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Madhav Gadgil, Champion of Western Ghats Conservation and Ecological Thought, Dies at 83

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Madhav Gadgil, Champion of Western Ghats Conservation and Ecological Thought, Dies at 83 2

Eminent ecologist Madhav Gadgil, widely regarded as one of India’s foremost champions of environmental conservation and a key voice in protecting the Western Ghats, passed away in Pune late Wednesday night after a brief illness, family sources said. He was 83.

Gadgil breathed his last at a private hospital in Pune, marking the end of a distinguished career that shaped India’s ecological research, conservation policy and public environmental consciousness for over five decades.

He was the founder of the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science and chaired the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel, popularly known as the Gadgil Commission. The panel’s 2011 report, which recommended declaring large parts of the Western Ghats as ecologically sensitive zones, sparked intense national debate but is widely considered a landmark in India’s environmental history.

In recognition of his lifelong work, Gadgil was honoured in 2024 with the United Nations Champions of the Earth award, the UN’s highest environmental honour, for his seminal contributions to safeguarding the Western Ghats, one of the world’s richest biodiversity hotspots.

Born in Pune on May 24, 1942, Gadgil hailed from an eminent academic family. His father, Dhananjay Ramchandra Gadgil, was a noted economist and former director of the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics. Madhav Gadgil completed his graduation in biology from Fergusson College in 1963, earned a master’s degree in zoology from the University of Mumbai in 1965, and went on to obtain a PhD from Harvard University in 1969, specialising in mathematical ecology and animal behaviour.

After returning to India in 1971, Gadgil joined IISc in 1973, where he played a pivotal role in institutionalising ecological research. During his tenure, he helped establish the Centre for Ecological Sciences and the Centre for Theoretical Studies, laying the foundation for contemporary ecological and interdisciplinary research in the country.

Following his retirement from IISc in 2004, Gadgil continued his academic and research work at the Agharkar Research Institute in Pune and the University of Goa. He also served on several high-level advisory bodies, including the Scientific Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, the National Advisory Council and the National Tiger Conservation Authority.

A prolific scholar, Gadgil authored or co-authored more than 250 scientific papers and several influential books, including This Fissured Land and Ecology and Equity. Beyond academia, he was a regular columnist in English and Marathi, committed to making ecological issues accessible to the wider public.

His contributions were recognised with numerous national and international honours, including the Padma Shri (1981), Padma Bhushan (2006), Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize, Volvo Environment Prize and the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement.

Gadgil’s passing is being mourned across academic, environmental and policy circles as the loss of a scientist who combined rigorous scholarship with an unwavering commitment to ecological justice. His last rites will be performed later on Thursday.

‘Not Acceptable’: Fadnavis Orders BJP to Exit Local Tie-Ups with Congress, AIMIM

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'Not Acceptable': Fadnavis Orders BJP to Exit Local Tie-Ups with Congress, AIMIM 4

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Wednesday directed the BJP to immediately sever its local alliances with the Congress and the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) in two municipal councils, asserting that such tie-ups were “not acceptable” to the party.

Reacting to alliances formed in Ambernath and Akot ahead of the January 15 municipal council elections, Fadnavis said the BJP would not tolerate partnerships with the Congress or AIMIM. “Alliance with Congress and AIMIM is not acceptable. It will have to be broken. Directives have been issued, and the matter will be looked into. Disciplinary action will be taken if anyone has violated party orders,” he said.

Within hours of the statement, the Indian National Congress announced the suspension of Ambernath Congress chief Pradip Patil and dissolved the local Congress committee.

In Ambernath, around 60 km from Mumbai, the BJP had formed the Ambernath Vikas Aghadi to keep the Shiv Sena out of power. The front included 14 BJP members, 12 from the Congress, four from the Ajit Pawar-led Nationalist Congress Party, and one Independent. A letter submitted to the Thane district collector named Abhijeet Gulabrao Karanjule-Patil as group leader.

While the BJP managed to secure the municipal council chairman’s post, the Shiv Sena emerged as the single largest party with 27 seats. Both Eknath Shinde and Maharashtra BJP chief Ravindra Chavan hail from Thane district, and the alliance was seen as part of a local power tussle to retain control over leadership positions.

A similar controversy surfaced in Akot municipal council in Akola district, where the BJP registered the Akot Vikas Manch by aligning with the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen, which emerged as the second-largest party with five seats. The front also includes both factions of the Shiv Sena, both factions of the NCP, and Bachchu Kadu’s Prahar Janshakti Party. BJP corporator Ravi Thakur was named group leader, making it mandatory for alliance members to follow the whip.

The alliance currently commands 25 of the 33 seats in the council and is set to vote together in the January 13 elections for deputy president and co-opted members. Congress and Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi corporators will sit in the Opposition.

Responding to the developments, Maharashtra Congress chief Harshavardhan Sapkal said there was no question of an alliance between the BJP and the Congress, as both parties had fought each other politically. He added that the party had sought a report on the matter and would take action if the allegations were substantiated.

Congress Names Observers for 2026 Assembly Polls in Assam, Bengal, South India

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Congress Names Observers for 2026 Assembly Polls in Assam, Bengal, South India 6

The Indian National Congress on Wednesday appointed a fresh set of observers for Assam, West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry as it accelerates preparations for the Assembly elections scheduled in these states and the Union Territory in 2026.

Assam and West Bengal are expected to go to the polls in March–April 2026, while Kerala is likely to vote in April. Tamil Nadu and Puducherry are expected to hold Assembly elections in April–May next year.

According to the list released by the party, former Chhattisgarh chief minister Bhupesh Baghel and Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister D K Shivakumar have been appointed as observers for Assam, along with Bandhu Tirkey. In a move signalling a stronger organisational focus, Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra has been named head of the screening committee for the state.

For Kerala, the party has appointed Sachin Pilot, K J George, Imran Pratapgarhi and Kanhaiya Kumar as observers, indicating an emphasis on reviving the party’s grassroots presence ahead of the crucial contest.

In Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, senior leaders Mukul Wasnik, Uttam Kumar Reddy and Qazi Mohammad Nizamuddin will oversee organisational and electoral preparations.

For West Bengal, the Congress has named Sudip Roy Barman, Shakeel Ahmad Khan and Prakash Joshi as observers, as the party looks to recalibrate its strategy in a state where it has struggled to regain political ground.

The appointments underline the Congress leadership’s intent to intensify coordination, candidate selection and campaign planning well ahead of the 2026 elections, with observers expected to play a key role in strengthening state units and alliance management.

Karnataka Row After BJP Woman Alleges Police Disrobing During Arrest; Cops Deny, Order Probe

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Karnataka Row After BJP Woman Alleges Police Disrobing During Arrest; Cops Deny, Order Probe 8

A political and administrative controversy erupted in Karnataka after a BJP woman functionary alleged that police personnel disrobed her during her arrest in Hubballi, a charge strongly denied by the police, who claimed she removed her clothes herself and assaulted officers, causing injuries.

The incident came to light after a video showing the woman topless inside a police vehicle went viral on social media, triggering sharp reactions and allegations against the police. The woman claimed she was forcibly disrobed by police personnel during her arrest in connection with an alleged attack on government officials.

Rejecting the allegations, Hubballi–Dharwad Police Commissioner N Shashikumar said on Wednesday that the claims were “absolutely false” and motivated. He asserted that the woman disrobed herself after being placed inside the police vehicle and also attacked police officers, including biting four of them.

According to police, the incident stemmed from an operation to clear an alleged encroachment on government land in the Chalukya Nagar area of Keshwapur in Hubballi. When revenue officials arrived with police personnel to conduct a land survey, they were allegedly attacked by occupants, leading to the registration of three separate cases. The woman was named as a key accused in one of them.

Commissioner Shashikumar said that anticipating possible resistance, the investigating officer had taken adequate precautions and deployed eight to ten women police personnel to carry out the arrest. “Despite this, once she was inside the police vehicle, she unclothed herself. Women police staff sought help from local residents and arranged alternative clothing for her, repeatedly requesting her to change,” he said.

He added that four women police officers were injured during the scuffle, with two sustaining serious bite injuries to the abdomen. Two others also suffered injuries, while several male personnel were hurt but chose not to file complaints. The injured women officers have lodged formal complaints.

The police commissioner said the woman has around nine criminal cases pending against her and has been sent to judicial custody. However, to ensure transparency, he has directed the Deputy Commissioner of Police to conduct a detailed inquiry into the sequence of events between January 1 and 5.

The incident has drawn political reactions across the state, with opposition parties demanding accountability, while police maintain that the viral video presents a misleading narrative detached from the actual sequence of events.

Nearly 6.5 Crore Voters Dropped from Draft Rolls in 12 States, UTs During SIR Phase 2

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Nearly 6.5 Crore Voters Dropped from Draft Rolls in 12 States, UTs During SIR Phase 2 10

Nearly 6.5 crore elector names have been removed from the draft electoral rolls of nine states and three Union territories published over the past few days as part of Phase 2 of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) being carried out by the Election Commission of India.

Before Phase 2 of the SIR began on October 27, the 12 states and Union territories together had 50.90 crore registered voters. After the publication of the draft rolls, the electorate count dropped sharply to 44.40 crore.

Election Commission officials said the deleted names have been placed under the ‘ASD’ category—absent, shifted, and dead or duplicate. Officials earlier noted that the collection of enumeration forms during the revision exercise was significantly lower in urban areas compared to rural regions across the states and UTs covered.

In Uttar Pradesh alone, the draft electoral roll published on Tuesday excluded 2.89 crore voters, retaining 12.55 crore electors. Officials said the excluded names accounted for 18.70 per cent of the earlier total of 15.44 crore voters and were removed due to reasons such as death, permanent migration or multiple registrations.

Phase 2 of the SIR formally began on November 4 in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep, Chhattisgarh, Goa, Gujarat, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Puducherry, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. A separate special revision of electoral rolls is currently underway in Assam.

The Election Commission said the most recent SIR in each state will act as the cut-off reference, similar to how the 2003 voter list of Bihar was used during an earlier intensive revision. Most states last undertook a Special Intensive Revision between 2002 and 2004.

Officials said the primary objective of the ongoing SIR is to clean up electoral rolls by verifying voters’ place of birth and identifying foreign illegal migrants. The exercise has gained added significance amid a wider crackdown in several states on illegal migrants, including those from Bangladesh and Myanmar.

SC Shields Singer Neha Singh Rathore from Arrest Over Pahalgam Post, Orders Cooperation with Probe

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SC Shields Singer Neha Singh Rathore from Arrest Over Pahalgam Post, Orders Cooperation with Probe 12

The Supreme Court of India on Wednesday granted interim protection from arrest to folk singer Neha Singh Rathore in connection with a case filed against her over a social media post related to the Pahalgam terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir.

The comments in question allegedly targeted Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah and the Bharatiya Janata Party over the killing of 26 tourists in the attack.

A bench comprising Justices J. K. Maheshwari and Atul S. Chandurkar issued notice to the Uttar Pradesh government and the complainant in the case, directing that no coercive action be taken against Rathore. The court, however, asked her to appear before the investigating officer and cooperate with the ongoing probe.

The relief comes after the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court rejected Rathore’s anticipatory bail plea on December 5 last year. The High Court had noted that she had failed to cooperate with the investigation despite directions issued earlier while dismissing her plea seeking quashing of the FIR.

An FIR against Rathore was registered at Hazratganj police station in Lucknow on April 27 following a complaint by Abhay Pratap Singh. The complaint alleged that Rathore had repeatedly attempted to incite one community against another on religious grounds and that her remarks threatened the unity of the country.

Rathore has challenged the FIR, contending that she has been falsely implicated under various provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, including charges related to promoting communal hatred, disturbing public peace, and endangering the sovereignty, unity and integrity of India. She has also been booked under provisions of the Information Technology Act.

The Supreme Court’s interim order will remain in force while the matter is examined further.

Clash Erupts During Anti-Encroachment Drive Near Delhi Mosque, Five Cops Injured; Juvenile Among Five Held

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Clash Erupts During Anti-Encroachment Drive Near Delhi Mosque, Five Cops Injured; Juvenile Among Five Held 14

Violence broke out during an anti-encroachment drive near the Faiz-e-Elahi mosque in the Ramlila Maidan area of Delhi early Wednesday, after miscreants allegedly pelted stones and glass bottles at police personnel, injuring five officers.

Police used mild force and teargas shells to disperse the crowd and took five people, including a juvenile, into custody following the clash that occurred on the intervening night of Tuesday and Wednesday. Officials said the situation is now fully under control.

According to police sources, the unrest was sparked by social media posts falsely claiming that the mosque was being demolished as part of the drive. Soon after the rumours spread, a crowd gathered near the site, and a section of people began pelting stones at police and Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) workers.

The demolition drive was being carried out by the Municipal Corporation of Delhi on land adjoining the mosque and a nearby graveyard at Turkman Gate, following directions from the Delhi High Court. MCD Deputy Commissioner Vivek Kumar clarified that no damage was caused to the mosque and that only illegal commercial structures were removed.

Police said around 100 to 150 people gathered at the site during the operation. While most dispersed after persuasion, a few created a ruckus and resorted to violence, leaving five policemen with minor injuries. They were provided medical treatment.

The Delhi Police said it is probing whether the violence was spontaneous or a pre-planned attempt to disrupt the court-ordered drive. CCTV footage and videos circulating on social media are being analysed to identify others involved.

Additional Commissioner of Police (Central) Nidhin Valsan said the demolition was scheduled for the night of January 6–7 and that police deployment had been planned in advance after receiving intimation from the MCD. He added that local residents were informed beforehand that the action was legal and limited in scope.

A police source said one of the videos that fuelled tension was allegedly recorded by a person named Khalid Malik, who urged people to step out in large numbers, falsely claiming bulldozers were being used to demolish a mosque.

Those arrested have been identified as Mohd Arib (25), Mohd Kaif (23), Mohd Kashif (25), Mohd Hamid (30), and a juvenile. An FIR has been registered under multiple sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, including rioting, assault on public servants, and disobedience of lawful orders, along with provisions of the Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act, 1984.

MCD officials said around 36,000 square feet of encroached land was cleared during the overnight drive, including a diagnostic centre, a banquet hall and boundary walls. Joint Commissioner of Police (Central Range) Madhur Verma said the area was divided into nine zones with heavy police deployment at sensitive points, and that prior coordination meetings were held with Aman Committee members and local stakeholders.

Delhi Home Minister Ashish Sood termed the incident “unfortunate” and warned that violence would not be tolerated. He said the Faiz-e-Elahi mosque was completely safe and urged people not to fall prey to rumours or provocation, reiterating that the government’s action was strictly within the framework of law.

Reviewing Shadow Armies: Between Allegation and Analysis

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Reviewing Shadow Armies: Between Allegation and Analysis 16

I opened Shadow Armies: Fringe Organizations and Foot Soldiers of Hindutva expecting rigor—cold facts, verifiable linkages, evidence that survives cross-examination. What I found instead was prosecution without a courtroom. The book doesn’t investigate; it indicates. It doesn’t interrogate assumptions; it sermonises. From page one, it’s clear the author isn’t searching for truth but assembling a case—brick by selective brick—against Hindutva and, by convenient extension, against the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the Bharatiya Janata Party.

The intellectual backbone of this narrative rests on a reckless shortcut: ideological proximity equals operational control. That isn’t courage—it’s laziness dressed up as bravery. Every fringe group, every local outfit, every individual crime is dragged under one oversized umbrella and christened “foot soldiers,” as if millions of RSS volunteers across generations operate from a single, hidden command room. No documents. No command chains. No financial trails. No institutional directives. Just insinuation, repeated until it starts masquerading as proof. Call it a “shadow,” and suddenly the absence of evidence becomes evidence. Clever trick. Cheap method.

What the book studiously avoids is the most inconvenient question of all: why are the RSS and Hindutva permanent targets? Not because they’re invisible—they’re among the most visible social formations in India. Not because they’re uniquely violent—India’s bloodiest chapters were written by separatists, Maoists, jihadi networks, and caste militias. They are targeted because they endure. Because they’re rooted. Because they mobilise without foreign funding, without intellectual clearance certificates, and without apologies. In an elite ecosystem trained to distrust Hindu assertion while normalising every other identity politics, a disciplined Hindu organisation becomes an existential irritant.

Reading Shadow Armies feels less like history and more like a refurbishment of an old prejudice for a new market. It mistakes mass participation for menace, structure for conspiracy, and cultural confidence for extremism. The anxiety it reveals belongs not to Hindutva but to an ideological class unsettled by its resilience. When hostility comes before inquiry, history is not written—it’s replaced by propaganda with footnotes.

The book’s favourite trope—that the BJP’s rise from two Lok Sabha seats in 1984 to a decisive majority in 2014 “caused” a mushrooming of violent Hindu organisations—is not analysis; it’s ideological storytelling. The conclusion is decided first; causality is reverse-engineered later. Electoral success is treated as forensic evidence. Popular mandate is reframed as moral deviance. Democracy itself is hauled into the dock for choosing the “wrong” side.

The claim that the BJP’s ascent was “accompanied” by groups whose sole purpose is to polarise and kill “in the name of Hindutva” borders on bad faith. Hindu social organisations didn’t pop into existence in the 1990s. Many pre-date the BJP’s relevance—arising as cultural, religious, or reactionary responses to decades of selective secularism, minority appeasement, academic capture, and routine delegitimisation of Hindu identity. Political rise doesn’t manufacture social churn; it reflects it.

The most dishonest move here is the deliberate blurring of ideology and command. The BJP does not run these organisations. The RSS does not issue operational orders to them. Hindutva is not a central headquarters dispatching kill lists. If ideological influence equals culpability, then by that logic every Left-inspired riot must be pinned on Marxist theorists, every Islamist terror act on religious institutions, and every separatist violence on sympathetic intellectuals. That standard collapses the moment the subject becomes Hindu society.

Entities as dissimilar as spiritual groups, youth outfits, and local pressure formations are lumped together to fabricate a single sinister machine. This isn’t investigation; it’s aggregation. Distinctions are erased because nuance doesn’t serve fear.

Take Sanatan Sanstha. Allegations against individuals are endlessly paraded as organisational guilt, as if due process were optional. Even the still-sub judice murder of Gauri Lankesh is exploited to indict an entire ideological spectrum. Verdicts are ignored, closure denied—only perpetual accusation remains. Courts are replaced by outrage.

Then comes Yogi Adityanath and the Hindu Yuva Vahini, wheeled out as proof of state-sponsored extremism. What’s quietly buried is chronology. HVY predates Adityanath’s constitutional role and emerged in regions long abandoned by governance. Criticise methods if you must—but turning it into a nationwide “shadow army” requires either selective amnesia or deliberate exaggeration.

The real discomfort here isn’t violence; it’s legitimacy. The BJP shattered a monopoly that believed narrative control and moral authority were hereditary rights. When voters across caste and class chose the BJP—again and again—the response wasn’t introspection. It was pathology: something must be wrong with the voters; something dark must be manipulating them.

Hence the myth of “shadow armies”—a convenient ghost story that spares the establishment from admitting a simpler, harsher truth: Hindutva gained ground because it resonated—socially, culturally, politically. Indians voted for something: identity, governance, confidence. They weren’t herded by imaginary foot soldiers.

This book isn’t about understanding India. It’s about controlling how India is allowed to be understood—criminalising cultural assertion, delegitimising democratic mandates, and placing Hindu society under permanent suspicion. When ideology blinds inquiry, scholarship dies. What’s left is propaganda—smoothly written, heavily footnoted, and hollow at the core.

The Brahmin Community: A Manufactured Image of Supremacy and an Ignored Reality

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The Brahmin Community: A Manufactured Image of Supremacy and an Ignored Reality 18

In Indian social discourse, certain assumptions have been repeated so often that they are now accepted as truth, even when historical outcomes do not support them. One such assumption is that the Brahmin community has, for centuries, been the natural inheritor of power, resources, and privilege. Manusmriti has been positioned as the central pillar of this belief, and over time a narrative was constructed in which Brahmins were portrayed as permanently “dominant,” while others were framed as perpetually “oppressed.” Yet when history is examined not through emotional slogans but through social consequences and structural realities, a far more complex and unsettling picture emerges.

If any community was subjected to the strictest moral discipline in the name of Manusmriti, it was the Brahmin community itself. Renunciation, austerity, restraint, contentment, and service were not presented to Brahmins as optional virtues but as compulsory duties. This was described as a morally elevated path, yet its social consequences were rarely examined honestly. This framework made Brahmins custodians of knowledge, but simultaneously kept them systematically distant from power, property, and material resources. This was not accidental; it was a long-term social arrangement in which intellectual labour was assigned to one group while material control flowed elsewhere.

Historical evidence clearly shows that real power in India—political, military, and economic—was rarely concentrated in Brahmin hands, even briefly. Brahmin rulers were exceptions, not the rule. Yet a handful of isolated examples were used to generalize an entire civilizational history, branding the community as structurally dominant. Such conclusions lack both historical balance and sociological integrity.

Another crucial fact repeatedly ignored in public discourse is that the Brahmin community never cultivated a culture of destroying knowledge. It did not burn books, suppress ideas through violence, or fear intellectual dissent. On the contrary, whenever India experienced invasions, regime changes, or political upheavals, the first institutions to be destroyed were centres of learning—gurukuls, ashrams, schools, and libraries. Those most frequently killed were teachers and scholars. This reality fundamentally contradicts the notion that Brahmins historically lived in safety or privilege.

In contemporary India, this distorted historical image has taken on a new form. Today’s Brahmin community faces tangible socio-economic challenges, yet continues to be viewed through the lens of alleged historical supremacy. In rural India, large sections of the community are landless or marginal landholders. In urban settings, they face middle-class insecurity, unemployment, and declining social capital. Despite this, there is little serious research or policy discussion addressing their present condition.

The paradox is stark: the Brahmin community today has neither institutional protection nor organized political representation. Yet in public narratives, it is portrayed as a powerful force that, in reality, does not exist. This is a form of imagined dominance, where real individuals pay real costs for a power they do not possess. It amounts to narrative-based punishment, where people are judged not by their current circumstances or actions, but by an imposed historical image.

It is also worth asking why the language of social justice—which rightly emphasizes structural disadvantage—becomes selective in this context. Brahmin poverty is treated as an anomaly, Brahmin vulnerability is rendered invisible, and questioning this framework is often viewed as morally suspect. No community remains static across centuries. Social groups evolve with time, policy, and circumstance. To freeze the Brahmin community permanently inside a historical caricature is neither intellectually honest nor socially just.

Questioning religious texts is a legitimate exercise in any modern society. However, such questioning must distinguish between a text, its interpretations, and its historical use. Manusmriti was not a living authority; it was a text interpreted differently across eras, often by ruling powers for their own purposes. To transfer the burden of those interpretations wholesale onto contemporary Brahmins reflects neither historical understanding nor ethical fairness.

This editorial does not argue for superiority, exemption, or entitlement. It argues for recognition—recognition of the Brahmin community as a living, changing social reality, not a fossilized symbol of the past. Its poverty, insecurity, and social invisibility deserve the same seriousness afforded to any other group.

India’s future depends on a social discourse that resists simplification and embraces complexity. Until history is viewed in its full dimensions and the present is freed from the weight of inherited prejudice, neither justice nor balance can be achieved. The Brahmin community preserved knowledge across centuries, often at great personal cost. If today it stands at a point of existential uncertainty, ignoring that reality—or dismissing it through ideological noise—will only repeat yet another historical mistake.

Justice is not selective empathy; it is universal moral sensitivity. When that sensitivity extends to the Brahmin community as well, Indian social discourse may finally align its ideals with its conscience.

Suresh Kalmadi Passes Away at 81, Ending an Era in Pune Politics Shadowed by CWG Controversy

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Suresh Kalmadi Passes Away at 81, Ending an Era in Pune Politics Shadowed by CWG Controversy 20

Senior Congress leader and former Union minister Suresh Kalmadi passed away in Pune early Tuesday after a prolonged illness, family sources said. He was 81.

His mortal remains will be kept at Kalmadi House in Erandwane till 2 pm, following which the last rites will be performed at the Vaikunth crematorium in Navi Peth at 3.30 pm.

For decades, Kalmadi was among Pune’s most influential political figures, combining electoral clout with deep roots in the city’s civic and cultural life. A former Indian Air Force pilot, he entered public life through the Youth Congress and went on to serve multiple terms in Parliament, including representing Pune in the Lok Sabha. During the mid-1990s, he served as Minister of State for Railways in the Union government.

Beyond politics, Kalmadi cultivated a strong local network through high-profile public events such as the Pune Festival and the Pune International Marathon, initiatives that helped him build cross-party goodwill and a mass connect in the city.

At the national level, he emerged as a powerful figure in sports administration, serving as president of the Indian Olympic Association and holding key positions in athletics bodies over the years. His influence in sports peaked when he headed the organising committee of the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi.

That event, however, came to define the most controversial chapter of his public life. The Games were marred by allegations of corruption and irregularities flagged in audits and probed by investigative agencies. Kalmadi was arrested in April 2011 in connection with the case and was subsequently suspended by the Congress.

The legal aftermath of the CWG controversy stretched over years. In 2025, a Delhi court accepted the Enforcement Directorate’s closure report in the Commonwealth Games money-laundering case, effectively ending that investigation. However, a separate CBI case related to the timing-scoring-results system contract, in which Kalmadi was named, has continued, with the trial still pending amid prolonged evidence recording.

Leaders across party lines expressed condolences on Tuesday, marking the passing of a leader whose career spanned public service, sports administration and political dominance in Pune, before the CWG scandal reshaped how a generation came to remember him.