Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from France
seen from China
seen from Venezuela
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Austria
seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Brazil
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Welcome to Hotel PRD Palace – Saharsa's premier luxury hotel. Enjoy elegant rooms, fine dining, spa, banquet hall & 24/7 services. Book now!
Mid-Day Meal or State Neglect?
Saharsa is not just a one-off news flash. It is a mirror held up to a broken system. In Bihar, children fell sick after eating the midday meal, and the same ugly pattern has appeared across India for years: Bihar, Odisha, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, and more. Sometimes the report says lizard, snake, worm, or stale food. Sometimes it says inquiry.
Sometimes FIR. Sometimes suspension. But in many cases, punishment has stopped at paperwork, while only a few incidents, like the 2013 Bihar tragedy, ended in a real conviction.
So the question remains: are Indian citizens and their children treated like cattle, useful only for votes and taxes, while basic safety, schools, and accountability are treated like charity?
Or is this the price of asking for clean food, safe classrooms, better hospitals, and roads that do not collapse with the first rain?
The government loves slogans. Children need meals that do not turn into medical emergencies. The nation deserves answers, not alibis.