By A Representative In an urgent and unprecedented joint statement, more than 140 prominent Indians—including former union ministers, retired civil servants, artists, scientists, and activists—have warned that the country stands on the “verge of a fratricide” unless citizens break their silence over what they call a complete breakdown of the rule of law in West Bengal.
By Devidas Tuljapurkar The documentary film " The Great Indian Illusion " by the young and promising filmmaker Varun Sukhraj arrives at a critical historical moment. The Indian banking sector is increasingly being projected as a spectacular success story through carefully curated balance-sheet figures, rising profits, and declining non-performing assets (NPAs). Yet beneath this glossy narrative lies a far more disturbing reality of deepening inequalities, growing corporate concentration, privatisation pressures, and the systematic marginalisation of ordinary bank employees, rural customers, and small borrowers. The film deserves appreciation because it courageously attempts to dismantle this manufactured narrative and bring before the public the structural contradictions of India's neoliberal banking model .