Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India's military salutes virus workers with rose petals, flypasts

Helicopters showered masked health workers with rose petals and jets roared across the skies on Sunday (3) as India's military paid tribute to frontline workers battling the coronavirus pandemic.

In one of the first of several gestures on Sunday, petals fell on to the upturned faces of medical personnel clad in protective gear as an army band played patriotic tunes including Jai Ho (May victory prevail) from the popular Slumdog Millionaire film.


In several states and territories across the vast nation of 1.3 billion people, fighter jets and transport aircraft in formations took part in low-flying aerial salutes to thank the country's so-called "corona warriors".

"The entire nation stands united in these challenging times," Defence Minister Rajnath Singh tweeted Sunday as he praised the "commendable work" of the "frontline warriors", including police which have been enforcing the nationwide virus lockdown in place since late March.

The navy will light up its ships off the sub-continent's shores when night falls as part of the tributes.

The performances were the third public show of gratitude to health and other frontline workers, after Indians took part in nationwide clapping and lamp lighting efforts led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on previous Sundays.

The lockdown was extended for another two weeks by the government on Friday, although some restrictions were lifted in regions that have lower numbers of virus cases.

India has recorded almost 40,000 coronavirus cases, including 1,301 deaths.

More For You

romanticising the mundane

Routine becomes your love story

AMG

Romanticising the mundane: How routine becomes a love story

Shiveena Haque

There is a strange kind of beauty hiding in the everyday – folding laundry, washing dishes, making your bed. The trick is seeing these moments not as chores, but as the softest threads in the tapestry of your life. Romanticising the mundane means falling in love with routine: making tasks feel poetic rather than menial; transforming moments of duty into rituals of joy.

It begins by prioritising. Sit down with your notebook or phone and write a to-do list. Not just a vague list, but one infused with intention: each task gets a timer deadline. Maybe 20 minutes to answer emails, 15 to organise your workspace. Setting deadlines sharpens your mind, creating tension and release. When you know there’s an end in sight, even folding socks becomes a dance.

Keep ReadingShow less