File photos Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has delivered both the Tehran’s demand and their reservations about the US demands as peace talks 2.0 continues to be uncertain.Delhi Police arrests YouTuber Salim Wastik, allegedly a fugitive convicted killer living under a new identity for 26 years.Raghav Chadha loses over 1 million Instagram followers within 24 hours of joining BJP.Coordinated terrorist attacks hit Bamako, Mali, with gunfire and explosions reported across the capital and fighting still ongoing.Mojtaba Khamenei reportedly uses a covert courier network of handwritten messages to avoid US-Israel surveillance.Here are top 5 news of the day:Iran’s FM delivers demands to Pakistan; US envoys enroute for peace talksAbbas Araghchi conveyed Iran’s negotiating positions along with its reservations about US demands to Pakistani officials during his visit to Islamabad, with discussions focusing on regional dynamics and diplomatic coordination. Follow live updatesYouTuber Salim Wastik, who was stabbed more than 10 times in abdomen at Ghaziabad office, arrested for killing boy in 1995In a dramatic turn of events that bridges a decades-old cold case with modern-day social media fame, the Delhi Police Crime Branch has apprehended Salim Wastik, a YouTuber and social activist known for his vocal criticism of Islam, in a two-decade-old kidnapping and murder charge. Read full storyRaghav Chadha loses over 1 million followers, flooded with hate comments after joining BJPWithin 24 hours of announcing his exit from the Aam Aadmi Party and joining the Bharatiya Janata Party, Rajya Sabha MP Raghav Chadha has seen a sharp decline in his Instagram following, losing over 1 million followers. Once seen as a Gen Z political icon, Chadha’s follower count dropped from 14.6 million to 13.3 million. Read full story’Gunfire everywhere’: Explosions heard near Mali international airport, military baseA series of coordinated attacks rocked Mali on early Saturday, with gunfire and explosions reported in the capital Bamako. Firing was also heard near a military camp close to the city’s international airport. The Malian Armed Forces said unidentified “terrorist” groups targeted several positions in the capital and other parts of the country in a coordinated assault. Read full storyHandwritten letters, human chain: How Mojtaba Khamenei controls Iran from the shadowsIran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is commanding the country through a secret “human chain” of handwritten letters to avoid detection by the US and Israel, according to a report by The New York Times. The report said messages meant for the leader are “handwritten, sealed in envelopes and passed on via a human chain” of trusted couriers. These couriers travel on highways and rural back roads using motorcycles and cars to reach his “hide-out,” with replies sent back through the same secure route. Read full storyAbout the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosK. Kavitha Launches Telangana Rashtra Sena, Revives TRS | Fallout of Delhi Liquor Policy CaseRaghav Chadha Blames ‘Sheesh Mahal’ for AAP’s Delhi Poll Defeat, Fresh AttackRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?123Photostories‘Marty Supreme’ to ‘Greenland 2’; English releases of the week on OTTWhy Chef Sanjeev Kapoor suggests visiting Kashmiri Kandur-waan: 7 must-try Kashmiri breadsVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trends5 signs your divorce is inevitableHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods daily123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

File photos Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has delivered both the Tehran’s demand and their reservations about the US demands as peace talks 2.0 continues to be uncertain.Delhi Police arrests YouTuber Salim Wastik, allegedly a fugitive convicted killer living under a new identity for 26 years.Raghav Chadha loses over 1 million Instagram followers within 24 hours of joining BJP.Coordinated terrorist attacks hit Bamako, Mali, with gunfire and explosions reported across the capital and fighting still ongoing.Mojtaba Khamenei reportedly uses a covert courier network of handwritten messages to avoid US-Israel surveillance.Here are top 5 news of the day:Iran’s FM delivers demands to Pakistan; US envoys enroute for peace talksAbbas Araghchi conveyed Iran’s negotiating positions along with its reservations about US demands to Pakistani officials during his visit to Islamabad, with discussions focusing on regional dynamics and diplomatic coordination. Follow live updatesYouTuber Salim Wastik, who was stabbed more than 10 times in abdomen at Ghaziabad office, arrested for killing boy in 1995In a dramatic turn of events that bridges a decades-old cold case with modern-day social media fame, the Delhi Police Crime Branch has apprehended Salim Wastik, a YouTuber and social activist known for his vocal criticism of Islam, in a two-decade-old kidnapping and murder charge. Read full storyRaghav Chadha loses over 1 million followers, flooded with hate comments after joining BJPWithin 24 hours of announcing his exit from the Aam Aadmi Party and joining the Bharatiya Janata Party, Rajya Sabha MP Raghav Chadha has seen a sharp decline in his Instagram following, losing over 1 million followers. Once seen as a Gen Z political icon, Chadha’s follower count dropped from 14.6 million to 13.3 million. Read full story’Gunfire everywhere’: Explosions heard near Mali international airport, military baseA series of coordinated attacks rocked Mali on early Saturday, with gunfire and explosions reported in the capital Bamako. Firing was also heard near a military camp close to the city’s international airport. The Malian Armed Forces said unidentified “terrorist” groups targeted several positions in the capital and other parts of the country in a coordinated assault. Read full storyHandwritten letters, human chain: How Mojtaba Khamenei controls Iran from the shadowsIran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is commanding the country through a secret “human chain” of handwritten letters to avoid detection by the US and Israel, according to a report by The New York Times. The report said messages meant for the leader are “handwritten, sealed in envelopes and passed on via a human chain” of trusted couriers. These couriers travel on highways and rural back roads using motorcycles and cars to reach his “hide-out,” with replies sent back through the same secure route. Read full storyAbout the AuthorTOI News DeskThe TOI News Desk comprises a dedicated and tireless team of journalists who operate around the clock to deliver the most current and comprehensive news and updates to the readers of The Times of India worldwide. With an unwavering commitment to excellence in journalism, our team is at the forefront of gathering, verifying, and presenting breaking news, in-depth analysis, and insightful reports on a wide range of topics. The TOI News Desk is your trusted source for staying informed and connected to the ever-evolving global landscape, ensuring that our readers are equipped with the latest developments that matter most.”Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosK. Kavitha Launches Telangana Rashtra Sena, Revives TRS | Fallout of Delhi Liquor Policy CaseRaghav Chadha Blames ‘Sheesh Mahal’ for AAP’s Delhi Poll Defeat, Fresh AttackRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?123Photostories‘Marty Supreme’ to ‘Greenland 2’; English releases of the week on OTTWhy Chef Sanjeev Kapoor suggests visiting Kashmiri Kandur-waan: 7 must-try Kashmiri breadsVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trends5 signs your divorce is inevitableHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods daily123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi has delivered both the Tehran’s demand and their reservations about the US demands as peace talks 2.0 continues to be uncertain. Delhi Police arrests YouTuber Salim Wastik, allegedly a fugitive convicted killer living under a new identity for 26 years. Raghav Chadha loses over 1 million Instagram followers within 24…

Read More
PSSSB Group D result 2026 declared, merit list PDF released at sssb.punjab.gov.in; download here

PSSSB Group D result 2026 declared, merit list PDF released at sssb.punjab.gov.in; download here

PSSSB Group D result 2026 declared, download merit list and verify candidate details online PSSSB Group D result 2026: The Punjab Subordinate Services Selection Board (PSSSB) has released the Group D Result 2026 on its official website. Candidates who appeared for the written examination can now check their results online through the merit list PDF…

Read More
The freshness fallacy: Why your kitchen candles are just ghosting the real problem |

The freshness fallacy: Why your kitchen candles are just ghosting the real problem |

Lingering cooking odors are a common problem, but air fresheners merely mask smells, creating a false sense of security and potentially hiding dangers. True odor elimination requires physically or chemically removing odor molecules, not just covering them up. Once you have served pasta loaded with garlic or even prepared seared salmon to perfection, there is…

Read More
What’s cooking in pantry? Bite into ‘adulterated’ truth

What’s cooking in pantry? Bite into ‘adulterated’ truth

Food adulteration is emerging as a serious public health with repeated cases pointing to a widespread and systemic problem. From milk and paneer to sweets and processed foods, commonly consumed items are increasingly found to be sub-standard or contaminated—sometimes with fatal consequences.Recent incidents across states suggest this is not an isolated issue but a pattern…

Read More
CM Revanth flags off India’s first pvt orbital rocket Vikram-1 at Skyroot Aerospace HYDERABAD: India’s first privately built orbital rocket moved yet another step closer to its historic mission with Telangana chief minister A Revanth Reddy flagging off Skyroot Aerospace’s Vikram-1 flight hardware to Sriharikota, where the company is hopeful of launching the rocket from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in June this year.Calling it a proud moment for Telangana and a major milestone in the state’s ambition to emerge as a global aerospace leader, the CM pointed out that Vikram-1 had been entirely designed and developed in Hyderabad which is indicative of the state’s growing importance in India’s aerospace and space technology ecosystem.“Skyroot has developed India’s first privately built orbital rocket to carry satellites into space. The company launched its first rocket (suborbital) in 2022, and reaching the stage of orbital launch in such a short time is a remarkable achievement,” Revanth Reddy said while interacting with the company’s leadership and engineering teams.Telangana industries & IT minister D Sridhar Babu was also present for the flag-off along with other senior officials.The CM said Telangana was already ranked number one in India in the aerospace sector and pointed to the presence of global majors such as Boeing, Airbus and Safran in the state. He added that the government had set a long-term goal of making Telangana a global aerospace hub by 2047, with aerospace identified as one of the state’s key growth engines.He also linked the rise of the aerospace sector to the state’s export performance. Citing Central government data, he said Telangana recorded the highest growth in engineering goods exports among Indian states, at 117.9% between 2023-24 and 2024-25.He said aircraft parts and defence equipment were among the biggest contributors to this surge, reflecting the rapid expansion of advanced manufacturing capabilities in the state. Revanth Reddy said the government was focusing strongly on building a skilled workforce to support future growth in aerospace and other high-technology sectors.He outlined ongoing efforts through Young India Skills University, Advanced Technology Centres and polytechnic institutions, saying the state planned to bring ATCs and polytechnics under the ambit of the Skills University.According to him, the move is intended to create a uniform, industry-driven curriculum and ensure that training remains aligned with changing industrial requirements. He said the government’s emphasis was not only on student training but also on improving the quality of instructors.“Our focus is on giving the best training to the trainers in these institutions. Tata Technologies is providing training to our trainers in ATCs across the state,” he said.Skyroot Aerospace CEO and co-founder Pawan Kumar Chandana said with this flag-off it will reach Sriharikota over the next week where they will start assembling the rocket for launch hopefully in June this year.Chandana said Skyroot is in discussions with IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) to get a launch window for the rocket.“We will be announcing the launch window soon,” he said, adding that after the first test launch of Vikram-1 in the next few months the company will have more test launches coming up.“By next year the aim is to get to a capacity where we can produce one rocket a month and probably next year sometime we will be able to reach the full payload capacity of 300kg in each rocket,” he said pointing out that the first few test launches will carry only partial payloads.He describing this as a proud moment not just for India but globally as well because very few companies in the world have the capability and technology to make rockets. “About the AuthorSwati BharadwajSwati Bharadwaj is a business journalist with 30 years of experience covering a host of sectors – right from technology, GCCs, talent, cybersecurity, pharma & biotech, aerospace & defence, BFSI, gems & jewellery to automotive, hospitality, infrastructure, retail, among others. She has worked with TOI and ET across multiple cities such as Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Pune and Ahmedabad.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosRaghav Chadha Blames ‘Sheesh Mahal’ for AAP’s Delhi Poll Defeat, Fresh AttackRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?DAILY ESSENTIALS HIT HARD: Hair Oil, ACs, Soaps Turn Costlier In FMCG Shockwave123PhotostoriesWhy Chef Sanjeev Kapoor suggests visiting Kashmiri Kandur-waan: 7 must-try Kashmiri breadsVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trendsHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods dailyMumbai-Pune Expressway finds its ‘missing link’: India’s longest road cable-stayed bridge to open on May 1How to grow ladyfinger plants at home (Simple step-by-step guide for beginners)123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

CM Revanth flags off India’s first pvt orbital rocket Vikram-1 at Skyroot Aerospace HYDERABAD: India’s first privately built orbital rocket moved yet another step closer to its historic mission with Telangana chief minister A Revanth Reddy flagging off Skyroot Aerospace’s Vikram-1 flight hardware to Sriharikota, where the company is hopeful of launching the rocket from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in June this year.Calling it a proud moment for Telangana and a major milestone in the state’s ambition to emerge as a global aerospace leader, the CM pointed out that Vikram-1 had been entirely designed and developed in Hyderabad which is indicative of the state’s growing importance in India’s aerospace and space technology ecosystem.“Skyroot has developed India’s first privately built orbital rocket to carry satellites into space. The company launched its first rocket (suborbital) in 2022, and reaching the stage of orbital launch in such a short time is a remarkable achievement,” Revanth Reddy said while interacting with the company’s leadership and engineering teams.Telangana industries & IT minister D Sridhar Babu was also present for the flag-off along with other senior officials.The CM said Telangana was already ranked number one in India in the aerospace sector and pointed to the presence of global majors such as Boeing, Airbus and Safran in the state. He added that the government had set a long-term goal of making Telangana a global aerospace hub by 2047, with aerospace identified as one of the state’s key growth engines.He also linked the rise of the aerospace sector to the state’s export performance. Citing Central government data, he said Telangana recorded the highest growth in engineering goods exports among Indian states, at 117.9% between 2023-24 and 2024-25.He said aircraft parts and defence equipment were among the biggest contributors to this surge, reflecting the rapid expansion of advanced manufacturing capabilities in the state. Revanth Reddy said the government was focusing strongly on building a skilled workforce to support future growth in aerospace and other high-technology sectors.He outlined ongoing efforts through Young India Skills University, Advanced Technology Centres and polytechnic institutions, saying the state planned to bring ATCs and polytechnics under the ambit of the Skills University.According to him, the move is intended to create a uniform, industry-driven curriculum and ensure that training remains aligned with changing industrial requirements. He said the government’s emphasis was not only on student training but also on improving the quality of instructors.“Our focus is on giving the best training to the trainers in these institutions. Tata Technologies is providing training to our trainers in ATCs across the state,” he said.Skyroot Aerospace CEO and co-founder Pawan Kumar Chandana said with this flag-off it will reach Sriharikota over the next week where they will start assembling the rocket for launch hopefully in June this year.Chandana said Skyroot is in discussions with IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) to get a launch window for the rocket.“We will be announcing the launch window soon,” he said, adding that after the first test launch of Vikram-1 in the next few months the company will have more test launches coming up.“By next year the aim is to get to a capacity where we can produce one rocket a month and probably next year sometime we will be able to reach the full payload capacity of 300kg in each rocket,” he said pointing out that the first few test launches will carry only partial payloads.He describing this as a proud moment not just for India but globally as well because very few companies in the world have the capability and technology to make rockets. “About the AuthorSwati BharadwajSwati Bharadwaj is a business journalist with 30 years of experience covering a host of sectors – right from technology, GCCs, talent, cybersecurity, pharma & biotech, aerospace & defence, BFSI, gems & jewellery to automotive, hospitality, infrastructure, retail, among others. She has worked with TOI and ET across multiple cities such as Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Pune and Ahmedabad.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosRaghav Chadha Blames ‘Sheesh Mahal’ for AAP’s Delhi Poll Defeat, Fresh AttackRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?DAILY ESSENTIALS HIT HARD: Hair Oil, ACs, Soaps Turn Costlier In FMCG Shockwave123PhotostoriesWhy Chef Sanjeev Kapoor suggests visiting Kashmiri Kandur-waan: 7 must-try Kashmiri breadsVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trendsHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods dailyMumbai-Pune Expressway finds its ‘missing link’: India’s longest road cable-stayed bridge to open on May 1How to grow ladyfinger plants at home (Simple step-by-step guide for beginners)123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

CM Revanth flags off India’s first pvt orbital rocket Vikram-1 at Skyroot Aerospace HYDERABAD: India’s first privately built orbital rocket moved yet another step closer to its historic mission with Telangana chief minister A Revanth Reddy flagging off Skyroot Aerospace’s Vikram-1 flight hardware to Sriharikota, where the company is hopeful of launching the rocket from…

Read More
Apr 25, 2026, 17:41 IST

Apr 25, 2026, 17:41 IST

Delhi Capitals’ KL Rahul celebrates his century (AP Photo/Manish Swarup) KL Rahul produced a historic knock for Delhi Capitals, becoming the first Indian batter to score 150 in the IPL, as he hammered an unbeaten 152 against Punjab Kings in Delhi. The innings now stands as the third-highest individual score in the history of the…

Read More
UP Board Result 2026: How flood-hit student from Lakhimpur Kheri topped district with 93%

UP Board Result 2026: How flood-hit student from Lakhimpur Kheri topped district with 93%

Representational AI photo In Lakhimpur Kheri’s Dhaurahra tehsil, where many families continue to live on embankments after losing land to river erosion, a quiet success story has emerged. Uma Shankar Jaiswal, a Class 12 student from the area, has topped the district in the Uttar Pradesh Board Intermediate examination. His achievement stands out not just…

Read More
(AI-generated image) For nearly two decades, Indian geneticists harboured a quiet frustration: while the world chased genomic breakthroughs, the billion-plus people of this subcontinent remained largely genomically invisible to science.The global genetic databases doctors and drug developers use to decode diseases, predict risks, and tailor treatments are, as one geneticist put it, “extremely Eurocentric”. Few databases capture Indian genetic variations, Bratati Kahali, geneticist and computational biologist at the Indian Institute of Science and principal investigator in the GenomeIndia Project, told The Scientist.That invisibility carried real consequences. For Indian patients, drug dosages, efficacy forecasts, and risk profiles — all were calibrated to someone else’s genome.That gap is now, at least partially, being closed.What a Genome actually isYour genome is the complete instruction manual for building and running you. It is the entire set of genetic material, DNA, present in an individual, containing all the information necessary for development, functioning, and maintenance of that organism. In humans, that instruction manual runs to more than three billion chemical base pairs, written in a four-letter alphabet — A, T, C, G — coiled up inside nearly every cell in your body.Genome sequencing is the process of reading that manual, letter by letter. What makes it medically significant is that roughly 0.1 percent of that sequence differs between any two people. These genetic variations among individuals are crucial for understanding disease predispositions and rare inherited disorders. They determine our response to drugs and help track migration and evolutionary patterns of population groups. The problem, historically, has been that those reference maps of human genetic variation were built largely from European populations. A 2022 study revealed that participants of European ancestry accounted for 86.3% of genome-wide association studies, a method for identifying genetic markers linked to diseases or traits, while South Asian populations contributed far less. For a country like India, with its extraordinary genetic complexity, this was not just a scientific inconvenience. It was a structural problem in healthcare.Why India is genetically unlike anywhere elseIndia is not one population. It is, more accurately, hundreds of populations living alongside each other, shaped by thousands of years of migration, adaptation, and- cruciall- a social structure that kept communities remarkably separate from one another.The Indian population comprises more than 4,600 population groups, and several thousand of them are endogamous – meaning people within these communities have, for generations, married within their own group. The consequences of this for genetics are profound. When a community practices endogamy over centuries, rare disease-causing mutations that might be diluted out in a more mixed population instead get amplified and passed down. Some communities carry elevated risks for specific diseases that the broader medical world hasn’t studied, simply because no one had looked closely enough at their genomes.India has one of the most genetically diverse populations in the world, with over 4,600 distinct groups. Due to this, some populations have unique genetic markers that may increase susceptibility to certain diseases or affect responses to specific drugs. The challenge wasn’t just that Indian genomes were understudied globally. It was that findings from genetic research in Europe, America, or East Asia couldn’t be reliably applied to Indians — their biology and risk profiles diverged sharply. Picture a doctor treating Type 2 diabetes in rural Tamil Nadu, relying on tools calibrated for someone in Manchester.The GenomeIndia Project: What was doneIn January 2020, the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) under India’s Ministry of Science and Technology launched the GenomeIndia Project- a coordinated national effort to do what had never been done at scale: sequence the genomes of a representative sample of Indians and build a reference database that actually reflected this country’s genetic reality.More than 20 illustrious research institutions, including IISc, IITs, CSIR, and DBT-BRIC, played a major role in the research. The project was spearheaded by the Centre for Brain Research (CBR) at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru, and involved institutions spread across the country- from CSIR-CCMB in Hyderabad to the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics in Kolkata. The dataset was drawn from 83 population groups and represented equitably, with 36.7% of the samples collected from rural populations, 32.2% from urban populations, and 31.1% from tribal populations. The genomes of India’s four major linguistic families — Indo-European, Dravidian, Austro-Asiatic, and Tibeto-Burman — were all included. Participants were healthy, unrelated individuals, and the project collected over 20,000 blood samples, which are now stored in a biobank at CBR in Bengaluru.Then came the actual sequencing and this is where the scale of what India pulled off becomes apparent. Technological advancement in this field has been remarkable: the first whole genome project required 13 years and  billion to complete, whereas this project sequenced genomes in 3-4 months per batch. The falling cost of sequencing technology made the project financially feasible, and the institutional network made it logistically possible even as Covid-19 disrupted the timeline midway through.Where the project stands todayIn February 2024, the Department of Biotechnology officially announced the completion of whole genome sequencing of 10,074 individuals. The project successfully sequenced the genomes of 10,000 individuals, archived at the Indian Biological Data Centre portals. A biobank housing 20,000 blood samples has been established at the Centre for Brain Research, IISc, to support future research endeavours. The completion was marked with a significant event in January 2025, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the Genomics Data Conclave at Vigyan Bhavan, calling it a historic step in the world of research. The data consisting of the genome sequences of 10,000 Indians was made available at the Indian Biological Data Centre, and researchers and scientists can now use it to understand India’s genetic landscape.The data is housed at the Indian Biological Data Centre (IBDC) in Faridabad, India’s first national life science data repository, and access is governed by the FeED Protocol (Framework for Exchange of Data), which was launched alongside the GenomeIndia Data Conclave to ensure responsible, transparent data sharing.Then, in April 2025, the preliminary scientific findings were published in Nature Genetics, bringing the project’s work into the peer-reviewed record. Preliminary findings of the GenomeIndia project revealed 180 million genetic variants from 9,772 individuals across India. The project identified around 130 million genetic variants, including over 44 million previously unknown variants that were not present in global databases. Of the 27 million rare variants identified, 7 million are novel and not found in global databases at all, highlighting India’s unique genetic landscape.  What the findings actually meanThe most immediate medical implications are in pharmacogenomics – the study of how our genes affect how we respond to drugs. The researchers observed that many Indian populations carry several gene variants implicated in reducing the efficiency and efficacy of antiviral drugs. The project identified 38 critical genetic variants that impact drug metabolism. This is not a small finding. It means that for a significant portion of the Indian population, the standard doses of certain medications may not work as intended — either under-treating or over-treating patients because the drug guidelines were derived from populations with different metabolic genetics.The implications for disease risk are equally significant. Researchers linked many of the rare variants to diseases such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypercholesterolemia, and cancers. The project also made progress on understanding genetic links to conditions like thalassemia, sickle cell anemia, particularly prevalent in tribal communities, and neurological disorders like muscular dystrophies and epilepsy.Then there is the matter of what scientists call population history. Because endogamy has kept Indian communities genetically distinct from one another for centuries, the genomes carry signatures of ancient migrations and admixtures. Genetic signatures provide clues to ancient migrations and ancestry; India has around 4,000 endogamous groups with minimal gene flow between them. In effect, reading these genomes is also a way of reading India’s history- the movements of peoples, the formation of communities, the biological imprint of social structures that are thousands of years old.The unfinished workIt would be a mistake to read the project’s completion as the end of the story. It is, more precisely, the end of Phase One.The 10,000 genomes sequenced represent approximately 2% of India’s documented 4,600 population groups. Programs like the USA’s All of Us initiative aim to enroll at least 1 million participants from historically underrepresented populations, representing 0.3% of the national population. Similarly, the UK’s 100,000 Genomes Project represents 0.15% of the country’s diverse population. By comparison, GenomeIndia currently covers approximately 0.007% of the population.Union minister of state (independent charge) for science and technology Dr Jitendra Singh announced a future target of sequencing 10 million genomes to accelerate India’s advancements in genomics and personalised medicine. Whether the funding, infrastructure, and institutional coordination required to reach that number will materialise is an open question. But the ambition reflects a genuine understanding within government that the 10,000 genomes are a foundation, not a ceiling.There are also real challenges that the project has surfaced rather than solved. Many Indian genomic samples are sent abroad for sequencing, as existing regulations allow commercial export of biological samples, raising concerns about data security and privacy. The genomic data of entire communities- their disease risks, their ancestry, their biological vulnerabilities- sitting in databases requires careful governance. The massive dataset generated, 8 petabytes, poses significant challenges in terms of storage, management, and data security. Ethical questions around informed consent are not trivial either. Genomic data is unlike other personal data, it implicates not just the individual whose sample was taken but their entire family. When a community’s genetic vulnerabilities are mapped, that information can be misused for insurance discrimination, stigmatisation or purposes that the original participants never consented to.The larger betWhat India is doing with the GenomeIndia Project is placing a long bet that the future of medicine is personalised and that being part of that future requires owning your own data. India’s bioeconomy has surged from  billion in 2014 to over 0 billion in 2024, with projections to hit 0 billion by 2030. India now ranks 12th globally in biotech and 3rd in the Asia-Pacific region. The GenomeIndia Project is part of that larger ambition. India produces nearly one-fifth of the world’s generic medicines and runs one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical industries. But its drug development has historically been derivative, making cheaper versions of medicines discovered elsewhere, for diseases profiled elsewhere, in populations that are not Indian. A national genomic database changes the terms of that equation.States are beginning to move too. Gujarat has become the first Indian state to launch a tribal genome sequencing project, an initiative to enhance health and well-being of tribal citizens. The Gujarat Biotechnology Research Centre will sequence the genomes of 2,000 individuals from the tribal population in 17 districts, with the aim of identifying genetic markers for natural immunity, cancer, and hereditary diseases such as sickle cell anaemia and thalassemia.A country of 1.4 billion people, extraordinary genetic diversity, and a documented problem with diseases that the rest of the world’s research establishment hasn’t fully studied, that is simultaneously India’s challenge and its scientific opportunity. The GenomeIndia Project has, for the first time, given the country a foundation to act on that opportunity. What happens next depends on whether India can translate that foundation into medicine, policy, and research infrastructure that actually reaches the people whose genomes made the project possible in the first place, the rural farmer in Odisha, the tribal community in Gujarat, the Tibeto-Burman speaker in Arunachal Pradesh.About the AuthorManya JainA writer at Times of India, I cover the stories that live in the gaps — between a screen and real life, between what we’re sold and what we actually feel. I try bring curiosity and candour to everything I write, whether I’m digging into global affairs, modern relationships, or the quieter anxieties of everyday life.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?DAILY ESSENTIALS HIT HARD: Hair Oil, ACs, Soaps Turn Costlier In FMCG ShockwaveBangladesh PM Tarique Rahman Writes To BJP Chief, Seeks BJP-BNP Political Dialogue123PhotostoriesVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trends5 signs your divorce is inevitableHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods dailyMumbai-Pune Expressway finds its ‘missing link’: India’s longest road cable-stayed bridge to open on May 1How to grow ladyfinger plants at home (Simple step-by-step guide for beginners)123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

(AI-generated image) For nearly two decades, Indian geneticists harboured a quiet frustration: while the world chased genomic breakthroughs, the billion-plus people of this subcontinent remained largely genomically invisible to science.The global genetic databases doctors and drug developers use to decode diseases, predict risks, and tailor treatments are, as one geneticist put it, “extremely Eurocentric”. Few databases capture Indian genetic variations, Bratati Kahali, geneticist and computational biologist at the Indian Institute of Science and principal investigator in the GenomeIndia Project, told The Scientist.That invisibility carried real consequences. For Indian patients, drug dosages, efficacy forecasts, and risk profiles — all were calibrated to someone else’s genome.That gap is now, at least partially, being closed.What a Genome actually isYour genome is the complete instruction manual for building and running you. It is the entire set of genetic material, DNA, present in an individual, containing all the information necessary for development, functioning, and maintenance of that organism. In humans, that instruction manual runs to more than three billion chemical base pairs, written in a four-letter alphabet — A, T, C, G — coiled up inside nearly every cell in your body.Genome sequencing is the process of reading that manual, letter by letter. What makes it medically significant is that roughly 0.1 percent of that sequence differs between any two people. These genetic variations among individuals are crucial for understanding disease predispositions and rare inherited disorders. They determine our response to drugs and help track migration and evolutionary patterns of population groups. The problem, historically, has been that those reference maps of human genetic variation were built largely from European populations. A 2022 study revealed that participants of European ancestry accounted for 86.3% of genome-wide association studies, a method for identifying genetic markers linked to diseases or traits, while South Asian populations contributed far less. For a country like India, with its extraordinary genetic complexity, this was not just a scientific inconvenience. It was a structural problem in healthcare.Why India is genetically unlike anywhere elseIndia is not one population. It is, more accurately, hundreds of populations living alongside each other, shaped by thousands of years of migration, adaptation, and- cruciall- a social structure that kept communities remarkably separate from one another.The Indian population comprises more than 4,600 population groups, and several thousand of them are endogamous – meaning people within these communities have, for generations, married within their own group. The consequences of this for genetics are profound. When a community practices endogamy over centuries, rare disease-causing mutations that might be diluted out in a more mixed population instead get amplified and passed down. Some communities carry elevated risks for specific diseases that the broader medical world hasn’t studied, simply because no one had looked closely enough at their genomes.India has one of the most genetically diverse populations in the world, with over 4,600 distinct groups. Due to this, some populations have unique genetic markers that may increase susceptibility to certain diseases or affect responses to specific drugs. The challenge wasn’t just that Indian genomes were understudied globally. It was that findings from genetic research in Europe, America, or East Asia couldn’t be reliably applied to Indians — their biology and risk profiles diverged sharply. Picture a doctor treating Type 2 diabetes in rural Tamil Nadu, relying on tools calibrated for someone in Manchester.The GenomeIndia Project: What was doneIn January 2020, the Department of Biotechnology (DBT) under India’s Ministry of Science and Technology launched the GenomeIndia Project- a coordinated national effort to do what had never been done at scale: sequence the genomes of a representative sample of Indians and build a reference database that actually reflected this country’s genetic reality.More than 20 illustrious research institutions, including IISc, IITs, CSIR, and DBT-BRIC, played a major role in the research. The project was spearheaded by the Centre for Brain Research (CBR) at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru, and involved institutions spread across the country- from CSIR-CCMB in Hyderabad to the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics in Kolkata. The dataset was drawn from 83 population groups and represented equitably, with 36.7% of the samples collected from rural populations, 32.2% from urban populations, and 31.1% from tribal populations. The genomes of India’s four major linguistic families — Indo-European, Dravidian, Austro-Asiatic, and Tibeto-Burman — were all included. Participants were healthy, unrelated individuals, and the project collected over 20,000 blood samples, which are now stored in a biobank at CBR in Bengaluru.Then came the actual sequencing and this is where the scale of what India pulled off becomes apparent. Technological advancement in this field has been remarkable: the first whole genome project required 13 years and $3 billion to complete, whereas this project sequenced genomes in 3-4 months per batch. The falling cost of sequencing technology made the project financially feasible, and the institutional network made it logistically possible even as Covid-19 disrupted the timeline midway through.Where the project stands todayIn February 2024, the Department of Biotechnology officially announced the completion of whole genome sequencing of 10,074 individuals. The project successfully sequenced the genomes of 10,000 individuals, archived at the Indian Biological Data Centre portals. A biobank housing 20,000 blood samples has been established at the Centre for Brain Research, IISc, to support future research endeavours. The completion was marked with a significant event in January 2025, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the Genomics Data Conclave at Vigyan Bhavan, calling it a historic step in the world of research. The data consisting of the genome sequences of 10,000 Indians was made available at the Indian Biological Data Centre, and researchers and scientists can now use it to understand India’s genetic landscape.The data is housed at the Indian Biological Data Centre (IBDC) in Faridabad, India’s first national life science data repository, and access is governed by the FeED Protocol (Framework for Exchange of Data), which was launched alongside the GenomeIndia Data Conclave to ensure responsible, transparent data sharing.Then, in April 2025, the preliminary scientific findings were published in Nature Genetics, bringing the project’s work into the peer-reviewed record. Preliminary findings of the GenomeIndia project revealed 180 million genetic variants from 9,772 individuals across India. The project identified around 130 million genetic variants, including over 44 million previously unknown variants that were not present in global databases. Of the 27 million rare variants identified, 7 million are novel and not found in global databases at all, highlighting India’s unique genetic landscape. What the findings actually meanThe most immediate medical implications are in pharmacogenomics – the study of how our genes affect how we respond to drugs. The researchers observed that many Indian populations carry several gene variants implicated in reducing the efficiency and efficacy of antiviral drugs. The project identified 38 critical genetic variants that impact drug metabolism. This is not a small finding. It means that for a significant portion of the Indian population, the standard doses of certain medications may not work as intended — either under-treating or over-treating patients because the drug guidelines were derived from populations with different metabolic genetics.The implications for disease risk are equally significant. Researchers linked many of the rare variants to diseases such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypercholesterolemia, and cancers. The project also made progress on understanding genetic links to conditions like thalassemia, sickle cell anemia, particularly prevalent in tribal communities, and neurological disorders like muscular dystrophies and epilepsy.Then there is the matter of what scientists call population history. Because endogamy has kept Indian communities genetically distinct from one another for centuries, the genomes carry signatures of ancient migrations and admixtures. Genetic signatures provide clues to ancient migrations and ancestry; India has around 4,000 endogamous groups with minimal gene flow between them. In effect, reading these genomes is also a way of reading India’s history- the movements of peoples, the formation of communities, the biological imprint of social structures that are thousands of years old.The unfinished workIt would be a mistake to read the project’s completion as the end of the story. It is, more precisely, the end of Phase One.The 10,000 genomes sequenced represent approximately 2% of India’s documented 4,600 population groups. Programs like the USA’s All of Us initiative aim to enroll at least 1 million participants from historically underrepresented populations, representing 0.3% of the national population. Similarly, the UK’s 100,000 Genomes Project represents 0.15% of the country’s diverse population. By comparison, GenomeIndia currently covers approximately 0.007% of the population.Union minister of state (independent charge) for science and technology Dr Jitendra Singh announced a future target of sequencing 10 million genomes to accelerate India’s advancements in genomics and personalised medicine. Whether the funding, infrastructure, and institutional coordination required to reach that number will materialise is an open question. But the ambition reflects a genuine understanding within government that the 10,000 genomes are a foundation, not a ceiling.There are also real challenges that the project has surfaced rather than solved. Many Indian genomic samples are sent abroad for sequencing, as existing regulations allow commercial export of biological samples, raising concerns about data security and privacy. The genomic data of entire communities- their disease risks, their ancestry, their biological vulnerabilities- sitting in databases requires careful governance. The massive dataset generated, 8 petabytes, poses significant challenges in terms of storage, management, and data security. Ethical questions around informed consent are not trivial either. Genomic data is unlike other personal data, it implicates not just the individual whose sample was taken but their entire family. When a community’s genetic vulnerabilities are mapped, that information can be misused for insurance discrimination, stigmatisation or purposes that the original participants never consented to.The larger betWhat India is doing with the GenomeIndia Project is placing a long bet that the future of medicine is personalised and that being part of that future requires owning your own data. India’s bioeconomy has surged from $10 billion in 2014 to over $130 billion in 2024, with projections to hit $300 billion by 2030. India now ranks 12th globally in biotech and 3rd in the Asia-Pacific region. The GenomeIndia Project is part of that larger ambition. India produces nearly one-fifth of the world’s generic medicines and runs one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical industries. But its drug development has historically been derivative, making cheaper versions of medicines discovered elsewhere, for diseases profiled elsewhere, in populations that are not Indian. A national genomic database changes the terms of that equation.States are beginning to move too. Gujarat has become the first Indian state to launch a tribal genome sequencing project, an initiative to enhance health and well-being of tribal citizens. The Gujarat Biotechnology Research Centre will sequence the genomes of 2,000 individuals from the tribal population in 17 districts, with the aim of identifying genetic markers for natural immunity, cancer, and hereditary diseases such as sickle cell anaemia and thalassemia.A country of 1.4 billion people, extraordinary genetic diversity, and a documented problem with diseases that the rest of the world’s research establishment hasn’t fully studied, that is simultaneously India’s challenge and its scientific opportunity. The GenomeIndia Project has, for the first time, given the country a foundation to act on that opportunity. What happens next depends on whether India can translate that foundation into medicine, policy, and research infrastructure that actually reaches the people whose genomes made the project possible in the first place, the rural farmer in Odisha, the tribal community in Gujarat, the Tibeto-Burman speaker in Arunachal Pradesh.About the AuthorManya JainA writer at Times of India, I cover the stories that live in the gaps — between a screen and real life, between what we’re sold and what we actually feel. I try bring curiosity and candour to everything I write, whether I’m digging into global affairs, modern relationships, or the quieter anxieties of everyday life.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosRaghav Chadha, AAP MPs Join BJP: How ‘Merger Clause’ Could Help Them Avoid DisqualificationPolitical Storm Erupts As BJP Targets Kejriwal Over ‘Sheesh Mahal 2’ ClaimsRam Madhav Says ‘India Agreed To Stop Buying Russian Oil’, Later Clarifies, Rahul Gandhi ReactsExplained: How the New US H-1B Bill Could Disrupt Indian Students’ Study-to-Work PathwayAnna Hazare Reacts to Raghav Chadha Joining BJP, Calls Party Switching for ‘Selfish Needs’ Wrong‘Rahman Dakait Of Delhi’: BJP Attacks Kejriwal Day After Chadha Exit, Shares ‘Sheeshmahal 2’ Pics3 Killed, 5 Injured In Fresh Naga-Kuki Clashes In Manipur’s Ukhrul; Rights Group Opposes UAPA PowersAAP Exodus: 3 MPs Present At BJP HQ, Where Are The Others Raghav Chadha Named?DAILY ESSENTIALS HIT HARD: Hair Oil, ACs, Soaps Turn Costlier In FMCG ShockwaveBangladesh PM Tarique Rahman Writes To BJP Chief, Seeks BJP-BNP Political Dialogue123PhotostoriesVisiting Pune? These 6 incredible day trips deserve a spot on your itineraryFrom an opulent house worth Rs 20 crore to an apartment with girlfriend Tejasswi Prakash in Dubai- Karan Kundrra’s lavish lifestyle5 heritage-inspired Indian design elements influencing modern housing trends5 signs your divorce is inevitableHow heavy traffic pressure is straining Bengaluru’s key highway infrastructureSimple and elegant home interior ideas inspired by Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha5 Indian summer vegetables you can grow in a pot at homeBhindi Fry to Sprouted Moong: Hrithik Roshan’s idea of diet includes eating these desi foods dailyMumbai-Pune Expressway finds its ‘missing link’: India’s longest road cable-stayed bridge to open on May 1How to grow ladyfinger plants at home (Simple step-by-step guide for beginners)123Hot PicksTamil Nadu ElectionWest Bengal voter turnoutAssembly Election 2026Mamata BanerjeeTamil Nadu voter turnoutAmit ShahPM ModiTop TrendingRaghav Chadha Joins BJPTamil Nadu electionAP SSC Class 10 resultsRRB opens qualificationAIIMS B.Sc. coursesJac Class 12 ResultPatrick MahomesBengal PollsNirmala SitharamanIPL Orange Cap

For nearly two decades, Indian geneticists harboured a quiet frustration: while the world chased genomic breakthroughs, the billion-plus people of this subcontinent remained largely genomically invisible to science.The global genetic databases doctors and drug developers use to decode diseases, predict risks, and tailor treatments are, as one geneticist put it, “extremely Eurocentric”. Few databases capture…

Read More
RR vs SRH Live Score, IPL 2026: Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi vs Travishek as Royals eye revenge against Sunrisers at home

RR vs SRH Live Score, IPL 2026: Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi vs Travishek as Royals eye revenge against Sunrisers at home

Sunrisers Hyderabad come into this match with confidence after having beaten Rajasthan Royals earlier in the season. That win on April 13 is still part of the narrative around this fixture. SRH had dominated that game across departments and will now look to repeat a similar performance, even in an away setting at Jaipur. SRH…

Read More
IMU CET 2026: Application last date extended to April 28; check how to apply, direct link

IMU CET 2026: Application last date extended to April 28; check how to apply, direct link

Representational photo- PTI The Indian Maritime University has extended the registration deadline for IMU CET 2026. Candidates now have time till April 28, to complete their application. Those who are eligible can apply online through the official website, imu.edu.in. The application process is being conducted online only. Candidates need to visit the official IMU website…

Read More
In 1985, a professional diver exploring the Calanques found a submerged prehistoric cave hidden for millennia

In 1985, a professional diver exploring the Calanques found a submerged prehistoric cave hidden for millennia

An astonishing underwater cave, discovered by diver Henri Cosquer in 1985 off the French Riviera, reveals over 500 Palaeolithic artworks dating back 19,000-27,000 years. Think of the sensation of diving into the clean blue water of the French Riviera, surrounded by the rocky cliffs of the Calanques. This is generally a place where tourists either…

Read More