Posts

Showing posts from 2018

"We chased Khatta Singh for two months for the sting": author Anurag Tripathi

Image
Anurag Tripathi during the interview with the writer Anurag Tripathi is an investigative journalist with sixteen years of experience and has worked as editor, reportage at Newslaundry, and senior associate editor, Tehelka. He started his career with the Hindustan Times, Lucknow, and has worked with the Times of India, Aaj Tak, India TV and NewsX. In an interview to Bhavey on the sidelines of Times Litfest 2018 , he talked about his decade long investigation on Ram Rahim; political nexus between BJP and India TV; Dera’s BJP boycott in Rajasthan elections; his two month long chase for Khatta Singh who later became the protected witness of CBI and ultimately led to the conviction of Gurmeet Ram Rahim in August 2017. His book “Dera Sacha Sauda and Gurmeet Ram Rahim: A Decade-long investigation” published by Penguin was launched in April 2018. Excerpts of the interview: Bhavey (B) : Tell us about how you initially uncovered the Jhootha Souda series while working for Tehelk

Prestige affair for Khattar

Image
Municipal Corporations in five districts of Haryana: Karnal, Panipat, Yamunagar, Rohtak and Hisar, due in October,  goes to poll on 16 December. The announcement came nine months after the first announcement of wardbandi in Karnal Municipal Corporation followed by Panipat and other districts. Moving one step ahead towards transparency, after laying down educational qualifications for candidates contesting elections under Panchayati Raj Institutions, the Manohar Lal Khattar government in Haryana approved direct election of mayors in September. The voters will not only vote for the ward councillor but also the mayor. This is in line with the elections for panches and sarpanches, where villagers vote for the sarpanch and the ward panch. Adding another feather on the crown, Khattar also gave nod to the cabinet decision of reserving Karnal mayor seat for woman candidate and neighboring Panipat for backward class woman while the post of the mayor is unreserved in Hisar, Rohtak and

"Agar khatm ho gyi ho mann ki baat, to ab kar lo kisaan ki baat": farmers roared at Kisan Mukti March

Image
A farmer resting and smoking at Ramlila Maidan. (From facebook wall of  Basant Kumar) It’s 7 in the evening and groups of farmers were still arriving at the Ramlila Maidan . More than half full, farmers from several points in the capital- Majnu Ka Tila, Anand Vihar, Sarai Kale Khan and Gurudwara Bangla Sahib, were here from various states belonging to different organizations. “ Sabah tk aise hi aate rhenge ye ” said a local policeman on duty outside the main gate. The next leg of this march was, to encircle the parliament for their two demands: Full loan waiver and increased Minimum Support Price (MSP); through special parliament session. Farmers at the Sansad Marg on day 2 ( From facebook wall of  Prashant Kanojia) This Kisaan Mukti March was organized under the banner of All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), a coalition of 200 plus organizations formed in the wake of the Mandsaur ( in Madhya Pradesh) firing that killed six farmers in June 2

"Stubble is an issue of eight days in a year" : P. Sainath

Image
Senior Journalist P. Sainath during an interview. (Source: Video screen grab )    P. Sainath is an Indian journalist and Founder Editor of the People's Archive of Rural India, who focuses on social & economic inequality, rural affairs, poverty and the aftermath of globalization in India. He is the 2007 winner of the  Ramon Magsaysay Award (and often referred to as the ‘Asian Nobel’). He is also the former Rural Affairs Editor of  The Hindu. In an interview to a group of students from IIMC on the sidelines of Kisan Mukti March Day 1 at Ramlila Maidan , Sainath, who is often credited for mass farmer mobilization in March during Nashik to Mumbai Kisan Padyatra , he talked about the women representation in agriculture, stubble burning and response by Delhiites in the Kisan Mukti March. Excerpts: Tapasya (T): What do you think where the women stand in this agrarian crisis? Sainath (S): You have no chance of resolving the agrarian crisis when you don’t enga

THE BOOK LOVER'S NIRVANA

Image
The first book stall just outside Delite Cinema Hundreds of people squeezed up in the narrow alleys where one have to be careful of not stepping upon dogs, cow-dung, dead rats and pray for less traffic: You’ve to believe that you are in Old Delhi. Take exit from Delhi Gate metro station’s gate number 3 on the violet line and you will witness a madman book club of your dreams! More than 250 book sellers put up their stalls on the pavement along Netaji Subhash Marg and Asaf Ali Road starting from Daryaganj-Faiz Bazar crossing to Delite Cinema every Sunday. For a book lover, one thing is persistent:  scavenging. They are ready to stop by every stall to get what he/she loves. Just like Puneet , a pharmaceutical professional in his 50s is coming to the market since 1990s. He said, “I use to come twice or thrice a month every Sunday and look for books of best authors before 20 th century that clicks me. Our Indian authors are still evolving. ” Rishu ’s book stall He

RAMZAN & KASHMIR: THE CEASEFIRE EXPERIMENT & BEYOND

Image
Inner  hall of Dastgeer Sahib, a Sufi Shrine in Srinagar during Ramzan. ( Image Source: Instagram account of Aamir Wani) To Muslims, fasting from dawn to dusk in the ninth month of the lunar Islamic Calendar, Ramzan is the month long self-control holiest resistance to daily appetites & a pledge to perform good deeds all through the year. As per my friend, the very idea of Ramzan is to show resilience, but also a reminder of how close nature is to life. Though, the valley has witnessed some of the bloodiest days in the recent years, there is something to cheer for the locals, thanks to the month of ceasefire, announced by the Union Home Ministry on request of Kashmiri Political Parties led by CM Mehbooba Mufti. Home Minister (HM) Rajnath Singh during his recent visit to Jammu & Kashmir was happy after a security review, but a surge in grenade attacks, ceasefire violations from Pakistan, death of Shujaat Bukhari: all tell a different story. And the question remains, W