39 Indians killed in Iraq: Families mourn the loss of dear ones
NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES
Two more apologies from Delhi Chief Minister and AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal secured acquittals for him in defamation cases filed by Union Minister Nitin Gadkari and Congress leader Kapil Sibal's son Amit Sibal is one of the top stories covered by the dailes this morning. "Sorry, Sorry, Sorry" leads Mail Today adding "Faced with defamation cases from every corner, Kejriwal apologies to Gadkari and Sibal after the first one to Majithia".
The high drama in Parliament is also extensively covered by the press. "Protesting MPs again stall debate on no-trust motion. Speaker Sumitra Mahajan cites ongoing chaos in Lok Sabha to deny discussion", leads The Hindu.
Referring to the Lingayat sect, Hindustan Times writes "Lingayats a religious minority, says Karnataka; Centre will decide". "karnataka plays 'Lingayats not Hindu' card" says The Pioneer. The paper writes that Congress government tags dominant group as religious minority, moves Centre for nod.
On the possibility of cobbling up a joint front of like minded parties minus the Congress to challenge the ruling BJP led alliance in next year general election, The Tribune writes "Mamata, KCR discuss new 'federal poll front'. Quoting the Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao, the paper says "Will offer something Congress, BJP unable to execute".
Writing on the Fodder scam case, DNA writes "Lalu is guilty in 4th case too". "Lalu guilty in 4th fodder scam case, Mishra freed. Sentencing on March 21, two cases remain" notes The Asian Age.
"Doval heads to US to get 2-2 dialogue back on track", reports Hindustan Times.
And finally, "9 bullets fail to stop Cheetah's resurgence. Well, The Pioneer carries the amazing story of Chetan Kumar Cheetah who sustained nine bullets in an encounter between a group of terrorists and security forces in J&K. He resumes duty after month in coma and a year in hospital after he fought death and miraculously survived.
NEWSPAPERS HEADLINES
Two more apologies from Delhi Chief Minister and AAP convenor Arvind Kejriwal secured acquittals for him in defamation cases filed by Union Minister Nitin Gadkari and Congress leader Kapil Sibal's son Amit Sibal is one of the top stories covered by the dailes this morning. "Sorry, Sorry, Sorry" leads Mail Today adding "Faced with defamation cases from every corner, Kejriwal apologies to Gadkari and Sibal after the first one to Majithia".
The high drama in Parliament is also extensively covered by the press. "Protesting MPs again stall debate on no-trust motion. Speaker Sumitra Mahajan cites ongoing chaos in Lok Sabha to deny discussion", leads The Hindu.
Referring to the Lingayat sect, Hindustan Times writes "Lingayats a religious minority, says Karnataka; Centre will decide". "karnataka plays 'Lingayats not Hindu' card" says The Pioneer. The paper writes that Congress government tags dominant group as religious minority, moves Centre for nod.
On the possibility of cobbling up a joint front of like minded parties minus the Congress to challenge the ruling BJP led alliance in next year general election, The Tribune writes "Mamata, KCR discuss new 'federal poll front'. Quoting the Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao, the paper says "Will offer something Congress, BJP unable to execute".
Writing on the Fodder scam case, DNA writes "Lalu is guilty in 4th case too". "Lalu guilty in 4th fodder scam case, Mishra freed. Sentencing on March 21, two cases remain" notes The Asian Age.
"Doval heads to US to get 2-2 dialogue back on track", reports Hindustan Times.
And finally, "9 bullets fail to stop Cheetah's resurgence. Well, The Pioneer carries the amazing story of Chetan Kumar Cheetah who sustained nine bullets in an encounter between a group of terrorists and security forces in J&K. He resumes duty after month in coma and a year in hospital after he fought death and miraculously survived.
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