Communal Organisations

Malegaon 2006 Blast Case: Bombay High Court rejects NIA’s ‘alternate narrative’, holds prosecution built on contradictions and inadmissible evidence

Holding that “diagonally opposite” narratives by investigative agencies cannot sustain a trial, the Court finds the NIA’s case rooted in retracted statements, hearsay material, and a legally impermissible reinvestigation—bringing the prosecution to a “dead end”

Reflections on JNU, India and Pakistan

Image: dnaindia.comThe ongoing row at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) reminded...

Afzal Guru’s execution has made him a martyr

The Indian state refuses to accept that there is...

Between Freedom and Fascism: Speech is really free only when it hurts

Amidst Hindutva’s escalating hysterical-nationalism, raising the question of Kashmir’s...

Bangalore Research Network’s Letter of Solidarity with JNU

We, the undersigned members of the Bangalore Research Network...

Muslim policeman at duty beaten up and paraded in Maharashtra

Photo: Two CirclesLatur (Maharahstra): In an apparent display of...

How Zee TV fuelled state action against JNU students

Local police filed their FIR not on the basis...

As police wait at the gate, JNU students accused of sedition say they won’t refuse arrest

The university’s administration has barred the police from entering...

Sedition frenzy: How the media painted atheist and communist Umar Khalid as an Islamist

A few news outlets have tried, without any substantiation,...

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Malegaon 2006 Blast Case: Bombay High Court rejects NIA’s ‘alternate narrative’, holds prosecution built on contradictions and inadmissible evidence

Holding that “diagonally opposite” narratives by investigative agencies cannot sustain a trial, the Court finds the NIA’s case rooted in retracted statements, hearsay material, and a legally impermissible reinvestigation—bringing the prosecution to a “dead end”

Delhi court orders FIR against Abhijit Iyer Mitra for sexually abusive posts targeting women journalists

Court finds tweets “sexually coloured,” prima facie intended to outrage modesty; directs police probe into X account and devices

From Cow Slaughter to “Public Order”: Allahabad High Court’s expanding use of preventive detention

Through detailed reliance on fear, timing, intelligence inputs, and administrative response, the Court stretches “public order” to justify preventive detention—raising difficult questions about liberty, evidence, and constitutional limits

From FIRs to “Corporate Jihad”: How the TCS Nashik case was transformed from an investigation into a communal narrative

As police probe serious claims of harassment, a parallel story of conspiracy and conversion dominates public discourse