By quashing FIRs against foreign Tablighi Jamaat members, Bombay HC shows govt that Muslims can’t be singled out for prosecution
Ajay Kumar • 5 years agoOne hopes that the powers that be will take note of the judgement, which quashed the FIRs against 29 foreign Tablighi Jamaat attendees, and mend the errors in their ways. It’s about time someone read the Riot Act to the executive branch
Mark Tully on why well run government institutions are crucial for the survival of India's democracy
Aarushi Agrawal • 6 years agoSir Mark Tully talks about the problem of governance, with unequal power distribution and interference being the main issues to address.
Narendra Modi, new ministers to be sworn-in on 30 May: PM-led Council of Ministers advises President, accountable to Lok Sabha
Fp Research • 6 years agoIndia will get a new Council of Ministers led by Modi on 30 May, when President Ram Nath Kovind administers them the oath of office and secrecy at Rashtrapati Bhavan
Deadly corporate combination: sincerity and mediocrity
Bikram Vohra • 6 years agoMediocrity is a currency. We might sneer at it, but it could well be the norm and we do not want to acknowledge that, which is why we put down the lone wolf: genius makes us nervous
RBI vs Centre and CBI vs CBI: Used to weak govts for three decades, bureaucracy has to re-learn working with a strong executive
Ajay Singh • 6 years agoThe Modi government firmly asserted its right to choose Rajan's successor and brought in Urjit Patel in a seamless transition. But the legacy of the past seemed to have infected Patel who seems to be more eager to play the role of the mentor to the finance ministry than an enabler.
The Brahminisation of justice or why our English-only Supreme Court needs a taste of linguistic democracy
Ajay Singh • 6 years agoThe privilege that English enjoys in the Supreme Court needs to be diluted in order to make its portals accessible to those who speak languages different from the clipped and accented English of foreign-educated but exorbitantly expensive lawyers
SC allows deportation of Rohingya: Prashant Bhushan's arguments flawed as international laws hold no water in Indian courts
Raghav Pandey • 6 years agoOn grounds of non-interference with the executive policy, the dualistic form of the State as well as the fact that India is non-signatory of the Refugee Convention, the Supreme Court is right in its judgment in allowing the deportation of the Rohingya refugees
Praising the executive not an immediate indicator of judiciary's partiality; judges have right to free speech too
Raghav Pandey And Neelabh Bist • 7 years agoThe masses raise questions of credibility whenever a member of the judiciary make comments about a party to a case, especially when it is the executive.
Will Indian democracy wither? Parliament witnessing supremacy of Executive in democratic Constitution's clothing
Malavika Prasad • 7 years agoOne might ask why the lack of Committees is "murdering Parliament", especially when these laws were duly passed by Parliament. After all, basic lessons in Civics classes taught us that we are a democracy because we elect representatives to Parliament who pass laws
Judicial appointments continue to vex Indian State: Constant disagreements, short tenures plague system
Fp Staff • 7 years agoThe problem of appointment of judges continues to vex the Indian State and its pillars of democracy.