The good people of Gurgaon's condominiums who were celebrating the BJP's victory in West Bengal are no longer that happy.
It seems that many Bengali Muslims — the bulk of Gurgaon's housekeeping staff — have decided not to return.
The acute labour shortage is forcing RWAs to pay higher wages to their maintenance staff.
The result — maintenance charges have increased in many housing estates. In some cases, the hike is more than the increment people have got this year!
I LOLed so hard. NGL Danish was what the Bangalore bro used to be like. funny, irreverent, smart af and completely non-performative. Fun only these people were to hang around.
Anyway.. danish makes an excellent point here.
Vishakapatnam is definitely the best coastal city in this country. I feel with more spends, promotion and infra investments by govt and pvt sector it can become Da Nang of India.
It's really clean, affordable, people are friendly and food is good too.
Pic source - My phone
This useless cabinet achieved 187% GDP growth (versus under 100% in the last 12 years), under this cabinet the Rupee was not Asia’s worst currency like today, and our stock market was not the world's second-worst performing stock market. It didn’t shut down 93,000 public schools like your paw paw, maintained petrol at 50–60 INR without ethanol blending despite 100–147 USD crude oil, and preserved a strong RTI and relatively free media. Furthermore, it levied no STT, LTCG, or STCG, enabling middle-class wealth growth and stability. Under its watch, India's per capita was not less than Bangladesh like today, income inequality was not worse than the days of the British Raj like today, and Taiwan did not overtake India in stock market capitalization.
Bashir Badr deserved a state funeral.
Petty, partisan, communal, bigoted politics should not have denied this honour to one of the tallest poets India has produced in modern times.
Hundreds of devotees gather outside the Sunni Masjid near Bandra West railway station, transforming one of Mumbai's busiest transit hubs into a serene canvas of collective devotion. Vivid blue prayer mats stretch across the road in perfect geometric rows as the city pauses for Eid al-Adha.
In a city that rarely stands still, this is a rare and moving sight, thousands united in quiet faith, shoulder to shoulder, embodying the discipline and communal warmth that define Mumbai's spirit. Eid Mubarak to all those celebrating.
indians when they see an oversized 42mm basic ass stainless steel case and bracelet with an NH35 movement inside being sold by a 'microbrand' (2 guys in bangalore/noida buying shit from china): 😍😍😍😍💦💦💦💦😍😍😍😍🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤😋😋😋😋😋😋😋
Her name was Lini Puthussery.
She was 31 years old. A nurse at the Perambra Taluk Hospital in Kozhikode Kerala. She had been working there for six years.
She had two sons. Ritul was five years old. Sidharth was two years old.
In May 2018 the Nipah virus arrived in Kerala. Two brothers and a relative were brought to the hospital with symptoms nobody had seen before.
Lini was on night duty when they arrived. She cared for them through the night.
They died soon after. Confirmed Nipah positive.
By Friday Lini herself had fallen ill.
She was shifted to the ICU at Kozhikode Medical College Hospital.
When she learned she had contracted the Nipah virus she asked the hospital not to allow her two sisters to visit. She did not want them exposed.
From the ICU she wrote a note to her husband Sajeesh.
“Sajeesh I am almost on my way. I don’t think I will be able to see you. Sorry. Please look after our little ones and take them to the Gulf. They should not be alone like our father. Lots of love.”
She died on May 21, 2018.
Her body was cremated quickly to prevent the spread of infection. Her family could not say a proper goodbye.
She did not hesitate when the patients arrived.
She did not ask who would care for her sons if she fell ill.
She showed up for her shift and did her job.
Today is International Nurses Day.
Her name was Lini Puthussery. She deserves to be remembered.