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When ports become pawns: Great-power competition in the Indian Ocean

By Ajay Chaudhary*  For centuries, the Indian Ocean has been more than a vast expanse of water—it has been the artery of global commerce. Today, it carries more than one-third of the world's bulk cargo and nearly two-thirds of global seaborne oil shipments, making South Asia's ports indispensable to international trade. For the region's littoral states, these maritime gateways have traditionally been viewed as engines of economic growth, regional connectivity, and national development.
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Rampur varsity demolition order puts students at the centre of a legal battle

By Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan*  The recent demolition order affecting a significant portion of the buildings at Mohammad Ali Jauhar University (MAJU), Rampur, has once again brought into focus a question that extends far beyond the boundaries of one institution. It raises a larger constitutional and moral dilemma: how should a democratic society enforce the rule of law without jeopardizing the educational future of thousands of students?

Operation Kagaar's ledger: 607 dead, no accountability

By Deepika Tandon, Shahana Bhattacharya *  The People's Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) new  report "Reddening The Green: Costs, Contexts, And Consequences Of The War In Bastar (2024-2026)" presents an account of 27 months of Operation Kagaar — security operations conducted jointly by the central and state governments between January 2024 and March 2026 with the professed object of the complete elimination of "Naxalism" or "Left-Wing Extremism." While Kagaar was conducted across several states of central-eastern India, including Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra, this report focuses on seven districts of the Bastar division. 

Immediately implement 33% quota without census-delimitation link: Women’s groups

By A Representative   Feminist activists, political leaders and representatives of marginalised communities on Wednesday demanded that the implementation of the Women's Reservation Act be delinked from the Census and delimitation process, asserting that 33 per cent reservation for women can be introduced at the current strength of Parliament.

How one Rajasthan town is transforming sanitation through community action

By Bharat Dogra  Sanitation has long been a weak link in the development of peri-urban areas, and the small town of Khamnor in South Rajasthan reflected this reality until about five years ago. Garbage lay scattered across the town, often clogging water sources and creating an unhealthy environment.

The Comet's final flight: Ben Stokes and the end of an era

By Harsh Thakor*  Ben Stokes, the most defining English cricketer of his era – a man who could turn the complexion of a game from the direst straits and transform despair into delirium with a single swing of his bat – announced his retirement from international cricket on June 28, 2026, during the ongoing third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge . The decision, shared with the England squad ahead of play that day, brought the curtain down on a glittering 15-year international career . His announcement marks an irreparable loss to the game of cricket, a moment that leaves the sport poorer for his absence.

The hollow empire: Shrikant Verma’s poetic anatomy of power

By Ravi Ranjan*   Shrikant Verma’s "Kosala Lacks Ideas" is a deceptively brief poem that unfolds into a dense meditation on power, language, history and the moral foundations of political life. Although framed as a courtly celebration of a king’s victory, the poem steadily dismantles the very idea of victory, exposing how political authority manufactures legitimacy through language, spectacle and selective memory.