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When the hospital closes, the heart stops: What's behind India's 'excess' COVID deaths?

By Rajiv Shah   A  landmark study , “The mortality burden from COVID in low-income settings: evidence from verbal autopsies in India”, using verbal autopsies of 20,000 deaths reveals that only one-third of India’s pandemic excess mortality was directly caused by SARS-CoV-2 . The rest — a hidden toll running into millions — was the collateral damage of a healthcare system brought to its knees. 
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India’s minimum wage policy backfires, hurting vulnerable workers: Study

By Jag Jivan   A sweeping policy report released by the Foundation for Economic Development (FED) argues that India’s minimum wage regime has become counterproductive, pricing millions of workers out of formal employment and costing the economy an estimated $60 billion in unrealised low-skill exports annually.

Politics of pseudoscience: Harvard-educated Scindia wants to cool masses with onions!

By Prof. Hemantkumar Shah*  At 55, Jyotiraditya Scindia served as a Member of Parliament from 2001 to 2020 with the Congress before switching to the BJP in 2020. A scion of the Gwalior royal family , educated at Harvard University and Stanford University with degrees in BA and MBA, he embodies what is often described as elite polish and global exposure.

Manufacturing hate: From ‘love jihad’ to ‘corporate jihad’

By Ram Puniyani*  A new phrase—“corporate jihad”—has been manufactured to malign educated Muslim youth. The term surfaced in Nashik, where allegations against Muslim employees of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) were amplified into a narrative of conversion conspiracies.  

Families in limbo as Sopore youth held under PSA: Detentions 'disproportionate'

By A Representative   At least six young men from Sopore have been detained under the Public Safety Act (PSA) following student protests earlier this month over alleged harassment of a girl at a government higher secondary school.   The protests began on April 13 after serious allegations were raised against a teacher.

AAP’s split and the deepening crisis of anti-defection law

By Vikas Meshram*  On April 24, seven out of ten Rajya Sabha members of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) announced their merger into the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Rajya Sabha Chairman C. P. Radhakrishnan accepted this claim, pushing the BJP’s standalone strength in the Upper House to 113. For the first time, the National Democratic Alliance crossed the majority mark in the Rajya Sabha. This event is not merely the story of an internal split within one party; it simultaneously sheds light on the true nature of AAP, the opportunism of defecting leaders, the BJP’s political strategies, and the ongoing weakening of the anti-defection law.

Pressure tactics alleged in move to relocate Chenchus from Nallamala forests

By A Representative   The Chenchu Solidarity Forum (CSF), an independent collective advocating for the rights of the Chenchu Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG), has raised serious concerns over what it describes as a “misleading” public narrative around the relocation of Adivasi communities from the Amrabad Tiger Reserve. In a press release, the forum alleged that a rally held on April 27 in Achampet projecting that there is no forcible relocation of Adivasis was largely dominated by non-Adivasis and did not reflect the genuine sentiments of the Chenchu community.