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HomeBest of ThePrint ICYMIJayant sacks RLD spokespersons after Dalit leader criticises Amit Shah's Ambedkar remarks

Jayant sacks RLD spokespersons after Dalit leader criticises Amit Shah’s Ambedkar remarks

A selection of the best news reports, analysis and opinions published by ThePrint this week.

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Jayant removes all RLD spokespersons after Dalit leader slams Amit Shah for Ambedkar remarks

RLD state president confirms that decision was taken on the basis of party spokesperson Kamal Gautam’s comments. Gautam had said Shah should apologise for his remarks on Ambedkar. Read Shikha Salaria’s report.

Matsya 6000 submersible will be tried in a harbour off Chennai with three crew members on board. If all goes as planned, in 2026, National Institute of Ocean Technology will send a crew 6,000 metres under the Indian Ocean, Akanksha Mishra reports from ground.

How ‘metro woman’ Ashwini Bhide’s appointment as Fadnavis’ principal secy signals his continued infra push

The IAS officer & Maharashtra CM Fadnavis have made unconventional decisions together, advancing Mumbai’s 1st underground metro line. Bhide has also worked closely with Thackeray regime, reports Manasi Phadke.

Why Starlink’s India troubles signal the next big battle for space internet

From its devices seized in Manipur to its contentious bid to enter India’s satellite communication market, Elon Musk’s Starlink has set off alarm bells in India, writes Yuthika Bhargava.

Whose obscenity is it anyway? Kolkata Metro PDA shows it’s time to kiss away outdated morality

Fortunately, one person’s obscenity is freedom of expression for another. Remember a time when women emerging from behind the purdah was obscene, writes Monideepa Banerjie.

‘Hinduphobia’, ‘oppressed Hindus’—enough with the bogus rhetoric even Modi doesn’t buy

The notion of Hindu victimhood is largely a 1980s creation, exploited for electoral purposes by LK Advani and passed down, in some garbled form, to the rabble, writes Vir Sanghvi.

Manmohan Singh has a legacy beyond 1991. Nuclear deal with US shows his strategic vision

Manmohan Singh’s success lay in making a decisive and historic shift towards the West. It was also audacious, in my book even more so than the 1991 reform, given how little support it had within Congress and UPA, Editor-in-Chief Shekhar Gupta writes in this week’s ‘National Interest’.

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