"We cannot have two Indias. You want the world to believe we are the strongest emerging economy, but millions of poor and hungry people are a stark contrast," the Supreme Court said on Wednesday pointing to a huge gap between poverty eradication measures and spread of the problem. The court's anguish was palpable. A Bench of Justices Dalveer Bhandari and Deepak Verma asked the government why additional subsidised food grains be...
More »SEARCH RESULT
Glare on ration data
The Supreme Court today slammed the Centre for sticking to the below-poverty-line estimates of the 1991 census in distributing PDS grain when preliminary figures for the 2010-11 census, showing a much higher number of BPL families, are available. The judges also criticised the income cap fixed by the government to determine families below the poverty line (BPL) by suggesting it was outdated. The 1991 census showed 36 per cent of the population...
More »10-year-old child worker's body covered with bruises by Tanima Biswas
MoHAmmed Mahboob Alam walks slowly towards a small grave in the corner of a cemetery in northwest Delhi. He is not related to the ten-year-old who was buried there on Saturday. But he cannot stop thinking about him. When a group of 20 people arrived at the cemetery with the child's body, Mr Alam was unnerved by their apparent haste to bury the boy. Mr Alam is on the committee of...
More »Moily promises ‘right to justice' law by Vidya Subrahmaniam
Union Law and Justice Minister M. Veerappa Moily said on Friday that an overarching law premised on the “right to justice” could soon be a reality. He said the first draft of the Bill was ready though it was still to be circulated for feedback. Mr. Moily's promise of a new law on justice came at a seminar, “Towards knowledge, development and peace,” organised by the Institute of Objective Studies (IOS)...
More »Death as destiny for migrant labour of Alirajpur by Mahim Pratap Singh
“Quartz grinding is one of the deadliest occupations” “Slowly, but surely, every one of us who has been to the factories in Gujarat will die, and there is nothing we can do to change that,” Buddha (45) of Undli village says bitterly. Buddha lost his 18-year-old-son MoHAn to acute silicosis a year ago. His 16-year-old daughter Ghamma is still suffering from the disease. Silicosis, the deadly scourge unleashed upon migrant labourers of...
More »