Ranchi: The state government is trying to persuade villagers of Nagri to approach the courts once again to find a solution to the dispute over land acquisition and compensation that has disrupted construction of campuses for three national institutes of learning, but the tribals are in no mood to relent. Today more than 100 villagers blocked the Ranchi-Patratu road since morning, braving sharp downpours, while the Administration deployed over 100 policemen...
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Flashpoint Nagri erupts again
-The Telegraph Ranchi: Land politics took an ugly turn in Nagri today, leaving two dozen people, including a senior police officer, wounded and the future of three elite cradles tense. Disarmed by a recent Supreme Court snub on their claim over 218 “fertile” acres — allotted by the government for IIM, IIIT and NUSRL campuses — villagers armed with bamboo poles and iron rods partially dismantled the boundary walls of the management...
More »A step away from corruption is anarchy-Shanti Bhushan
-The Hindu Most people remain at the mercy of a venal Administration that, encouraged by the absence of an independent watchdog, exploits them relentlessly The state of affairs in the country is characterised by rampant corruption at all levels leading to a breakdown in the rule of law and lack of accountability all around. One can say that there is a complete collapse of governance in the country. Something drastic needs to...
More »Apex court bans tourism around Jarawa zone
-The Telegraph Tourists cannot step within 5km of the Jarawa reserve in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Nor can anybody — government or private — set up shop within this buffer zone. The Supreme Court has banned all commercial and tourist activities either inside the reserve or within this 5km-radius, squashing the island Administration’s attempt to dilute a notification the Union territory’s government had itself passed nearly five years ago. In its judgment yesterday,...
More »When the gas leaked, Arjun flew away to pray-Rasheed Kidwai
-The Telegraph When the deadly gas was spreading havoc in Bhopal, Arjun Singh was hundreds of miles away — praying. Hours after the leaking methyl isocyanate gas had left a trail of death in the Madhya Pradesh capital, the state’s then chief minister had taken a flight to Allahabad, where he visited the chapel of his childhood school to pray for “moral courage”. The startling revelation comes in Arjun’s yet-to-be-released memoirs, A Grain...
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