Weekend reads
- The attack on the cafe in Dhaka is an attack on Bangladesh's collective national identity, it is the "beginning of the end", says SN Rasul in a bitter moment of introspection in the Dhaka Tribune.
- The Dhaka attack was predictable; it was the culmination of violence that has gone unchecked by the Awami League government, writes Jason Burke in the Guardian.
- The targeting of the Ahmadi community in Pakistan speaks of the country's dangerous drive to "cleanse" and "purify", writes Khalid Ahmed in the Indian Express.
- In the Hindu, Jacob Koshy writes that Indian scientists may be closer to detecting whether patients infected with HIV will go on to have AIDS.
- In Lounge-Livemint, Sumana Mukherjee tracks the release of Bangalore's lab beagles.
- In Hindu BLInk, Gaurav Deka documents the queer spaces of Delhi, which take on a different identity during the day.
- In the Telegraph, Gordon Rayner describes how Boris Johnson, the Conservative leader of the Brexit campaign, was felled by party colleague Michael Gove's devious "cuckoo nest" plot.
- But does Michael Gove even exist, asks Glen Newey in the London Review of Books.
- In the New Yorker, George Packer examines whether President Ashraf Ghani, theorist of the failed state, can bring back Afghanistan from the brink of dissolution.
- Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav is gradually stamping his authority on the Samajwadi Party, writes Virendra Singh Rawat in the Business Standard.
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