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Mint
12 hours ago
- Mint
Attention Flyers! IndiGo, Air India and SpiceJet issue advisory amid rain and winds forecast for Delhi
Indian airline operators IndiGo, Air India, and SpiceJet announced on Saturday, May 31, that flight operations from the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi are likely to be affected amid IMD's forecast for rain and moderate winds in the region. According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), Delhi and a few other states have been issued an Orange Alert warning of heavy rainfall and the possibility of thunderstorms in the upcoming days. IndiGo cited moderate winds and rainfall in Delhi for any potential delays in flight operations from Delhi Airport on Saturday, 31 May 2025. '#6ETravelAdvisory: Rain and moderate winds are forecast in #Delhi, which could affect flight operations. Please check your flight status before heading to the airport and allow extra time for your commute. Safe travels!' said IndiGo in its post. The airline also said that 'light showers and moderate winds' are expected throughout the day. 'The city may be cloaked in grey, but our flight schedule is mostly staying bright and on time. Light showers and moderate winds are expected through the day, and while they're perfect for a hot chai, they might slow down your drive to the airport,' said the airline. IndiGo also issued another advisory on Saturday, warning travellers of a 'slight delay' in flight operations on the nation's East coast due to persistent rainfall and thunderstorms. Silchar, Aizawl and Shillong are the primary areas where the flight operations are expected to be disrupted on Saturday. '#6ETravelAdvisory: As monsoon showers sweep across the eastern coast, intermittent heavy rains may cause slight delays in flight operations,' said IndiGo in an announcement on platform X. Air India also informed its passengers through a social media post on platform X that flight operations from Delhi are likely to be impacted by rain and thunderstorms in the region. They also advised people to keep some extra time allotted while travelling to the airport due to traffic situations. 'Rain and thunderstorms may impact flights to/from Delhi this evening. Please check your flight status and allow extra travel time,' said Air India in its post. SpiceJet also announced that due to the bad weather in Delhi on Saturday, all departures and arrivals from the Delhi airport are set to be affected. The company recommended travellers to check their flight status from the official website. '#WeatherUpdate: Due to bad weather in Delhi (DEL), all departures/arrivals and their consequential flights may get affected. Passengers are requested to keep a check on their flight status,' said the airline company in its social media post.


Scroll.in
13 hours ago
- Scroll.in
‘The umbrellas are on a protest march': Bishnu Mohapatra's poems on rain for a desolate May
It is May. And May has its darling buds. Palash and hibiscus. Zinnia and marigold. But this May is not the month of flowers in the Indian plains. It is a parched month of pining. For compassion. And for the rain. The open beak of the sparrow and cuckoo, the dry petals of marigolds and zinnias, the paws of cats and the dogs, and the desert of the mind and the heart all wait, panting for the rain to descend. So do the poems of Bishnu Mohapatra's book, Rain Incarnations. It is rain in its many (in)carnations - the euphoria, the nostalgia, the awakening of the rain, as it arrives, as it seeps in, as it sponges in and caresses the soil and all life nestled within. Paeans to rain and the monsoon are not new in the subcontinent. Kalidasa's Ritusamhara offers resplendent rhymes to rain, a Sanskritic canon that Rabindranath Tagore was very fond of. His early work Bhanusingher Padabali carries clear signs of how immersed he was in both Kalidasa and the rains. In between these two maestros of monsoon came the mythologies of rain, the rhymes and the lores, and the poetry of Mas'ud Sa'd Salman, Mirabai, Surdas, Kabir and even Mirza Ghalib. When Tansen sang Megh Malhar and Desh, he could bring rains to the dry and wry lands of the northern plains, it is said. In recent years, one can remember Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things invoking, in her way, the wetness of Kerala; or Alexander Frater's Chasing the Monsoon, which the critic Rukun Advani called 'a literary monsoon mania' which made 'a religion of rain'. Rain is in our music, our food, our travels, and indeed, in our tongues. Clearly, no one – no poet, no wanderer, no romantic, no raconteur – could be immune to the subcontinental samhara of the monsoon. Mohapatra, who is a senior professor of politics at Krea University and an acclaimed Odia poet, is the latest literary devotee of the rain. Rain Incarnations is his elegantly published volume of mostly short poems translated eloquently by Aparna Uppaluri and are accompanied by a set of minimalist, mostly monochrome, atmospheric, abstract art by Gauri Nagpal. It is a petit volume in every sense of the French word. A note on the original Odia volume, Barshavatar, by Uppaluri perhaps best captures the mood of the original. The rain of Barshavatar, she writes, is 'the rain of the ordinary man, the ordinary woman, it is the rain that ripens mangoes; here, rain is a witness, rain is time…lost love,…God's gaze; rain dances, sleeps, transforms, glides, flies and sinks'. In keeping with the mythical origins of the title, we see, among others, the dancing rain in 'Raasa Leela', and the departed rain in 'departure'. Then there is the troubadour-like lonely rain with whom a chance meeting is valued on a deserted night on the street; or the shifting relationship with the rain during the pandemic, or when one is faced with the idea, if not the actuality, of death. In 'Blame', probably the most touching poem of the volume, rain bears the cross of all human adventures. These themes are perhaps to be expected in the lines of a poet who invokes the rain as muse. But what is genuinely telling are the poems in which the political scientist in Bishnu peeks from the behind the poet in him, in poems like 'Rain thinks of Socrates' or 'Rain in the Footsteps of Ambedkar' – in the first, rain 'representing' the suicidal thirst for knowledge, and in the second, the source of ablution. Most poems in this wonderful volume would call for a reread; the first time to comprehend, then to soak in them. In this country of the present, without the slightest touch of compassion, dry in heart and isolated in hate, may rain inundate us all. As it should. This May. Blame Tonight the moon's youth is squandered. For this, we can blame the rain. The salt of love we hoarded for years, has been washed away into the ocean For this, we can blame the rain. The black mole on my lover's breast slips slowly to her belly. For this, we can blame the rain. Flouting all orders, the umbrellas of the city are out on a protest march. Demands, slogans, and speeches fill the streets, police break their barricade. Even for this, we can blame the rain. In the Irani café in Bandra, Sarveshwar while cleaning the tables, remembers the moist eyes of his mother. A few drops of his tears fall into a teacup. For this, too, we can blame the rain. Rain thinks of Socrates I am not an imitation, nor an image of my own being. I am not a diminished body, nor its broken reflection. You will not find me, even if you look for me. My ideal form is not in your heaven. I have wandered for long around the world, fatigued, with muscles tired, heels cracked and broken, soles of my feet, drenched in blood. I have walked the world. Whether you know it or not, I live life caught in my own questions. From the womb of my answers, questions emerge like dark butterflies and scatter across my sky. That day, you drank hemlock surrounded by your friends, your disciples, your lovers. Your feet, then fingers, then your thighs and your abdomen, finally your heart – slowly turned to stone. I loitered in the city-square for a long time, everything was quiet – only the untimely cawing of the crows. Your toga came flying, a pack of street dogs tore it to shreds. I rolled over those tatters till they moistened and mingled with the earth. I will tell you a truth. I too intoxicated the young. Made and unmade known and unknown Gods. Like you, I know Life is familiar – Death, intimate. Raasa Leela Look, look – at that ecstatic dance of rain, like Sri Ramakrishna swaying, or avadhootas with ashen bodies whirling in abandon. Rain appears still, at times – like a note held in raag Malhar, or like Manguli the peasant, rapt in love for his wife. Rain, an unruly cow in the city forages, feeding on everything. Torn clothes, pajamas, hawai chappals, polythene bags, crumpled newspaper, computer CDs, condoms, and old bottles of homeopathic remedies. Everything whisked together and gulped. Still, much remains – like the broken arm of Jesus in Kandhamal, like severed limbs of workers of Kalinganagar, or the duplicity of our statesmen. The deep sad sigh of those whose lands are taken by force, their bulging anger, our blind intolerance and the torso of broken dreams. In these turbulent times, the times of war – Where does the rain get such courage? To dance wildly on the high streets of the City? Rain – melting moonlight pearl fallen off the stars horses let loose from the stable dove flown away from its coop first touch and the stirring of breasts intimate flicker unseen face of the world rumble of drums naked water lily green melody. 'Rain does not deceive, has no alibi' Who says this? Who flatters rain? Look, look, again – at this ecstatic Raasa of Rain Its Leela And the wild laughter of its sycophants all around. Sayandeb Chowdhury teaches literature at Krea University, Andhra Pradesh.


India Today
16 hours ago
- India Today
Dust, thunderstorm alert for Delhi-NCR, rain likely today
The Indian meteorological department has forecast a cloudy sky with thunder and lightning on Saturday and Sunday for the Delhi NCR region with a dust storm with 40-50 kmph wind followed by rains expected after 2 national capital on Saturday morning recorded a minimum temperature of 34.8 degrees Celsius, 5.6 notches below the season's average, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).advertisementRelative humidity was recorded at 64 per cent at 8:30 am. The air quality was recorded in the "poor" category at 9 am on Saturday, with an Air Quality Index (AQI) reading of 204, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) data weather department had earlier asked residents of Delhi-NCR to prepare for a spell of turbulent weather, forecasting gusty winds reaching up to 70 kmph, accompanied by thunderstorms and rainfall through the end of month has already set a new record for rainfall in Delhi. As of May 28, the city has received 186.4 mm of rain, surpassing the previous high of 165 mm recorded in May 2008. The average rainfall for May is typically around 30.7 mm, making this year's precipitation exceptionally has been hit by five significant storms this month:advertisementMay 2: A dust storm accompanied by 77 mm of rainfall and winds of up to 80 km/ 15: Dust-raising winds between 40-50 km/h reduced visibility to 1,200-1,500 meters for nearly 12 17: Thunderstorms with winds reaching 74 km/h and light 21: A brief but intense storm with winds of 79 km/h and 12 mm of 25: Heavy rainfall measuring 81.4 mm and winds peaking at 82 km/hMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Delhi#Noida#Ghaziabad