• Newsletters
  • Gift Membership
Logo Logo
Take Scroll With You Download the app to read our award-winning journalism on the go and stay up-to-date with our notifications.
Get the app Get the app
ANDROID iOS
  • Home
  • Common Ground
  • The India Fix
  • Eco India
  • The Latest
  • The Reel
  • Magazine
  • Video
  • Trending
    • Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn
    • In wake of ceasefire, damaged homes in a Jammu neighbourhood bear witness to human cost of conflict
    • Sunday book pick: The rootless marriage of an Englishman and a Bengali woman in ‘Memories of Rain’
    • What does Trump’s ceasefire announcement mean for Modi's strongman image?
    • ‘We must accept scientific discoveries with humility’: Pope Francis on the moon landing
    • Operation Sindoor: Both Hindutva backers and leftists are wrong in claiming India-Israel parallels
    • The community that became home: Nine years of Broke Bibliophiles – Bombay Chapter book club
    • A new book examines the repercussions of shutting the Indian Railways network during Covid-19
    • From the fall of Islamabad to an attack on Karachi: 5 fake stories that Indian TV news ran with
    • Indira Gandhi ‘mishandled’ situation following creation of Bangladesh, claims Assam CM Himanta Sarma
    • ‘War is costly’: Indians lurch between relief and disappointment over ceasefire with Pakistan
    • Interview: ‘Embarrassing for Modi to compromise under Trump pressure’
  • Sections
    • Politics
    • Culture
    • India
    • World
    • Film and TV
    • Music
    • Books and Ideas
    • Business and Economy
    • Science and Technology
    • In Pictures
    • Announcements
    • Bookshop
    • The Field
    • Pulse
    • Elections 2024

Ad
OTHERS ARE

Reading icon icon

  • Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn
    1

    Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn

  • In wake of ceasefire, damaged homes in a Jammu neighbourhood bear witness to human cost of conflict
    2

    In wake of ceasefire, damaged homes in a Jammu neighbourhood bear witness to human cost of conflict

  • Sunday book pick: The rootless marriage of an Englishman and a Bengali woman in ‘Memories of Rain’
    3

    Sunday book pick: The rootless marriage of an Englishman and a Bengali woman in ‘Memories of Rain’

  • What does Trump’s ceasefire announcement mean for Modi's strongman image?
    4

    What does Trump’s ceasefire announcement mean for Modi's strongman image?

  • ‘We must accept scientific discoveries with humility’: Pope Francis on the moon landing
    5

    ‘We must accept scientific discoveries with humility’: Pope Francis on the moon landing

  • Operation Sindoor: Both Hindutva backers and leftists are wrong in claiming India-Israel parallels
    6

    Operation Sindoor: Both Hindutva backers and leftists are wrong in claiming India-Israel parallels

  • The community that became home: Nine years of Broke Bibliophiles – Bombay Chapter book club
    7

    The community that became home: Nine years of Broke Bibliophiles – Bombay Chapter book club

  • A new book examines the repercussions of shutting the Indian Railways network during Covid-19
    8

    A new book examines the repercussions of shutting the Indian Railways network during Covid-19

  • From the fall of Islamabad to an attack on Karachi: 5 fake stories that Indian TV news ran with
    9

    From the fall of Islamabad to an attack on Karachi: 5 fake stories that Indian TV news ran with

  • Indira Gandhi ‘mishandled’ situation following creation of Bangladesh, claims Assam CM Himanta Sarma
    10

    Indira Gandhi ‘mishandled’ situation following creation of Bangladesh, claims Assam CM Himanta Sarma

Around the Web

‘You were late at every stage’: UK journalists question why travel from India wasn’t halted earlier

Adil Ray told UK politician Kwasi Kwarteng that he was trying to justify ‘a catastrophic error’ when he responded to the question with ‘strong vaccine rollout’.

Scroll Staff
May 17, 2021 · 05:25 pm
Read in App

Why did the government not put India on the red list sooner when COVID rates were rising?

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng says the vaccine roll-out 'makes people safe' against the Indian varient. pic.twitter.com/24SP8wQ7BY

— Good Morning Britain (@GMB) May 17, 2021
Get the app Get the app
ANDROID iOS
We welcome your comments at letters@scroll.in.
  • Vaccination
  • UK
  • coronavirus

Related

Watch: Republican National Convention delegates wear ear bandages in support of Donald Trump

Watch: Republican National Convention delegates wear ear bandages in support of Donald Trump

Trending

  1. Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn

    Why the India-Pakistan ceasefire is giving Modi supporters heartburn

  2. In wake of ceasefire, damaged homes in a Jammu neighbourhood bear witness to human cost of conflict

    In wake of ceasefire, damaged homes in a Jammu neighbourhood bear witness to human cost of conflict

  3. Sunday book pick: The rootless marriage of an Englishman and a Bengali woman in ‘Memories of Rain’

    Sunday book pick: The rootless marriage of an Englishman and a Bengali woman in ‘Memories of Rain’

  4. What does Trump’s ceasefire announcement mean for Modi's strongman image?

    What does Trump’s ceasefire announcement mean for Modi's strongman image?

  5. ‘We must accept scientific discoveries with humility’: Pope Francis on the moon landing

    ‘We must accept scientific discoveries with humility’: Pope Francis on the moon landing

Ad