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Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede line

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Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede line
including Naihati–Bandel and Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch lines
Halisahar railway station
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerIndian Railway
LocaleWest Bengal
Termini
Stations45
WebsiteEastern Railway
Service
TypeCommuter rail
SystemKolkata Suburban Railway
Operator(s)Eastern Railway
Depot(s)Narkeldanga EMU Carshed
Ranaghat EMU Carshed
History
Opened1862; 162 years ago (1862)
Technical
Line length117 km (73 mi)
Number of tracksQuadruple line: Sealdah–Naihati

Triple Line: Naihati–Kalyani

Double line: Naihati–Bandel, Kalyani–Ranaghat–Gede

Single line: Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta
CharacterAt grade
Track gauge5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge
Electrification25 kV overhead line
Operating speedup to 100 km/h (62 mph)
Route map

km
121
Darshana
117
Gede
114
Harish Nagar Halt
112
Banpur
106
Majhdia
Mathabhanga river
100
Tarak Nagar Halt
97
Mayurhat Halt
94
Bagula
91
Bhayna Halt
89
Shantinagar Halt
87
Bahirgachhi Halt
91
Duttapulia
(planned)
83
Aranghata
km
80
Panchberia Halt
78
Bankimnagar Halt
Left arrow
76
Churni Ghat
74
Ranaghat Junction
Kalyani Simanta
56
69
Payradanga
Kalyani Ghosh Para
53
63
Chakdaha
Kalyani Silpanchal
51
61
Palpara
FCI siding
58
Simurali
Up arrow
54
Madanpur
Right arrow
Bandel Junction
47
49
Kalyani
Left arrow
Hooghly Ghat
43
46
Kanchrapara
45
 
Kanchrapara Workshop Gate
Kanchrapara Railway Workshop
Hukumchand jute mill siding
43
Halisahar
Indian Pulp & Paper Mill siding
Naihati jute mill siding
Sealdah–Ranaghat line
Garifa
42
Naihati–Bandel line
Gauripur jute mill siding
39
Naihati Junction
Nadia jute mill siding
Naihati Rail Yard
Reliance jute mills siding
36
Kankinara
abandoned lines
Kankinara jute mill siding
34
Jagaddal
Kankinara paper mill siding
Weaverly jute mill siding
Anglo-India jute mill siding
31
Shyamnagar
Jagaddal jute mill siding
Shyamnagar jute mill siding
Alliance jute mill siding
Dunbar cotton mill siding
Alexandra jute mills siding
28
Ichhapur
Meghna jute mills siding
26
Palta
India jute mills siding
27
Racecourse
Barrackpore
Army Cantonment
Craig jute mills siding
24
Barrackpore
Auckland jute mills siding
Bhatpara power house siding
Empire jute mill siding
Kelvin jute mill siding
Kinnison jute mill siding
Standard jute mill siding
abandoned lines
Titagarh paper mill siding
22
Titagarh
Titagarh jute mill siding
CESC TTPS siding
Khardaha jute mill siding
20
Khardaha
TEXMACO Sodpur siding
17
Sodpur
15
Agarpara
Left arrow
Kamarhati jute mill siding
M/s Diamond Products siding
Dakshineswar metro station Dakshineswar
14
UpperRight arrow KM Line 5  (planned)
Baranagar jute mill siding
TEXMACO Belgharia siding
Baranagar metro station Baranagar Road
13
13
Belgharia
Noapara metro station and depotNoapara metro station and depot Noapara
00
Noapara Metro Depot Noapara metro station and depotNoapara metro station and depot
Kestopur Canal
15
Biman Bandar Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport
13
Jessore Road
Up arrow
Up arrow line dismantled
11
Dum Dum Cantonment Dum Dum Cantonment metro station
Down arrow line dismantled
Dum Dum metro station Dum Dum Junction
08
Jessore Road
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport Biman Bandar
Patipukur loop
line (dismantled)
LowerRight arrow  KM Line 4  (u/c)
Belgachia metro station Belgachia
00
10
Patipukur
Ultadanga Road
011
Lansdown mill siding
Kolkata
012
Brown Blanket mill siding
Down arrow
Kestopur Canal
Bidhan Nagar Road
5
Bidhannagar Road
Press House siding
Kankurgachi Road
2
Kankurgachi Road Junction
Narkeldanga
EMU Carshed
3
Sir Gurudas Banerjee Halt
Circular Canal
Kankurgachi
Chord line
Sealdah North
00
0
Sealdah Main
Sealdah metro station Sealdah
Left arrow  KM Line 2  Right arrow
Sealdah South
00
Beliaghata Diesel Loco Shed
6
Kamardanga Halt
Beruck & Comens Siding
3│7
Park Circus
Down arrow
km
km
Key
Indian Railways broad gauge (1676 mm)
Kolkata Metro (KM) broad gauge (1676 mm)
Kolkata Metro (KM) standard gauge (1435 mm)
in use
out of use, planned, or
under construction (u/c)
tunnel

The Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede line connects the Sealdah Main and North terminus of Kolkata with Ranaghat and Gede of Nadia district of West Bengal, India. Once a part of the old Calcutta–Siliguri main line, today it is a busy suburban section of the Kolkata Suburban Railway's Sealdah North section connecting the North 24 Parganas and Nadia districts with Kolkata. It is under the jurisdiction of the Sealdah railway division of the Eastern Railway zone of the Indian Railways.[1][2]

The Naihati–Bandel branch line connects this line with the Howrah–Bardhaman main line and Bandel–Katwa line through the Sampreeti Bridge, and previously the Jubilee Bridge, over the Hooghly river. The Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line caters to the Kalyani town and industrial area of the Nadia district.[2]

Services

[edit]

Once a part of the old Calcutta–Siliguri main line with prestigious trains such as Darjeeling Mail, East Bengal Express and East Bengal Mail running through it, today the section is primarily a suburban section with a total of 231 daily and 187 Sunday EMU services serving the Sealdah–Ranaghat section.[3] A further 40 EMU services also run between Sealdah and Gede via Ranaghat junction.[3] A majority of the services are served by 9-car EMU rakes from the Narkeldanga EMU Carshed.[4] They are also served with a few 12-car EMU rakes from the Ranaghat EMU Carshed as well.[4]

Gede railway station serves as a major international transit point for freight and passengers to Bangladesh with the Darsana railway station serving as its Bangladeshi counterpart.[5][6] Maitree Express, the direct international service connecting Kolkata with the Kamalapur station of Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, stops at Gede which previously served as an immigration checkpoint before crossing over to Darsana in Bangladesh.[7]

Gunny bales, a major freight export commodity handled in this section, are loaded in Titagarh and Naihati, two historically important centres for jute mills in the area.[3] Containers for export are loaded at the Cossipore Road Goods Shed which is connected to the line via the Kolkata Circular Railway.[3] The major import commodities handled by this line are cement, fertilizer, food grains, containers, POL and coal for thermal power plants.[3] Transportation and heavy engineering equipment are other major export commodities handled by this line with companies such as Electrosteel Castings, Titagarh Wagons and Texmaco Rail & Engineering having sidings along the line.[8] The primary manufacturing unit of the Titagarh Wagons company is also located in Titagarh and has a capacity to produce 4100 wagons per year.[9]

The Naihati–Bandel branch line connects Sealdah with the west bank of the Hooghly and thus the rest of the country and acts as a transit route for major long-distance trains such as the Tirhut Express, Mithilanchal Express and Purvanchal Express bound to and from Sealdah and Kolkata railway stations.[2][10] The branch line is also served by 38 Daily EMU services between Naihati and Bandel junctions.[3]

History

[edit]

Eastern Bengal Railway

[edit]

The Eastern Bengal Railway (reporting mark :EBR) company was formed in 1857 for the construction and working of a line from Calcutta to Dacca, with a branch to Jessore.[11] The construction of the 112 mi (180 km) long broad gauge line began in 1859 and was completed in stages up to Kushtia by 1864 but the planned branch to Jessore was not built.[12][13] The Calcutta terminus of the line was initially constructed as a tin roof shed in Sealdah, a neighbourhood of Calcutta in 1862.[14] In 1869 the original station building at Sealdah, designed by Walter Granville was built and opened.[14]

The company also acquired a steam vessel service operating between Kushtia and Dacca on the Padma river.[13] In 1871 the line was extended from Poradaha to a new ferry terminal at Goalundo Ghat, about 45 mi (72 km) east of Kushtia and reducing the river trip to Dacca. and becoming the main line of the Eastern section of EBR.[12][15] With the successful construction and opening of the Hardinge Bridge in 1915 and gauge conversion of the Santahar–Parbatipur–Siliguri line from 1924 to 1926, the Calcutta–Siliguri broad gauge line was completed and became the main line of the Eastern section of EBR.[12][15]

The Eastern Bengal Railway, which operated east of the Hooghly, was linked with the East Indian Railway, which operated west of the river, when Jubilee Bridge, linking Bandel and Naihati was opened in 1887 as part of the Naihati Branch railway of the East Indian Railway.[12][15] In 1932 a shorter route to Barddhaman from Calcutta was realised through the construction of the Calcutta Chord link line via the Willingdon Bridge (now renamed as Vivekananda Setu) over the Hooghly river.[15][16]

A vivid description of the railway system of the Nadia district, including the Sealdah–Gede line is provided in the Bengal District Gazetteer of 1910 as follows:[17][18]

"The district is now (1909) very well served with railways. About 170 miles of the Eastern Bengal State Railway, all broad gauge, lie within its borders. The main line from Calcutta to Siliguri passes through the district, roughly from south to north; the distance from Kanchrapara on the southern boundary to Damukdia on the Padma is about 92 miles, and this section has 21 stations. The Lal Gola branch takes off from Ranaghat junction; it passes in a north-westerly direction; the portion within the district is about 48 miles in length, and there are 8 stations upon it. This branch traverses the Kalantar, which is the tract that is most liable to famine in the district and generally contains the lowest stock of food grains. In the 1896-97 famine the supply of food suddenly gave out in this tract, and, in the absence of the railway, which had not then been constructed, the greatest difficulty was experienced in importing enough grain to prevent deaths from starvation. If another famine should unfortunately occur, this line will save the District Officer much of the anxiety which his predecessors had to bear. The central branch of the Eastern Bengal State Railway also takes off from Ranaghat junction; only about nine miles of it (with two stations) lies within the boundaries of the district; it passes in an easterly direction through the Ranaghat subdivision into the Bangaon subdivision of the Jessore district. The Goalundo branch takes off from Poradah"

With the establishment of the first jute mill in India, the Acland Mill in Rishra in 1855 to having around 38 companies operating 30,685 looms, exporting a billion yards of cloth and over 450 million bags by 1910, the growth of the jute trade and industry around Kolkata was rapid. As a result, numerous jute mill sidings popped up around the line. By 1939, there were 68,377 looms, concentrated mainly on the areas near the Hooghly like Titagarh, Bhadreswar, Bauria, Kankinara, Naihati, Shyamnagar, Jagaddal and Budge Budge and these mills alone proved able to supply the world demand.[19][20]

The Kanchrapara Railway Workshop was established by EBR in 1863. It was developed as an integrated shop to carry out periodic repairs and overhauls to steam locomotives, wooden body carriage and wagons.[21][22]

In 1942, EBR was merged with the Assam Bengal Railway (reporting mark :ABR) to form the Bengal and Assam Railway (reporting mark :B&AR).[1][23] In 1947, with the partition of India, B&AR was divided into three parts with the 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge lines in West Bengal being transferred to the East Indian Railway under the Sealdah railway division.[1][23] Gede railway station became the terminus of the line on the Indian side whereas Darsana railway station became the terminus on the East Pakistani side.[1][23]

The Calcutta terminus was renamed as the Sealdah railway station post the independence of India in 1947.[14]

Eastern Railway

[edit]
Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede line map

On 14 April 1952, with the reorganisation of the various railway zones under Indian Railways, the Eastern Railway zone was formed with the Sealdah division coming under its jurisdiction.[1]

With the electrification of the line, starting from 1962, the Kanchrapara Railway Workshop was remodeled for Periodic Overhauling (POH) of electric locomotives and suburban EMU trains, with the first of such overhauled locomotive & EMU units being turned out at 1965.[21]

Post the partition of India the jute industry suffered a major setback as most of the jute fields for producing raw jute was located in East Pakistan whereas most of the jute mills for processing the raw jute were located near Kolkata in India thus leading to the slow decline of the jute mills of the area.[19][20]

Even after partition, two rail services namely the East Bengal Express, from Sealdah to Goalundo Ghat and East Bengal Mail from Sealdah to Parbatipur Junction, carrying both freight and passengers continued, with Gede and Darsana serving as custom check points, till 1965 when the services were snapped following the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.[24][25]

While freight services were briefly restored for a period of 2 years from 1972 following the liberation of Bangladesh, passenger services were not restored.[24][25]

In 1979, the Chandmari Halt railway station was renamed as the Kalyani railway station and the Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line was opened for traffic.[26][27]

To offset the heavy traffic of long-distance trains bound to Sealdah, the Chitpur railway station, a part of the Kolkata Circular Railway, was remodeled and merged with the Ultadanga Road railway station to build the Kolkata railway station. It was opened for traffic on 30 January 2006.[1][28]

As a result of talks that were held between the Indian and Bangladeshi governments to revive passenger service between the two countries via the Gede–Darsana route since 2001, the Maitree Express service between Kolkata and Dhaka was started on the occasion of the Bengali New Year (Bengali: পয়লা বৈশাখ) on 14 April 2008.[29]

Tracks

[edit]

The Sealdah–Naihati section of the line is a quadruple line section. The Naihati–Bandel and Naihati–Ranaghat–Gede sections are double line sections respectively. The Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line is a single line section. The Naihati–Ranaghat section is planned to be upgraded to a triple line section.[3][30]

The Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede track is classified as a C-class track, which is not a speed classification but one used for suburban sections of metropolitan areas.[31][32]

Electrification

[edit]

The Sealdah–Ranaghat section of the line was electrified in between 1963 and 1964. The Bandel–Naihati section was electrified in 1965.[33][34] The Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line was electrified right away after construction in 1979–80.[34] The Ranaghat–Gede section of the line was electrified in 1997-98 beginning EMU services on the line.[35]

EMU Carshed

[edit]

The Sealdah–Ranaghat section of the line is primarily served by 9-car EMU rakes from the Narkeldanga EMU Carshed.[4] They are also served with some few 12-car EMU rakes from Ranaghat EMU Carshed especially in the Ranaghat–Gede section.[4]

While the section was initially served by the Narkeldanga EMU carshed which opened on 1963, due to the increasing traffic requirements in the Ranaghat–Gede, Ranaghat–Bangaon, Ranaghat–Shantipur–Krishnanagar City and Ranaghat–Lalgola sections the Ranaghat EMU carshed was commissioned in 2007.[4]

As of January 2024, the Narkeldanga carshed had 28 9-car EMU rakes, a few of which served the Sealdah South section mostly via the Circular line, while rest served the Sealdah North section lines. The Ranaghat EMU carshed, as of January 2022 contains 1 9-car EMU rake, 16 12-car EMU rakes (of which 1 is a 3 phase EMU) and 8 12-car MEMU rakes. Four of the 12-car MEMU rakes are ICF three phase IGBT based rakes while the rest are the RCF conventional rakes.[4]

Now conventional and 3 phase Emu rakes of Ranaghat, Barasat and Narkeldanga Carshed served this section.

317** series :- Ranaghat Gede Local (UP and DN) 319** series :- Sealdah Gede Local (UP and DN)

Routes and stations

[edit]

Stations

[edit]
Names in bold indicate that the station is a major stop or an important interchange/terminal station.

Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede main line

[edit]
Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede main line
# Distance from Sealdah Main and North (km) Station Name Station Code Connections Station Category[36]
1 0 Sealdah Main and North SDAH Sealdah South section NSG-1
2 2 Kankurgachi Road Junction KGK Circular line HG-3
3 5 Bidhannagar Road BNXR SG-2
4 8 Dum Dum Junction DDJ Sealdah–Bangaon line / Calcutta Chord link line / Kolkata Metro Line 1 (Dum Dum metro station) SG-2
5 13 Belgharia BLH SG-2
6 15 Agarpara AGP SG-3
7 17 Sodpur SEP SG-2
8 20 Khardaha KDH SG-2
9 22 Titagarh TGH SG-3
10 24 Barrackpore BP SG-2
11 26 Palta PTF SG-3
12 28 Ichhapur IP SG-3
13 31 Shyamnagar SNR SG-2
14 34 Jagaddal JGDL SG-3
15 36 Kankinara KNR SG-3
16 39 Naihati Junction NH Naihati–Bandel branch line NSG-2
17 43 Halisahar HLR Naihati–Bandel branch line SG-3
18 45 Kanchrapara Workshop Gate KPAW HG-3
19 46 Kanchrapara KPA SG-3
20 49 Kalyani KYI Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line SG-3
21 54 Madanpur MPJ SG-3
22 58 Simurali SMX SG-3
23 61 Palpara PXR SG-3
24 63 Chakdaha CDH SG-2
25 69 Payradanga PDX SG-3
26 74 Ranaghat Junction RHA Ranaghat–Bangaon line / Ranaghat–Krishnanagar City–Lalgola line SG-2
27 78 Bankimnagar Halt BNKA HG-3
28 80 Panchberia Halt PNCB HG-3
29 83 Aranghata AG SG-3
30 87 Bahirgachhi Halt BHGH HG-3
31 89 Shantinagar Halt SNTR HG-3
32 91 Bhayna Halt BHNA HG-3
33 94 Bagula BGL SG-3
34 97 Mayurhat Halt MYHT HG-3
35 100 Tarak Nagar Halt TNX HG-3
36 106 Majhdia MIJ SG-3
37 112 Banpur BPN SG-3
38 114 Harish Nagar Halt HRSR HG-3
39 117 Gede GEDE SG-3

Naihati–Bandel branch line

[edit]
Naihati–Bandel branch line
# Distance from Naihati (km) Station Name Station Code Connections Station Category[36]
1 0 Naihati Junction NH Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede main line NSG-2
2 3 Garifa GFAE SG-3
3 4 Hooghly Ghat HYG SG-3
4 8 Bandel Junction BDC Howrah–Bardhaman main line / Bandel–Katwa line NSG-3

Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line

[edit]
Kalyani–Kalyani Simanta branch line
# Distance from Kalyani (km) Station Name Station Code Connections Station Category[36]
1 0 Kalyani KYI Sealdah–Ranaghat–Gede main line SG-3
2 2 Kalyani Silpanchal KLYS SG-3
3 4 Kalyani Ghoshpara KLYG SG-3
4 7 Kalyani Simanta KLYM SG-3

Planned extensions

[edit]

The Aranghata–Duttapulia extension between Aranghata and Duttapulia of Nadia district was proposed in the railway budget of 2011.[37][38]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Brief Detail of Sealdah Division Archived 2018-06-25 at the Wayback Machine, Eastern Railway
  2. ^ a b c "Sealdah Division System Map" (PDF). Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Details of Operating Department: Sealdah Division, Eastern Railway". Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Highlights of TRS Organisation, Sealdah division, Eastern Railway". Retrieved 30 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Dhaka looks to unlock export potential thru' rail". The Business Standard. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Bangladesh Railway earns record revenue carrying freight at India-Bangladesh interchange points". NewsOnAIR. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  7. ^ "Excitement mounts over train link". BBC. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Operative Goods Sheds and Sidings over Eastern Railway as on 01.11.2019" (PDF). Eastern Railway. 1 November 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  9. ^ "Rolling Stock Suppliers | Railway Wagon Manufacturers Italy & India | Titagarh Wagons". titagarh.in. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  10. ^ "IndiaRailInfo - Naihati Junction - Departures". IndiaRailInfo. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
  11. ^ "Money Market and City Intelligence", The Times, Wednesday, 15 June 1859, #23333, 7a.
  12. ^ a b c d "Administration Report on Railways 1918". Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  13. ^ a b H.M. Government “Statute Law Repeals: Nineteenth Report : Draft Statute Law (Repeals) Bill; April 2012"; pages 127-8, paragraphs 3.51 - 3.55 Retrieved on 2 Jun 2016
  14. ^ a b c R.P. Saxena. "Indian Railway History timeline". IRFCA. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  15. ^ a b c d "History Of Indian Railways, constructed and in progress', 31 March 1937 by 'The Government of India - Railway Department'" (PDF). Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  16. ^ "Vivekananda Setu in Bally". Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  17. ^ "Bengal District Gazetteers - Nadia". Internet Archive. 1910. p. 100. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  18. ^ J.H.E.Garrett. "Nadia, Bengal District Gazetteers (1910)". IRFCA. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  19. ^ a b "History of Jute Industry". www.worldjute.com. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  20. ^ a b "History of Jute industry development". Divulge Jute. 14 June 2021. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  21. ^ a b "History of Kanchrapara Workshop". Eastern Railway. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  22. ^ "Imperial Gazetteer of India, v. 14, p. 373". Digital South Asia Library. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  23. ^ a b c "Railway". Banglapedia – National Encyclopaedia of Bangladesh. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  24. ^ a b "Thapliyal, Sangeeta. "India-Bangladesh Transportation Links: A Move for Closer Cooperation". Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses". Archived from the original on 12 October 2000. Retrieved 5 October 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  25. ^ a b "India, Bangladesh reintroduce rail link". The Hindu. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  26. ^ "Indian Railways Budget Speech 1979-80" (PDF). Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  27. ^ "সামরিক শহরের স্মৃতি নিয়ে বেড়ে উঠেছে কল্যাণী". Anandabazar Patrika (in Bengali). 13 January 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
  28. ^ "Railway Stations in Kolkata". Trains Spread. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  29. ^ "A Report from Dhaka to Kolkata on the first operation day". BBC News, watching available by Windows Media Player. Retrieved 20 April 2008.
  30. ^ "Mamata flags off railway project at Ranaghat". The Statesman, 8 January 2011. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  31. ^ "CHAPTER II MODES OF INVESTIGATION OF RAILWAY PROJECTS". Indian Railways Code for the Engineering Department. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  32. ^ "Permanent Way – Track Classification". IRFCA. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  33. ^ "The Chronology of Railway development in Eastern Indian". railindia. Archived from the original on 2 August 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  34. ^ a b "History of Electrification". IRFCA. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  35. ^ "Railway Electrification" (PDF). ireeindia. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 June 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  36. ^ a b c "Category of stations - Eastern Railway" (PDF). Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  37. ^ "Advantage Bengal, but others gain too". Indian Express. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  38. ^ "ONGOING PROJECTS ON NEW LINES, GAUGE CONVERSION AND DOUBLING" (PDF). Indian Express. Retrieved 28 January 2022.