A ToI or Hindu claim that Pakistani state support for the Mumbai attacks existed, without providing clear evidence supporting that claim, is just as invalid as an Ahmed Quraishi claim that India is supporting some of the Taliban factions, without presenting an clear evidence supporting that claim.
Please don't put Times of India and Hindu together. I used to read Times of India, Hindu and Indian Express at some point.
Here is how I'd describe them
1)Times of India - Sensational news articles.Sometimes they get lucky and are the first to break stories. But most of the reason anybody buys this paper is for the pictures and the "City Edition" where they have gossip about what happened at the local parties/pubs.
Do not trust the editorials -- They once actually put up an advertisement inviting people to place products as part of editorials etc. The policy might have changed, but I still don't trust them.
2) Indian Express - Sensational news articles. But also has a reputation for honesty (mainly from past). They were one of the rare papers to stand up during Indian Emergency and to take on Reliance group and their influence in government.
Has a lot more news content compared to Times of India and slightly less amount of opinion.
3) The Hindu - Despite its name it has nothing to do with Hinduism . The name is a leftover from pre-independence times. Very popular in South India. For many, the morning does not start without a cup of filter-coffeee, a masala Dosa and the Hindu.
My complaint with the paper is that it does not report anything until it is absolutely sure of what is going on. Rarely gets things wrong, but mostly because they won't publish anything until everyone else has published the story and fixed the errors in the original.
I have talked to a few reporters from the paper both in India and US, and they are the typical old-school reporters with strong beliefs about right & wrong and the role of newspapers.
4) Financial Times/ Economic times - In my opinion these papers have the highest content of news and the lowest amount of opinion pieces. This is what I started reading regularly even though I did not have much to do with stock market.
5) The Mint - Basically Indian edition of Wall Street Journal. The News corporation connection (Star TV, Fox news) makes me slightly suspicious of the paper. But so far Wall Street Journal in the US has not shown a rightist bias (other than the libertarian bias it already had)