Breaking News
Delhi blast cyber scam At the very first signs of the Delhi blast cyber scam, savvy users can protect themselves from fraudsters-

- Person receives a call from unknown number.
- Caller says: “Your number was used in the Delhi explosion; unless you pay/deliver data you will be arrested.”
- They then either:
- ask for UPI/bank transfers, or
- request to share OTP/verification via video-call, or
- threaten to leak fabricated evidence online.
- People who may not be fully digitally literate — e.g., older citizens, rural or semi-urban individuals.
- Users with linked mobile/Aadhaar and bank/UPI accounts.
- Those who react quickly under fear or threat.
- Individuals who do not immediately verify the caller or threat.
In one recent case in Rajasthan’s Chittorgarh, the accused used fear of exposure via video-call to extort money.
Being aware that anyone could be a target is important — the tactic relies on fear, not necessarily previous vulnerability. - Impersonation of law enforcement: Fraudsters say they are from the police or cyber-crime branch and that legal action is imminent.
- Citing the Delhi blast incident: Using the recent explosion as a “proof” that the caller’s number is implicated.
- Urgency and panic: Victims are told they must act now or be arrested — leaving little time to think.
- Request for bank/UPI details or verification access: This is how money or personal data is extracted.
- Threat of exposure: Prying on the victim’s fear of social stigma, especially when video or audio “evidence” is mentioned.
- Switching to other contact modes (WhatsApp, video-call): To appear more credible and extract more intimate data.
For example, in one incident, the caller began with a WhatsApp video call, threatened to upload the conversation unless payment was made.
Such layered tactics make the scam highly dangerous. - The fraudsters pose as senior police or cyber officials.
- They demand money and personal bank/UPI data.
- They exploit the fear of arrest and terror involvement to manipulate people.
- The advisory urges people not to share personal details or money without verification, and to immediately report suspicious calls.
This case study shows how official agencies are recognizing and actively warning about the scam, which means it is serious and ongoing. - Ask for their official badge number, department name, and call back from verified number.
- Use official channels listed on police websites.
- Do not respond to threats.
- Note down the number, block it.
- Report to your local cyber-crime cell, or call national helpline 1930 (India).
- Inform your bank if you shared any banking detail.
- Change UPI/bank app PINs periodically.
- Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) on all important accounts.
- Do not install unknown apps or click links from unknown numbers.
- Keep your mobile OS, antivirus app updated.
- Educate your family members — especially elderly relatives — about this scam strategy.
- Don’t engage further with the caller — hanging up is fine.
- Disconnect your internet or put your phone on airplane mode if you shared any access.
- Notify your bank/UPI provider immediately, and ask them to freeze any transactions.
- File a complaint with your local police cyber-crime cell or through the national portal (e.g., cybercrime.gov.in).
- Change passwords and PINs on all linked financial apps.
- Monitor your accounts for any unauthorized transactions for at least 30-90 days.
- Rajasthan Police issued a formal advisory.
- They emphasised that no legitimate police officer will demand money to “clear your name” or ask you to share OTPs.
Reporting mechanisms you can use- - National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal: cybercrime.gov.in
- Police helpline number: 1930 (in India)
- Local cyber-crime branch in your city.
By reporting early, you help authorities trace the gang, freeze suspect accounts, and potentially avoid wider damage.
Contents
New Delhi, Nov.12,2025:Delhi blast cyber scam is emerging as one of the most chilling frauds of the season — fraudsters are now using the backdrop of a major incident in the nation’s capital to intimidate ordinary citizens. Immediately following the recent explosion near Red Fort in Delhi, the Rajasthan Police’s Cyber Crime branch flagged a new wave of fraudulent calls in which victims are told their mobile or Aadhaar numbers were used in the blast.
In this article, we deep-dive into this scam, how it works, why it’s spreading, and what you can do to protect yourself.
What Is the Delhi Blast Cyber Scam
How the Scam Operates
In the Delhi blast cyber scam, criminals call unsuspecting individuals, claiming that their mobile number or Aadhaar is linked with a serious criminal case such as the car explosion near Red Fort. They pose as senior police officers, ask for personal data, bank details, or demand money under the guise of “clearing your name”.
They often follow this pattern-
Why It’s Linked to the Recent Delhi Blast
The connection to the Delhi blast gives this scam heightened emotional power — using fear, panic and urgency to push victims into hasty actions. Reports indicate that after the incident near Red Fort, several states (including Rajasthan) issued advisories about scams playing off the event.
Because the blast was high-profile and triggered national alerts, fraudsters are leveraging that environment to make their claims seem credible.
Who Is at Risk – Understanding the Target Profile
The victims of the Delhi blast cyber scam tend to include-
The Tactics Used by Fraudsters in the Delhi Blast Cyber Scam
Here are some of the key manipulative tactics used in the scam-
The Alert Issued by Rajasthan Police
The Rajasthan Police Cyber Crime branch issued a statewide alert, stating that scammers have begun targeting citizens after the Delhi explosion, claiming their mobile/Aadhaar number was used in the blast.
Key points from the alert-
Five Powerful Preventive Steps Against the Delhi Blast Cyber Scam
Below are five practical, strong actions you can take to protect yourself from the Delhi blast cyber scam-
Always verify identity of caller.
If someone claims to be from the police or cyber-crime branch:
Do not panic — pause and evaluate.
Scammers rely on fear and urgency. Taking even a minute to step back helps you think rationally.
Ask: “Why would they contact me if they already know the number is involved”
Real law enforcement will not demand immediate bank transfers to “clear your name”.
Never share OTPs, bank/UPI details or video-call access with unknown callers.
If they ask you to share your phone screen, video-call, or link your phone for “verification” — it is a red flag.
Malicious actors may gain full access to your banking apps via fake verification.
There is a similar method where a mere photo sent via WhatsApp empties bank accounts.
Report the call immediately and block the number.
If you receive a suspicious call-
Strengthen your digital hygiene and awareness.
What to Do If You Are Targeted
If you believe you are a target of the Delhi blast cyber scam — follow these steps
Role of Law Enforcement & Reporting Mechanisms
Law-enforcement agencies at both state and national levels have ramped up warnings about the scam. For example
Stay Vigilant and Rise Above the Scam
The Delhi blast cyber scam is a particularly insidious fraud because it uses a real incident — the explosion near Red Fort and associated national alert status — to manipulate fear in ordinary citizens. But with awareness, caution, and the right actions, you can ensure the fraudsters don’t succeed.
Breaking News
Delhi Blast Gujarat Terror Arrests reveal a stunning Rajasthan connection in a terror plot-

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Gujarat,Nov.12,2025:Delhi Blast Gujarat Terror Arrests open a harrowing new chapter in India’s internal security narrative. In the aftermath of a blast near Red Fort in Delhi, the Gujarat Anti‑Terrorism Squad (ATS) arrested three suspects whose investigation has uncovered a startling Rajasthan connection. The gravity of this development lies not only in the arrests but in the surprising route of weapons supply—via drones from Pakistan into the Indian state of Rajasthan, then onward to Gujarat. This article delves into the full details, the wider implications, and the evolving response from India’s security apparatus.
What Happened
The incident that triggered the investigation was the blast near Delhi’s Red Fort which claimed multiple lives and set off nationwide security alerts. In the wake of that explosion, Gujarat ATS succeeded in capturing three suspects who were allegedly plotting multiple attacks across the country. Their capture uncovered an entire logistical chain involving cross-state transfers and international inputs. Evidence suggests the weapons were brought into India via drones from Pakistan, dropped in Rajasthan’s border districts such as Hanumangarh and Sri Ganganagar, then moved into Gujarat for further deployment.
The Arrests
In the operation, Gujarat ATS arrested
- Ahmed Mohiyuddin Saiyed (35), a doctor from Hyderabad who had studied medicine in China and later ran a restaurant business.
- Azad Suleman Sheikh (20), from Shamli, Uttar Pradesh.
- Mohammad Suhail (aka Mohammad Salim Khan) (23), a student from Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh.
According to Gujarat ATS, the trio were working for the terrorist outfit Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), and were part of two separate modules planning large-scale attacks. They had conducted reconnaissance of sensitive locations, including offices of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) in Ahmedabad, Delhi and Lucknow.
Weapons & Materials Seized
During the operation, authorities recovered a dangerous arsenal-
- Two Glock pistols and one Beretta pistol, along with 30 rounds of ammunition.
- 4 litres of castor oil — a raw ingredient used in preparing the deadly poison ricin.
- Indicators that one suspect, Saiyed, had already started chemical preparations to manufacture ricin.
The discovery of a chemical-based weapon plot alongside conventional arms marks a significant escalation in threat profile.
The Rajasthan Link
One of the most troubling facets of the case is the revealed connection to Rajasthan. The Delhi Blast Gujarat Terror Arrests investigation found that the arms cache was sourced from Hanumangarh in Rajasthan, allegedly delivered via drones from Pakistan into Sri Ganganagar / Hanumangarh border districts.
The Rajasthan Anti‑Terrorism Squad (ATS) has dispatched a team to Gujarat to interrogate the accused and trace the supply chain, including local actors who may have facilitated movement of materials from Rajasthan to Gujarat.
Border-area intelligence had already noted drone-based drops of narcotics and weapons in these districts, raising concerns that the region has become a new corridor for illicit arms supply.
Implications for National Security
Threat Evolution
The Delhi Blast Gujarat Terror Arrests case exemplifies how non-state actors are evolving
- Using drones for cross-border arms supply, bypassing traditional routes.
- Combining chemical weapons (ricin) with firearms, increasing potential lethality.
- Operating across multiple states (Rajasthan → Gujarat → Uttar Pradesh), complicating jurisdiction.
Intelligence and Surveillance Challenges
The intelligence system in Rajasthan’s border districts appears to have exhibited gaps. The drop of arms by drones into Hanumangarh/Sri Ganganagar went undetected until the Gujarat ATS breakthrough. This raises questions about surveillance and coordination among agencies.
State-Centre Coordination
The case underlines the importance of rapid coordination between state ATS units and federal agencies. With arrests in Gujarat, link-tracing to Rajasthan, and implications for Delhi, multi-state and federal networks are being tested.
Public Safety & Counter-Radicalisation
The use of drone-based arms drops and chemical weapons indicates a shift from mass casual attacks to integrated threat models. Public spaces, major religious sites and organisations now face an elevated risk. Agencies will likely expand monitoring of online radicalisation channels, as these suspects reportedly used digital networks for indoctrination.
What the Agencies Are Doing
Gujarat ATS Investigations
The Gujarat ATS continues to probe the arrested trio, tracking:
- Their handlers in Pakistan and the logistics of their communication.
- Financial flows for procurement of weapons and chemicals.
- Ground network within Gujarat, especially Ahmedabad–Adalaj route used by the suspects.
Rajasthan ATS Mobilisation
The Rajasthan ATS team dispatched to Gujarat is tasked with-
- Identifying whether local sleeper cells or brokers in Rajasthan facilitated the drone drop and onward transport.
- Examining surveillance footprints in border districts such as Hanumangarh and Sri Ganganagar.
- Enhancing intelligence sharing with the BSF and state police in light of previous drone-based contraband drops.
Security Alert and State-Wide Measures
Following the Delhi blast and subsequent arrests, Rajasthan has raised its security alert. Vehicle checks, deployments of Quick Response Teams (QRTs), bomb-disposal squads and intensive border surveillance have been stepped up in the border districts.
The Delhi Blast Gujarat Terror Arrests case is a watershed moment for Indian internal security: a trio of suspects, arms smuggling via drones from Pakistan, chemical weapon manufacturing, and a multi-state nexus that intertwines Rajasthan, Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh.
Breaking News
e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal in Jaipur exposes grave abuse of trust and widow vulnerability—

Contents
Jaipur, Nov.12,2025:e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal has sent tremors through Jaipur’s social landscape after a 27-year-old widow was allegedly drugged, raped and blackmailed by a local e-Mitra kiosk operator in the Mansarovar area. In this article, we explore every facet of this tragic incident, its background, how it unfolded and why it raises alarm bells about bureaucratic trust, gender vulnerability and systemic safeguards-
The victim’s background and approach
The young woman, approximately 27 years old, had recently become a widow and was residing alone in Jaipur. She was informed that the government offers widow pension benefits, making her situation marginally easier. On investigation she was told that the pension-card would be issued via an e-Mitra kiosk.
She proceeded to the nearby kiosk of the operator in question. The operator—a local “e-Mitra” service provider—collected detailed personal and family information.
This sets the stage for how the e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal unfolded. The victim’s vulnerable status and trust in a service channel created the opportunity.
The alleged scheme by the e-Mitra operator
The operator invited the widow to his kiosk under the pretext that her pension-card was ready. He told her she had “worked hard” and that he would host a “party” for her. At the party, she was offered snacks (a cold drink and kachori). Unbeknownst to her, the cold drink allegedly contained a sedative. She lost consciousness. The operator then allegedly stripped her, made a video and raped her.
Following this, the operator threatened to share the video clip if she resisted or disclosed the incident. This sequence highlights the calculated nature of the e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal—a gross misuse of service-provider trust and technology as blackmail weapon.
The victim described being lured multiple times under the fear of the clip being made public, thereby enduring repeated assault.
The assault and subsequent threats
In the core act of the e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal, the operator not only assaulted the victim when she was unconscious—but also created digital evidence (video clip) to threaten her further.
He leveraged the victim’s isolation (widowhood, living alone) and her trust in the system (e-Mitra kiosk) to trap her. The clip-threat enabled continuation of the abuse beyond the initial assault.
This pattern reflects a chilling combination of service-provider betrayal, digital blackmail, and gender-based violence—a triple threat amplifying the scandal’s severity.
The police action and legal proceedings
Upon the victim’s complaint, police in Jaipur registered a case under various serious sections. Investigations are underway. The fact that such a case emerged at an e-Mitra kiosk in Jaipur’s Mansarovar area underscores the urgent need for oversight and accountability in such centres.
Authorities are currently probing details: How the sedative was administered, how the video was recorded, the chain of repeated abuse and blackmail, and the operator’s network (if any).
In the wider context, the scandal adds to alarming statistics: For example, in the first half of 2025, Rajasthan recorded 2,966 rape cases and 6,192 dowry harassment cases — with Jaipur district having the highest number of both.
Thus, the e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal is both a singular incident and symptomatic of broader gender-security crises.
Why the e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal matters
Violation of public service trust
The e-Mitra kiosk is meant to streamline government-citizen services. When such a platform becomes a site of betrayal, it erodes trust in digital-service frameworks.
Exploitation of systemic vulnerability
The victim’s widowhood, lone living status and reliance on welfare support made her especially vulnerable. The operator exploited this—it’s a stark reminder that system design must account for such weak-points.
Digital blackmail dimension
Recording the assault and the threat of releasing the video highlight how modern abuse blends physical assault with digital coercion. The video becomes both weapon and prison for the victim.
Gender safety & service access intersection
Women accessing welfare services should feel safe. This incident showcases how the intersection of gender, vulnerability and service access can become perilous if oversight is weak.
Precedent and deterrence
It’s vital that this case leads to strong legal consequences and systemic reforms—the scale of the “shocking assault scandal” label is justified only if it triggers deeper change.
Social and systemic implications
Service-provider regulation
Kiosks like e-Mitra require regulatory oversight, background checks for operators, security protocols for clients, and monitoring of abuse risks.
Victim support system
The victim navigated this ordeal alone until filing complaint. There must be mechanisms for immediate support — medical, legal, psychological — especially in welfare-service settings.
Tech-safeguards
Given the digital blackmail angle, safeguards against unauthorized recording, video-leak threats and malicious coercion must be strengthened in service environments.
Awareness campaigns
Citizens, especially vulnerable groups (widows, single women, etc.), need to be educated about predatory risks—even when engaging official-looking service kiosks.
Data transparency & crisis monitoring
With the state registering thousands of rape and harassment cases (as referenced earlier) it becomes mandatory to monitor, analyse, and prevent patterns that allow e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal-type incidents to propagate.
The e-Mitra Operator’s Shocking Assault Scandal in Jaipur lays bare a brutal betrayal: a welfare service channel turned instrument of abuse. From the victim’s vulnerable status to the calculated exploitation, the incident is a wake-up call about trust, safety, digital threat and systemic gaps. Unless such cases are met with stringent accountability and structural reforms, the sinister potential of service-platform exploitation remains.
Our hope is that the legal process brings justice, the victim finds closure and Gujarat-Rajasthan frameworks learn hard lessons from this disturbingly unique case.
Breaking News
Subodh United 2.0 triumphs at Subodh Public School in Jaipur — young leaders shine in a high-energy Model UN conference featuring five dynamic committees-

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Jaipur, Nov.12,2025:Subodh United 2.0 emerged as an outstanding platform for young minds at Subodh Public School, Rambagh, Jaipur. With more than 100 delegates stepping into the shoes of diplomats and journalists, the conference delivered an immersive Model United Nations experience. The focus keyword Subodh United 2.0 resonates through this article as we explore how this ambitious event unfolded-
how Subodh United 2.0 came together
Within a short span of just 15 days, the school organised the second edition of Subodh United 2.0, demonstrating agility and commitment to student leadership. A 20-member Secretariat, led by Secretary-General Tanisha Gupta and Director-General Mansi Agarwal, under the mentorship of MUN Coordinator Shikha Banerjee and guided by Advisor Arpit Agrawal, took charge of execution.
The motto “Voices Within, Visions Beyond” was woven into each stage of the conference — from thematic design to delegate kits, certificates and mementos. The swift timeline—15 days—is remarkable and speaks to the passion and organisation of the team.

Committee breakdown – five engaging forums
Committee – UNICEF
In the UNICEF forum, delegates explored child rights, global health and education initiatives. They debated scenarios from improving access to schooling in remote regions to crisis response for displaced children. The UNICEF committee provided a strong start to Subodh United 2.0, enabling delegates to engage with pressing humanitarian issues.
Committee – UNHRC
In the UNHRC committee, human rights violations and emerging global concerns such as digital privacy, refugee protection and minority rights were brought into focus. Delegates sharpened their diplomatic reasoning, drawing from real-world precedents and UN conventions.
Committee – AISM
The AISM (which could stand for an international security/monitoring body) committee within Subodh United 2.0 challenged delegates to think strategically. Discussions ranged from arms control, cyber security treaties, regional stability and peace-keeping mandates. Young participants experienced the rigour of international negotiation.
Committee – Pro Kabaddi League (PKL) Committee
A uniquely innovative feature of Subodh United 2.0 was the inclusion of the Pro Kabaddi League Committee. Fusing sports diplomacy and organisational leadership, this committee invited delegates to deliberate on sports governance, regional leagues, gender parity in sports and commercial-ethical dimensions. It brought a fresh cultural element to a typical MUN format.
Committee – International Press
The International Press Committee gave delegates the chance to act as journalists covering the rest of the conference. They wrote press-releases, covered debates, conducted interviews and shaped narratives. This dynamic forum emphasised media literacy, communication skills and ethical reporting—complementing the diplomatic discourse elsewhere in Subodh United 2.0.

The delegate experience at Subodh United 2.0
Over 100 enthusiastic delegates arrived with expectation and creativity. From insightful opening speeches to heated caucus sessions, the youth displayed outstanding engagement. The event emphasised public speaking, critical thinking and teamwork.
Each delegate received a premium kit, certificate and memento—an indicator of the event’s professional standard. The Secretariat and Executive Board worked behind the scenes to ensure smooth transitions, proper scheduling, timely debates and inclusive participation. The experience echoed beyond mere formalities; it was a developmental journey.
Closing ceremony & awards
On Day 2, the closing ceremony held in the gracious presence of Dr Sanjay Parashar (Principal of Subodh Public School) and convener Alok Kumar Ji Bumb marked the grand finale of Subodh United 2.0. Felicitation of the Executive Board and Secretariat members celebrated the dedication and hard work behind the scenes. Outstanding delegates were awarded for their performance, further reinforcing the culture of recognition and achievement.
The atmosphere was electric with pride and enthusiasm, and the event underscored Subodh’s commitment to fostering leadership and organisation in young people.
Impact and why Subodh United 2.0 matters
Leadership & diplomacy
By hosting Subodh United 2.0, Subodh Public School created an environment where students not only learned about global issues but experienced them. The format of a Model United Nations conference cultivates confidence, initiative and the ability to articulate views under pressure. These are essential 21st-century skills.
Teamwork & organisation
The fact that the event was organised in just 15 days speaks volumes about efficiency and team coordination. The Secretariat and Executive Board model real-life leadership and teamwork behind events. This experience reinforces in students that leadership is both proactive and collaborative.
Cultural & educational breadth
Incorporating a committee like Pro Kabaddi League alongside traditional UN forums indicates a broad vision—merging sports, culture, diplomacy and media. Such breadth keeps engagement high, makes learning fun and reflects a world where multiple disciplines intersect.
Recognition & motivation
Award ceremonies and mementos serve more than symbolic functions—they motivate young delegates to strive for excellence. Recognition at Subodh United 2.0 can build a sense of achievement which spurs further ambition and participation in global discourse.
the future of Subodh United 2.0
Given the success of this second edition, Subodh Public School is well-positioned to scale this initiative further. Some possible next steps
- Expand the number of committees, perhaps including Environment & Climate Action, Digital Governance, or Business Diplomacy.
- Invite external schools to participate, making it a regional or national level MUN.
- Build online resources (pre-conference training modules) so delegates can prepare more deeply.
- Set up alumni panels from past delegates to mentor new participants.
- Publish post-conference reports or white-papers showcasing resolutions from the MUN, to extend learning beyond the day.
If Subodh maintains momentum, Subodh United 2.0 may evolve into a flagship event that draws schools from across Rajasthan or beyond.
Subodh United 2.0 has once again affirmed that youth leadership, teamwork and diplomacy are not just lofty ideals but living practices. Through immersive committees, crisp organisation and a high-energy environment, Delegates at Subodh Public School embraced global issues, enhanced their speaking skills and developed a deeper understanding of how ideas translate into action. With its motto “Voices Within, Visions Beyond,” the conference has set a high bar—and invites us to imagine where the next edition might lead.
Breaking News
the 100 Days Celebration & MasterChef with Moms at DAV CPS Jaipur-

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Jaipur,Nov.12,2025:The 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur marked an important milestone in the academic calendar. It was more than simply a count-up of days: it was a recognition of progress, community, young minds growing and the journey of the children through their early phase of schooling.
With that milestone came the chance to stop, enjoy, celebrate—and deepen relationships. It set the tone for what school life can mean beyond textbooks.
Rainbow Theme – Colours, Costumes & Cheer
In keeping with the theme of “Rainbow”, students turned up in colourful attire, bright and varied like the bands of a rainbow itself. The vivid costumes, joyful faces and a palette of hues in decorations created a lively atmosphere.
The 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur walked the talk of fun and creativity: from colourful banners to playful activities, the theme was embedded thoroughly.
That thematic unity helped children and mothers alike feel part of something special and cohesive—not just a regular day, but a memorable occasion.
MasterChef with Moms – Food, Fun & Family Bonding
As a highlight of the 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur, the “MasterChef with Moms” segment combined culinary creativity, teamwork and family engagement.
Mothers and children partnered up to design dishes, don aprons and chef-caps, and present their creations for judging. But beyond competition, the emphasis was on fun, togetherness and healthy eating.
They were evaluated not only on taste, but also on hygiene, presentation, teamwork and design of apparel (apron, chef-cap) — showing that the event aimed to teach values, not just celebrate.
Children helped arrange, present and assist their mothers. The process became a lesson in cooperation, respect and shared responsibility. In the end, the joy of creating memories was as significant as the food itself.
Presentation, Hygiene & Teamwork
One of the most striking aspects of the 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur was the thoughtful criteria: creativity, teamwork, presentation, hygiene and even the design of uniforms (aprons and caps).
This multi-facet evaluation encouraged participants to think holistically: how a dish looks, how cleanly it’s made, how well the team functions, how appealing the final presentation is.
It reinforced lessons about planning, execution and aesthetics in everyday activities. For children, especially, this kind of immersive participation bridges classroom learning with real-life skills.
Principal’s Inspiring Address
The Principal of the school, A.K. Sharma, addressed the gathering with warm words of appreciation. He commended the efforts of both mothers and students, encouraging them to keep up the spirit of creativity, teamwork and fun.
His remarks underscored that these celebrations are not mere ceremonies—they are integral to shaping a vibrant school culture and instilling lifelong values.
Such recognition helps participants feel valued and motivates future engagement.
Why Events Like This Matter – Beyond the Day
Building Community & Bonding
The 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur did more than mark a date—it built community. Students, mothers, teachers and staff all participated, bridging the home–school divide. Family engagement events help children feel supported and seen in both spheres.
Encouraging Healthy Habits
With “MasterChef with Moms” emphasising healthy eating, hygiene and presentation, the event subtly reinforced good nutritional and cleanliness habits. Schools that combine fun and values often see long-term behavioural benefits.
Fostering Creativity & Life Skills
By judging not just taste but presentation, teamwork and design, the school encouraged children to think creatively, plan collaboratively and execute with care. These are life skills beyond curriculum.
Celebrating Milestones & Motivation
Marking 100 days offers a sense of achievement for young students. Especially in early schooling, small milestones help build confidence, identity and motivation to continue.
Embedding Happiness in Learning
Finally, the colourful “Rainbow” theme, the laughter, costumes and fun activities remind everyone that learning and school can be joyful. When schools emphasise joy, children remember the experience—and often bring that memory into future learning.
Tips & Takeaways for Future School Celebrations
- Choose a cohesive theme: The “Rainbow” theme at the 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur unified all activities visually and emotionally.
- Engage families: Involve mothers (or parents) with the children to bridge home–school worlds and increase buy-in.
- Combine fun with values: Use activities (like MasterChef) that teach hygiene, teamwork and creativity alongside celebration.
- Plan evaluation criteria thoughtfully: Having multiple dimensions (taste, presentation, hygiene, design) makes participation meaningful.
- Recognise efforts publicly: The Principal’s address is a simple but powerful way to show appreciation and boost morale.
- Make memories: Photographs, colourful costumes, creative setups—all help children remember the day, reinforcing positive feelings associated with school.
- Reflect and iterate: After the event, gather feedback from students, mothers, and staff to refine future celebrations.
The 100 Days Celebration at DAV CPS Jaipur was not just a day of festivity—it was a vibrant blend of milestone-marking, thematic creativity, family engagement and life-skill building. From rainbow-themed costumes to the MasterChef with Moms event, every detail worked towards making the day unforgettable.
In celebrating together, students, mothers and school staff created memories that extend far beyond those 100 days—laying the foundation for a school culture rich in joy, creativity and collaboration.
Breaking News
Delhi Blast Investigation uncovers key arrests, terror links, network probes and doctor-accused suspects after the Red Fort car explosion-

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New Delhi, Nov.12,2025:The Delhi Blast Investigation began in earnest after a devastating car explosion occurred on 10 November 2025 near the Red Fort Metro Station (Gate 1) in Delhi’s Old City area.
A white Hyundai i20 vehicle came to a stop at a red-light signal near the metro entrance and shortly after detonated, killing at least 8 people and injuring many more.
Eyewitnesses described horror-stricken scenes: body parts scattered, surrounding vehicles engulfed in fire and the blast heard over multiple kilometres away.
In the immediate aftermath, Delhi saw heightened security alerts – the national capital and neighbouring states such as Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra were placed on high guard.
Arrests of Three Doctors and Their Links
One of the most startling developments in the Delhi Blast Investigation is the arrest of three doctors from the adjoining region who are now believed to be linked to the operation leading up to the explosion.
- In Faridabad, Haryana, authorities arrested three doctors, identified as Dr Umar Nabi (from Pulwama, J&K), Dr Muzammil Shakeel and Dr Adil Rather.
- These arrests come as part of a 15-day joint operation by the Jammu-Kashmir Police and Faridabad Police, as stated by Faridabad Police Commissioner Satendra Kumar Gupta.
- While the police have not yet confirmed an official link between these doctors and the Red Fort explosion, intelligence sources say they are investigating suspected terror-module connections.
- For example, Dr Umar Nabi is alleged to be the driver of the Hyundai i20 used in the blast. His family maintains his innocence, stating he had been busy with his professional duties for months.
- Dr Muzammil Shakeel is alleged to have had a car registered in the name of Dr Shaheen Saeed; police claim to have found a pistol, a rifle and large quantities of flammable materials in their rented accommodation.
- In Saharanpur and Lucknow, searches are underway in relation to Dr Shaheen Saeed’s residence and contacts, as part of the Delhi Blast Investigation.
This cluster of professional persons suspected of extremist links has added a striking twist to the investigation.
The Operation in Faridabad, Haryana
The Delhi Blast Investigation is also closely tied to events in Faridabad, Haryana
- Authorities claim to have seized 360 kg of combustible materials (though not labeled RDX) and weapons including a Kirnikov rifle and a pistol from a unit linked to the suspects.
- The vehicle used in the blast (Hyundai i20) was reportedly parked for days at the campus of Al‑Falah University, where one of the doctors taught, before being moved into Delhi.
- Police cite the Faridabad finds as part of a “module” that may have been preparing for a larger strike, thereby elevating the Delhi Blast Investigation beyond a simple car bomb to potentially a coordinated terror cell.
- This large‐scale seizure raises questions about how such materials accumulated undetected and into what planned event they might have been destined.
Suspect Reconnaissance, Network Probes & Terror Law Application
Reconnaissance and planning
Key intelligence indicates that suspects had reconnoitred the Red Fort and adjacent crowded spaces as early as January, perhaps targeting high-visibility dates such as 26 January (Republic Day) or Diwali.
Phone-metadata recovered from suspects revealed multiple visits to the area and repeated movements between Jammu & Kashmir and Delhi.
Terror-law invocation
In response to the gravity of the explosion and the preliminary evidence of organised extremist involvement, the investigation has invoked the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).
This marks the case as more than an individual act of violence; it is now being treated as a potential terror strike with nationwide implications.
Network probes & doctor-extremist nexus
Investigators are working to map out material and ideological links between the doctors, extremist organisations such as Jaish‑e‑Mohammad and Ansar Ghazwat‑ul‑Hind, and reclaiming how the module operated across state lines (J&K → Delhi → Faridabad → Lucknow/Saharanpur).
This cross‐state network mobility is central to the Delhi Blast Investigation’s challenge: tracing contacts, funding, arms caches, mobile communications, travel histories and recruitment patterns.
Security, Legal, Intelligence Challenges
Heightened security across the capital region
In wake of the explosion, Delhi’s security apparatus has gone on full alert: Metro stations, major transport hubs, crowded public spaces and tourism hotspots (including the Red Fort) are all under extra scrutiny.
Legal & forensic hurdles
The Delhi Blast Investigation now rests heavily on-
- Forensic analysis of explosive residue and vehicle components
- CCTV and parking records of the Hyundai i20
- Telecommunication logs of the suspects
- Interrogation of the arrested doctors and their known associates
Intelligence and inter-state coordination
Because the suspected network crosses state lines and involves persons with medical credentials, intelligence sharing between J&K, Haryana, UP and Delhi is crucial. Delay or silos will hamper the progress of the investigation and possible prosecution.
Public trust and institutional accountability
Given the high‐profile nature of the Red Fort blast, public confidence in security systems has been shaken. The Delhi Blast Investigation must also address how large explosive quantities (hundreds of kg) remained undetected and how suspects with professional qualifications were able to allegedly mobilise assets.
The Delhi Blast Investigation stands at a pivotal moment. What started as a horrifying car explosion near a symbolic monument has branched into a sprawling probe involving doctors, explosives, suspected terror modules, professional networks and multi-state coordination.
Crucially, answers are needed on how this plot evolved, who funded and organised it, whether any further attacks were planned, and how the security infrastructure can adapt to pre-empt such threats.
Breaking News
Morel-dam-pollution-alarming-eco-disaster-

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Dausa,Nov.08,2025:Morel Dam pollution is not just a local issue—it’s a rapidly escalating ecological crisis in Rajasthan that threatens one of India’s most important migratory bird habitats. Located in the Lalsot subdivision of Dausa district, the earthen dam (described as Asia’s largest “kaccha” or unlined/mud embankment dam) has historically functioned as a sanctuary for around 20,000 migratory birds annually–
Now, due to unchecked industrial effluent from the dyeing-printing sector in nearby Sanganer (Jaipur region), its waters have become toxic, posing a serious risk to wildlife, human health and Rajasthan’s natural heritage. The time for attention and action is very short.
The dam, the river and the region
The Morel Dam sits on the Morel River in the Lalsot sub-division of Dausa district. It is described as Asia’s largest “kaccha” (earth-fill or unlined) dam.
Geographical context
- The dam lies downstream of the Sanganer region of Jaipur, where industrial wastewater and dyeing unit effluents enter the Morel River and eventually reach the dam.
- The region’s wetlands and the dam serve as an annual wintering ground for migratory birds, with arrivals beginning around October and continuing through February.
Ecological significance
The dam has been more than just a water reserve—it has been a sanctuary for rare and migratory bird species: from the Greater Flamingo to the Rosy Starling, the Indian Skimmer and many others.
What exactly is happening at Morel Dam
Water colour and smell
Local residents report the water of Morel Dam turning black and green with a foul odour over several months. Fish are dying, aquatic vegetation is rotting.
Chemicals detected or suspected
According to statements by experts-
- Dyeing industry effluents containing ammonia, arsenic, lead and heavy metals are reaching the dam via the Morel River.
- These pollutants threaten aquatic life, birds and ultimately human health via the food chain.
Impact on the birds
Whereas historically about 20,000 birds would descend annually in the winter, this season the count is “very low or negligible” according to experts.
Industrial discharge pathway
The dye-printing units of Sanganer discharge untreated or partially treated wastewater into the Morel River, which flows into the dam. Despite many warnings, no decisive action has been taken till now.
The threat to migratory birds and biodiversity
Who comes here and why
Between October and February, the Morel Dam hosts species such as-
- Greater Flamingo
- Rosy Starling
- Common Teal
- Painted Stork
- Lapwing
- Openbill Stork
- Sanderling
- Black-tailed Godwit
- Osprey
- Indian Skimmer
These birds rely on the dam’s water and its surrounding wetlands for feeding, roosting and as a safe stopover on long migratory routes.
Loss of habitat, loss of numbers
This year the usual large flocks have failed to appear in expected numbers. The contaminated water has deterred the birds from settling, threatening the dam’s reputation as a bird-tourism and biodiversity hotspot.
Wider ecological cascading effects
When birds skip the dam, entire ecological linkages (nutrient flows, predation of insects, aquatic plant-animal interactions) falter. Fish die, plants rot, the entire wetland health deteriorates. The experts warn: “If Morel Dam loses its ecological identity, we will have lost much more than just a bird sanctuary.”
Causes of the contamination
Source of effluents
Around the Sanganer area of Jaipur, dye-printing and textile finishing units discharge wastewater containing dyes, chemicals, heavy metals like arsenic and lead, and high ammonia. These flow untreated or inadequately treated into the Morel River, then into the dam.
Treatment capacity and enforcement gap
Local communities say though warnings have been issued repeatedly, responsible authorities have failed to-
- Ensure high-quality effluent treatment plants (ETPs) are installed and maintained.
- Monitor discharge standards strictly.
- Stop illegal dumping of industrial wastewater into the river.
Time-lag of effect
Experts note that the contamination has built up over years rather than overnight. What we are seeing now (the drastic drop in bird numbers, fish deaths and foul water) is the tipping-point of years of neglect.
Human, ecological and health risks
To human health
The presence of heavy metals such as arsenic and lead in water bodies imposes serious risks-
- Consumption of contaminated fish or plants may lead to bio-accumulation.
- Residents using local water or eating local produce face long-term health impacts.
- Aquatic toxicity also affects farming and local livelihoods.
To aquatic life and wetland functions
- Fish kills and decaying aquatic plants have been observed at Morel Dam.
- The wetland’s capacity to act as a biodiversity hub and natural filter is compromised.
- Loss of birds reduces insect predation, affects ecological balance.
To tourism and local economy
Morel Dam once attracted bird-watchers and eco-tourists. With the decline in bird numbers and water quality, that tourism potential is at severe risk, reducing local income and community incentive to protect the site.
What is being done — and what still needs to be done
Steps taken so far
The Rajasthan Water Resources Department (RW RD) through its Assistant Engineer, Mr Chet Ram Meena, has acknowledged the contamination and said that the government is taking necessary steps. Several treatment plants are planned in Jaipur region.
Demands from experts and local residents
- Take immediate samples of water at Morel Dam and analyse for heavy metals (arsenic, lead, ammonia, dyes).
- The Rajasthan Pollution Control Board (RPCB) and the Forest Department must step in with enforcement.
- Stop the discharge of industrial wastewater into the Morel River → install/upgrade ETPs in Sanganer industrial area.
- Monitor bird numbers actively; bring in bird-conservation organisations.
- Engage local communities, eco-tourism stakeholders, and NGOs to revive the dam’s habitat value.
What still remains undone
- No publicly accessible data yet on the exact concentrations of heavy metals in Morel Dam water.
- Enforcement against polluting units remains weak. Many units may still operate below standards or evade compliance.
- The community lacks a unified platform and strong voice to pressure for implementation.
- Funding and clarity on timeline for the treatment infrastructure is vague.
Morel Dam pollution is a wake-up call for Rajasthan—and India at large. The contamination of waters that once welcomed tens of thousands of migratory birds symbolises our broader ecological fragility. What is at stake is not just the dam, not just the birds, but an entire ecosystem and the human communities that depend on it.
If immediate, decisive action is not taken, the dam may lose its natural identity forever. A ground-level, multi-stakeholder effort is required: government, industry, civil society and academia must cooperate. From this moment onward, the dam must be seen not just as water storage, but as a precious ecological asset in need of protection and restoration.
Breaking News
Sudan gold war, Sudan gold mining conflict, Sudan gold smuggling, RSF gold Sudan, UAE Sudan gold, Russia gold Sudan conflict-

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New Delhi,Nov.08,2025:Sudan once relied heavily on oil. With the split‐off of South Sudan in 2011, the country lost about 75% of its oil reserves and nearly 90% of its foreign-currency income.
In that vacuum, gold emerged as the go-to resource. Now, that rush for gold has morphed into a war economy—a full-scale Sudan gold war.
What is the Sudan gold war
The term “Sudan gold war” refers to how gold has become both the prize and the weapon in Sudan’s three-year civil conflict (which erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF)).
Where once oil framed the economy, now gold mines, artisanal shafts and smuggling routes frame the battle. As one report puts it:
“Start with gold: it equals guns.”
The war is thus not just over territory. It’s over control of gold resources, mining areas, refining infrastructure and the export routes that convert gold into cash.
How gold mining exploded after oil revenues collapsed
Oil losses and gold gains
When South Sudan separated, Sudan lost its oil backbone. Gold stepped in. According to research-
“Sudan’s reliance on gold as a primary foreign currency source became crucial after losing oil revenues following South Sudan’s separation in 2011.”
Rise of artisanal mining
With formal jobs evaporating, many Sudanese turned to informal gold-mining. The mining boom spread across at least 14 states. These mines are often “wild west” style: small-scale, unsafe, extractive—and under the thumb of armed entities.
Mining becomes militarised
Control of mines shifted to companies and paramilitary groups: research shows a link between RSF and mining concessions in areas like Al-Radom in Darfur.
To quote:
“Both conflict parties … have turned their focus to gold production.”
Army, RSF, foreign powers
The Army (SAF)
The SAF holds parts of Sudan and controls some mining through the state-owned Sudanese Mineral Resources Company (SMRC). This entity oversees operations in government-held zones to generate revenue.
The RSF
The RSF, a powerful paramilitary organisation originally rooted in the Janjaweed militia of Darfur, has seized key mines and mining infrastructure. One investigation finds:
“Gold production in western RSF-controlled areas … the bulk of these operations … export the final product to their primary financiers, the United Arab Emirates.”
UAE, Egypt, Russia, China
- The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is the major export destination for Sudan’s gold. Researchers estimate “nearly all of the gold trade” passes through the UAE.
- Egypt has emerged as a secondary smuggling hub. Unofficial exports via Egypt may account for 60% of production in northern states.
- Russia and China are also involved—Russia in particular gaining mining concessions, seeking barter deals.
Smuggling routes and complicity
The scale of smuggling
While official gold output is reported, the real numbers are far higher due to smuggling. A UN estimate places 100 kg of gold leaving Sudan daily through unofficial routes; some 60 tonnes since April 2023.
How the routes work
- Mines under RSF control extract gold.
- The gold is sold or transported via neighbouring countries (Egypt, Chad, UAE) and converted into hard currency/arms.
- Some foreign firms provide logistics, refining or chemical inputs. For instance, Sudan imports cyanide and mercury for mining from Europe, Middle East and Asia.
Who benefits
- Armed groups: Gold funds weapons, drones, salaries.
- Foreign investors: Cheap access to gold deposits in conflict zones.
- Local elites: Mining licences, control of processing plants, refining and export gates.
Environmental and human toll
Deaths and disasters
In June 2025, eleven miners died and seven were injured in a mine collapse in the Red Sea state. The shaft was artisanal, unsafe, and mining resumed despite warnings.
Health and environmental damage
- Artisanal mining heavily uses cyanide and mercury, leading to soil contamination, water pollution and serious health risks.
- Farming communities report their lands spoiled, groundwater poisoned, and the precious Nile River threatened.
Social impact
- Millions of people are displaced; many lose farmland and livelihoods because mines take precedence over agriculture.
- Mining zones become war zones: looting, forced labour, labour-abuse rampant.
Regional and global implications
Africa’s changing gold map
Sudan is now among Africa’s top gold producers, behind only Ghana and South Africa. Mining has become a major export driver—though the revenues are deeply unequal and intertwined with conflict.
Proxy warfare and global arms flows
The Sudan gold war is not isolated. UAE, Russia and China see Sudan as a strategic site for resource access. Gold sold in exchange for arms, drones and services. Smuggling passes through border states, drawing in countries like Chad and Eritrea.
Impacts on international supply chains
Gold from Sudan enters global markets, often laundered through Dubai. This poses risks to companies under conflict-minerals laws and global efforts to make supply chains ethical.
Can peace return if the gold stops flowing
weakening war machine
One potential peace lever is to choke the revenue streams of warlords and armed factions. Without gold, the war economy loses fuel.
Challenges are enormous
- Mines are remote, control is fragmented.
- Smuggling routes pass through multiple countries.
- Victims are local workers, communities with little voice.
- International actors have incentive to keep flow going.
What would a responsible future look like
- Transparent mining licences and exports.
- Environmental remediation and safe labour standards.
- Redirecting gold revenues into reconstruction and civilian development.
- International oversight on gold purity, origin and supply chain traceability.
The Sudan gold war is a tragic irony: a country blessed with gold, yet cursed by it. Gold was meant to be a lifeline after oil, but instead has become a bullet-point in the war budget. The Sudan gold war shows how natural resources can fuel conflict rather than prosperity.
Unless the gold mining-smuggling-weapon pipeline is broken, millions will continue to suffer—miners crushed in collapsing shafts, farmers poisoned, children recruited, and a nation torn apart by stakes far higher than mere land or politics.
Bihar
Bihar Chunav 2025 captured dramatic scenes at Patna Airport, viral video and sharp political barbs —

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Bihar, Nov.08,2025:Bihar Chunav 2025 has steered into a striking turn this weekend — a scene at Patna Airport became more than a mere photo-op, evolving into a symbolic flashpoint of the campaign. In the fever of the assembly elections, where alliances, slogans and social media momentum shape outcomes, this incident forced attention, media replay and commentary. At its heart lies a question: for Bihar Chunav 2025, is celebrity meets politics merely spectacle, or does it signal a deeper realignment?
In this article we break down the airport moment, its players, the viral spread and what it augurs for Bihar’s political terrain.
The airport encounter that broke the mold
In a most unexpected staging of the Bihar Chunav 2025 drama, two high-profile figures crossed paths at Patna Airport. On one side, Khesari Lal Yadav — a Bhojpuri cinema star and newly-folded politician in the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) camp. On the other, Manoj Tiwari — actor-turned MP for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and a vocal campaigner in the same election.
When Khesari approached Manoj at the airport, bowed and touched his feet, the moment was captured on camera and quickly went viral. Media outlets reported:
“मनोज तिवारी और खेसारी लाल एयरपोर्ट पर आमने-सामने … खेसारी लाल ने पैर छुए”
The visual of a leader from one side paying a traditional gesture of respect to a leader from the rival side is rarely seen in active election battles. In Bihar Chunav 2025, this moment triggered speculation, commentary and a sharp shift in media tone.
Power play and viral footage at Patna Airport
The Bihar Chunav 2025 viral moment and its stakeholders
The footage from Patna Airport shows Khesari Lal Yadav approaching Manoj Tiwari, touching his feet, and being embraced. The suddenness of this encounter raises multiple questions: Was it symbolic humility, an unscripted moment of respect, or a strategic gesture? According to an article:
“दोनों कलाकारों ने हंसते हुए एक-दूसरे को गले लगाया … वीडियो सोशल मीडिया पर तेजी से वायरल”
This moment spread quickly across platforms. Even in the election-heat of Bihar Chunav 2025, such an incident stands out because it interrupts the usual pattern of aggressive rallies, speech lines and cast-based appeals.
Why this matters in the campaign context
For campaign strategists and political watchers, this incident ticks several boxes-
- Visual symbolism: The act of touching feet is loaded with cultural meaning in India.
- Celebrity-politics crossover- Both figures are from the Bhojpuri film world, bringing their star-power into the electoral fray.
- Rival alliance moment: With RJD and BJP on opposite sides, any interpersonal gesture between their candidates reverberates.
- Viral potential: In modern campaigns like Bihar Chunav 2025, social-media spread can shape narratives faster than speeches.
Media-spin and perceptions
While the gesture could be read as respect, some political commentators suggest it may mask underlying power dynamics or even alliance overtures. The timing within the Bihar Chunav 2025 timeline is especially relevant: such crossings happen as campaigns intensify, candidate lists firm up, and local organisation gains critical mass.
Political tensions escalate in Bihar Chunav 2025
Khesari Lal Yadav’s declaration and challenge
Before the airport moment, Khesari Lal Yadav had made bold statements to energise his base in Bihar Chunav 2025. He claimed-
“पहले चरण में हमें 100 में से 100 मिलेंगे… कोई और नहीं है, खेसारी के आने के बाद सरकार बदल जाएगी। मैं तेजस्वी का छोटा भाई हूँ।”
He also vowed-
“मैं उन सभी (एनडीए नेताओं) को चार दिनों के अंदर पागल कर दूँगा … अगर मैं बेहतर बिहार के लिए बोलता हूँ… मुझे ‘याद-मुल्ला’ कहा जाता है।”
These remarks feed into the broader narrative of Bihar Chunav 2025 of change, of generational challenge and of caste/celebrity assertions.
Manoj Tiwari’s response and BJP’s framing
On the other hand, Manoj Tiwari has positioned himself in Bihar Chunav 2025 as both cinema-star and campaigner. He has spoken of job creation promises and youth aspiration in the election context.
In the wake of the airport incident, BJP strategists may interpret the moment as either a symbolic concession or a softening of opposition tactics. Thus Bihar Chunav 2025 becomes not only about policies but gestures that can shape voter psychology.
Underlying issues driving Bihar Chunav 2025
Unemployment and migration
Beyond the theatrics lies the weight of home-issues. For Bihar Chunav 2025, unemployment and outward migration remain pivotal. According to Manoj Tiwari-
“Reverse migration has begun, Biharis are returning to work in their own state.”
The airport encounter thus sits against a backdrop where the electorate is looking for stronger jobs, better infrastructure and credible change. Celebrities participating lend visibility, but the real test lies in voter perception of delivery.
The role of identity and celebrity in the campaign
In Bihar Chunav 2025 the presence of regional film stars like Khesari Lal Yadav and Manoj Tiwari underscores a broader trend: politics increasingly blends with cinema and culture. Voters recognise names, familiar faces, popular songs and a direct connect through platforms. This adds an extra dimension to traditional caste- and ideology-based appeals. The airport moment amplifies that blend: it’s a celebrity gesture, a campaign headline and a viral piece of content.
What this airport moment means for Bihar Chunav 2025’s narrative
Symbolic realignment or isolated moment
The question now for analysts of Bihar Chunav 2025 is whether the Patna Airport encounter will become a cornerstone of the campaign story or remain a footnote.
- On one hand, it could signal shifting alliances, softened rhetoric, or last-minute repositioning.
- On the other, it might simply be a viral clip that distracts from policy debates.
Voter psychology and momentum
In an election like Bihar Chunav 2025 where turnout, enthusiasm and narrative momentum matter, moments like this can matter disproportionately. They generate buzz, prompt social-media debate and may influence undecided voters by shaping impressions of leadership maturity, humility or strategy.
Risks and reactions
For the RJD side, the moment could be spun as showing respect across party divides. For BJP, it could be portrayed as validation or a sign of moral high-ground. But risks exist: critics may call it opportunistic, staged or distraction-driven, which could erode trust.
As Bihar Chunav 2025 moves toward its polling days, the airport moment at Patna offers a potent symbol of how elections today are not just fought in rallies and manifestos, but in gestures, visuals and social-media clips. The meeting between Khesari Lal Yadav and Manoj Tiwari at Patna Airport will likely be revisited — by campaign teams, by voters scrolling feeds, and by commentators searching for trends.
Bihar
Bihar Election 2025 sees a bold agenda from PM Modi — Bihar Election 2025 focuses on start-ups over ‘hands-up’ politics, youth-

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Bihar, Nov.08,2025:Bihar Election 2025 opens with a resonant message- the state is not returning to the politics of the past. At a massive rally in Sitamarhi, Narendra Modi laid out a vivid contrast between the old and new agendas, declaring that Bihar Election 2025 marks the moment when the youth of the state choose development, ambition and enterprise—over fear, stagnation and nostalgia-
His address, delivered on 8 November 2025, came as the second phase of the assembly election campaign heated up. It was a rallying cry for what the governing National Democratic Alliance (NDA) presents as “new Bihar”, and a challenging taunt at what the opposition alliance stands for.
The record turnout and the “65-volt jhatka” in Bihar Election 2025
One of the earliest anchors of the campaign narrative around Bihar Election 2025 is the exceptionally high voter turnout in the first phase. The figure of approximately 65.08% was the highest ever in the state’s history (some reports quote 64.6%).
At the Sitamarhi rally in the context of Bihar Election 2025, PM Modi described that turnout as a “65-volt jhatka to jungle raj” — positioning it as a shock to the politics of fear and lawlessness.
This phrase serves several strategic purposes in the Bihar Election 2025 narrative-
- It claims a moral victory for the NDA side, implying the people have rejected the past.
- It frames the opposition’s legacy (especially Rashtriya Janata Dal or RJD) as one of “jungle raj” — an era of disorder.
- It uplifts voter enthusiasm as a political weapon in Bihar Election 2025.
By emphasising a high turnout, the BJP-led alliance suggests momentum is with its vision — a key message ahead of the next phase of the election.
From “hands-up” to “start-up” Bihar Election 2025 signals a youth revolution
A standout moment in the rally was the line: “Now Bihar needs start-ups, not hands-up.” In the context of Bihar Election 2025, this becomes a defining slogan for change. The rally message emphasised giving children laptops, computers, sports kits—not pistols or fear.
Reframing Bihar Election 2025 around ambition and enterprise
In his speech, PM Modi asked-
“Should Bihar’s child become a ‘rangdaar’ (armed hooligan) or a doctor/engineer/lawyer?”
He positioned the Bihar Election 2025 agenda as one where the state’s younger generation will become engineers, doctors, advocates, judges—not colour-coded political foot soldiers.
Education, sports, and start-ups
The campaign tied this message to tangible programmes: distributing computers, sports gear (hockey sticks, footballs), reinforcing the idea that Bihar Election 2025 is about building skills and infrastructure.
Why this matters
- Youth bulge: With a large young population, Bihar Election 2025 efforts aim to capture aspirations rather than merely rely on identity mobilisation.
- Migration and jobs: The promise of start-ups addresses the persistent issue of outward migration from Bihar in search of work.
- Narrative shift: Politically, positioning the campaign as about enterprise offers the NDA a contrast to older politics of patronage.
“jungle raj”, colours and curfews
The rally repeatedly evoked the term “jungle raj” to describe past governance — and tied it to criminality, industry shutdowns and social stagnation. For Bihar Election 2025, the opposition (RJD + Indian National Congress) was accused of imagining a return to that era.
The symbolic language of the campaign
- “65-volt jhatka” for the first-phase turnout.
- “Katta government” (armed rule) versus “startup government”.
- Criticism that opposition wants children to become “rangdaar” rather than professionals.
Implications for Bihar Election 2025 strategy
This framing serves dual roles
- It attacks the opposition’s credibility by painting them as regressive.
- It situates the NDA as the forward-looking alternative.
It also plays to security and stability concerns, which are powerful in election messaging.
Development, industry and the business case
Beyond slogans, PM Modi’s rally in Sitamarhi touched on infrastructure, investment and industrial revival — essential elements of the Bihar Election 2025 discourse.
He highlighted that under the NDA and Bihar’s Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, investor confidence has returned: roads, connectivity, factories are coming back. Example: the restarting of the RIGA sugar mill was cited.
The economic narrative in Bihar Election 2025
- Ukrainian-style transformation: from “locked factories” to revived industry.
- Jobs, investment and development pitched as the key deliverables of the election.
- Youth-centric economic policies: start-up ecosystem, skill building, digitisation of access.
Business-friendly Bihar in the campaign
The rally claimed that Bihar Election 2025 is not just about politics but about creating an environment for business and modern jobs. The message: the state is open for business, with a new generation ready to lead.
Cultural roots and pilgrimage politics in Bihar Election 2025
Another dimension of the Sitamarhi rally was the invocation of culture, religion and symbolism: PM Modi emphasised that Sitamarhi is the land of Sita and that the world will soon witness the grandeur of Punaura Dham as a global attraction.
Why cultural identity plays a role in Bihar Election 2025
- Relating development to heritage: infrastructure plus pilgrimage circuits.
- Building emotional resonance: the reference to 8 November 2019 and the Supreme Court decision on Ayodhya.
- Political messaging: presenting the NDA as protecting cultural identity while delivering modernisation.
The pilgrim-corridor pitch in Bihar Election 2025
The campaign highlighted upcoming projects linking Sitamarhi with Ayodhya through the Ram-Janaki corridor, championing belief and tourism as engines for development.
What this means for voters and the NDA strategy
For voters
- The Bihar Election 2025 campaign invites the electorate to choose between two futures: fear-based politics or opportunity-based governance.
- For young people, the message is clear: education, start-ups, jobs.
- For women and families, the appeal is to stability, law and order, infrastructure.
For the NDA
- The Sitamarhi rally sets the tone: attack the legacy of the opposition, celebrate progress, emphasise delivery.
- The message targeting youth (“start-ups, not hands-up”) signals where the campaign sees its growth potential.
- High turnout is used as proof of momentum.
The risks
- The opposition can frame this as rhetoric rather than substance.
- Voters may scrutinise actual delivery of start-ups, jobs and infrastructure.
- Cultural-religious overtures may polarise rather than unify if not handled sensitively.
Bihar Election 2025 is unfolding as more than just another assembly poll; it is being shaped as a decisive turning point. The message from Sitamarhi is loud and clear: the state must look forward, not backward. The rally’s major themes — high turnout, ambition for youth, industrial revival, cultural heritage — all serve to shape a new identity for Bihar.
Breaking News
hidden sugar in everyday foods is raising your diabetes and heart-disease risk –

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Jaipur, Nov.08,2025:hidden sugar is a term you may have heard casually, but it deserves serious attention. Despite our best efforts to eat healthily, we may unknowingly be consuming large amounts of sugar — not just the lumps of white table sugar, but the sugar that is already embedded in the foods we eat every day. This silent sugar exposure can drive weight gain, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic illnesses. With escalating rates of obesity and diabetes globally, it’s time to pull back the curtain and expose the hidden sugar in everyday foods.
In this article we’ll define what hidden sugar really means, show you where it hides, explain how it harms health, review the global trend, and give you actionable tools to detect and reduce it.
What is hidden sugar
By “hidden sugar” we mean sugar that is not obviously present (like a candy bar) but rather appears in everyday foods and drinks that appear healthy, savoury, or innocent. The sugar may be added by manufacturers (so-called “added sugars” or “free sugars”) or may be naturally present but in a form that leads to a rapid blood-sugar spike.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), “free sugars” include monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods and beverages by the manufacturer, cook or consumer, and sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, fruit juices and fruit juice concentrates.
Hidden sugar is dangerous because it adds to total sugar intake without you realising it. Many health-organisations warn that the modern diet’s sugar content is far higher than in prior generations, and that much of this comes from processed, packaged or prepared foods. For example, research shows that ultra-processed foods — which tend to contain added sugars, among other additives — are linked to higher risks of type 2 diabetes.
Thus, hidden sugar isn’t just a trivia item — it’s a significant public-health issue.
Everyday foods where hidden sugar lurks
Dairy & yoghurt
Many people assume yoghurt is a health-food. But flavoured yoghurts can contain significant added sugar. The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warns that packaged yoghurts and dairy products may have high amounts of added sugars.
For example, a “fruit-on-the-bottom” cup may have sugar levels comparable to a dessert. Because you expect yoghurt to be healthy, you may not account for that sugar in your daily total.
Bread, buns & bakery items
Bread and bakery items may seem low-risk, but many commercial breads contain sweeteners or sugar to improve texture, aid fermentation, or prolong shelf life. A recent Indian news article flagged that breads and buns often contain more sugar than consumers expect.
Thus something as “innocent” as your sandwich bread may contribute to your hidden sugar load.
Condiments, sauces and “savory” processed foods
One of the biggest culprits for hidden sugar is savoury foods that you wouldn’t suspect: ketchup, pasta sauce, salad dressings, sausages, processed meats. The CDC specifically lists condiments and sauces as common sneaky sources of added sugar.
For example, a single tablespoon of ketchup may already add 3-4 g of sugar.
Drinks, juices and smoothies
Bottled juices, smoothies, energy drinks, flavoured milks — these are classic hidden sugar sources. Even “100 % fruit juice” can contain a high free-sugar load, because fibre is removed during juicing and the sugars act like free sugars.
Also, when you drink sugar rather than eating food, the sugars can be absorbed more rapidly, spiking blood sugar and contributing to metabolic risk.
Ultra-processed snacks and cereals
Breakfast cereals, granola bars, snack foods often carry added sugars under multiple names. Many items marketed as “healthy” may in fact contain sugar as a primary ingredient. The Johns Hopkins Medicine site warns that “whole-grain” or “vitamin-fortified” do not guarantee low sugar.
Artificial intelligence research shows that across many countries, packaged foods often fail to meet carbohydrate-quality benchmarks because of high free-sugar content.
obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and more
When you repeatedly consume hidden sugar beyond what your body can handle, multiple pathways lead to harm.
- Excess sugar contributes to weight gain because it adds calories, often without making you feel full. The WHO says keeping free sugar intake under 10% of total energy reduces risk of overweight and obesity.
- As weight increases, the risk of type 2 diabetes rises. Also, high sugar intake independently can reduce insulin sensitivity.
- Heart disease: hidden sugar plays a role in high blood pressure, inflammation, fatty-liver and cardiovascular risk independent of cholesterol. For example, a recent cardiologist statement claimed sugar may damage the heart more than cholesterol by raising risk up to 21%.
- Ultra-processed food consumption (which usually implies high added sugar) is linked to increased type 2 diabetes risk.
In sum, hidden sugar is not simply “extra sweetness” — it’s an insidious contributor to chronic disease.
rising sugar consumption and the toll on health
Global dietary patterns have changed dramatically in recent decades: processed foods, sugary drinks, high-calorie snacks, and hidden sugar infiltration are widespread. According to recent reporting-
- The WHO guideline suggests reducing free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake, and ideally below 5% for additional benefits.
- A recent article noted that hidden sugars are “silently increasing health risks like obesity and diabetes” in India, urging awareness of routine foods.
- A machine-learning study found varying compliance across countries in packaged foods meeting carbohydrate-quality standards; some countries had as low as ~9.8% of foods meeting targets.
Thus, hidden sugar is a global phenomenon with local consequences — especially in nations undergoing nutritional transition (such as India, where packaged foods and snacks are growing rapidly).
How to detect and reduce hidden sugar intake
Read labels and watch ingredient lists
One of the first steps is label literacy. The CDC says reading nutrition labels to assess total sugars and added sugars is vital.
Tips-
- Look at “added sugars” or “free sugars” if listed.
- Check the ingredient list: if sugar (or corn syrup, dextrose, fructose, honey, agave nectar) is among the first few ingredients, the product likely has high added sugar.
- Be sceptical of claims like “low-fat” or “whole grain” without checking sugar content.
- Watch serving sizes: what looks small may hide large sugar loads.
Choose whole foods and cook at home
One sure way to avoid hidden sugar- favour unprocessed or minimally processed foods. Fresh vegetables, whole grains, legumes, plain dairy, unflavoured milk/yoghurt. Make your own sauces, dressings, breads. When you control ingredients, you avoid the surprises.
Understand added vs natural sugars
Not all sugars are equal. Sugars naturally present in whole fruits and milk are less problematic because fibre, fat and structure slow absorption. The problem arises when sugars are “free” or added, causing rapid absorption and higher metabolic impact.
Practical switching tips
- Swap flavoured yoghurt for plain yoghurt + fresh fruit.
- Choose breads with minimal added sugar (check label).
- Replace sweetened condiments with homemade versions: e.g., tomato-puree + herbs instead of packaged ketchup.
- Choose water, unsweetened tea/coffee instead of sugary drinks or juices.
- Eat breakfast cereal only if sugar < 5 g/serving or switch to oatmeal with nuts and seeds.
- When buying snacks, pick those with short ingredient lists and no sugar synonyms (corn syrup, maltose, etc.).
body mass index (BMI), health equity & vulnerable groups
While the hidden sugar issue is universal, there are special angles to consider. The common measure of overweight/obesity is the body mass index (BMI), but this measure has limitations: it does not account for body-fat distribution, muscle mass, age, ethnicity. In some ethnic groups (e.g., South Asians) the risk of type 2 diabetes or heart disease may be higher even at lower BMI levels. Thus, relying solely on BMI may mask real risk.
Moreover, hidden sugar harms are affected by social determinants: access to fresh whole foods, education about labels, marketing of processed foods, and socio-economic status. Countries in transition (with rising incomes and shifts to processed-food diets) face steep increases in overweight and diabetes. For example, some forecasts indicate by 2050 over half of adults globally may be overweight or obese if current trends continue.
Therefore the hidden sugar narrative must also include equity: those with fewer resources may be disproportionately impacted.
hidden sugar is more than an inconvenient ingredient — it’s a stealth driver of chronic disease risk. The good news is: awareness and action work. By understanding where sugar hides, reading labels, favouring whole foods, cooking at home, and making smarter swaps, you can significantly reduce your exposure. Given the global rise of obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease, uncovering the hidden sugar in your diet is a powerful step toward reclaiming your health.
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