हेलो @AshwiniVaishnaw जी,
सहरसा से चलकर मुंबई को जाने वाली गाड़ी संख्या 05585 , 10 घंटे की देरी से चल रही है।
इस असुविधा के लिए आपको खेद है या नहीं?
10 घंटे की कीमत कौन देगा।
पूरा पैसा क्यों नहीं रिफंड करते हो?
@RailMinIndia@Raz010199
कैमरा लेकर सरकार की बुराई और कमी दिखाने वालों की तादाद बहुत बढ़ रही है ,
इन सबसे निपटने के लिए सबसे पहले यहां एक I Love haldwani वाला बोर्ड लगाया जाए, फिर पुलिस को भेज कर इस इन्फ्लूएंसर का कैमरा जब्त किया जाए
- A man died falling in a pit in Delhi
- Reporters were criticising Govt
- Bhakts intervened and says that the people who gave that kid a bike is responsible for his death.
- Reporter shocked and says these people are the reason India is behind & politicians goes scott free
उत्तराखंड के दीपक वही शख़्स हैं जो एक बुज़ुर्ग मुस्लिम चाचा के सामने चट्टान बनकर खड़े हुए और नफ़रत फैलाने वालों को डटकर भगा दिया। इस वीडियो में वही दीपक अपना ब���ान दे रहे हैं। सच में, हिंदुस्तान को ऐसे ही दीपक रोशन करते हैं। आज के दौर में ऐसे लोगों की बहुत ज़रूरत है।
While we mourn #NoidaTechieDeath ,
@noida_authority is waiting for another similar incident to happen.
Same city, same danger, same ignorance
When will they wake up?
📍Sector 78, Noida
Kalesh b/w a Lady passenger and a Driver over driving in wrong-side lane (Lady confront a government vehicle for wrong-side driving, leading to heated arguments and alleged inappropriate language toward a female journalist)
Meet BJP’s Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Member of Parliament representing Saran in Bihar.
Let’s examine the work done in his constituency through the lens of the Central Government’s MPLADS website.
A thread 🧵
Almighty. Only You know what we’re going through in these tough days. Only You know our pain & discomfort. Only You are there for our grief and sorrow. Only You have the power to heal us, grant hope in our hearts and make us feel whole again. Aameen.
I’m not targeting any political party by name, but let’s stop pretending this is normal. In the last ten years, crimes, corruption, assaults, rapes and harassment involving ministers, councillors and party members have hit a peak we’ve never seen before. Yes, crimes existed earlier. Yes, Lalu’s era was lawless. Yes, UP has always had a reputation. That excuse is tired and dishonest.
What feels different now is entitlement. A dangerous one. People aligned with this party behave like laws don’t apply to them because practically they don’t. There’s no fear of consequence. No urgency for justice. No accountability. When a minister is caught with ₹100 crore and walks free with ₹90 crore still intact, the message is clear: evidence means nothing, power means everything.
This isn’t corruption anymore. This is institutional rot. Courts move slowly, agencies selectively wake up and public outrage is managed until people get bored. The accused don’t even bother hiding anymore. They roam freely, give interviews, attend rallies because they know no one will touch them.
So where are we heading as a nation? Towards a place where morality is optional if you’re politically useful. Where justice depends on proximity to power. Where the system bends not because it’s broken, but because it’s been instructed to.
And what can one person do? Honestly very little. When power is concentrated in the hands of one man and that man protects his own, fair trials become a myth. Democracy starts looking less like a system & more like a stage managed illusion.
That’s the real danger not just that crimes are happening, but that we’re being slowly conditioned to tolerate them. Outrage is numbed, questions are buried and silence is sold as maturity. This is how democracies don’t collapse overnight, they decay quietly, while people convince themselves nothing can be done. The moment citizens stop demanding accountability & start accepting injustice as “normal,” power stops fearing the public & when power stops fearing the people, the country isn’t being governed anymore it’s being taken over 🙏🏻
“When Students Don’t Come Home”
I am writing this as a conscious journalist from the Northeast, carrying the weight of years of silence, loss and unanswered questions.
Late Anjel Chakma was preparing to return to his hometown for the holidays, a routine moment of relief every student understands. But that journey never happened. Instead, Anjel’s life was violently altered and ultimately taken in Dehradun, far from home, far from safety and far from the comfort of those who raised him.
His death is not an isolated tragedy. It is a painful and familiar reminder for every family in the Northeast that sends its children away in search of education and a better future.
More than a decade has passed since Nido Taniam, a young student from Arunachal Pradesh, was killed in South Delhi’s Lajpat Nagar. That incident shook the nation’s conscience. Committees were formed, guidelines were drafted, helplines were launched, and special police units were introduced to protect people from the Northeast living outside their home states.
Yet today, looking at Anjel Chakma’s death, we must ask: what truly changed?
What we have not honestly acknowledged is that the Northeast continues to be seen as “different” in the national imagination. That difference has become dangerous. It manifests as casual slurs, suspicion, ridicule and at times, fatal violence. This mindset was not created overnight and it has not disappeared with laws or advisories.
We often comfort ourselves by saying systems are in place. But systems do not control the minds of men. The prejudice that fuels such attacks has existed since the earliest days of our collective existence, passed on quietly, normalised, and tolerated. The question before us is uncomfortable: do we keep forgiving a rotten mindset until more innocent lives are lost?
Enough is enough.
Special helplines and designated police units are not enough to protect students who are targeted because of how they look, speak or belong. What is needed is institutional seriousness, not symbolic gestures. A dedicated national ministry or statutory body that focuses solely on the vulnerabilities, safety and dignity of Northeastern people across India, without distractions, without dilution, must be debated urgently.
Will it work? That remains to be seen. But doing nothing has already failed too many times.
In response to Anjel Chakma’s death, the Chakma Students’ Union proposed a protest at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi, on December 28, 2025, demanding justice and stronger safeguards for students from the Northeast. This protest was not only for Anjel. It was for every student who left home with hope and returned in a coffin or never returned at all. However, the proposed protest by the Chakma Students’ Union Delhi was postponed after police permitted only 50 participants.
Anjel Chakma’s death is not just news. It is memory. It is a warning. It is grief carried by an entire Northeast region.
I write this not to provoke sympathy, but to demand recognition, that the Northeast is not an exception within the nation, and its children are not expendable.
I write this because silence, at this point, is no longer an option.
@pushkardhami@DrManikSaha2@uttarakhandcops@HMOIndia@DelhiPolice@mygovtripura@tripura_cmo@PMOIndia@NodalofficerNE
#JusticeForAnjelChakma
#NortheastLivesMatter
#EnoughIsEnough
#ProtectNortheastStudents
It is so disturbing and frustrating to see the police always coming after peaceful protestors. One thing is confirmed: people in power are scared of ‘Satya and Ahimsa’.
Full support to dear @yogitabhayana. Hats off!!
#WATCH | Unnao, UP | On Delhi HC suspending the sentence of 2017 Unnao rape case accused, Kuldeep Singh Sengar, Victim's sister says, "I'm not happy about this. He killed my uncle and then my father. Then this incident happened with my sister. He has been released, but we're still in danger. Who knows, now that they're out, they might kill me and my entire family. If they've released him, then they should put us in jail. At least our lives would be safe there. We would be alive. My sister is in distress that he has been granted bail. My family is still in danger. There are small children. I have a brother. Who knows what they might do to him? Many of their men are roaming around outside, giving threats, saying, "Now that he is coming back, what can you do to me? I'll kill each and every one of you." We receive these kinds of threats, that's why I live in fear..."