This is Pendajam, a tiny tribal hamlet in the south Odisha highlands that is home to Reena Jani, a 34-year-old ASHA worker, who was among the first wave of Indians to be vaccinated against COVID-19 earlier this month.
Jani woke up early on Jan 16, finished her chores, checked on a nearby pregnant woman and then sat pillion on a neighbor’s bike to reach the vaccination centre.
This is what her ride to Mathalput Community Health Centre looked ride.
The vaccine Jani was about to receive had travelled much further. From @SerumInstIndia’S factory in Pune, it had travelled to Odisha’s capital city by air.
From there, a vaccine truck brought the shots some 500km to Koraput town.
On the way: traffic jams, cows, fog, fatigue.
A day after arriving in Koraput, the shots were again pulled out of a fridge, counted and packed carefully to delivery to vaccination centres.
An armed policeman stood by the whole time, and then accompanied the van on its delivery run.
A small white vaccine van then took off for its delivery run, cutting through small country roads.
In all, India has distributed 16.5 million COVID-19 shots and this is how the vaccine travelled deep into the hinterland - all the while being kept at the required temperature.
At Mathalput Community Health Centre the next morning, officials and health workers first listened to the Prime Minister’s speech.
Then, they held a quick ceremony to appease the gods before starting the vaccination programme.
A coconut was expertly smashed.
Jani quietly waited her turn but she was scared.
“I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?” Jani told us, visibly relieved after the injection produced no immediate side effects.
When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn’t worried. Then, she heard a rumour.
“Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection,” she said. “That is why I was frightened.”
A jittery Jani eventually received her shot, partly vaccinating her against COVID-19: one tiny step in India’s mission to beat the pandemic.
The farmers have stopped just ahead of the Outer Ring Road. A number of them want to go straight. A large contingent of police, backed by water cannons and tear gas launchers, are imploring them to go right, as per a planned route.
Stalemate.
Police and protestors have since scuffled, with police firing several rounds of tear gas to unsuccessfully hold the crowds back.
Concrete barricades and containers have been removed by protestors, and a large group has marched on to the ring road.
In recent months, the military has brought vast quantities of ammunition, equipment, fuel, winter supplies and food into Ladakh - more than 150,000 tonnes, via two highways and a fleet of large transport aircraft.
You can spot two below.
Eastern Ladakh, where the flare-up occurred, is typically manned by 20,000-30,000 soldiers. But the deployment has now more than doubled.
And they are set to stay through the harsh winter, in freezing temperatures and often deployed above 15,000 ft.
The death of a Tibetan member of an Indian special forces unit in a mine blast near the site of a border flare-up with Chinese troops has offered a rare glimpse into a little-known group of elite, high-altitude warriors.
The solider - part of the little known Special Frontier Force - was killed and another commando critically wounded in the blast near the shores of the Pangong Tso lake in the western Himalayas, three Indian government officials and two members of his family told Reuters.
Amitabh Mathur, a former Indian government adviser on Tibetan affairs, said the SFF were “crack troops.
“If at all they (SFF) were deployed, I am not surprised. It makes sense to deploy them at high altitudes. They are terrific mountain climbers and commandos."
The home isolation plan was devised in May, when the city's COVID-19 cases started spiking and hospital beds running short.
“If we hadn’t done this, there would’ve been no room to even stand in our hospitals,” Delhi’s health minister @SatyendarJain told me in an interview.
But health authorities started noticing “happy hypoxemia” - low blood oxygen levels without any breathlessness - that was leading to complications in coronavirus patients isolated at home.
That's where the cheap pulse oximeters came into play.