Pahalgam attack anniversary: How the massacre reset India's counter-terror policy
One year after the Pahalgam terror attack, India has fundamentally shifted its anti-terror doctrine from reactive measures to preemptive action.
President Droupadi Murmu was on Thursday welcomed at the Parliament Building by Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla with an official carrying the 'Sengol', adopted as a cultural symbol by the government. The President will address the joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament following the constitution of the 18th Lok Sabha and the formation of the new government led by Prime Minister Modi. The President was given a guard of honour in the lawns of the Parliament building and was escorted to the Lok Sabha chamber by Dhankhar, Modi, Birla and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju. Ahead of President Murmu's arrival, Rajeev Sharma, a senior Marshal in the Lok Sabha and dressed in traditional attire with decorated scarf and a turban, removed the Sengol and walked in a procession with Speaker Birla amid drum rolls.
One year after the Pahalgam terror attack, India has fundamentally shifted its anti-terror doctrine from reactive measures to preemptive action.
An India Today ground report from South 24 Parganas highlights the political contest between the Trinamool Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party ahead of the 2026 West Bengal Assembly elections.
As India observed the first anniversary of the Pahalgam terror attack, we raise these questions on the show: Has geopolitics changed since Pahalgam attack? Is the world now ready to ignore Pakistan's terror links? Watch as General VP Malik,former Army Chief, and Vivek Katju, former diplomat, share their perspectives on these and more on the show.
This edition of News Today focusses on escalating tensions in West Asia following Iran's seizure of two vessels, including an India-bound ship, in the Strait of Hormuz.