'The victims of the Pahalgam massacre are being insulted by the actions taken against Mahmudabad,' said the president of the Federation of Central University Teachers Association.
Azmi was in conversation with actor-director Aparna Sen at Delhi’s India Habitat Centre. Part of the 17th Habitat Film Festival, the event celebrated Azmi’s 50 years in cinema.
The launch of Ashutosh's book 'Reclaiming Bharat' had political scientist Zoya Hasan, journalist Rajdeep Sardesai, and RJD MP Manoj Jha as part of the panel.
Even positive representation of Muslims now has a ‘tonality’ problem, said panellists at a discussion on Nadira Khatun’s book Postcolonial Bollywood and Muslim Identity.
At the launch of ‘Identity, Conflict, and Counter-narratives’, JNU professor Surinder S Jodhka delivered a sharp critique of Brahminism in academia and public discourse.
The curator of the ‘Of Worlds Within Worlds’ exhibition, Roobina Karode, said Sheikh’s work ‘draws us into a definite moment of recognition and then leaves us with a series of questions’.
‘There is a common perception that everything started with Ashoka at Sarnath, but I knew that couldn’t be true,’ said archaeologist BR Mani, speaking about his 2013–14 excavation.
We have failed terribly at two important things. One, we are reacting to this issue only emotionally, not logically. And two, we are not asking the right questions.
WhatsApp privacy policy case is among a string of matters involving practices like restrictive platform rules, pricing & billing policies, reflecting India’s tight scrutiny of market dominance.
Bihar is blessed with a land more fertile for revolutions than any in India. Why has it fallen so far behind then? Constant obsession with politics is at the root of its destruction.
The security agencies must note down every single person who attended this event. Each one of them must be investigated and tracked.
It’s quite possible that these people are working on behalf of China or Pakistan to destabilize India.
The Print is deliberately providing undue coverage to this issue. A single article could have sufficed. But there have been multiple articles along with an editorial on this arrest.
Let’s compare this with The Print’s coverage of anti-Hindu pogroms carried out by Islamists in Murshidabad. There were two articles – one by Sourav Barman and the other was a photo-article. There were no editorials on the egregious murders and the massive displacement of Hindus.
A comparative analysis serves well to show The Print’s bias against Hindus. If the victims had been Muslims, The Print would have surely printed endless articles and gone hammer and tongs at the government.
These are cut from the same piece of cloth. Every single attendee at this event should be arrested and prosecuted. These are the 0.5 front the late General Bipin Rawat warned us about.
The security agencies must note down every single person who attended this event. Each one of them must be investigated and tracked.
It’s quite possible that these people are working on behalf of China or Pakistan to destabilize India.
The Print is deliberately providing undue coverage to this issue. A single article could have sufficed. But there have been multiple articles along with an editorial on this arrest.
Let’s compare this with The Print’s coverage of anti-Hindu pogroms carried out by Islamists in Murshidabad. There were two articles – one by Sourav Barman and the other was a photo-article. There were no editorials on the egregious murders and the massive displacement of Hindus.
A comparative analysis serves well to show The Print’s bias against Hindus. If the victims had been Muslims, The Print would have surely printed endless articles and gone hammer and tongs at the government.
These are cut from the same piece of cloth. Every single attendee at this event should be arrested and prosecuted. These are the 0.5 front the late General Bipin Rawat warned us about.