India Today is the leading news magazine and most widely read publication in India. The magazine’s leadership is unquestioned, so much so that India Today is what Indian journalism is judged by, for its integrity and ability to bring unbiased and incisive perspective to arguably the most dynamic, yet perplexing, region in the world. Breaking news and shaping opinion, it is now a household name and the flagship brand of India’s leading multidimensional media group. Additionally, the weekly brings with it a range supplements like Women, Home, Aspire, Spice and Simply which focus on style, health, education, fashion, etc. and Indian cities.
FROM THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
India Today
HOPE FOR THE YOUNG
KEY FACTS ABOUT ZyCoV-D
THE POLITICS OF E-TAIL
TIGHTER NORMS
WAR IN THE LALU PARIVAR?
LOOKING FORWARD, COUNTING BACKWARDS
MULTIPLE CHALLENGES
KISHOR’S ‘MISSION 300’
Lotus Season
BRAND AMBASSADOR
Pointed Compliments
UP BEAT
HOW INDIA SHOULD DEAL WITH THE TALIBAN • THE RETURN OF THE RADICAL ISLAMISTS PLUNGES AFGHANISTAN INTO UNCERTAINTY. INDIA MUST ENGAGE RATHER THAN BOYCOTT THE NEW TALIBAN REGIME
NOW FOR THE REALLY HARD PART • FOLLOWING ITS RETURN TO POWER, THE BIG QUESTION IS HOW THE TALIBAN WILL GOVERN AFGHANISTAN—A PATCHWORK OF TRIBAL AREAS. WHILE IT HAS A MILITARY COMMAND STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE WILL BE A HUGE CHALLENGE
THE NEW GREAT GAME • From being a pawn in the ‘Great Game’ between the British and Russian empires in the early 20th century to three wars in the past 50 years—the anti-Soviet jihad in 1979-89, the civil war from 1989-2001 and the US-led War against Terror from 2001-2021—Afghanistan has been in constant turmoil. Now, with the Taliban returning to power, a new Great Game has begun
AFGHANISTAN’S DEVELOPMENT: A MIXED BAG • THE 17 YEARS OF DEMOCRATIC RULE SAW GAINS IN HEALTH AND EDUCATION BUT NOT POVERTY
INDIA’S GOODWILL HUNTING • India has invested around $3 billion or Rs 22,200 crore in Afghanistan since 2001, mainly in development projects. Highlights:
THE TALIBAN GUEST HOUSE • The Taliban is linked to many Islamist terrorist groups hostile to many countries, including India
UNITED IN OPPOSITION • OPPOSITION PARTIES MAKE MOVES TO GET TOGETHER TO TAKE ON THE BJP IN THE 2024 LOK SABHA ELECTION, BUT ANY SUCCESS WILL DEPEND ON THE CONGRESS
FIXING THE BANKRUPTCY CODE • Despite the hope vested in the IBC, recoveries and resolution timelines remain far short of expectations
THE IBC SCORECARD
LANDMARK CASES
Education in the Times of Crisis
OPTIMIZING THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS AMIDST THE PANDEMIC
RETURN OF THE FAMILY • FAMILIES THAT FOUGHT COVID TOGETHER STAYED TOGETHER, AS FAMILIAL BONDS GREW STRONGER
THE MARDAS • Business family, New Delhi
RAJIV and EKTA PAREKH • Architects and founding partners, reD Architects, Mumbai
SAJI ZACHARIA • HR professional, Bengaluru
SANYA GOEL • Business owner, Delhi
DINAKARAN and JANAKI • Dinakaran runs an Internet café, Chennai
THE COMICS ARE ALRIGHT • A NEW VARIETY SHOW SEES THE WORLD OF INDIAN COMEDY TRYING TO LAUGH AWAY THE BLUES
LOL: LEAVING OUT LAUGHTER • Amazon Prime Video’s LOL: Enga Siri Paappom does a beleaguered Tamil comedy scene no favours
THE BAWA WAY OF LIFE • Coomi Kapoor’s new book is a handy dictionary for all things Parsi
BRAVE IN A NEW WORLD • Payal Dhar tells the coming of age tale with a new compassion that makes it altogether refreshing
CASTE, A LONG SHADOW
Free Poets Society • Javed Akhtar’s new show, the India Shayari Project, celebrates freedom through poetry
STREAMING SOON • Coming to a...