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REPORTS
& ANALYSIS
Stranded Wheels Of Justice
Minorities
have borne the brunt of organised mass murder that passes off
as ‘riots’ in independent India. The perpetrators,
often top politicians and senior officials, are rarely punished.
The trials drag on, until most of the accused are acquitted
for lack of evidence
READ »
‘But
Modi’s PM Hopes Have Been Shattered’ In
Gujarat, Tehelka’s exposé is spoken of in hushed
tones. The parties don’t know what to do, the Muslims
are scared of a backlash. Modi prefers this gag, reports DARSHAN
DESAI
READ »
Fear
Of Flaying No
more than a whimper emerged from the grand old party before
the gloating of Gujarat’s killers. But it has become used
to such abject surrenders, writes SANKARSHAN THAKUR
READ
»
Drop
By Drop, Protests Gain Strength
Ahmedabad,
Mangalore see civil society take up cudgels for justice
READ »
Dubious
Claims
The Gujarat
government is harping on the state’s development indices
for the Assembly elections. But even its official figures
tell a different story, says SHIVAM VIJ
READ
»
Bloodthirst,
Redux
Gujarat
isn’t the only recent carnage where justice has been
a casualty. A new book recounts the lapses after the anti-Sikh
riots of 1984. Excerpts READ
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Tehelka
Magazine, Vol 4, Issue 44, Dated Nov 17, 2007
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