News Broadcasting
NDTV visible in Canada via Rogers Digital Cable
MUMBAI: Canada based Rogers Cable Communications Inc has announced it will be adding New Delhi Television (NDTV) to its list of multicultural programming starting 21 December.
“As our communities continue to grow and diversify, Rogers strives to provide the most multicultural programming to its customers with programs like NDTV,” said Rogers Cable television division VP and GM David Purdy. “With more choice, our customers have the freedom to watch what they want when they want with personal TV.”
Rogers Digital Cable customers can order NDTV for $14.95 per month or $10.00 per month when ordered with ATN and Zee TV, informs an official release.
With the addition of New Delhi Television, Rogers now offers multicultural programming in 20 different languages on 41 multicultural channels.
Recently, NDTV 24×7 launched on the UK’s digital television service provider Sky TV and also tied up with the direct-to-home (DTH) DirecTV in US to cater to a large section of south Asian community.
Rogers Cable passes 3.4 million homes in Ontario, New Brunswick and Newfoundland, with 67 per cent basic penetration of its homes passed. The cable company provides high-speed Internet access with the commercial launch in North America in 1995 and now approximately 32 per cent of homes passed are Internet customers.
News Broadcasting
Business Today MindRush returns to Mumbai, spotlight on India’s edge in a fractured world
Policymakers and corporate heavyweights gather to map supply chains, energy security and markets
MUMBAI: As fault lines widen across global trade and geopolitics, Business Today is doubling down on India’s moment. The 14th edition of Business Today MindRush & Best CEOs Awards lands in Mumbai on March 28, pitching India’s strategic edge at the centre of a fragmenting world.
The day-long summit, presented by PwC, will bring together a tight mix of policymakers, industry leaders and market voices to decode shifting supply chains, maritime strategy, defence priorities, energy security and capital markets—sectors now deeply entangled with geopolitics.
M Nagaraju, secretary, department of financial services, ministry of finance, will headline the event, setting the tone for discussions that aim to track how India is repositioning itself amid disrupted trade routes and volatile energy dynamics.
The speaker slate reads like a cross-section of India Inc’s command centre. Krishna Swaminathan will zero in on sea lanes and supply chains, while Prashant Ruia is set to push the case for self-reliance in oil and gas. Ashish Chauhan will weigh in on capital markets at a pivotal juncture, as a panel featuring Vibha Padalkar, Sanjiv Mehta, Amish Mehta and Sanjeev Krishan debates navigating economic uncertainty.
Leadership under pressure will be another running theme. Madhavkrishna Singhania, Sharvil Patel, Karan Bhagat and Anurag Choudhary will unpack how businesses are steering through disruption. Arun Alagappan will turn the spotlight on fertilisers, Arundhati Bhattacharya will reflect on leadership transitions, while Anish Shah and S Vellayan will outline blueprints for building future-ready conglomerates.
The event will close with Aroon Purie setting the broader editorial lens, before the Best CEOs Awards recognise standout corporate leadership across sectors.
At a time when the global order looks increasingly splintered, MindRush 2026 is positioning itself as more than a conference—it is a signal that India intends not just to navigate the churn, but to shape it.








