Email: sabrangind@gmail.com
AERO dies by suicide in Kolkata, family alleges extreme election duty pressure and humiliation
A 48-year-old Assistant Electoral Registration Officer (AERO) died by suicide in South Kolkata’s Bansdroni area after consuming pesticide, the tragic death of Malabika Roy Bhattacharyya has sparked serious concerns regarding the immense pressure placed on government officials tasked with SIR/Election duties, with her family explicitly blaming the ECI for the extreme workload
Berkeley University study of Islamophobia in India highlights plight of Muslims
The last decade has witnesses intensified attacks on Muslim,...
Human rights groups decry the use of torture in J&K, seek UN probe
Human rights groups release first comprehensive report on torture...
Prioritization of large dam projects typically occurs in centralized decision-making processes
Sabrang -
A joint statement has been issued by over 250...
12 years of Makkah Masjid bomb blast: Justice still denied
Sabrang -
May 18, 2019 marks completion of 12 years of...
Why Won’t Right Wing Admit That Godse Was a Terrorist?
Sabrang -
In this episode, Nikhil Wagle explains why Nathuram Godse...
Missed NRC Claim Filing Deadline? Now face Foreigners’ Tribunal Cases!
Guwahati, 17th May: About 3.8 lakhs of people, who...
In India’s Holiest City, Modi Not As Omniscient As Before
Varanasi and Bhadohi (Uttar Pradesh): “I don’t fake things....
Woman Divorced Via Whatsapp, Case Registered Against Husband and In-Laws Under Muslim Women Act
Thane: A 28-year old Muslim man and his parents...
The conspicuous absence of women in India’s labour force
India’s rapid economic growth has been accompanied by falling...
Trending
Related VIDEOS
ALL STORIES
ALL STORIES
Communal Organisations
When History substitutes Governance: Hindutva’s Politics of Manufacturing Pasts
Inventing kings, rebranding dynasties, and fabricating history to mask policy failure and engineer caste-communal politics
Communal Organisations
Fractured Fault lines: Violence, governance gaps, and rising tensions across Odisha
From church vandalism and communal flashpoints to tribal resistance, welfare exclusions, and political impunity—recent developments point to deepening fault lines in Odisha’s social and administrative landscape
India
“Inside the SIR”: Booklet flags ‘mechanical disenfranchisement’ in electoral roll revision
CJP–VFD publication combines training manual and ground documentation to question ongoing voter verification exercise
Communalism
Censorship and the Drumbeats of Hate: Mapping the state of free speech ahead of the 2026 polls
A new report by Free Speech Collective traces five years of censorship, criminalisation of dissent, and the rise of hate-driven political discourse across Assam, Kerala, and Puducherry—raising urgent questions about the conditions for free and fair elections
Politics
AERO dies by suicide in Kolkata, family alleges extreme election duty pressure and humiliation
A 48-year-old Assistant Electoral Registration Officer (AERO) died by suicide in South Kolkata’s Bansdroni area after consuming pesticide, the tragic death of Malabika Roy Bhattacharyya has sparked serious concerns regarding the immense pressure placed on government officials tasked with SIR/Election duties, with her family explicitly blaming the ECI for the extreme workload
Communal Organisations
UP’s syncretic warrior cults facing Hindutva challenge
Be it the attack on the Gogamedi shrine in the Hanumangarh district of northern Rajasthan or the Neja Mela in the Sambhal district of western Uttar Pradesh, Hindutva’s systemic attack on India’s syncretic traditions, past and present, reveals its rigid and Brahmanical ideological orientation: imposition of a strictly hierarchical, exclusionary and structured notion of faith and practice
Minorities
No Hearing, No Notice, Just Deletion: How Bengal’s SIR Erased a Decorated IAF Officer
The removal of Wing Commander Md Shamim Akhtar, who served the nation for 17 years, during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) highlights a systemic lack of due process that threatens the voting rights of even the most distinguished citizens
Dalit Bahujan Adivasi
An Adivasi woman once in bonded labour now serves her village as a Sarpanch
As India marks 50 years of the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976, cases of bonded labour still surface in states like Telangana where many workers in sectors such as agriculture, brick kilns, fishing and construction remain trapped in debt and coercion; here the author reflects on a transformative journey of an Adivasi woman who serves as a Sarpanch.
