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Learnt in Godhra, forgotten in Jaipur by Aakar Patel

It is difficult to explain to Indians the wrongness of collective punishment. This is because our identity is collective, and so is our behaviour This month is the 10th anniversary of the incident at Godhra and the events in Gujarat that followed. When the violence began, it was said that the Media had made the violence worse. Often this was by its innocence and sometimes by its malice. Was this true? The...

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Don't trash this law, the fault lies in non-implementation by Brinda Karat & Sabu George

There can be little quarrel with the argument that India requires a comprehensive policy to prevent sex selection as put forward by National Advisory Council members Farah Naqvi and A.K. Shiva Kumar in The Hindu (“India & the sex selection conundrum,” January 24, 2012). That the use of sex selection technologies to abort female foetuses is linked to the increasing devaluation and disempowerment of women is well known. It is...

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New tactics to flout Election Commission rules on “paid news” by J Balaji

Before filing papers, prospective candidates enter into a tacit deal with Media, says EC   Even as it is tightening the noose around the Media-candidates' nexus to thwart “paid news” instances through its district Media committees and expenditure observers, the Election Commission has come to know about new strategies worked out by them to break the rules. “We have received reports that such ‘paid news' transactions had taken place in some instances in...

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Snakes and ladders by Amartya Sen

Like many board games that were developed in India, of which chess is perhaps the most important and famous, the game of “snakes and ladders” too emerged in this country a long time ago. With its balancing of snakes that pull you down and ladders that take you up, this game has been used again and again as a metaphor for life, telling us about our fortunes and misfortunes, and...

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What Azadi means: Findings from a first-ever Home Ministry survey of Kashmiri youth by Riyaz Wani

Valley’s youth say peaceful political protests are the most effective means for achieving political aspirations. Estrangement from India is matched by the lack of interest in Pakistan In 2010 the Ministry of Home Affairs had commissioned a focussed survey on the priorities and aspirations of Kashmir’s new generation, which had spearheaded the long spell of unrest, and found that 54 per cent of them identified “Azadi” as their preferred “final status...

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