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HomeBest of ThePrint ICYMIHow 20 UP villages, which lost their beloved Sakarni River decades ago,...

How 20 UP villages, which lost their beloved Sakarni River decades ago, got it back

A selection of the best news reports, analysis and opinions published by ThePrint this week.

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20 UP villages lost their beloved Sakarni River decades ago. They just got it back this July

A local environmentalist and Pratapgarh officials used MGNREGA funds to mobilise 30,000 residents to revitalise the 28-km Sakarni River in Uttar Pradesh, reports Akanksha Mishra

Kuki group CoTU says it has drones but they’re only used for surveillance, admits ‘feeling sad’ about woman killed in Manipur’s Koutruk on 1 Sept; rules out talks with Meiteis ‘till Biren is CM’, reports Ananya Bhardwaj

As Modi welcomes ‘new member’ at 7, Lok Kalyan Marg, animal lovers thrilled, but have 1 request for PM

Prime Minister shares video of himself petting newborn calf ‘Deepjyoti’ and walking with it through his garden, explains the calf was named so due to a unique mark on its forehead, writes Debdutta Chakraborty 

After delays & controversies, Mumbai’s costliest Metro inches close to launch, just in time for polls

Phase-1 operations of Metro 3, Mumbai’s first underground Metro corridor, expected to begin by September-end. The 12-km line will stretch from Aarey Colony in Goregaon (East) to BKC, reports Purva Chitnis

Yechury, Noorani obits show Modi has redefined political ideology more than Indira

Narendra Modi has brought the old left and right together. Once bitter ideological opponents have joined hands and are pushing back, trying hard to protect their vision of India, writes Vir Sanghvi

Modi is back. It took J&K, Haryana elections to make the PM break his self-imposed silence   

Has the PM misplaced Modi magic or are we less enchanted? It will take many more Modi speeches to answer that but for now, there is something missing, writes Shailaja Bajpai 

Jats and Dalits in Haryana are voting differently. There is a growing tide for INDIA

The upcoming Haryana Assembly elections are anticipated to be highly competitive, with caste dynamics significantly influencing voter preferences and party strategies, writes Jyoti Mishra

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