Fugitive jeweller Mehul Choksi has appealed to Belgium’s Supreme Court against a lower court’s order approving his extradition to India. Arrested in Antwerp in April, Choksi claims he faces threats of kidnapping, torture, and political persecution if returned. The appeal automatically suspends the extradition process until the verdict.
In August 2025, Canada denied about 74% of Indian student visa applications, a sharp rise from 32% two years earlier. The surge in rejections follows stricter vetting and fraud checks introduced by Ottawa. Indian student permits dropped steeply from 20,900 in 2023 to just 4,515 this year.
A mild earthquake measuring 3.1 on the Richter scale struck near Vijayapura in Karnataka early Tuesday at a shallow depth of about 5 km. Residents experienced light tremors for a few seconds. Authorities confirmed there were no reports of damage or injuries following the minor seismic event.
With an aim to boost private sector investment in research and development, Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the Research, Development and Innovation (RDI) Fund at the first-ever Emerging Science Technology and Innovation Conclave in New Delhi on Monday. The fund will operate through a two-tiered structure and drive innovation and support India’s Viksit Bharat 2047 […]
AIADMK expelled senior leader KA Sengottaiyan after he met VK Sasikala and TTV Dhinakaran. The nine-time MLA had urged the party to reinstate them. His removal highlights growing rifts within the party as it prepares for the Tamil Nadu elections under Edappadi K Palaniswami’s leadership. The expulsion was announced late Friday.
Air India has sought ₹10,000 crore from shareholders Tata Sons and Singapore Airlines to recover from the Ahmedabad crash’s financial and reputational impact. The funds aim to boost safety, maintenance, and operations, helping the Tata-owned airline rebuild trust, meet compensation costs, and sustain its Vihaan.AI transformation plan.
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump hosted the 67th annual White House Halloween celebration, offering cheer amid a government shutdown. Children dressed as superheroes and mini-presidents joined in the fun. Pumpkins from the event, donated by the International Fresh Produce Association, were later sent to DC Central Kitchen.
Seven people, including a child, were killed as Russia launched more than 650 drones and 50 missiles on October 30, crippling Ukraine’s power grid. Energy facilities across several regions were hit, prompting Kyiv to impose power rationing as winter approaches and families took shelter in darkness amid renewed fear.
President Droupadi Murmu has appointed Justice Surya Kant as the 53rd Chief Justice of India. Currently the Supreme Court’s second senior-most judge, he will assume office on November 24, succeeding Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud. Renowned for integrity and balanced rulings, his tenure will continue till February 2027.
Former India cricket captain and Congress leader Mohammad Azharuddin will be sworn in as a Telangana minister on October 31. Nominated to the Legislative Council under the Governor’s quota, his induction restores Muslim representation in the cabinet. The move also comes ahead of the crucial Jubilee Hills by-election on November 11.
The name of this publication is The Summary. This section is where that philosophy is most directly expressed. The Summaries are not abbreviated versions of longer articles. They are complete pieces of journalism — reported, edited, and published at a length that respects both the story and the reader's time. The decision to keep them short is not a constraint. It is a position: that most news can be communicated clearly in 150 words, and that padding it to 600 words rarely improves it.
The editorial discipline required to produce a good summary is different from, and in some ways harder than, writing at length. Every sentence has to do real work. Nothing survives that doesn't belong there.
The range is genuinely broad — and deliberately so. On any given day, The Summaries might carry a Karnataka cabinet resignation, a hospital fire in Bihar, a CBSE policy recommendation, a Kerala toddler death that has triggered public outrage, and a Cockroach Janta Party founder's plans to protest at Jantar Mantar. These are not thematically related stories. They are simply the news, treated with consistent brevity.
That breadth is the point. A reader who follows The Summaries doesn't need to choose a category to monitor. National politics, health research, civic tragedies, civil society, lifestyle news — it all comes through this section at a pace that doesn't require hours of reading to stay current.
Selection is where the editorial work happens. Not everything becomes a Summary. Stories make it here when the core fact is clear, the significance is demonstrable, and the full picture can be honestly conveyed at short length without stripping context that the reader actually needs. A story like the Muzaffarpur hospital fire — four lives lost, a state inquiry ordered, families to be compensated — can be told completely in under two minutes. Stretching it doesn't add information; it adds length.
Some stories don't work as summaries because the context is too dense to compress responsibly. Those go elsewhere on the site. The Summaries is not a catchall; it's a format with specific requirements, and not every story meets them.
Over time, The Summaries has become a reliable daily record of what happened in India and across the world — told concisely, sourced from official announcements and credible reporting, and published without the delay that often accompanies longer-form analysis. Readers who have followed the section consistently say it functions as a news briefing they can consume in a single sitting. That is more or less exactly what it was designed to do.
The Summaries are short, complete news pieces — typically under 150 words — covering a single event or development clearly and accurately. Unlike the full-length articles in sections like National, Business, or Health, these are written to be read in under a minute. The format is intentional: the goal is to report the news completely, not briefly for brevity's sake.
All topics. A single scroll through The Summaries on any given day might include political news, health research, a civic disaster, an education policy decision, and a human interest story. The connective thread is the format, not the subject. Readers who want to stay across multiple beats without tracking several sections will find everything here.
No. They are standalone pieces written specifically for this format. Occasionally, a major developing story will have both a full article and a Summary — but they are written separately, for different purposes. The Summary version is complete on its own terms, not a teaser or a preview of something longer.
If a story can be told accurately and completely at short length without stripping essential context, it's a candidate for The Summaries. If the background, timeline, or stakeholder complexity genuinely requires more room, it gets a full article. The test is whether the reader comes away informed — not whether the piece meets a word count.
Throughout the day as news develops. There is no fixed publishing schedule — stories are published when they are ready. Readers who check in once or twice daily will typically find several new pieces each visit. The pace reflects the news cycle, not a content calendar.
It is probably the most efficient way to understand the full scope of what The Summary covers. Because the section spans every beat — politics, business, health, lifestyle, science, national, world news — a few minutes in The Summaries gives a reader a clearer picture of the publication's range than browsing any single category section would.