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Crushed in the middle by Ramachandra Guha

As the Union government prepares to launch an offensive on Maoist revolutionaries, I am reminded of three conversations that I heard or had in Chhattisgarh in the summer of 2006. The first took place in the state capital, Raipur, at the home of the leading Congress politician, Mahendra Karma. Karma was the begetter of the Salwa Judum, a vigilante army that has been responsible for a wave of killings, rapes...

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The sorry plight of Khara tribals in M.P. by Mahim Pratap Singh

REWA: Having struggled for the past five years for their land, mine workers of Khara village in Madhya Pradesh still do not know what they are fighting against—a feudal social system, a corrupt Forest Department, or their own fate? Khara village is a typical example of how feudal forces with tacit approval from the local administration still call the shots in most of rural India.Three years of drought and a barren,...

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Villagers use Indira scheme cash for guns to fight dacoits by Anand ST Das

In a shocking revelation about Bihar’s crumbling law and order situation, 116 villagers in Darbhanga are found to have purchased guns with the money they were given to build houses under the Indira Awas Yojna (IAY). The poor villagers felt they needed guns more than homes to confront continuous attacks by dacoits. In two other incidents reflecting rising public anger against frequent robberies in Bihar, three robbers were lynched in...

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In praise of honesty by Jayati Ghosh

It is rare nowadays to come across people of unflinching and unquestionable integrity. It is even rarer to find in such people a strong sense of personal and intellectual honesty that demands that they interrogate their own actions and arguments with as much sincerity as they turn on others. And it is rarest of all to find such people engaged in public life, where they would constantly have to face...

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To a Land of More Returns by Dipankar Dasgupta

Fairness in land acquisition is difficult to achieve A market’s charm, leaving out cases of distress sale, lies in the fact that it ensures for individuals the right to refuse unacceptable transactions. This observation, though pedestrian, has implications for the controversies surrounding the use of agricultural land for industrial growth in Bengal. Indeed, many — the present author included — have argued in favour of land acquisition through markets, for...

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