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India Today, April 26, 1999
April 26, 1999


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Sonia's Nightmare
The dramatic fall of the 13-month old Atal Bihari Vajpayee Government leads to a fresh round of confusion over the alternative regime. Congress President Sonia Gandhi either has to manage a coalition of bewildering contradictions or face elections.

New Role Old Job
The immediate task before the BJP-led alliance is to put a united front and check desertions in order to prevent the formation of a new government.

States
Wrath of Grapes
Income-tax authorities gun for Jayalalitha as she claims exemption for fruit she never grew.

Battle for Brownie Points
Discomfiture on the family front apart , Chandrbabu Naidu's slugfest with the state Congress chief puts him on the defensive.

Letter from the EditorEditorials
Eyecatchers
VoicesOfftrack
Centrestage
Centrestage
Books
Metro Today


People Have Their Say

Public support forces the reinstatement of Pune civic chief Arun Bhatia as the Government readies to fight the court order.

Unholy War
Inter-gang rivalry in Mumbai has now moved on to another plane -- communal wars. And dons use religion as a weapon to establish their supremacy.

Columns
Usual Suspects by Swapan Dasgupta
Fifth Column by Tavleen Singh
Kautilya by Jairam Ramesh
On the Ball by Kapil Dev
Flip Side by Dilip Bobb

Sports
Enfant Terrible
A gifted yet erratic Pakistani team has had its World Cup chances bolstered by the arrival of a bowler who is frighteningly fast, aggressive but also indisciplined.

Lone Ranger
Three centuries in the Test series versus Australia have rescued Lara's reputation, and galvanised the West Indies team.

Newsnotes
Pipe Dreams
Famous Bookworms
Desperate Knock
Poetic Challenge

Health
Badshah in the Red
Finding itself pushed to a corner, Amitabh Bachchan's bankrupt dream venture braces for a long-drawn battle with its creditors.

Religion
Boom for Boom
Pakistan's prompt reply to India's testing of the Agni II intensifies the deadly nuclear missiles race in the region.

Health
Striking Young
An exponential increase in diabetics changes the disease from an individual problem to public worry.

 

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