
Sania Farooqui
Journalist and Producer at Freelance
Journalist. Past - Field Producer @CNN | Host @saniashow | Reporter/ Producer - Al Jazeera, IPS News, TIME, Mambo Panda, Amnesty International (South Asia)
Articles
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Jun 5, 2024 |
cnn.com | Diksha Madhok |Sania Farooqui
India, the world’s fastest growing major economy, is not firing on all cylinders. That’s a problem for Narendra Modi, who has just won a third consecutive five-year term as prime minister, although without a simple majority. The 73-year-old wants to make the country a $5 trillion economy before the end of the current decade. His plans for reform have been complicated by the narrower-than-expected election victory, and there are major challenges ahead.
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Mar 15, 2024 |
accuweather.com | Rhea Mogul |Meenketan Jha |Sania Farooqui
A man carries a water can amid an ongoing water crisis in Bengaluru on March 14. (Idrees Mohammed/AFP/Getty Images via CNN Newsource) Bengaluru, India (CNN) — The water tanker arrives once every two weeks, its 1,000 liters expected to serve hundreds of people in this suburb of India’s most high-tech metropolis, where women carrying empty buckets come clamoring to quench their thirst.
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Mar 15, 2024 |
amp.cnn.com | Rhea Mogul |Meenketan Jha |Sania Farooqui
The water tanker arrives once every two weeks, its 1,000 liters expected to serve hundreds of people in this suburb of India’s most high-tech metropolis, where women carrying empty buckets come clamoring to quench their thirst. The sight is not unusual says Susheela, a resident of the suburb of Bandepalya, who goes by one name and needs the water for her family of four. “Sometimes fights break out, there is a lot of arguing,” she said. “But what do we do? We need water.
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Mar 15, 2024 |
albanyherald.com | Rhea Mogul |Meenketan Jha |Sania Farooqui
Bengaluru, India (CNN) — The water tanker arrives once every two weeks, its 1,000 liters expected to serve hundreds of people in this suburb of India’s most high-tech metropolis, where women carrying empty buckets come clamoring to quench their thirst. The sight is not unusual says Susheela, a resident of the suburb of Bandepalya, who goes by one name and needs the water for her family of four. “Sometimes fights break out, there is a lot of arguing,” she said. “But what do we do? We need water.
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Mar 15, 2024 |
cnn.com | Rhea Mogul |Meenketan Jha |Sania Farooqui
The water tanker arrives once every two weeks, its 1,000 liters expected to serve hundreds of people in this suburb of India’s most high-tech metropolis, where women carrying empty buckets come clamoring to quench their thirst. The sight is not unusual says Susheela, a resident of the suburb of Bandepalya, who goes by one name and needs the water for her family of four. “Sometimes fights break out, there is a lot of arguing,” she said. “But what do we do? We need water.
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