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Indian Rupee(INR)/Botswana Pula(BWP)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.1608 Botswana Pula




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Brazilian Real(BRL)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0759 Brazilian Real




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Bolivian Boliviano(BOB)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0913 Bolivian Boliviano




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Brunei Dollar(BND)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0187 Brunei Dollar




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Bahraini Dinar(BHD)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.005 Bahraini Dinar




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Bulgarian Lev(BGN)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0239 Bulgarian Lev




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Bangladeshi Taka(BDT)

1 Indian Rupee = 1.1257 Bangladeshi Taka




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Australian Dollar(AUD)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0203 Australian Dollar




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Argentine Peso(ARS)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.8804 Argentine Peso




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Indian Rupee(INR)/Netherlands Antillean Guilder(ANG)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0238 Netherlands Antillean Guilder




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Indian Rupee(INR)/United Arab Emirates Dirham(AED)

1 Indian Rupee = 0.0486 United Arab Emirates Dirham




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Pakistani Rupee(PKR)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Pakistani Rupee = 0.916 Icelandic Krona




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Pakistani Rupee(PKR)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Pakistani Rupee = 0.4729 Indian Rupee




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Sierra Leonean Leone(SLL)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Sierra Leonean Leone = 0.0148 Icelandic Krona



  • Sierra Leonean Leone

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Sierra Leonean Leone(SLL)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Sierra Leonean Leone = 0.0077 Indian Rupee



  • Sierra Leonean Leone

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New Taiwan Dollar(TWD)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 New Taiwan Dollar = 4.898 Icelandic Krona



  • New Taiwan Dollar

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New Taiwan Dollar(TWD)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 New Taiwan Dollar = 2.5289 Indian Rupee



  • New Taiwan Dollar

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Thai Baht(THB)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Thai Baht = 4.5671 Icelandic Krona




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Thai Baht(THB)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Thai Baht = 2.358 Indian Rupee




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Turkish Lira(TRY)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Turkish Lira = 20.6289 Icelandic Krona




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Turkish Lira(TRY)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Turkish Lira = 10.6507 Indian Rupee




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Singapore Dollar(SGD)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Singapore Dollar = 103.5181 Icelandic Krona




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Singapore Dollar(SGD)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Singapore Dollar = 53.4466 Indian Rupee




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Mauritian Rupee(MUR)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Mauritian Rupee = 3.6827 Icelandic Krona




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Mauritian Rupee(MUR)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Mauritian Rupee = 1.9014 Indian Rupee




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Nepalese Rupee(NPR)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Nepalese Rupee = 1.2092 Icelandic Krona




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Nepalese Rupee(NPR)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Nepalese Rupee = 0.6246 Indian Rupee




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Bangladeshi Taka(BDT)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Bangladeshi Taka = 1.7206 Icelandic Krona




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Bangladeshi Taka(BDT)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Bangladeshi Taka = 0.8883 Indian Rupee




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Moldovan Leu(MDL)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Moldovan Leu = 8.2014 Icelandic Krona




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Moldovan Leu(MDL)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Moldovan Leu = 4.2344 Indian Rupee




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Mick Jagger and Will Smith to perform in India Covid-19 concert

International and Indian celebrities to take part from home in fundraising event

Mick Jagger and Will Smith will be among dozens of international and Indian celebrities performing from their homes in a four-hour concert to raise funds for the battle against coronavirus in India, where the number of cases is surging.

The country’s cricket captain Virat Kohli, actors Priyanka Chopra and Shah Rukh Khan are some of the top domestic names billed to perform or read messages during the event on Sunday.

Related: Mobs stop Indian doctors' burials: 'Covid-19 took his life, why take his dignity?'

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India's Covid-19 app fuels worries over authoritarianism and surveillance

State-built Aarogya Setu has had record downloads but critics warn of civil liberties implications

Narendra Modi’s request was simple: to help combat the spread of coronavirus, people should download an Indian government-built smartphone app that helps identify their risk of catching and spreading the virus.

“As more and more people use it, its effectiveness will increase,” the prime minister said in a televised address last month.

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Destitute migrant workers in India forced to pay train fares home

Labourers’ plight contrasts with affluent Indians flown home from abroad in coronavirus crisis

Migrant labourers in Indian cities whose incomes have plummeted as a result of anti-coronavirus lockdown measures have been told that they will have to pay to board special trains taking them back to their homes in the countryside.

The decision has prompted derision in India, where most labourers live off what they earn in a day and have been surviving on state handouts.

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India to send navy and fleet of planes to repatriate workers stranded by coronavirus

Kuwait police break up riot by Egyptian workers after large numbers of jobs lost across the Gulf states

India is to send its navy and a fleet of planes to repatriate migrant workers stranded by the coronavirus pandemic, as mounting tensions sparked a riot in Kuwait and alarm among large numbers of laid-off employees across the Gulf states.

The riot in a migrant camp in Kuwait on Sunday night was led by Egyptian workers, some of whom brandished furniture as security forces fired tear gas and sound grenades towards them.

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Where India’s government has failed in the pandemic, its people have stepped in

Civil society has outperformed the state in helping to feed India’s poorest. It should be seen as ally not enemy

The highways connecting India’s overcrowded cities to the villages had not seen anything like it since the time of partition 73 years ago. Hundreds of thousands of workers were on the move, walking back to their villages with their possessions bundled on their heads.

On 24 March, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi ordered a nationwide 21-day lockdown to contain the coronavirus pandemic. States sealed their borders, and transport came to a halt. With no trains or buses to take them home, India’s rural-to-urban migrant population, estimated at a staggering 120 million, took to the roads. On 5 April a statement from the home ministry said 1.25 million people moving between states had been put up in camps and shelters.

Related: As the wealthy quaff wine in comfort, India’s poor are thrown to the wolves

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Notorious Indian bandit dies at 92 after stints in Bollywood and politics

Mohar Singh was once one of the most feared men in the Chambal region

A notorious bandit who spent years rampaging across central India’s impoverished badlands before trying his luck as a Bollywood actor and politician has died aged 92, police have said.

Mohar Singh, once one of the most feared men in the Chambal region accused of hundreds of murders, kidnappings and other crimes, died on Tuesday, a senior police official in Bhind district told AFP.

Related: Masked assassins kill Bandit Queen

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Top rebel commander killed by Indian forces in Kashmir

Riyaz Naikoo was member of region’s largest indigenous militant group, Hizbul Mujahideen

Indian government forces have killed a top rebel commander and his aide in disputed Kashmir, and shut down mobile phone and mobile internet services during subsequent anti-India protests.

Riyaz Naikoo, 35, was the chief of operations of the region’s largest indigenous rebel group, Hizbul Mujahideen, which has spearheaded an armed rebellion against Indian rule.

(August 1, 1947) 

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India's chemical plant disaster: another case of history repeating itself

Decades after Bhopal, lack of law enforcement and political will plagues Indian industry

The gas leak at a chemical factory in Visakhapatnam will immediately remind many in India and beyond of the 1984 Bhopal disaster, widely considered the world’s worst industrial disaster.

So far, the scale of the tragedies are very different. Eleven people are confirmed to have died in Visakhapatnam – but with hundreds hospitalised and thousands affected, there are fears the toll will rise. In Bhopal, 4,000 people died within days of the toxic gas leak from a pesticide plant in the central Indian city, and thousands more in the following years.

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Hundreds exposed to gas after deadly leak at Indian chemical factory

Gas from LG Polymers plant in Andhra Pradesh leaked into nearby homes while families slept

At least 11 people have been killed and hundreds more taken to hospital after a gas leak at a chemical factory in south-east India.

A plastics plant owned by South Korea’s LG Corp started leaking styrene into the surrounding residential area at about 3am on Thursday. Some people were enveloped as they slept, while others collapsed in the streets as they tried to flee the area on the outskirts of the coastal city of Visakhapatnam.

Related: 'Bhopal’s tragedy has not stopped': the urban disaster still claiming lives 35 years on

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India chemical leak: more evacuations amid fears of second gas release

Everyone within 5km of the plant in Andhra Pradesh told to leave over fear of repeat of accident that has left at least 11 dead

Indian officials have evacuated more people from the area around a chemical plant in the south of the country that leaked toxic gas, killing at least 11 people and sickening hundreds more.

There was confusion about whether the wider evacuation orders were sparked by a renewed leak at the LG Chem factory in Andhra Pradesh, or by the fear that rising temperatures at the plant could lead to another leak.

Related: India's chemical plant disaster: another case of history repeating itself

Related: 'Bhopal’s tragedy has not stopped': the urban disaster still claiming lives 35 years on

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Colombian Peso(COP)/Icelandic Krona(ISK)

1 Colombian Peso = 0.0375 Icelandic Krona




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Colombian Peso(COP)/Indian Rupee(INR)

1 Colombian Peso = 0.0194 Indian Rupee




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[Football] The Indians Hold on Strong Against Presentation College

Indian running back Malcolm Coleman pushes through for a first touchdown of 12 yards during the season opener against Presentation College. The Indians and the Saints went head-to-head in Aberdeen, South Dakota Saturday, in a close fight to the end.




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[Football] Indian Football Drops to 0-2 After Loss to Robert Morris

It was a beautiful Saturday afternoon as the Indians prepared to take on the Robert Morris Eagles for Haskell Football's Home Opener. This would be the second time the Indians would take on the Illinois team. The Indians lost in their first match-up against the Eagles in 2011, which would play a recognizable tune in 2012.




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[Football] Indian Football Will Be Ready For Action Away at Tabor College

It will be an away game this weekend for the Indians(0-1) against Tabor College(1-1) in Hillsboro Kansas. Kick-off is at 7:00pm on Saturday the 15th.




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[Football] Indian Football Equals Youth, Strength, and Determination

(LAWRENCE KS) As the sun set Saturday over Memorial Field, the Indians and Bacone College kicked off game four of Haskell Football's season. Athletes and fans were pulling for a win against our rival Warriors. The Indians came out hard and fought endlessly through the night, but in the end, it would be experience that would win the game.




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[Football] Indians Tally up Touchdowns But Can't Hold Lindenwood Back

(Lawrence KS) The Indians kicked off the Homecoming Football Game at 1:00pm on Saturday October 6th against Lindenwood University Belleville.




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[Football] Indian Football Treks Down to Waxahachie Texas

 

(Lawrence KS) Indian Football will take off tomorrow on a road trip to Waxahachie, Texas to play Southwestern Assemblies of God on their own turf. 

 




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[Football] Indian Football Will Play the Last Game of the Season on Saturday

(LAWRENCE) The Haskell Football season will come to a close tomorrow, Saturday November 10th 2012, as the Indians take on Trinity Bible College. Kick-off will be at 1:00pm at Haskell Memorial Field.