CBSE’s May 2025 tender required answer sheets to be scanned with automatic robotic scanners, spines preserved, at a minimum of 300 DPI.
The tender re-issued in August quietly removed all of it. “Scanners” became generic. Resolution dropped to 200 DPI.
Now we know what that meant in practice. It has been exposed that COEMPT scanned the answer sheets using mobile phones.
The blurred copies, the missing pages, the unscanned books - they are not “errors.” They are the predictable outcome of a contract written to fit a vendor.
This is fraud. And every child whose marks were wrongly evaluated is a victim of it.
This morning, the Prime Minister had time to speak about mangoes. He has not had time to speak about 18.5 lakh children whose answer sheets were scanned with phones.
Dharmendra Pradhan ji still sits in office.
Modi ji’s silence is no longer indifference. It is complicity.
Kohli’s running is unreal. Watch him in the stadium and you’ll be stunned. The moment he knew that the ball is coming towards his area, he leans forward slightly and starts running towards the ball just like a cheetah 🐆 from a standing position!
A Crowded Train, A Silent Crowd: The Death of Junaid Khan
His name was Junaid Khan.
He was 16 years old.
He lived in Ballabhgarh, Haryana, and like many teenagers his age, he had gone to Delhi with his family to shop for Eid, carrying back new clothes and small purchases meant for celebration.
On June 22, 2017, he boarded a crowded train from Delhi to Mathura with his brother and cousins, unaware that this routine journey home would turn fatal within hours.
An argument broke out that evening inside the packed compartment. It began over seats, something daily commuters say happens almost every day on that route because of overcrowding and lack of regulation.
But this did not remain a seat dispute.
Junaid and his companions were abused. They were called “beef eaters” and “anti-national,” and what started as an argument quickly took on a communal tone as insults escalated.
His skull cap was pulled off. His beard was tugged. The verbal abuse turned into physical violence within minutes as tempers rose and more people got involved.
A group of men surrounded them, turning a small altercation into a mob confrontation where the boys had little chance to escape or defend themselves.
Knives were pulled out.
Junaid was stabbed multiple times inside a packed train, in full view of passengers who were either too shocked or too afraid to intervene.
He was bleeding, struggling for life, surrounded by people in a compartment that was too crowded for movement but somehow still silent in action.
No one intervened.
On June 22, 2017, when the train reached Asaoti station, about 30 kilometres from Delhi, Junaid was pushed out of the train onto the platform, severely injured and losing blood rapidly. He was taken to a hospital but was declared dead on arrival.
On June 23, 2017, an FIR was registered by his family, who had lost a son in what began as an ordinary train journey after a festive outing.
By June 29, 2017, police had arrested multiple accused based on witness statements, identifying several individuals allegedly involved in the attack and initiating legal proceedings.
On July 8, 2017, another accused, identified as the main assailant who allegedly stabbed Junaid, was apprehended, strengthening the case but not necessarily accelerating justice.
On August 2, 2017, some of the accused were granted bail by a sessions court, and in the months that followed, others also secured bail as the case moved slowly through the legal system.
The case slowed.
There were dozens of people in that coach, many of whom had witnessed at least part of the incident unfold in front of them.
There were people on the platform when the train stopped.
The train was full. The platform had people. Yet, despite so many potential witnesses, very few came forward to testify or identify the attackers.
Passengers later said they were afraid—afraid of retaliation, afraid of getting entangled in a criminal case, and afraid that stepping forward could put their own lives at risk.
“Who wants to die trying to save someone else?” one commuter said, capturing the fear that often silences bystanders in such situations.
On November 27, 2017, the Punjab and Haryana High Court refused to transfer the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation, stating that it did not warrant such intervention, leaving the investigation with the state authorities.
Years passed.
Court proceedings were delayed, and like many cases involving multiple accused and witness dependency, progress remained slow and inconsistent.
In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic slowed hearings even further, pushing the case deeper into delay and prolonging the wait for justice.
Several accused remain out on bail.
The trial has stretched on for years without a definitive conclusion, leaving critical questions unanswered and accountability incomplete.
There is still no final closure.
Junaid’s family is still waiting for justice, for accountability, and for a system that can deliver answers for what happened inside that train compartment on June 22, 2017.
A 16-year-old boy boarded a train after Eid shopping, expecting to reach home by night.
He never came home.
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@sagarfused Lol, I was there yesterday. They didn't allow to carry RCB flags from outside. And by default GT flags are put under every seats. DJ also tried hard to get cheers for GT but 90% of stadium was filled with RCB fans so hardly anyone was responding to him 🤣
Virat Kohli keeps asking the same question & the critics keep running out of answers. Since 2023, he has scored 2365 runs in 51 IPL innings. He has been dismissed for single digits just 3 times in his last 40 innings (On average, 1 single digit score per season).
13 of his last 15 innings crossed 25, 11 went past 40, 8 cleared 50. While everyone else chased highlights, he built a floor of consistency so high that failure became a stranger.
Critics called him an anchor. They said T20 had moved past him, that his method was built for a slower era. So he changed the physics. The bat that used to come down straight & still started moving before the bowler released. Up, down, tap, hover. R Ashwin called it potential energy. Rest of us called it freedom.
Then 2025 happened. RCB won their first title in 18 years. Kohli made 657 runs that season, nothing flashy, just a man holding his nerve while the world wobbled. The title did not relax him. It unlocked something.
2026 brought the real transformation. He quit Tests. What remained was just a batter. No format switching, no need to keep one part of his brain defensive while the other attacked. This season he hits a boundary every 4.9 balls. He strikes at 160 in the powerplay, 140 in the middle, 200 in the death.
Dale Steyn watched the opener against Sunrisers Hyderabad. Kohli hit 69 not out off 38 balls, 5 sixes, a chase of 202 done in 15.2 overs. Steyn said he was hitting aerial shots time & again. A man who had stopped fearing the fall.
The attacking shot percentage tells the story. 40.6 percent in 2021. Almost 75 percent in 2026. He steps down to spin now. He lofts over long on. He was the cover drive man, the wristy flick man. Now he is something messier & more dangerous. Striking at 163 this season. Averaging 54.6, which is technically a dip from his overall average of 56 since 2023. That is the level he has set.
No other batter has scored more runs than him in the last 4 IPL seasons. Not Gill, Not Jaiswal, Not Buttler, Not Samson. He has also hit more sixes than all of them since 2023. The man they called slow is out-hitting the generation that was supposed to replace him. He is not surviving T20 anymore. He is still defining it.
Critics will find something new. Kohli will hear them, fix what needs fixing & keep asking what is next. The bat is still moving, The red jersey is still his. And somehow, impossibly, he is just getting started.
what a party man. On One side of India they call people anti-hindu for eating meat, their goons attack meat shops and force closure and on the other side ministers and MP/ MLAs are eating meat on camera just to gain votes. tragically hilarious🤣🤣
And somehow, it just feels right that it’s Bhuvneshwar Kumar who gets there first among pacers with 200 IPL wickets.
He has never been the loudest guy on the field. Just that calm run-up, that gentle (yet lethal) swing & same quiet belief in his craft.
Maybe that’s why it hits a little deeper. He feels like one of us. You see him grow, you see him fight through phases & when he achieves something, it feels personal.
Some players impress you,
but someone like Bhuvi...he makes you feel proud, in a very real way.
In Mumbai, a Muslim woman claimed that authorities demolished only her house while leaving nearby structures untouched during a local demolition drive. She named official Pratiksha Mate, accusing her of selective enforcement. The woman warned, “I will stay here, I will die here, and she will be responsible. If anything happens to my family, she will be responsible.”
A will say - why don’t you have filter at home?
B will say - Aisi bekar jaghe kyu rehta hai tu?
C will say - Bhai population bhi toh dekho
D will say - Ab yebhi unki galti hai kya
E will lodge FIR on you
F will say - It is DS soros plan to dismantle the country in the time of crisis
G will blame nehru era idk why
H will blame other govt era no idea why
I will say don’t let anyone say all these. Counter them immediately. We need to shut these voices down. Save India.
🚨 URGENT: MISSING PERSON – AHMEDABAD 🚨
Akshat Shah, a young Jain boy from Vasna, Ahmedabad, has been missing since the afternoon of March 28, 2026.
His family is going through unimaginable distress and is desperately seeking help. Every minute matters.
We humbly urge @AhmedabadPolice, @sanghaviharsh Ji, @CMOGuj to immediately activate all technical & human resources—including Mobile Tower Triangulation and City-wide CCTV surveillance—to trace this aspirational youth.
When Govt is the beneficiary they'll implement even new age tech like AI for tolls collection without any hassles.
But when Public needs some service from Govt like to fill a pothole on road you've first complain to 10 different politicians and Govt offices and then wait for months to get the paperwork done from Sarkari babus for the patchwork which will wash away after one rain.