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Sports Authority of India denies damage to athletes’ personal equipment at JLN during Diljit concert

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

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Amid row over wrecked JLN stadium post Diljit concert, SAI says no personal equipment of athletes damaged

Asian Youth gold medallist Beant Singh, whose video of the mess at JLN stadium after ‘Dil-Luminati’ concert sparked outrage, said athletes’ personal equipment were also vandalised. Read Shubhangi Misra’s report.

In letter to Poilievre, Overseas Friends of India Canada (OFIC) president Shiv Bhasker raised issue of systemic racism faced by Canadians of Indian descent and sought an apology, reports Keshav Padmanabhan.

Pakistan ‘can’t digest one good week in cricket’; coach Gary Kirsten resigning a ‘humiliation’

Kirsten was appointed by the PCB on a two-year contract in April 2024, but lasted just six months. He leaves without coaching Pakistan in a single ODI, reports Debdutta Chakraborty.

Indian politics is going back to the pre-2014 era. What this means to Brand Modi and BJP

BJP may even end up winning Maharashtra and Jharkhand but going back to pre-2014 politics will hurt Brand Modi, writes DK Singh.

My question on Canada: Are these spies really the best India can find in the 21st century?

Senior officers at R&AW do not know how to conduct covert operations. Many are police officers who don’t seem to understand the difference between an encounter and a covert hit, writes Vir Sanghvi.

How Chinese media explains LAC ‘thaw’—India has given up on US support

China wants to disregard India’s global status as the key factor forcing its hand toward military disengagement. But it can’t ignore New Delhi’s engagements with the US and its allies, writes Rishi Gupta.

Xi wanted to teach India about imbalance of power. We should take a budgetary lesson from it

While we talk much about our military, we don’t put our national wallet where our mouth is. Nobody is saying we should double our defence spending, but current declining trend must be reversed, writes Editor-in-Chief Shekhar Gupta in this week’s ‘National Interest’.

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