Jun 11, 2025
After a quiet family dinner, Solapur’s celebrated neurologist Shirish Valsangkar walked into his bathroom with a revolver—minutes later he was dead, a chilling suicide note in his pocket blaming his trusted admin officer, now arrested, as secrets unravel
How could a man so deeply revered in the medical fraternity, a neurologist of unmatched skill, and the face of brain healthcare in Solapur, choose to end his own life? This question continues to haunt the minds of thousands in Maharashtra and beyond, after the shocking and heartbreaking news broke out that Dr. Shirish Padmakar Valsangkar, a respected neurologist and the founder of Valsangkar Hospital, also known as the S P Institute of Neurosciences, had died by suicide. The esteemed doctor, whose name had become synonymous with cutting-edge neurology in the region, reportedly shot himself in…
Jun 11, 2025
"RAW Officer Who Vanished in 2004": The Making of India’s Most Dangerous Double Agent, Rabinder Singh who leaked 212 secret files, exposed agents, collapsed RAW’s networks, and fled to the U.S. via Nepal with CIA help in India’s worst betrayal ever
There are traitors who betray for ideology, and there are traitors who betray for money. Then there are those like Rabinder Singh, who "sold out the people of the country for personal luxury and comfort." He wasn’t just a minor cog in India’s intelligence machinery. He was a high-ranking officer in RAW — the Research and Analysis Wing, India’s most elite and secretive intelligence agency. And yet, he went down in history as "the biggest traitor in RAW."
Jun 10, 2025
"मुहब्बत": In 2003, Bengaluru's dark Ring Road Murder shocked all as Shubha Shankaranarayan lost in a secret love with Arun Varma, planned the cold killing of her fiancé BV Girish, with four jailed for life, yet her 2014 bail left a grim shadow on justice
In the sultry summer of July 2010, a fast-track court in Bengaluru delivered a verdict that sent shivers down the city’s spine: Shubha Shankaranarayan, a young law student with a promising future, was sentenced to life imprisonment for the cold-blooded murder of her fiancé, BV Girish. This was no ordinary crime; it was the infamous Ring Road Murder of 2003, a case that unraveled like a dark mystery novel, exposing a web of deceit, forbidden love, and a fatal decision that shattered three families. The city, unaccustomed to such sinister acts, was left reeling, haunted by the question: how cou…
Jun 10, 2025
In Karnataka’s Hassan, Chaitra, 33, chillingly poisoned her husband, kids, and in-laws’ meals with sleeping pills to hide an affair with Shivu, until Gajendra’s grim find led to her arrest, as Shivu vanishes, leaving Belur village frozen in fear
In the sleepy village of Belur, nestled in Karnataka’s Hassan district, a sinister plot unraveled that left the community reeling in horror. The tranquil evenings, filled with the aroma of home-cooked meals, hid a dark secret: Chaitra, a 33-year-old mother and wife, was allegedly slipping sleeping pills into her family’s food, driven by a forbidden love affair. This chilling case, which broke into headlines in early June 2025, has sent shockwaves through the nation, exposing the fragility of trust within a household. Below, the haunting tale unfolds in chronological order, piecing together a…
Jun 9, 2025
Trump, who bizarrely bragged about brokering an India-Pakistan ceasefire that India never acknowledged, unleashed 2,000 troops on LA streets as ICE snatched 118 immigrants, protesters choked on tear gas, a journalist was shot, and democracy gasped for air
Los Angeles, the city that prides itself as a symbol of American diversity and culture, has become the face of chaos once again. On June 6, 2025, the city descended into turmoil after a controversial set of immigration raids conducted by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). What started as isolated detentions soon turned into widespread unrest, culminating in city-wide riots, aggressive policing, and the shocking injury of an international journalist. By June 7, streets were ablaze, protesters were on edge, and the National Guard was called in to suppress what can only be descr…
Jun 9, 2025
"सोनम बेवफा है": Sonam and her secret lover, Raj Kushwaha from Indore plotted a perfect honeymoon murder, vanishing into shadows after Raja’s body was found dumped in a Meghalaya gorge, only for her to resurface 17 days later in a midnight surrender
What promised to be a romantic escape into the misty green embrace of Meghalaya’s hills ended in chilling silence and a decomposing corpse at the bottom of a gorge.
Jun 8, 2025
On 8 June 1980, in a forgotten chapter never taught in textbooks, over 350 Bengali Hindus were butchered and 2 lakh displaced in Mandai massacre—India’s own 'My Lai'—where flames, daos, and silence erased an entire community from history and memory
The quiet morning of 8th June 1980 in Mandai, a small village in Tripura, turned into a day of bloodshed that would scar the history of independent India forever. In what has come to be known as the Mandai massacre, hundreds of Hindu Bengali refugees—men, women, and children—were slaughtered in cold blood by armed tribal mobs in a pre-planned assault that shook the entire nation.
Jun 8, 2025
After 41 years, India returns to space as IAF’s Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla pilots Axiom-4 to ISS on June 10, leading 7 Indian experiments and paving the way for Gaganyaan, a future space station by 2035, and a Moon landing by 2040
On 10th June 2025, India is set to mark a turning point in its space journey. On this historic day, Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, a proud officer of the Indian Air Force, will become the pilot of the Axiom-4 mission heading to the International Space Station (ISS). His journey carries deep meaning, as it comes forty-one years after Rakesh Sharma’s iconic spaceflight in 1984. Shukla’s mission goes far beyond pride—it is a step forward for India’s goals in space, especially in human spaceflight and scientific exploration. This event doesn’t just recall a historic past, it reignites India’s v…
Jun 7, 2025
In a bold move, Assam revives a forgotten 1950 law to deport illegal immigrants without court approval, as CM Himanta Biswa Sarma vows immediate pushback across the Bangladesh border, ending delays caused by tribunals and the sluggish NRC process
In a major policy shift, Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has announced that the state will now invoke an overlooked law from 1950 to deport illegal foreigners, eliminating the need for lengthy court procedures. Speaking to the media during his official visit to Nalbari, the Chief Minister stated that Assam no longer needs to approach courts in every case involving illegal immigrants. He explained that the Supreme Court has recently confirmed that the Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Act, 1950, remains valid, which grants the state legal power to act swiftly.