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India vs Thailand Live Score: Blue Tigers Take On Changsuek In Exhibition

India vs Thailand Live Score: Blue Tigers Take On Changsuek In Exhibition

News184 days ago

India vs Thailand Live Score, Football Match Today:
The Indian football team face off against the Thailand side at the Thammasat Stadium in Pathum Thani on Wednesday in an international friendly.
India play the exhibition fixture against Thailand as a tune-up event ahead of the Blue Tigers' Asian Cup Qualifier against Hong Kong, while Thailand are set to take on Turkmenistan in the qualifiers.
The hosts boast a better head-to-head record against India with 12 wins for Thailand, 7 for India and 7 draws, however, the Blue Tigers can seek to draw inspirtation from their recent victories against the Changsuek as India managed to beat Thailand 4-1 at the AFC Asia Cup 2019, and 1-0 in the King's Cup.
Thailand, who have climbed 14 places since Japanese coach Masatada Ishii took charge in December 2023, stand 99th in the FIFA rankings as compared to the 127th-placed India.
Indian Lineup for the game against Thailand:
India: Vishal Kaith, Anwar Ali, Apuia, Asish Rai, Abhishek Tekcham, Sandesh Jhingan, Ashique Kurunian, Manvir Singh, Liston Colaco, Ayush Chhetri, Sunil Chhetri
Thailand: Khammai; Dolah, Ballini, Haiprakhon, Kraikruan; Songkrasin, Doloh, Davis, Wonggorn, Panya; Chaided

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Office Para Dalhousie
Office Para Dalhousie

Time of India

time36 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Office Para Dalhousie

Once the most politically charged precinct east of Suez, Kolkata's Dalhousie Square — now officially BBD Bag — is a living relic. It was the cradle of modern Indian governance, the workshop of the British East India Company, and the epicentre of Bengal's revolutionary fervour. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now As the steel girders of the Mahakaran metro station pierce the subsoil of this historic heartland, and scaffolding wraps Writers' Buildings in a veil of future promise, the Square is slowly shifting its silhouette — from a colonial memoryscape to a dynamic urban commons. At the crossroads of nostalgia and necessity, Dalhousie Square stands at a unique moment in time. It is steeped in layered narratives — from the administrative architecture of the British Empire to revolutionary blood spilled in the name of freedom. Now, the future demands that it evolve into a space that not only honours its past but actively engages the civic life of contemporary Kolkata. "Dalhousie Square is not just a cluster of colonial-era buildings — it is the treasury of governance memories for all of modern south Asia," says Alapan Bandyopadhyay, former Bengal chief secretary and the current chairman of the Bengal Heritage Commission. Bandyopadhyay's relationship with the precinct is intimate. He spent long years working in the Writers' Buildings, the city's oldest and most symbolic secretariat. Its most iconic structure, the red-brick Writers' Buildings, is currently undergoing long-overdue restoration. Once the domain of the Company's "writers" — junior clerks — the edifice morphed into Bengal's administrative core through the 19th and 20th centuries. And yet, in its silent grandeur, it remained a watchtower of colonial nostalgia and an unwilling witness to post-Independence inertia. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now "Heritage must not remain fossilised in nostalgia," Bandyopadhyay insists. "The challenge is to reimagine this historical heart of Kolkata as a dynamic, democratic, and sustainable public space — a cultural and administrative commons where history coexists with contemporary urban life." For decades, Dalhousie Square served as the office para — the de facto central business district (CBD) of Kolkata. While the centrality of this function persists, the precinct today battles dilapidation, traffic chaos, visual clutter, and urban disconnection. The area that once housed India's first reserve bank (Currency Building, 1770), Asia's first hotel (Spence's, 1830), first elevator (Raj Bhawan, 1892), first telegraph line (1854), world's first fingerprint bureau (1897), and now, Asia's first underwater Metro, is being forced to ask itself difficult questions: What is the future of a CBD that still operates on 19th-century blueprints? Can nostalgia become an asset in urban revitalisation? "There is an urgent need to bring pedestrian friendliness, restore architectural harmony, declutter signage, and reactivate historic spaces for civic engagement," says urban planner Dipankar Sinha, former DG (Town Planning) of KMC. "We don't need to turn Dalhousie into a tourist trap, but we must make it a civic spectacle." Bandyopadhyay sees the opportunity as transformative. "In the years ahead, I envision Dalhousie Square as a seamless confluence of preservation and progress," he explains. "Restored heritage structures should house public institutions, museums, think tanks, cultural hubs, and quiet courtyards for civic interaction." If the future is subterranean, Dalhousie is already digging in. The Mahakaran metro station, being built just south of the Writers' Buildings, symbolises not just physical connectivity, but philosophical renewal. Kolkata's first under-river metro is not only an engineering feat but also a metaphor for linking eras — past, present, and future. And while the future promises a cleaned-up square, enhanced public transport, and restored facades, it must also reckon with the emotional landscape that Dalhousie inhabits in the hearts of its citizens. Kolkata has long been called the Capital of Nostalgia, and nowhere is this truer than at Dalhousie. Every forgotten corner here has hosted the arc of empire, revolution, and resistance. The square is more than a site of colonial governance; it was also the theatre of resistance. In 1930, three young revolutionaries — Benoy, Badal, and Dinesh — stormed the Writers' Buildings to assassinate a top British official. Their sacrifice lent BBD Bag its present name. Even earlier, the Rodda Arms Heist of 1914, in which Bengali nationalists stole German Mauser pistols in broad daylight, unfolded in the same alleys. In 1930, C A Tegart, then police commissioner, narrowly escaped an assassination attempt right here. The resistance embedded in Dalhousie's stones still whispers beneath the city's postcolonial calm. Today, a red sign for AG Bengal on the Treasury Building — the former site of Spence's Hotel — sits jarringly over intricate friezes. The room where C V Raman once worked lies unmarked. Even President Rajendra Prasad walked these corridors, now largely anonymous to passersby. Dalhousie's heritage is not just something to be protected; it's a brand, a potential urban identity. "Dalhousie has been left with memories," said Chandranath Chattopadhyay, a cultural commentator. "But that can be a compliment. If only we could reimagine these neighbourhoods, get the world to gawk at their romance, stay in our hotels, carry our stories home—we could turn memory into momentum." Dalhousie's future is more than architectural — it is psychological. For a city battling modernity on uncertain terms, Dalhousie offers a unique roadmap: how to remain old without becoming obsolete, said P K Mishra, an archaeologist who worked for long at Dalhousie. Making of Dalhousie Dalhousie Square's story begins with Job Charnock of the British East India Company, who set up a kuthi (factory) near the Hooghly banks in 1690. From this foothold, the Company built Fort William, established St Anne's Church, and gradually acquired the villages of Sutanuti, Govindapur, and Kalikata — laying the foundation of modern Calcutta British historian H E A Cotton described Dalhousie as the "pivot of the settlement" in 'Calcutta Old and New' (1909), noting its role as the nerve centre of governance, commerce, and communication. Over the years, the square became home to a stunning array of 'firsts' — Asia's first hotel (Spence's), elevator (Raj Bhawan), telegraph line, fingerprint bureau, and more The area also witnessed pivotal moments of political resistance: the Rodda Arms Heist, the Benoy-Badal-Dinesh attack on Writers' Buildings, and multiple assassination attempts on British officials Also known as BBD Bag, the square is undergoing a crucial transformation. As the past is restored and the future built underground, Dalhousie remains the beating heart of a city that remembers — and dreams|

Centre gives nod for weapons that outgun Pakistan's arsenal
Centre gives nod for weapons that outgun Pakistan's arsenal

Hindustan Times

time40 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Centre gives nod for weapons that outgun Pakistan's arsenal

Even as national security planners and military chiefs celebrated one month of Operation Sindoor on Saturday evening, HT learns that the defence ministry has given the green signal to the three services to replenish inventory with longer-range loitering ammunition, artillery shells, kamikaze drones and beyond-visual-range air-to-air missiles that out-range the Chinese missiles used by Pakistan during the four day high intensity skirmish. According to people familiar with the matter and on the basis of action taken reports and damage assessment undertaken by the three services, there is digital evidence to conclude that the Indian Air Force (IAF) fighters, surface-to-air missile batteries and S-400 air defence system downed four Pakistani Chinese-made fighter jets and two big aircraft (possibly one C-130 J and one SAAB 2000 airborne early warning system) during Operation Sindoor. There are also indications, the people added, that two F-16 fighter aircraft may have been partly damaged during the IAF's missile assault on 11 airbases, including those at Sargodha, Rafiqui, Jacobabad and Nur Khan (Chaklala, Rawalpindi). The reports indicate that India's Rafale fighters, S-400 missile systems and M777 howitzers acquitted themselves well during the four-day conflict with the Russian air defence system taking three enemy aircraft. They also show that India destroyed one Chinese LY-80 fire radar, two AN TPQ-43 US-made automatic tracking radar and one fire unit of Chinese HQ-9 radar at Chaklala during the retaliatory strike on May 10. Intelligence inputs now suggest that Pakistan has four HQ-9 (the Chinese equivalent of the Russian S-300 air defence radars) instead of two originally estimated by national security planners. The Pakistani military used the Chinese version of PL -15 air to air missile which has a range of 180 are also inputs that the Pakistanis, by mixing two fire units of 250-km range HQ 9 air defence system with two other 150-km range systems at Chaklala and Malir cantonment near Karachi, respectively, may have tried to catch the Indian Air Force by surprise. The Action Taken Reports also show that IAF fired 19 BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles on Pakistan air bases and almost an equal number of French SCALP subsonic cruise missiles. The Pakistanis, in turn, fired CM-400 AKG air-launched supersonic missiles at Indian air bases using Chinese JF-17 fighters but these failed to do any damage. The Turkish built YIHA loitering ammunition that Pakistanis fired in large numbers were either jammed by the Indian electronic warfare suite, missed their targets, or were taken down by India's robust air defence system. Even the FATAH-1 rockets fired by Pakistan were either off the mark or were intercepted by the Indian air defence systems. HT learns that there is now adequate evidence that India's first counter-terror strike on May 7 was a success as Markaz-e-Taiba (the LeT headquarters at Muridke) was hit by four to five Crystal Maze missiles, which show a small entry point but damage the facility within. The Jaish-e-Mohammed facility at Markaz-e-Subhan Allah was hit by 6 SCALP missiles launched from Rafale fighters and totally destroyed the terror factory through pin-pointed strike using bunker busting techniques. The US-made Excalibur ammunition used by M-777 howitzers of the Indian Army destroyed the tier 2 defences of the Pakistan Army across the LoC as did India's Polish-made loitering extended range ammunition. The Indian Air Force and Indian Navy used Israeli loitering ammunition to destroy terror camps in Occupied Kashmir on May 7. Between the launch of the operation in the early hours of May 7 and the ceasefire on the evening of May 10, Indian forces bombed nine terror camps in Pakistan and PoK and killed at least 100 terrorists, and the Indian Air Force struck targets at 13 Pakistani air bases and military installations. On Tuesday, it emerged that India's targeting of locations within Pakistan during the May 7-10 clash was more extensive than was previously known, with a Pakistani document acknowledging that Indian drones had struck locations ranging from Peshawar in the northwest to Hyderabad in the south. Pakistan's Operation Bunyan-ul-Marsoos, which was mounted in response to Operation Sindoor, 'folded in eight hours' on May 10 belying Islamabad's ambitious target of bringing India to its knees in 48 hours, chief of defence staff General Anil Chauhan said on Tuesday. The action taken reports as well as the immediate emphasis on replenishment suggest that the Indian forces are aware, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi has repeatedly said, that Operation Sindoor isn't over.

India a must at G7 table: Mark Carney on inviting PM Modi
India a must at G7 table: Mark Carney on inviting PM Modi

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

India a must at G7 table: Mark Carney on inviting PM Modi

NEW DELHI: Canadian PM Mark Carney defended the last-minute invitation to his counterpart Narendra Modi for the , saying it made sense for Canada and other members to invite the "5th largest economy" and the most populous country in the world that's central to a number of supply chains. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now While Modi's travel programme is not finalised yet, he's expected to reach Alberta in time for the G7 outreach session on June 17. Other G7 members keen on seeing Modi's participation, hints Carney The G7 summit begins on June 15. Asked repeatedly about why Canada would have Modi over when the probe into the killing of Khalistan separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar is still on, Canadian PM Mark Carney said there had been progress on law enforcement dialogue which "recognises issues of accountability". Carney's predecessor Justin Trudeau had wrecked the India-Canada relationship by alleging the Indian govt's role in the murder without, as India continues to maintain, sharing any evidence. "Bilaterally, we have now agreed-importantly-to continued law enforcement dialogue. So, there's been some progress on that, which recognises issues of accountability. I extended the invitation to Prime Minister Modi in that context, and he has accepted,'' said Carney, responding to questions from the media about the issue and the invitation to Modi. "We are a country of the rule of law. The rule of law is proceeding as it should in Canada, and I am not going to disrupt that process,'' he added. Carney hinted that other G7 members were keen on seeing participation by the Indian leader. "First, we are in the role - Canada is in the role - of the G7 chair, and in those discussions, as agreed with our G7 colleagues, we're addressing important issues like energy security, the digital future, and critical minerals, among others. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Partnerships in building infrastructure in the emerging and developing world are also part of the agenda,'' he said. "In my capacity as G7 chair, and in consultation with others - some of whom also make these determinations - it makes sense to include India, the fifth-largest economy in the world, effectively the most populous country, and central to a number of those supply chains,'' he added.

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