Tag: Odisha
Odisha Train Tragedy: Initial Reports Point to Human Error or Technical...
Major Train Disaster in Odisha: Human Error Suspected as Initial Reports Emerge In what is being deemed as India's most catastrophic rail accident in...
Miraculous Escape: Bengaluru-Howrah Train’s Reserved Coaches Unscathed in Odisha Train Accident
In a tragic train accident that occurred in Balasore district of Odisha on Friday, claiming the lives of over 230 people, there is a...
Train: Catastrophic Odisha Mishap Marks Third Decades-Long Streak of Major Train...
In a devastating incident that unfolded on Friday evening in Odisha's Balasore district, three trains collided, resulting in an immense loss of life. The...
Horror Unleashed: Eyewitnesses Hauntingly Recall Odisha Train Tragedy with Loud Shrieks...
In a chilling account of the tragic train accident, eyewitnesses in Bahanaga village shared their haunting experiences of the horrifying scene that unfolded on...
Complacency a big enemy during pandemic: Patnaik
Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik Wednesday cautioned people against complacency during the pandemic and asked officials and the people not to take things lightly...
2 killed, 20 injured as bus carrying pilgrims rams into truck...
Two persons were killed and around 20 others injured, when a bus carrying pilgrims from Uttar Pradesh rammed into a paddy-laden truck in Odishas Bhadrak district on Wednesday, officials said.
India successfully test-fires Agni-2 ballistic missile that can hit 2000 kilometers
India has successfully test-fired a 2,000-km-range Agni-2 ballistic missile from Balasore, Odisha. Defense sources said the surface-to-surface missile was tested from the Integrated Test Range (ITR).
The Agni-2 missile was tested last year but it has been tested for the first time at night. Its firepower can be increased from two thousand to three thousand km. The Agni-2 missile is capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
The controversial remark about Gandhi’s death in Aama Bapuji- Here is...
Recently a controversy spurred upon the question of the death of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of the nation. It surfaced the news because of a booklet published in a school at Odisha and the mass education department which says, the death of Gandhi was 'accidental'. It was a book with texts and pictures, widely circulated amongst all schools in the state of Odisha. It was a two-page booklet titled Aama Bapuji: Aka Jhalaka which in English translates to Our Bapuji: A Glimpse.