State leaders | Age of satraps
If the centre cannot hold, things fall apart—goes the line. But the colossal figures who rose across the Indian map were a sign of a rainbow nation, a democracy speaking many languages
If the centre cannot hold, things fall apart—goes the line. But the colossal figures who rose across the Indian map were a sign of a rainbow nation, a democracy speaking many languages
India began clocking international wins in individual sports like never before: shooters, weight-lifters and tennis players led the charge
Modi brought political stability to the country, made welfare delivery a personal mission, and shaped a bold, assertive India
A collection of images from INDIA TODAY’s finest photographers that may lie outside official memory, yet are a depiction of the texture of an era
In this decade of technology, sex, war and unbridled capitalism, India was caught up in a whirl of change and yet managed to preserve the past
Tsunami. Supercyclone. Monster quake. Coastal India was the worst hit in a series of natural disasters that exacted a devastating toll from the late 1990s to the early 2000s. The only positive: governments learnt to hone their emergency response systems
The golden team forged under Ganguly’s captaincy fought opponents on green pitches, and fought them on dusty bowls. Unlike past greats, it never surrendered easily
In-flight entertainment? Yes, all of a sudden in the mid-’90s, Indian pop culture was all global in look, feel, conception and theme, Bollywood took an outbound flight. And Bhangra was blaring on the world’s public address systems
It was not only the miracles of technology that touched India. As unpoliced as the internet, human minds were increasingly seduced by the paranormal—Ganesha drinking milk, prehominids stalking Delhi...
Once that first mobile call was made—and the enter button pressed on the first internet search—there was no looking back for India
The decade of progress was greyed by smoke and ash from riots, blasts and suicide attacks—a dark undertow that reminded India its inner demons had yet to be tamed
The old order changed, terror came home to roost, and no one was safe anymore, not even Uncle Sam
A warlike general turned into a surprise peddler of solutions to history’s problems. India, too, had a gifted pacifist in Vajpayee. But it was too fraught a time for even the boldest entrepreneurs of peace
As the leaders sued for peace in Lahore, the Pak army was playing saboteur. The battle to reclaim the high ground on the Kargil road needed howitzers, tactical chutzpah and plenty of fallen heroes
Pokhran-II announced India as a nuclear weapons state. It did bring in some recriminations and sanctions, but India shrugged it off. It was now a bona fide member of the nuclear club
Sitaram Kesri, backroom badshah and emblem of power without responsibility, was just a device. Through his caprices, a federal polity was being birthed
Rao, Gowda, Gujral, three times Vajpayee, and then Manmohan. In an era of fragile coalitions, India found a new synthesis in Vajpayee
The 1995-2005 decade was perhaps politically the most complex since Independence. We kept our lens razor-sharp through the reign of five prime ministers as single-party dominance gave way to coalition compulsions
Structural reforms did more than just drag India’s economy back from the brink. In a virtuous segue from Rajiv’s prelude on telecom and IT, the Rao-Manmohan duo wrote the opening act of a new script
In a Republic still young and evolving, decades would naturally compete to be called the ‘most consequential’. But even put to that test, 1985-1995 would probably have the most stories that dominate our democracy and debates today