, up to 300 tigers – Gadchiroli cannot even accommodate 25 without triggering conflict. In one forest-fringe home in Jharkhand, a tiger entered a family’s hut, settled on a wooden cot, and waited. The family, stunned, watched in silence from a corner of the room. The tiger had wandered far from mapped territory. Its entry was a mistake. Its departure, hours later, was quiet. Nobody was hurt. The event became a story of awe and fear. These tigers are no longer sentinels of wilderness. They are migrants. Monarchs in exile. Each one a ghost of ecological success, walking into fields, hamlets and homes – not out of aggression, but because the forests behind them are full. In some landscapes, officials speak of “social carrying capacity” – not how many tigers the habitat can sustain, but how many human communities are willing to tolerate. In parts of Uttarakhand, tiger-inflicted fatalities have surpassed leopard attacks for the first time in years. In response, village volunteers called Bagh Mitras have been trained to monitor tiger movement and alert forest departments. Some report sightings through mobile apps. Others simply listen for silence – the kind that descends before a tiger appears. Translocation – moving tigers from dense parks to underpopulated reserves – has been tried. Odisha attempted it in 2018, without success. Intra-state efforts show more promise, but officials now lean toward corridor consolidation. Movement is safer when it’s natural. But for that, corridors must exist – not just on policy maps, but on the ground. In the Terai Arc, at least 10 critical corridors are under threat from habitat loss and development. In central India, linear infrastructure – railways, highways, power lines – cuts across migration routes. And yet, some reserves offer hope. In Tadoba, tiger density rose 30% over a decade, with buffer populations expanding as prey base improved. In Sundarbans, the reserve is being expanded by more than 1,000 sq km to create space for 101 tigers now crowding its mangrove heartland. India now has more than 50 tiger reserves. Some are full. Others still hold ecological potential, if prey can be restored. The key lies not just in creating new habitat, but in connecting the old – allowing dispersing tigers to move without triggering conflict. Perhaps the tiger today is not just an emblem of wilderness, but a kind of refugee of success – displaced by recovery. The Purulia tiger’s trek is both a biometric trail and a metaphor. It is the story of a tiger with nowhere to go, walking east until the land gave way to politics and fear. In the empty classrooms of Pilibhit, in the living room of a Jharkhand family, in the cattle sheds of Bandhavgarh, and in the forests of Gadchiroli now marked by claw and memory, India’s national animal is no longer confined to the forest. The tiger has returned. The question is – where can it stay?End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosKhaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In DhakaThrowback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation SindoorTerror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 2025Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UNThrowback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic MasterstrokesAyodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple EventIndia’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal’s Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan’s Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | WatchLeT Deputy Saifullah Kasuri Admits India Hit Terror Camps, Threatens Kashmir After Op Sindoor StrikeTwist in Osman Hadi Murder Case: Prime Accused Blames Jamaat From Dubai, Clears India’s Role123PhotostoriesFrom boardrooms to weddings: 5 global luxury brands Indian men are wearing right nowWhat 2025 taught us about health: The biggest lessons of the year10 best New Year traditions to celebrate the start of 2026Food poisoning vs. gastrointestinal infection: What’s the difference?10 South Indian breads that are so soulfulWalking through 2025: The year we put our best foot forwardSkip the crowds in 2026: 10 offbeat destinations in India for New Year travel5 relationship habits to inculcate in 2026 to make it the best year of your lifeFrom soldier to supermodel: 5 looks that made BTS’ V the ultimate fashion muse of 20258 traditional Bengali snacks that are best enjoyed during winter123Hot PicksSaudi Strike YemenPAN-Aadhaar link statusBank holiday New YearGold rate todayIncome Tax RefundBahrain Golden Visa 2025Bank Holidays DecemberTop TrendingJustin Thomas Net WorthWWE Star Nikki BellaCardi BCeeDee Lamb Luxury Car CollectionStefon DiggsCaitlin ClarkTom BradyMicah Parsons vs CeeDee Lamb Net WorthNHL Injury UpdateVanessa Bryant

In early 2025, a motion-sensor camera high on the hills of Purulia district, West Bengal, blinked to life. The image it captured was unremarkable in isolation: the grainy silhouette of a tiger crossing scrubland. But for residents and forest officials, it was extraordinary. Purulia had never yielded a tiger sighting before. No camera traps, no…

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‘New normal’: How India’s 2025 ‘zero-tolerance’ doctrine pushed terror outfits and Pakistan to the sidelines

‘New normal’: How India’s 2025 ‘zero-tolerance’ doctrine pushed terror outfits and Pakistan to the sidelines

Sudarshan – surface-to-air defence system NEW DELHI: The “new normal” in India’s national security playbook took on a harder edge in 2025. Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the country’s zero-tolerance doctrine against terrorism, especially the kind nurtured across the border in Pakistan, became not just policy but a mindset. For years, Pakistan has acted much…

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Donald Trump SLAMS George Clooney over French citizenship; claims Oscar winner was ‘just an average guy who complained, constantly’ |

Donald Trump SLAMS George Clooney over French citizenship; claims Oscar winner was ‘just an average guy who complained, constantly’ |

US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Paris was welcome to Hollywood star George Clooney after the actor got French citizenship – and took the opportunity to bash France, too.Trump, whose administration has backed anti-immigration parties in Europe, said key ally France had a “horrendous” problem with crime and immigration.An official decree seen by…

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Representational image GUWAHATI: A special NIA court convicted and sentenced a key accused in a Hizbul Mujahideen terror conspiracy case to life imprisonment, the agency said Wednesday. The convict, Kamruj Zaman alias Hurairah or Kamaruddin from Erakapili village in Assam’s Hojai district, was arrested in 2018 for conspiring to raise a module of the banned outfit in the state during 2017-18. Zaman was awarded three separate sentences, with maximum being life imprisonment under Section 18 of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967. He was sentenced to five years’ simple imprisonment each under UAPA sections 18B and 38, read with IPC Section 120B. All sentences will run concurrently. The court imposed a fine of Rs 5,000 in each case. NIA said Zaman recruited several accused to establish a terror network aimed at expanding Hizbul Mujahideen’s footprint in the northeast.End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosKhaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In DhakaThrowback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation SindoorTerror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 2025Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UNThrowback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic MasterstrokesAyodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple EventIndia’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal’s Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan’s Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | WatchLeT Deputy Saifullah Kasuri Admits India Hit Terror Camps, Threatens Kashmir After Op Sindoor StrikeTwist in Osman Hadi Murder Case: Prime Accused Blames Jamaat From Dubai, Clears India’s Role123PhotostoriesFrom boardrooms to weddings: 5 global luxury brands Indian men are wearing right nowWhat 2025 taught us about health: The biggest lessons of the year10 best New Year traditions to celebrate the start of 2026Food poisoning vs. gastrointestinal infection: What’s the difference?10 South Indian breads that are so soulfulWalking through 2025: The year we put our best foot forwardSkip the crowds in 2026: 10 offbeat destinations in India for New Year travel5 relationship habits to inculcate in 2026 to make it the best year of your lifeFrom soldier to supermodel: 5 looks that made BTS’ V the ultimate fashion muse of 20258 traditional Bengali snacks that are best enjoyed during winter123Hot PicksSaudi Strike YemenPAN-Aadhaar link statusBank holiday New YearGold rate todayIncome Tax RefundBahrain Golden Visa 2025Bank Holidays DecemberTop TrendingJustin Thomas Net WorthWWE Star Nikki BellaCardi BCeeDee Lamb Luxury Car CollectionStefon DiggsCaitlin ClarkTom BradyMicah Parsons vs CeeDee Lamb Net WorthNHL Injury UpdateVanessa Bryant

Representational image GUWAHATI: A special NIA court convicted and sentenced a key accused in a Hizbul Mujahideen terror conspiracy case to life imprisonment, the agency said Wednesday. The convict, Kamruj Zaman alias Hurairah or Kamaruddin from Erakapili village in Assam’s Hojai district, was arrested in 2018 for conspiring to raise a module of the banned outfit in the state during 2017-18. Zaman was awarded three separate sentences, with maximum being life imprisonment under Section 18 of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967. He was sentenced to five years’ simple imprisonment each under UAPA sections 18B and 38, read with IPC Section 120B. All sentences will run concurrently. The court imposed a fine of Rs 5,000 in each case. NIA said Zaman recruited several accused to establish a terror network aimed at expanding Hizbul Mujahideen’s footprint in the northeast.End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosKhaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In DhakaThrowback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation SindoorTerror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 2025Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UNThrowback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic MasterstrokesAyodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple EventIndia’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal’s Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan’s Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | WatchLeT Deputy Saifullah Kasuri Admits India Hit Terror Camps, Threatens Kashmir After Op Sindoor StrikeTwist in Osman Hadi Murder Case: Prime Accused Blames Jamaat From Dubai, Clears India’s Role123PhotostoriesFrom boardrooms to weddings: 5 global luxury brands Indian men are wearing right nowWhat 2025 taught us about health: The biggest lessons of the year10 best New Year traditions to celebrate the start of 2026Food poisoning vs. gastrointestinal infection: What’s the difference?10 South Indian breads that are so soulfulWalking through 2025: The year we put our best foot forwardSkip the crowds in 2026: 10 offbeat destinations in India for New Year travel5 relationship habits to inculcate in 2026 to make it the best year of your lifeFrom soldier to supermodel: 5 looks that made BTS’ V the ultimate fashion muse of 20258 traditional Bengali snacks that are best enjoyed during winter123Hot PicksSaudi Strike YemenPAN-Aadhaar link statusBank holiday New YearGold rate todayIncome Tax RefundBahrain Golden Visa 2025Bank Holidays DecemberTop TrendingJustin Thomas Net WorthWWE Star Nikki BellaCardi BCeeDee Lamb Luxury Car CollectionStefon DiggsCaitlin ClarkTom BradyMicah Parsons vs CeeDee Lamb Net WorthNHL Injury UpdateVanessa Bryant

GUWAHATI: A special NIA court convicted and sentenced a key accused in a Hizbul Mujahideen terror conspiracy case to life imprisonment, the agency said Wednesday. The convict, Kamruj Zaman alias Hurairah or Kamaruddin from Erakapili village in Assam’s Hojai district, was arrested in 2018 for conspiring to raise a module of the banned outfit in…

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‘Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri’ box office collection Day 7: Kartik Aaryan and Ananya Panday starrer fails to make Rs 30 crore even after a week of its release amid ‘Dhurandhar’ wave | Hindi Movie News

‘Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri’ box office collection Day 7: Kartik Aaryan and Ananya Panday starrer fails to make Rs 30 crore even after a week of its release amid ‘Dhurandhar’ wave | Hindi Movie News

Kartik Aaryan and Ananya Panday’s rom-com ‘Tu Meri Main Tera Main Tera Tu Meri’ has struggled at the box office, earning just THIS much in its first week against a Rs 90 crore budget. Meanwhile, ‘Dhurandhar’, starring Ranveer Singh, continues its impressive run, surpassing Rs 722 crore. The contrast highlights the differing audience reception for…

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‘Dhurandhar’ box office Collection Day 27: Ranveer Singh starrer crosses Rs 1,110 crore mark; becomes highest-grossing Hindi film of all time

‘Dhurandhar’ box office Collection Day 27: Ranveer Singh starrer crosses Rs 1,110 crore mark; becomes highest-grossing Hindi film of all time

‘Dhurandhar’, starring Ranveer Singh, ended 2025 on a strong note, maintaining its dominant hold at the Indian box office. The Hindi spy thriller, directed by Aditya Dhar, has been on a historic, record-breaking run since its release in December and continued its momentum by earning over Rs 10 crore on its fourth Wednesday.Dhurandhar Movie Review…

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New Year Wishes & Quotes: 75+ Happy New Year Messages, Greetings, Wishes and Quotes for 2026 |

New Year Wishes & Quotes: 75+ Happy New Year Messages, Greetings, Wishes and Quotes for 2026 |

The new year arrives without fanfare, prompting a moment of reflection before sending messages. The article offers simple, honest phrases for New Year’s greetings, acknowledging that not everyone starts the year with grand plans. It emphasizes genuine connection and self-compassion over forced cheerfulness, encouraging a quiet, hopeful approach to the year ahead. The new year…

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