IRAP Highlights
Latest Articles
Collapse of Bailey Bridge on Irang River Throws Traffic and Safety Measures in Total Disarray
Although the Ministry of Road Transport & Highways through National Highways & Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited (NHIDCL) had decided in January 2019 to undertake the
Three Elections and How They are Demonstrating the Flaws More Than the Strengths of Democracy
Polling for the byelection to the four of five vacant seats in the Manipur Legislative Assembly, has just concluded and the fate of the candidates
Bye-elections Pass Off Smoothly, Kakching MLA Disqualified, And Vendors Urge Market Reopening
Bye-elections to four Assembly constituency seats were held on Friday to fill up the backlog caused by a number of defections and disqualifications in the
Nonagenarian Anti-Uranium Activist, Grand Matriarch Spelity Lyngdoh Langrin, Passes Away in Meghalaya
Spelity Lyngdoh Langrin, who rejected lucrative offer of Rs. 45 crore to sell off her uranium-rich land at Domiasiat village in Meghalaya to the Uranium
Pakistan is Still the Land of the Midnight Knock
Pakistan is still a long way from becoming a true ‘democracy ‘ led by an effective civilian leadership. And the late night arrest of
Poetry: Outside its never new on execution day and more
Outside its never new on execution day It’s Good Friday I met an acquaintance the other day Sabbath dries my vision for the next
A Daughter Recalls the Lives and Times of Manipur’s First Doctor – Part-9 Last
Book Title: And He Opened the Window Author: Binapani Thokchom Translated from Manipuri by the Author Often, milk powder for the children was distributed
Does Cinema Have Independent Life or is it Destined to be “a Sycophant to literature” – Part 2
My feeling that a poet, who called cinema a sycophant of literature would have approved Aravindan, a director who explored the medium’s possibilities, lends courage
Time to Deconstruct the Myth of “North-East” and the Racial Connotations of the Nomenclature
The popular term in the Indian lexicon, “North-East,” was once used by the white British colonial rulers to connote its newly annexed territory of Assam