Over 5,000 Teaching Posts Vacant in Central Universities, Says Government

In a written response, Minister of State for Education Sukanta Majumdar revealed that as of October 31, there were 5,182 vacancies in these institutions, according to multiple news reports.

New Delhi: More than 5,000 teaching posts are currently vacant in central universities across India, the government informed the Rajya Sabha on Thursday, November 28. In a written response, Minister of State for Education Sukanta Majumdar revealed that as of October 31, there were 5,182 vacancies in these institutions, according to multiple news reports.

Majumdar attributed the vacancies to routine factors such as retirement, resignations and increased student enrollment. “The occurrence of vacancies and their filling is a continuous process,” he stated, adding that central universities are responsible for ensuring these posts are filled in a timely manner.

The minister noted that over 7,650 teaching positions have been filled through special recruitment drives. He also pointed to the CU-Chayan recruitment portal, launched by the University Grants Commission in May 2023, which provides a centralised platform for advertising and filling vacancies across all central universities.

“The Ministry of Education and University Grants Commission regularly monitor the institutions and the central universities have been directed to fill up the vacancies in regular mode,” Majumdar emphasised. In total, 25,777 positions – including 15,139 faculty posts – were filled in mission mode by central higher education institutions across the country, even as the government acknowledged that vacancies in teaching positions remain a persistent issue.

Also read: Several Posts Lying Vacant in Commission That Regulates Medical Education, Practice

Beyond central universities, other premier institutions, including Indian Institutes of Technology, Indian Institutes of Information Technology, National Institutes of Technology, Indian Institutes of Management, Indian Institutes of Science Education and Research and Indian Institute of Science Bangalore collectively filled 25,257 vacancies by October 29. Of these, 15,047 were faculty positions, including 1,869 reserved for Scheduled Castes, 739 for Scheduled Tribes and 3,089 for Other Backward Classes.

Two Newborn Cheetah Cubs Found Dead in Kuno National Park

19 cheetah cubs have been born in Kuno and seven cubs have died so far.

New Delhi: Authorities found the mutilated bodies of two cubs born to the cheetah Nirva in Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park on November 28, around three days after they were born.

In a post on social media platform X (formerly Twitter) on November 28, the Madhya Pradesh Forest Department announced the death of the two cubs. The post said that after female cheetah Nirva left her den site, a team led by wildlife veterinarians and the cheetah monitoring team inspected the den. They found the mutilated bodies of the two cheetah cubs.


The forest department said that while they inspected the boma where Nirva resided, they found no other bodies of cubs. Samples taken from the bodies of both cubs have been sent for detailed analysis, as per the post. However, the female cheetah is healthy, it said.

On November 25, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav had announced on X that cubs have been born to cheetah Nirva, and that officials of the forest department would soon confirm their number. 

With the birth and death of Nirva’s cubs, 19 cheetah cubs have been born in Kuno since the arrival of 20 adult African cheetahs from Namibia and South Africa in 2022 and 2023 as part of Project Cheetah, India’s ambitious cheetah re-introduction programme based at Kuno. And out of the 19, seven cubs have died so far. 

Of the 20 adults, eight have died due to various reasons including what experts have called septicaemia, an infection of the blood. 

‘Have to Be Absolutely Neutral’: SC Asks Uttar Pradesh Court Not to Proceed with Sambhal Mosque Suit

A bench of Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar has directed that the advocate commissioner’s report must be kept in a sealed cover and not be opened in the meantime.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court has asked a civil court in Uttar Pradesh to not proceed in the suit against the Sambhal Jama Masjid until the mosque committee’s petition challenging the survey order is listed in the high court.

On November 19, a local civil court ordered an advocate commissioner to survey the Mughal-era mosque in Uttar Pradesh’s Sambhal district. The court was acting on a petition filed by Hindu activists claiming the Islamic religious site was originally a prominent Hindu temple dedicated to an avatar of Vishnu.

On November 24, a follow-up survey led to clashes in the area, in which four Muslim men were killed, allegedly in police firing.

LiveLaw has reported in its live blog on the hearing that a bench of Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Sanjay Kumar has directed that the advocate commissioner’s report must be kept in a sealed cover and not be opened in the meantime.

“Peace and harmony must be maintained. We have to be absolutely neutral,” the Supreme Court has told the Uttar Pradesh administration.

The situation in Sambhal remains tense. Police have arrested 25 Muslims, including two women, and booked around 2,500 persons, including Samajwadi Party (SP) MP Zia-ur-Rehman Barq, for the violence. It has claimed that it did not use any lethal weapons against the mob – a claim contradicted by the chairperson of the mosque’s managing committee Zafar Ali, who said that he personally witnessed police firing bullets at the mob.

‘Inequalities Are at the Core of the Monstrous Dramas Unfolding Today’: Amitav Ghosh’s Erasmus Prize Acceptance Speech

‘Driving the ascendancy of these neo-fascist movements is a myth of victimhood, in which affluent countries are seen as the aggrieved parties, resisting invasions by black and brown foreigners.’

Writer Amitav Ghosh is the recipient of the Erasmus Prize 2024, given by the Praemium Erasmianum Foundation. The foundation has cited his passionate written contribution to the theme of climate change, an unprecedented global crisis.

“Ghosh has delved deeply into the question of how to do justice to this existential threat that defies our imagination. His work offers a remedy by making an uncertain future palpable through compelling stories about the past,” the foundation notes.

The following is Ghosh’s acceptance speech, delivered on November 26, 2024, produced in full from the Praemium Erasmianum Foundation’s website. 

§

It takes only a glance at a newspaper nowadays to see that much of what we once took for granted is either being cast aside or turned on its head. Indeed, with floods sweeping away entire cities, and the prospect of a nuclear war closer than it has ever been, I couldn’t bring myself to think about what I was going to say today until a couple of weeks ago; such are the uncertainties of our times that I wondered whether it would even be possible to hold this ceremony as scheduled.

On the day that I finally began to write these words, I happened to be at the far eastern end of Indonesia, in the Banda archipelago, which is the ancestral home of the tree that produces both nutmeg and mace. These spices were once immensely valuable, and they made those islands so rich and prosperous that they became a coveted prize for European colonialists and were ultimately conquered by the Dutch East India Company or VOC. In the year 1621, on the orders of the then governor general of the East Indies, Jan Pieterszoon Coen, almost the entire population of the islands was eliminated in the course of a few weeks, although a few hundred managed to escape to neighboring islands where they kept their culture and language alive till the present day. This was one of the foundational genocides of the early modern era, and it enabled the VOC to establish a monopoly on nutmeg and mace, which in turn, contributed greatly to the prosperity of the Netherlands in the period known as the Dutch Golden age.

This atrocity never features in the art and literature of that period, and it would probably have been largely erased from history had it not been for the work of an almost forgotten Dutchman who happened to be the head archivist of the colonial administration in Batavia, J.A. van der Chijs. In 1886  van der Chijs published a meticulously detailed account of the Banda genocide, titled The Establishment of Dutch Rule Over The Banda Islands: it was van der Chijs’s research that made it possible for me to write my own account of the Banda massacre in my book The Nutmeg’s Curse. 

Van der Chijs should by rights be accorded a prominent place within the distinguished lineage of Dutch critics of empire that goes back to Eduard Douwes Dekker or Multatuli. This tradition that has been kept alive until the present day by scholars like Jan Breman, Dirk Kolff and Marjolein van Pagee. The fact that I am here today, to accept this great honor here in the Netherlands, is itself a testament to this tradition’s continuing relevance and vitality.

The legacies of writers like Multatuli and van der Chijs serve to remind us of the extreme violence through which Western hegemony over the entire  planet was established several centuries ago. It is important to note that violence was not incidental to the geopolitical ascendancy of Western empires; it was central to it. As the American political theorist Samuel Huntington once noted: “The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion… but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact; non-Westerners never do.”

Paradoxically, it was in the aftermath of decolonization that Western geopolitical dominance reached its apogee, with the United States becoming the world’s sole hyperpower at the end of the Cold War. This rise to absolute dominance happened so suddenly, and in such a fashion, that American political elites came to be convinced that the US had achieved absolute and permanent geopolitical supremacy, and that its paramountcy would never again be challenged. This, combined with the booming successes of Silicon Valley, created a hubris that surpassed anything that had existed even in the glory days of European imperialism in the 19th century. Western politicians and pundits decided that they had a duty to impose their will wherever they wanted, for whatever reason. And what was the result? Sadly, it was a swath of destruction that stretched from Afghanistan and Pakistan to Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Somalia and Palestine.

NATO’s bombing of Libya is a particularly egregious example of the short-sightedness of Western actions in this period. Libya was host to hundreds of thousands of Asian and African migrants: after the government collapsed, and the country descended into civil war, these workers had no recourse but to flee across the Mediterranean, as stateless migrants and refugees.

Also read: Deaths, Destruction on the Rise Due to Extreme Weather Events: Grim Statistics in India Climate Report 2024

This resulted in a crisis that continues to roil politics in the West to the present day, with the issue of migration causing an upsurge in support for demagogues and right-wing movements. Driving the ascendancy of these neo-fascist movements is a myth of victimhood, in which affluent countries are seen as the aggrieved parties, resisting invasions by black and brown foreigners. Yet the fact is that the preconditions for these mass migrations were created by none other than the West itself, with the multiple invasions and regime change operations that it launched across the world while it was reveling in the delirium of the unipolar moment.

Did none of the West’s leaders, with all the collective wisdom of their armies of pundits and think tanks, see this coming? The triumphalism of their pronouncements at that time suggest that they truly believed that their actions would never have any consequences. But, as the recent US elections show, all of that is now unraveling because of a tremendous backlash from their own constituencies, which are no longer willing or able to pay the price of hegemony.

This is indeed one of the principal reasons for the extreme uncertainties of our era, because it has now become evident that the centuries-long period of Western dominance is lurching towards its end. Whatever might be our opinions on the rights and wrongs of the current conflicts in Israel, Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen and Ukraine, it is now self-evident that it is no longer possible for the West to dictate solutions through force of arms, as it once did: it has lost its erstwhile ‘superiority in applying organized violence.’ This loss has been accompanied also by an accelerating erosion of the West’s financial and industrial dominance: the fact that the recently founded BRICS  grouping of nations now has a significantly larger share of global GDP than the G7 nations is a clear indication of this. Nor is it a coincidence that this relative military and financial decline has been accompanied by political crises of such gravity that the West’s structures of governance are now in danger of swerving disastrously off course.

We are, in other words, in a moment of multiple intersecting crises and transitions – of geopolitics, financial structures, and, perhaps most importantly, of environmental and ecological regimes that are slowly but surely pushing the planet towards catastrophe. No wonder then that one of the most often repeated quotations of our time is Antonio Gramsci’s famous aphorism: “The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”

That is where we find ourselves today, living through a time of monstrous anomalies, when exterminatory violence, like that which depopulated the Banda Islands, can play out on live television; a time when it is possible to speak of the deaths of certain people, but not of others; a time when entire cities can be swept away by flash floods while the world carries on as usual; a time when environmental activists receive longer jail sentences than corporate criminals; when UN  forums for climate change negotiations turn into markets for selling oil and gas.

Even Antonio Gramsci could not have imagined the full extent of the abnormality of our era, because he lived in a simpler time when the most dangerous monsters were purely political creatures, like fascists. What is distinctive about our time is that its monsters consist not only of political extremists of all kinds, but also of weather events that could not have been conceived of in Gramsci’s lifetime: supercharged storms, megadroughts, catastrophic rain-bombs and the like. Back then these monsters, had they appeared, would have been considered ‘natural’ phenomena or acts of God. But knowing what we now know about the role of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions in intensifying climate disasters, it is no longer possible to cling to the fiction of a strict division between the natural and the political: it is clear now that wildfires, rain-bombs and the like are also deeply political creatures in that they are the by-products of historical processes that have hugely benefited a small minority of human beings at the expense of the great majority of the world’s population.

These inequalities are at the core of the monstrous dramas that are unfolding in front of us today: what we are witnessing is nothing other than an epochal struggle between those who are intent on preserving their historical advantages, and those who are not only determined to resist but now also have the means to do so.  And since those historical advantages, as well as the means to resist, are greatly dependent on the use of fossil fuels, the result is a spiraling double helix that will continue to generate more and more monstrously anomalous events, through processes that are neither exclusively political nor environmental, but both at once.

Also read: Blowing Hot Air: Countries’ Official Pledges Are Not on Track to Arrest Global Temperatures to Agreed Limits

And yet, the paradox of this interstitial era is that these anomalies are not all monstrous in nature: some of them could even be described as benedictions in that they have suddenly made it possible to contemplate, and even embrace, possibilities that were denied or rejected during the age of high modernity – for example the idea that plants might possess something akin to intelligence; that rocks might be sentient; that rivers might be regarded as persons; that certain topographical features might possess qualities and attributes that cannot be reduced to their geological composition.

Such vitalist conceptions have been widely prevalent in human cultures since the infancy of our species and they still continue to exist in many different forms across the world. It was only at the beginning of the early modern era, at about the time of the conquest of the Banda Islands, that a tiny group of elite European men, many of whom were deeply implicated in colonialism, invented a philosophy in which sentience, thought, reason, and historical agency were ascribed solely to human beings, with the result that vitalist beliefs of all kinds came to be contested, denied and violently suppressed. Over the following centuries, with the Western conquest of most of the world, this kind of human-centeredness became a core component of elite ideologies everywhere in the world, even in formerly colonized countries like India and Indonesia.

Today, as the planet hurtles towards environmental and societal breakdown, brought about by the interlinked vectors of global warming, biodiversity loss, species extinctions and the spread of new pathogens, it is becoming ever more evident that modernity was founded on a profoundly mistaken understanding of the world, and that the elevation of humans above all other species, and indeed the Earth itself, has had disastrous consequences for humanity as well as all other living Beings.

Also read: Climate Action, and Also Contradictions: NITI Aayog’s SDG India Index 2024 Report is a Mixed Bag

The discrediting of modernity’s anthropocentrism is itself a part of the ongoing collapse that we are now witnessing. Now, as it begins to dawn on us that there is much to be learnt from premodern ideas and understandings, the Earth suddenly seems to teem with sentience as we come to understand that we have always been surrounded by many kinds of Beings who also have spirits and souls and are richly alive. High  modernity taught us that the Earth was inert and existed primarily to be exploited by human beings: in this time of monstrous anomalies, we are slowly beginning to understand that in order to ensure a future for humanity we must learn to recognize that we have never been alone on this planet, that the Earth itself is watching, and judging, us.

To come to this realization has taken me a very long time and I am fortunate in having had the support, on this journey, of my children Lila and Nayan, and above all, of Deborah, my partner of 35 years, who has at this point been by my side for the better part of my life. I have also been extraordinarily fortunate in having had the support of many friends and members of my family, some of whom have taken the trouble to travel long distances to be here today: I thank them all from the bottom of my heart, particularly my sister and my niece, and my in-laws from the Baker and  Harper families. There are many others I would like to thank but I am afraid that I would run out of time because I have been informed, by none other than the director of the Erasmus Prize Foundation, that the number of family and friends attending this ceremony is more than she has ever seen in her ten years in that position. Well, that is what happens when you give a prize to someone from the world’s most populous country.

However,  it would be remiss of me if I failed to thank Shanti Van Dam, the director, and Britt Kroon, the program administrator, of the Erasmus Prize Foundation who have spared no effort to make the arrangements for this ceremony. And finally, I would like to thank the members and jury of the foundation for bestowing an undreamt-of honor on me, and for making it possible for me to be here today, in the Royal Palace in Amsterdam, to receive the prize from his Majesty, King Willem-Alexander in the presence of the Royal Family of the Netherlands.

Amitav Ghosh is a celebrated writer. He won the 54th Jnanpith award, India’s highest literary honour, in 2018.

‘We Will Pass Orders That the DGP Will Remember for Life’: SC Warns UP Police Over Misconduct

The court came down heavily on the police for routinely harassing people involved in civil disputes by converting them into criminal cases.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Thursday (November 28) came down heavily on the UP police for routinely harassing people involved in civil disputes by converting them into criminal cases.

The court warned the police that if the practice did not stop, it would pass orders that the UP Director General of Police (DGP) would remember for the rest of his life.

A bench of Justices Surya Kant and Ujjal Bhuyan were hearing an anticipatory bail plea by a person against whom a dozen cases related to various land disputes had been filed by the police.

Appearing for the UP government, senior advocate Rana Mukherjee argued that the accused had not joined the investigations and was instead seeking protection from arrest.

The court remarked that the accused was probably afraid that the police would slap another case against him if he appeared.

“He must not be appearing because he knows that you will register another false case and arrest him there. You can convey your DGP the moment he (Dubey) is touched, we will pass such a drastic order he will remember his whole life. Every time you come with a new FIR against him! How many cases can prosecution uphold? It’s very easy to allege land-grabbing. Someone who purchased by a registered sale deed, you say land grabber! Is it a civil dispute or criminal dispute?” the court said.

“UP Police are entering into a dangerous area. You register criminal cases in purely civil disputes. Tell your DGP that if this practice does not stop immediately, we will pass such drastic orders, he will remember for his whole life,” the bench added.

When Mukherjee said that if the police did not abide by the court’s instructions, he would return the case to the government, the court said that the bench’s remarks were aimed at the police’s conduct and told Mukherjee that he should use his office to drive home the court’s message.

“Let him join the investigation but don’t arrest him. And if you bonafide think that in a particular case, arrest is required, then come and tell us that these are the reasons. But if the police officers are doing, you take it from us, we will not only suspend them, they will lose something more, the court said.

The police was also instructed to send summons to the accused on his mobile phone, specifying the date, time and place where he should appear before the investigating officer.

Mizoram CM Lalduhoma Calls for President’s Rule in Manipur

The Mizoram chief minister also opposed the proposed fencing along the India-Myanmar border, arguing that it would hinder the reunification of the Zo people.

New Delhi: Mizoram chief minister Lalduhoma on Thursday, November 28, strongly criticised his Manipur counterpart N Biren Singh, calling him a “liability” to the state, its people and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). In an interview with Hindustan Times, Lalduhoma said president’s rule would be preferable to the current administration, citing the ongoing ethnic violence that has plagued Manipur for 18 months.

Lalduhoma, who leads the Zoram People’s Movement, accused Singh of failing to address the crisis in the state and suggested that a new leadership was necessary.

“I am sorry to say that he is a liability to the state of Manipur. He has been a liability to his own people and his party,” Lalduhoma told Hindustan Times. “If his service is still needed, in my opinion, it is a necessary evil. More evil and less necessary.”

“If we are going to compare president’s rule with the present government, then president’s rule is much more preferable. But if there can be a responsible government, elected body with a different leader, who can acknowledge the significant contribution made by tribal people for freedom struggle of this country, who recognises them as an integral part of India and genuine citizens of this country – then in that case, it may be better to have that kind of CM,” Lalduhoma further told Hindustan Times.

The violence in Manipur, which began in May 2023 between the Meitei and Kuki communities, has claimed around 260 lives and continues to escalate. Recent incidents, including the killing of 10 tribal people and six Meitei individuals, have further inflamed tensions.

Despite mounting pressure from within and outside the BJP, Singh has resisted calls for his removal. Last week, the National People’s Party withdrew its support from his government, even as union home minister Amit Shah held emergency meetings in Delhi.

Lalduhoma suggested banning armed groups and disarming militias as the first step toward peace. “All the arms and ammunition held by militias in Manipur should be surrendered. If these people continue keeping all these sophisticated weapons, who knows – one day they may point their guns at Delhi,” he told Hindustan Times.

He also called for sincere negotiations with tribal leaders, adding, “They may not like to have this discussion in the presence of the chief minister and Meitei leaders. Maybe they want to have a separate meeting.”

The clamour for president’s rule in Manipur has been going on for over a year now, having recently picked up momentum after MPs and journalists across Northeast started demanding it, with no alternative solution in sight.

Also read: Centre Directs Telecom Operators in Manipur to Preserve Call Records For Five Years: Report

The Mizoram chief minister also opposed the proposed fencing along the India-Myanmar border, arguing that it would hinder the reunification of the Zo people. “How can we have a border fencing when we are talking about reunification? Once we have a border fencing, our brothers and sisters will never look towards us. Forever we will be divided,” he told Hindustan Times.

He claimed to have raised the issue with Shah and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. While acknowledging concerns over smuggling across the porous border, Lalduhoma dismissed the effectiveness of fencing in stopping illegal activities. “These things could not be stopped despite the Indo-Bangladesh border fence,” he told Hindustan Times.

‘One of the Great Intellectual Giants of Our Time’: Economic Historian Amiya Bagchi Passes Away

His books remain landmark works of scholarship.

New Delhi: Amiya Bagchi, famed political economist and economic historian, has passed away. He was 88.

Bagchi taught, researched and guided research in many institutions and universities including Presidency College, Kolkata, the UK’s University of Cambridge and Cornell University in the US.

Until 2005, Bagchi was a member of the Bengal Planning Board, set up to report on the finances of the government during the Tenth
Five Year Plan period. He was the official historian of State Bank of India until 1997.

He retired as the Reserve Bank of India professor from the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences in Kolkata in 2001, and shortly afterwards founded the Institute of Development Studies Kolkata in 2002. He was its director until his retirement in 2012.

He received the Padmi Shri in 2005.

Bagchi’s wife, feminist scholar Jasodhara Bagchi, passed away in 2015. He is survived by his daughters, scholars Tista and Barnita Bagchi.

His books remain landmark works of scholarship. Economist Jayati Ghosh has described him, as “one of the great intellectual giants of our times, whose sharp, insightful political economy analyses taught us so much about economic processes…”.

Writer Amitav Ghosh described him as an “exceptional scholar [who] has left a lasting mark on economic history.”

His edited books include (with Nirmala Banerjee as co-editor) Change and Choice in Indian Industry (1981); New Technology and the Worker’s Response: Microelectronics, Labour and Society (1995); Democracy and Development (1995); Economy and Organization: Indian Institutions under the Neoliberal Regime (1999); (with Dipankar Sinha and Barnita Bagchi) Webs of History: Information, Communication and Technology from Early to Post-colonial India (2005); (with Krishna Soman as co-editor) Maladies, Preventives and Curatives (2005); and (with Gary Dymski) Capture and Exclude: Developing Economies and the Poor in Global Finance (2007).

In Post-Election Maharashtra, Ajit Pawar Is the Leader to Watch

In a game of wits, as the winners are thirsting to get the largest pie in the power-sharing model, Ajit Pawar has proven that he wasn’t ever a pushover, even when he had to face a humiliating loss a few months ago.

Amidst the political uncertainty over who the next chief minister of Maharashtra will be, the role of Ajit Pawar who is the legal claimant of the Nationalist Congress Party now can’t be understated. Ajit has already made his move by supporting the BJP’s Devendra Fadnavis to lead the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) or the Mahayuti government in the state – a wily gambit to de-centre chief minister Eknath Shinde in the coalition.

There could not have been a better time to assert his position within the NDA for Ajit, whose NCP was the worst performer in the recent Lok Sabha polls. The BJP currently sits comfortably as the leader of the alliance with 132 seats. With the half-way mark at 144, the support of the NCP with 41 seats is more than enough for the NDA to form a government.

In such circumstances, Shinde may not be able to flex his muscles for the chief ministerial chair in the way he did when he broke away from the Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena in 2022. Perhaps, that explains why Shinde went overboard in his monologue on November 27 to hand over all decision-making powers to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union home minister Amit Shah, at once forcing the top two BJP leaders into a moral quandary while positioning himself as Fadnavis’s immediate competitor.

In such a game of wits, as the winners are thirsting to get the largest pie in the power-sharing model, Ajit has proven that he wasn’t ever a pushover, even when he had to face a humiliating loss a few months ago. Not only did he recover from the crisis, but he went on to outmanoeuvre his uncle and founder of the NCP, Sharad Pawar, at every stage of the elections. Sharad Pawar, also widely known as the original “Chanakya” of Indian politics, struggled to match his nephew’s guile and craftiness, while Ajit assumed a mission-like zeal to prove himself as the true inheritor of the NCP.

The Pawar family had always divided roles. While the senior Pawar navigated the corridors of national power, the nephew was trusted to consolidate the state, especially in the NCP’s pocket borough of Western Maharashtra, or what is known as “Desh”. Ajit used his deep links in the region, democratised local leaderships in his strongholds, and concentrated on fighting a limited number of seats (53) and winning them to consolidate his position in the NDA. He was always known to have a better hold than anyone in the Pawar family on regional dynamics. The assembly election found him on home turf, and he knew it right from the start.

As Shinde’s popular Ladki Bahin Yojana was spoken about with huge excitement in the run-up to the polls, Ajit did something that may have punctured the INDIA bloc or the Maha Vikas Aghadi’s political narrative entirely. In an interview to senior journalist Sreenivasan Jain, Ajit dropped a bombshell. He alleged that the senior Pawar was also present in a 2022 meeting, which was being mediated by the industrialist Gautam Adani to get the NCP to support a BJP-led government, after Uddhav Thackeray had withdrawn from the NDA. Later, Sharad Pawar confirmed being present at the meeting with Amit Shah at Gautam Adani’s house where the BJP assured both the Pawars that cases against his party leaders would be dropped if NCP agrees to cross over.

Also read: ‘The Mammoth Majority for the BJP in Maharashtra Beats Reason’: Yogendra Yadav

Pawar was ostensibly offering a justification for his switch, but he ended up stripping the Congress-led coalition of its ideological heft. It was time when the Congress leaders like Rahul Gandhi had narrowed down their attack on the NDA around the alleged Modi-Adani nexus. Gandhi was talking about an unforeseen spurt in parasitical business monopolies during the Modi regime, with allegations of corruption and financial fraud against the Adani group at its centre point. Ajit’s revelation, in a way, pitted the INDIA bloc as a group of disparate political forces borne out of convenience against a more cohesive NDA coalition for common voters.

As Ajit consolidated the regional dynamics of western Maharashtra and deflated the INDIA bloc’s narrative, he also went on to curry some favour with a significant section of Muslims by openly objecting to the BJP’s Hindutva campaign. As the results came in, the data clearly indicated that he turned out to be the most significant reason for the NDA’s unprecedented majority in the state assembly. The CSDS-Lokniti’s post-poll survey showed that 22% of Muslim voters backed the Mahayuti – a gain of 10 percentage points from the Lok Sabha elections.

The BJP-Shiv Sena coalition is considered natural in Maharashtra. Together, they crossed the majority mark comfortably in 2014 and 2019. But it was the NCP that played the greatest role behind the NDA’s mammoth majority this time. Data also shows that the BJP has been slowly gaining significant ground in the Pawar family’s bastion of western Maharashtra. Ajit, with his striking performance in the 2024 assembly polls, has also managed to gain some control over the region, even when he is a part of the NDA.

The roles in the Pawar family have reversed at the moment. While Ajit has led his NCP with sharp tactical thinking, he has also compelled his quick-witted 84-year-old uncle to hit the ground once again to rebuild support for his faction of the NCP and his daughter Supriya Sule. After the electoral outcome, however, Ajit will have the equally astute Shinde as his primary regional challenger, as both may have to compete with each other at every step in a government steered by the dominant BJP.

This piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire & Galileo Ideas – and has been updated and republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.

Inside Bangladesh’s Media Blackout and How Its Effects Linger

In July this year, amidst an internet blackout, across print newsrooms in Bangladesh, stories were written on different computers before being transferred to a single device, on which the layout was made up.

Four months after the fall of Sheikh Hasina’s government in Bangladesh, the country’s media is navigating a fragile, new-found freedom. This week, the offices of two daily newspapers, Prothom Alo and The Daily Star, in several cities, came under attack from protestors, who branded them as supporters of India and the former prime minister. 

Yet the two newspapers and other media outlets had played a pivotal role in the uprising that led to Hasina’s fall. Despite a government crackdown and internet blackout in July, they provided accurate information to readers in Bangladesh and abroad. 

They were able to do so because, over the last 15 years, most had worked hard to retain a partial freedom, often the product of subtle negotiations with dispensations. But today, the free press faces threats not from the government, but from sections of the public. 

Bangladeshis are voracious consumers of media, and the country, at present, has more than 50 daily newspapers. The largest, Prothom Alo, has around 250,000 daily readers in print and more than six million online. Consequently, media outlets remained influential under the previous government, despite the challenges.

But, under Hasina, journalists were often co-opted, harassed, or intimidated by a government keen to control the narrative. Reporters from Prothom Alo and The Daily Star were detained by security forces, while their editors were tied down by cases filed in distant districts. Muktadir Rashid Romeo, who worked until this year for the outspoken English-language daily, New Age, says he was called to intelligence headquarters in 2019 and told, “We know your family…why do you take so many risks?” 

Some were physically attacked: another New Age reporter, Ahmmad Fayad, was hospitalised in 2011 after an attack by members of the ruling party’s youth wing, the Chhatra League.

The administration employed softer methods too. Powerful officials would phone editors asking to quash stories. Gentle warnings came through journalists known for their close ties to the government, delivered “politely” or “in an avuncular mode”, recalls senior journalist Faisal Mahmud, who found it prudent to leave the country temporarily during the 2018 election, after a “chilling” string of disappearances. There were also rewards on offer for those who toed the line, such as foreign trips or access to the government.

Newspapers also self-censored; stories deemed risky were often suppressed or minimised by editors, who had to walk a fine line, holding the government to account without attracting its ire. Reaz Ahmad, executive editor of The Dhaka Tribune, recalls, “We tried not to suppress anything but it’s true that we gave less emphasis to certain stories”.  

And since Bangladesh mostly follows a traditional model of journalism, with editors and publishers enabled by big business interests, media owners can play an important role in shaping coverage. As Ahmad says, “Anyone who got a licence to open a newspaper or television channel in Bangladesh did it through political connections.”

Also read: In Photos: Dhaka in a ‘New’ Bangladesh

By July 2024, Bangladeshi journalists had fallen into a mood of resignation, believing that the situation would never improve. “Ultimately, I had to self-censor, because I knew what I could and couldn’t do,” says Romeo. Those working inside the country resigned themselves to an involuntary decision to continue despite adverse conditions.

That perseverance reaped rewards during the July protests. Some newspapers were still staffed by independent-spirited journalists, who did not necessarily support the government. Consequently, they were able to produce full, accurate reporting during a momentous summer that shaped the history of Bangladesh.

As quota reform protests ballooned into widespread anger against the Hasina government, the latter cracked down, often with cruelty. Bangladeshi media was instrumental in providing the outside world with a picture of this. 

Through it all, the measure of statutory protection it retained, despite the constraints, came to use. So, when a curfew was imposed on July 18, journalists were issued with curfew passes, enabling them to report from trouble spots. 

Although press markings sometimes afforded protection, journalists were also directly targeted, in at least two instances by the police, and more often by the Chhatra League. 

Five  journalists were killed during the July protests, and more than 250 injured, including Romeo, who was covering clashes between students and the Chhatra League in Dhaka’s Mirpur area on July 18. “Police were allowing the Chhatra League to open fire on students,” he says. He concealed his press pass inside his flak jacket, since “there was a risk if I wore clear markings, the ruling party would attack me.” After being shot with rubber pellets in both arms, he travelled to a local hospital amidst what he calls a “war-like situation.” 

Dozens of protestors were killed that day, out of more than 700 during the movement. “Our reporters were traumatised,” says Partha Shankar Sinha, an assistant editor of Prothom Alo.

News reporting got a lot more difficult on the night of July 18 when the government took the unprecedented step of turning off the internet completely. Although wireless internet and social media had been restricted since July 14, the country of 180 million people now lost all internet connectivity. There was limited mobile-phone signal, however, which allowed reporters to phone in stories. But they still faced challenges, notably in collecting accurate daily deaths tolls; access to hospitals was blocked to journalists as well as injured protestors.

Inside print newsrooms, stories were written on different computers before being transferred to a single device, on which the layout was made up. This was transferred to printing presses by pen-drive, wired connection, or Bluetooth. The papers were then printed and distributed around the country at night by “Hawkers’ Unions”, delivery organisations working for several newspapers at once. 

International and online outlets were particularly affected by the internet black-out. But they too were able to circumvent the restrictions. Shafiqul Alam, the AFP bureau chief in Dhaka, had a secret, emergency internet line to four devices in his office. “We had a deal with one of the major internet service providers,” he explains to The Wire. “If there was any shut down, they would give us a backup line. But until July we never tested it.” Alam, now the government’s Press Secretary, still won’t name his service provider, but describes this period as his “finest hour.” As other journalists got to know of AFP’s wired connection, “some 40 people were working in our small office. I had to ration them.” 

Alam knew he was taking a risk; he says he received threats from government ministers via journalist colleagues. But AFP played a crucial role in alerting the world to violence which the Bangladeshi government tried hard to hide.

During the blackout, Mahmud would reach the AFP office by rickshaw to send reports for Al Jazeera. Celebrated photojournalist Shahidul Alam sent widely shared reports, while AFP facilitated international coverage of a statement made in Dhaka by Mohammad Yunus, then an opponent of the government, and now its “Chief Advisor”. 

Since the government fell on August 5, the media has been subject to intimidation amidst volatility on the streets; this week’s attacks on Prothom Alo and Daily Star are just the latest example. 

More than a hundred journalists seen as supportive of the old regime have been named in cases filed by members of the public, a legalistic form of mob justice. As with the violence, the interim government has struggled to stop this. 

More worryingly, the police have arrested at least six journalists, possibly for similar reasons. The government itself has revoked the accreditation of 29 journalists, despite its commitment to civil liberties.

Meanwhile, self-censorship and political manoeuvring reportedly continue inside the country’s media houses. Politicisation continues as outlets close to the former ruling party reposition themselves with the former opposition; moreover, some owners are in jail, leaving their organisations in uncertain control. 

And with a public empowered as well as fractured in the wake of the July uprising, independent journalism in Bangladesh remains at risk. 

Cyrus Naji is a writer and researcher, currently working in Bangladesh.

Amid Rise in Indians Seeking Asylum in US, Govt Says They ‘Denigrate Nation to Obtain Personal Gains’

Data indicates that in 2023, 41,030 Indians had applied for asylum in the US.

New Delhi: The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) has told the parliament that asylum seekers “denigrate” the nation and society to “obtain personal gain”.

The MEA’s reply in parliament comes after data indicated that more than 41,000 Indians have applied for asylum in the United States, reported The Tribune.

Data from the US Department of Homeland Security Report ‘2023 Asylees Annual Flow Report’, that was released in October stated that 41,030 Indians had applied for asylum last year.

“The Government of India believes asylum seekers, while applying for asylum to a foreign government, denigrate the nation and society to obtain personal gains despite the fact that India, being a democratic country, provides avenues for everyone to redress their grievances lawfully”, the MEA said while replying to a question asked by MP Kapil Sibal in the Rajya Sabha.

Asylum seekers in the US must meet the definition of a refugee, among other requirements.

“A ‘refugee’ is a person who is unable or unwilling to return to their country of nationality because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion”, states the Homeland Security Report, citing US law.

The US Homeland report stated that in the last three years, the number of applications for asylum from Indians increased by nearly 855 per cent.