Law & Justice

Reproductive Autonomy Cannot Be Subordinated to Adoption: Supreme Court allows termination of 7-month pregnancy of minor

Holding that a woman’s choice is paramount under Article 21, the SC affirms that constitutional courts must prioritise dignity, mental health, and bodily autonomy over statutory limits under the MTP framework

270 Million Accounts are Duplicate or fake Admits Facebook

Finally its been confirmed from the horse's mouth, itself....

J&K Human Rights Commission asks government to investigate 2,080 unmarked graves in two Jammu districts

Srinagar: The Jammu and Kashmir Human Rights Commission on...

Jharkand”s Rickshaw Puller Dies of Hunger: Jharia

"...his death occurred due to hunger and disease"A rickshaw-puller...

Where is justice? 33 years after the massacre of Sikhs

Congress leaders who were involved in the violence were...

ABVP Disrupts Attempts to Implement HC Order: Najeeb Disappearance Case

JNU again witnessed aggression in the name of ‘protest’...

Umar Khalid on how India is criminalising dissent

Umar Khalid is not known for mincing words. In...

India outlawed commercial surrogacy – clinics are finding loopholes

Would you pay someone US$150,000 to have your baby?A...

NIA files chargesheet against Zakir Naik and Islamic Research Foundation

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Thursday filed a...

Delhi High Court calls Subramanian Swamy’s PIL as political interest litigation

The Delhi High Court has dismissed BJP leader  and...

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Reproductive Autonomy Cannot Be Subordinated to Adoption: Supreme Court allows termination of 7-month pregnancy of minor

Holding that a woman’s choice is paramount under Article 21, the SC affirms that constitutional courts must prioritise dignity, mental health, and bodily autonomy over statutory limits under the MTP framework

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