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Disclosure and transparency from the RSS may finally expose decades-old ambiguities
The author, a historian and keen documentalist of the far right argues that if the RSS is compelled into legal transparency and accountability, murky details from the past could well tumble out of its century old existence
CBI Still Clueless About Missing JNU Student Najeeb’s Whereabout
Najeeb, a student of M.Sc Biotechnology, had gone missing...
UP Police sides with the ABVP, prevents CJP’s workshop on How to Stop Fake News
Force used against students of Kashi Vidyapeeth deplorable: CJP In...
Kashi Students stand by Teesta Setalvad, defy ABVP and UP Police
Ensure scheduled workshop on stopping Fake News is conducted...
BHU students complain against the play on Nathuram Godse in campus
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Students from the Banaras Hindu University speak to Sabrang...
Rajasthan Kisan struggle intensifies as leaders remain arrested, demands unfulfilled
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Image courtesy: AIKSToday, Kisan leaders Hetram Beniwal and Sheopat...
They remember every detail: Ifrah Butt
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Remembering Kunan Poshpora on Kashmiri Women's Resistance DayFebruary 23,...
Nearly A Third of India’s States/UTs Have Not Hiked Pay To Women Who Form Core Of Health Services
As many as 11 states and four union territories...
Canada’s troubling indifference to the Air India bombing
In this 2005 photo, Rattan Singh Kalsi shows a...
How Jind in Haryana has become a nightmare for Dalits
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Gangrapes, murders and broken busts of Dr Babasaheb AmbedkarSeveral...
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India
To Karnataka’s Anti-SIR Movement: A note of caution and concern
While efforts have been afoot in Karnataka, Maharashtra, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh by civil rights groups and people’s movements to ensure inclusion of the maximum number of eligible voters under the ongoing, expanded, SIR process. The author argues how these efforts may come to naught, given the structural issues involved: a compromised ECI, rushed timelines and the unlawful and rigid document-test for citizenship. In fact, robust efforts in Kerala, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu where similar efforts were made also came to naught.
Minorities
After Akbar Ali Mondal’s Killing, Pani Sol’s Hawkers Ask: How Will We Survive?
Ground Report I In Pani Sol, one of Bengal's largest villages of hawkers, Akbar Ali Mondal's killing has left thousands of Muslim traders fearful about earning a living and supporting their families
India
The BEST Strike: Years of unfulfilled promises, structural neglect and the future of public transport in Mumbai
From unpaid employee dues and stalled budget reforms to controversial depot monetisation and the expansion of the wet-lease model, the strike has reopened fundamental questions about the future of public transport in Mumbai
Rights
Declared Foreigners, Facing Deportation: Supreme Court grants interim relief
Women detained after being declared foreigners argue that tribunals disregarded substantial evidence and relied on minor inconsistencies to reject their citizenship claims
Rights
Release Kashmiri HRD Khurram Pervez immediately & unconditionally: International HR Fora
In a strong joint statement issued on the occasion of Khurram Parvez’s 49th birthday on June 18, 2026, close to 100 international organisations and an equal number of individuals, including those associated with the United Nations like World Organization against Torture (OMCT), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, Frontline Defenders, Amnesty International, among others, have demanded the immediate and unconditional release of the Kashmiri human rights defender and the relentless campaign of judicial harassment.
Rule of Law
The Court spoke, the police paraded anyway
The Rajasthan High Court's landmark judgment on public shaming was ignored within the month it was delivered; what have other High Courts said on this depreciable practice?
Caste
Thirty years on, justice remains elusive for Dalits in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Haryana
A chapter in a major 30-year review of the PoA Act argues that institutional failures, rather than legislative gaps, remain the biggest obstacle to justice
Politics
The telegram NEET case and the expansion of platform-level censorship in India
The Court's judgment marks a significant shift in Indian digital rights jurisprudence by accepting that the very design and architecture of a platform may justify extraordinary restrictions affecting millions of lawful users
