'Empty Words, Colourful Balloons': Shiv Sena (UBT) Tears Into MahaYuti Govt Over Tribal Healthcare Neglect 2
Shiv Sena (UBT) on Saturday accused the MahaYuti government led by Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis of making grand claims on infrastructure while failing to provide even basic healthcare and road facilities in remote tribal regions.
In a strongly worded Saamana editorial, the party said the government’s development narrative amounted to nothing more than “empty words” and “colourful balloons,” pointing out that people living just a few hours from Mumbai still suffer due to broken roads, poor health services and dysfunctional ambulance systems.
The criticism came in the wake of a disturbing incident in Mokhada in Palghar district, where an ambulance driver left a tribal woman and her newborn midway after delivery, forcing them and their relatives to walk two kilometres. The editorial said the episode, revealed only after a citizen posted it on social media, exposed the stark contrast between the government’s lofty development claims and ground reality.
The Thackeray camp said that even after seven decades of independence, areas like Wada-Mokhada and other tribal belts lack basic necessities. It noted that many primary health centres are without doctors, staff or medicines, and pregnant women often have to be carried in slings or palanquins for treatment — risking deaths en route. Even when ambulances are available, they are rendered useless due to the absence of proper roads or drivers.
“In Mumbai, which the Chief Minister claims to be transforming, Mokhada is barely a stone’s throw away. If an ambulance driver can behave so callously with a tribal woman in labour, what use is your development vision?” the editorial asked.
It further accused the MahaYuti partners of boasting about kilometres of roads, bridges and metro lines while failing to address the plight of the most marginalised. “The incident in Mokhada has exposed how baseless these claims and colourful balloons are,” the editorial said.
Concluding its criticism, Shiv Sena (UBT) stressed that true governance is not measured by metro corridors and expressways but by the state’s ability to provide essential services such as healthcare, all-weather roads and reliable emergency systems to its most vulnerable citizens.
11 Naxals, Including Top Cadre With Rs 89 Lakh Bounty, Surrender in Maharashtra’s Gondia 4
Eleven Naxals, including senior cadre Anant alias Vinod Sayyana, surrendered before police in Maharashtra’s Gondia district on Friday, marking a significant setback for the CPI (Maoist) network in the region. The group carried a combined reward of ₹89 lakh on their heads.
Deputy Inspector General of Police Ankit Goyal (Gadchiroli Range) said the surrendered cadres were part of the Darekasa Dalam, considered the most active Maoist unit in the MMC Zone (Maharashtra–Madhya Pradesh–Chhattisgarh).
“With this surrender, a majority of the outlaws from the Dalam have come forward to join the mainstream,” he said at a press conference.
Those who surrendered included Vinod Sayyana (40) of Telangana’s Karimnagar district — carrying a ₹25 lakh bounty — along with Pandu Pusu Wadde (35), Rani alias Rame Yesu Narote (30), Santu alias Tijauram Dharamsahay Poretti (35), Shevanti Raisingh Pandre (32), Kashiram Rajya Bantula (62), Nakke Suklu Kara (55), Sannu Mudiyam (27), Sadu Pulai Sotti (30), Sheila Chamru Madavi (40) and Ritu Bhima Dodi (20).
Officials said Vinod Sayyana surrendered with an AK-47 rifle, signalling a major boost to the state’s anti-Naxal operations.
Supreme Court Issues Notice to Centre on Plea Seeking Ban on Female Genital Mutilation 6
The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear a plea seeking a nationwide ban on female genital mutilation (FGM), a practice reportedly prevalent among sections of the Muslim community, particularly the Dawoodi Bohras.
A bench of Justices B.V. Nagarathna and R. Mahadevan issued notices to the Centre and other respondents on the petition filed by Chetna Welfare Society, an NGO arguing that FGM is not an essential religious practice and violates the rights of children.
The plea states that while India has no specific law banning FGM, the act constitutes offences under several provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), including sections 113 and 118, relating to causing hurt.
It adds that under the POCSO Act, any non-medical touching of a minor’s genitalia amounts to an offence. The petition also cites the World Health Organization, which classifies FGM as a grave human rights violation, and highlights global conventions such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which guarantee bodily integrity and protection from harm.
Calling FGM a serious health hazard, the plea notes risks including chronic infections, childbirth complications and long-term physical and psychological trauma.
The matter will next be heard after the Centre files its response.
National Herald Case: Delhi Court Delays Order on ED Chargesheet to December 16 8
A Delhi court on Saturday deferred its order on taking cognisance of the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) chargesheet in the National Herald case, pushing the pronouncement to December 16.
Special Judge Vishal Gogne postponed the decision on the chargesheet, in which the ED has accused Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi, late leaders Motilal Vora and Oscar Fernandes, journalist Suman Dubey, technocrat Sam Pitroda, and the company Young Indian of conspiracy and money laundering.
According to the ED, the accused allegedly acquired properties worth around ₹2,000 crore belonging to Associated Journals Limited (AJL) — the publisher of the National Herald — through Young Indian. The investigation agency claims the Gandhis held 76% of Young Indian’s shares, enabling them to “fraudulently” take over AJL’s assets in exchange for a ₹90 crore loan.
The chargesheet names Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Sam Pitroda, Suman Dubey, Sunil Bhandari, Young Indian, and Dotex Merchandise Pvt Ltd.
The court’s order on whether it will formally take cognisance of the charges will now be announced on December 16.
Shivakumar Meets Siddaramaiah Over Breakfast Amid Intensifying Karnataka Power Tussle 10
Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar arrived at Chief Minister Siddaramaiah’s residence ‘Kaveri’ on Saturday morning for a crucial breakfast meeting aimed at breaking the deadlock over the state’s leadership issue.
The political tension, simmering for nearly two months, escalated after November 20, when the Congress government completed two-and-a-half years in office—reviving Shivakumar’s claim that he was promised the chief ministership on a rotational basis. Siddaramaiah, however, has maintained that he has the mandate to continue as CM for the full five-year term.
Following growing pressure and internal discord, the Congress high command on Friday stepped in and directed both leaders to resolve the matter amicably through dialogue. Siddaramaiah subsequently invited his deputy for the breakfast meeting.
Before leaving for the CM’s residence, Shivakumar avoided questions from the media, saying he would speak only after the meeting concluded.
Sources from the Chief Minister’s Office said the menu included idli, vada, sambar, chutney and uppittu (upma)—a traditional southern spread served as the two leaders attempt to iron out differences that have begun to unsettle the state leadership.
The outcome of the meeting is expected to set the tone for the Congress government’s political stability in Karnataka in the coming months.
Assam Breaks the Silence: A Historic Strike Against Polygamy and the Exploitation of Women 12
Polygamy in Assam is not an overnight phenomenon; it is the outcome of a long, layered history where culture, migration, socio-economic factors, and weak legal enforcement all collided to create a system that silently crushed women generation after generation. When Assam passed the Assam Prohibition of Polygamy Bill 2025, it wasn’t a random political gesture. It was the state finally admitting a long-hidden social wound, turning towards a future where women are not treated as replaceable, divisible assets. The law signals that the era of silent suffering is over and that accountability will finally walk into bedrooms where injustice once hid behind customs and religious freedoms.
Polygamy’s roots in Assam can be traced back centuries. In earlier times, certain tribal communities practiced it within a structured social setup. It served utilitarian purposes—like labour sharing or resource management—and women still retained dignity and decision-making power within their clans. But what might have been a balanced, culturally contextual practice centuries ago slowly mutated into something exploitative. The deeper scars began to appear during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when waves of migration from Bengal and later East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) altered Assam’s demographic and cultural landscape. With these migrations came practices where polygamy was not cultural cooperation but male-centric expansion, often used to increase family size, establish economic clout, or consolidate land and political influence. Women became the silent casualties in this demographic shift.
Over time, in districts with low literacy, weak awareness, and fragile local administrative structures, polygamy entrenched itself as a kind of twisted social status symbol. A man with multiple wives was perceived as prosperous or powerful. It was a public display of male privilege masquerading as cultural acceptance. But the price of this “status” was paid by women whose voices were buried under layers of obedience, dependency, and social conditioning.
The situation worsened when polygamy found refuge behind religious laws. While over 130 to 140 countries worldwide—Turkey, France, America, Germany, Sweden, England, Australia, Canada, Japan, Spain, Italy among them—have imposed strict restrictions or outright bans on polygamy, India continued a fragmented legal system where personal laws dictated marital rights differently for different communities. This inconsistency created loopholes. It allowed certain groups to continue the practice without fear of consequences, even though the Constitution speaks of gender equality and dignity. In Assam, these loopholes became escape routes for exploitation. A man could marry a second or third time without informing the first wife. He could abandon a woman without formal divorce, leaving her economically stranded. And he could justify everything under the shield of personal law.
When women lack economic independence, social support, and legal literacy, they become easy targets. In Assam, countless women—especially in rural belts—found themselves trapped in marriages where their husbands brought home second wives without warning. The emotional shock is only the beginning. Once a second marriage takes place, the first wife often faces immediate financial cutbacks. Her children receive less attention, fewer resources, and weaker inheritance rights. The man’s income—already limited in many households—now stretches over multiple families. In such scenarios, women silently slide into poverty while the man enjoys the unchallenged privilege of expanding his household at will.
Many first wives are pushed out of the home through psychological harassment or direct intimidation. Some are labelled “burdens,” or blamed for not having sons, or accused of being incapable of maintaining marital harmony—all convenient excuses for a husband seeking a new, younger wife. This is not culture; this is deeply structured injustice presented under the disguise of tradition.
Societally, polygamy does even more damage. It destabilises family structures, creates rivalry among children from different wives, and fuels long-term emotional conflict within households. When two or three families compete for the same breadwinner’s attention and resources, instability becomes a way of life. This has implications for mental health, education, and child welfare—three pillars that decide a society’s long-term progress.
At the community level, polygamy fuels population pressure. In regions where the practice is more common, population growth rates spiked far faster than the state’s average. More wives meant more children, which strained local resources, increased dependency on state welfare schemes, and limited upward mobility. In areas lacking strong education systems and employment opportunities, this demographic pressure contributed to deeper poverty cycles. When women have little say in family planning, population policies cannot function effectively. This is a reality Assam lived with for decades.
Against this background, the Assam Prohibition of Polygamy Bill 2025 emerges as a bold, long-overdue correction. The law imposes up to ten years’ imprisonment for men who enter a second marriage while concealing an existing one, and two years of imprisonment with heavy fines for village heads, kazis, priests, or parents who knowingly facilitate such marriages. This directly targets the ecosystem that enables polygamy—not just the act itself. It breaks the chain of social sanction by holding intermediaries accountable. When a priest, kazi, or village elder fears jail time and a personal fine of one to one-and-a-half lakh rupees, the casual acceptance of polygamy collapses.
The law goes a step further by removing state benefits from offenders. Anyone convicted will lose the right to government jobs, welfare schemes, and even the right to contest elections. This may sound harsh, but let’s face the truth: a person who cannot remain loyal to one family, who deceives and destroys the life of a woman who trusted him, shouldn’t be sitting in public office or enjoying taxpayer-funded benefits. Accountability begins at home. When a man destabilise his own household, society has no reason to trust him with broader responsibilities. What truly shifts the balance is the support promised to victims. Women subjected to polygamy will receive legal assistance, financial support, and protection from further abuse. This empowers them to step out of silence. This is not just prohibition; it is rehabilitation. The state is not punishing and walking away—it is rebuilding the lives of those who were harmed.
Globally, the trend is clear: countries that value women’s freedom, economic independence, and human dignity have rejected polygamy because it is fundamentally unequal. It reduces women to commodities, divides families, and weakens social stability. Even many Islamic countries have introduced strict restrictions, requiring judicial permission or the consent of the first wife—something rarely given. The world has moved on, because societies that treat women as equal partners progress faster in every measurable way: economy, education, health, and innovation.
India cannot claim to be a modern, forward-thinking nation while allowing loopholes that jeopardise women’s basic rights. Equality cannot be selective. If men and women are equal citizens, polygamy cannot survive. Assam has taken the first courageous step, and it will not remain confined to one state. Other states will inevitably follow, because social justice moves slowly but decisively. Once one pillar falls, the old walls cannot stand.
The truth is simple: polygamy is not tradition; it is an outdated power structure. It does not protect culture; it protects male privilege. It does not strengthen families; it fractures them from within. And it does not honour women; it reduces them to silent spectators in their own lives.
Assam’s new law marks a turning point. It restores dignity to women, stabilises families, and sets a national precedent that exploitation cannot be hidden behind the veil of custom. It is a reminder that societies evolve not by preserving everything from the past but by discarding what harms the future. Assam choose courage over convenience, justice over silence, and fairness over fear.
When the pages of history are written, this moment will stand out—not as a legal reform, but as a social awakening. A state finally stood up and said, “Women are not options. They are individuals with rights, dignity, and agency.” And that statement is long overdue, not just for Assam, but for India.
India Posts 8.2% GDP Growth in Q2 — Highest in Six Quarters, Powered by Manufacturing and Services 14
India’s economy posted a six-quarter high GDP growth of 8.2% in Q2 FY2025-26, outpacing expectations as strong manufacturing output and a robust services sector offset a slowdown in agriculture. The growth rate was higher than the 7.8% recorded in the previous quarter and significantly above the 5.6% seen a year earlier.
This performance also helped India retain its position as the world’s fastest-growing major economy, with China expanding 4.8% during the same period.
According to the National Statistics Office (NSO), GDP growth for the first half of FY2025-26 averaged 8%, compared with 6.1% in the year-ago period. With this momentum, India appears poised to surpass the full-year growth target of 6.3–6.8% projected in the Economic Survey.
Manufacturing and Services Drive Growth
Manufacturing grew 9.1% year-on-year, a sharp rise from 2.2% last year. Factories scaled up production in anticipation of festive-season demand following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s GST rate cut announcement in his Independence Day address. The revised rates took effect on September 22.
The services sector—including finance, real estate and professional services—expanded 10.2%, significantly higher than 7.2% in Q2 last year.
However, agriculture growth slowed to 3.5%, down from 4.1% a year earlier.
Economists See Growth Surpassing 7% for FY26
The RBI, earlier in October, revised its GDP projection upward to 6.8% for the current financial year.
Key GDP Indicators
Real GDP (Constant Prices), Q2: ₹48.63 lakh crore vs. ₹44.94 lakh crore last year
Nominal GDP (Current Prices), Q2: ₹85.25 lakh crore vs. ₹78.40 lakh crore
Real GDP, H1: ₹96.52 lakh crore (8% growth)
Nominal GDP, H1: ₹171.30 lakh crore (8.8% growth)
Private Consumption Growth (PFCE): 7.9% vs. 6.4% last year
Gross Fixed Capital Formation: 7.3% growth
India continues to demonstrate strong macroeconomic resilience, with analysts expecting growth to stay above 7% despite global uncertainties.
Maharashtra Cancels All Birth Certificates Issued Solely on Aadhaar Basis, Orders FIRs for Discrepancies 16
The Maharashtra government has ordered the cancellation of all birth certificates issued solely on the basis of an Aadhaar card, declaring that Aadhaar will no longer be accepted as a valid document for delayed birth registrations.
The decision comes amid a statewide crackdown on a racket involving fake birth and death certificates, allegedly used to obtain government benefits, capture land, and compromise national security.
Revenue Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule said the government would take strict action against those involved. “Fake birth and death certificates are being misused to gain benefits, seize land, and even endanger national security. We will not tolerate such racketeering,” he said.
According to the state’s directive, any birth certificate issued solely using Aadhaar after the August 2023 amendment will now be considered invalid and cancelled. If discrepancies are found between application details and the Aadhaar date of birth, an FIR will be registered immediately.
Officials who issued such certificates will also face action.
The Revenue Department has circulated a 16-point verification checklist to Tehsildars, Sub-Divisional Officers, District Collectors, and Divisional Commissioners. Cancellations will take place only after verification under these guidelines.
The government has identified 14 districts as hotspots for certificate malpractice, including Amravati, Akola, Anjangaon Surji, Achalpur, Ardhapur, Sillod, Sambhajinagar, Latur, Pusad, Parbhani, Beed, Gevrai, Jalna and Parli.
What the cancellation order means:
Birth certificates issued using only Aadhaar as proof will be cancelled.
Any mismatch with Aadhaar data will lead to FIR against the applicant.
Applicants unable to produce original documents or who cannot be traced will be declared absconding, with FIRs registered.
Special verification camps will be held under direct supervision of District Collectors and Divisional Commissioners.
The government says the crackdown is aimed at restoring authenticity and preventing misuse of the civil registration system.
After DC Shooting, US Orders Fresh Review of Green Cards Issued to Immigrants From 19 Countries 18
The Trump administration has announced a “rigorous” re-examination of all Green Cards issued to immigrants from 19 “countries of concern”, following the shooting of two National Guard service members in Washington, DC, by an Afghan national earlier this week.
US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Joseph Edlow said President Donald Trump had directed a full-scale review of Green Cards issued to immigrants from these nations, noting the safety of Americans remains the administration’s top priority.
“The American people will not bear the cost of the prior administration’s reckless resettlement policies,” Edlow said in a post on X, adding that the new policy guidance applies immediately to all pending and future requests filed on or after November 27, 2025.
The new rules allow USCIS to weigh “negative, country-specific factors” when vetting immigrants from the 19 countries, which include Afghanistan, Iran, Cuba, Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Myanmar, Haiti and Venezuela. These nations were previously included in a travel ban issued by Trump in June.
The move follows Wednesday’s shooting that left US Army Specialist Sarah Beckstrom, 20, dead, and US Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, critically injured. The accused, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, arrived in the US under the Biden-era refugee programme Operation Allies Welcome, meant for Afghans fleeing after the Taliban’s 2021 takeover.
Edlow said the updated policy will help USCIS determine whether an immigrant poses a public safety or national security threat, accusing the Biden administration of eroding crucial vetting safeguards over four years.
Trump, calling the shooting a “terrorist attack,” claimed many Afghan arrivals were brought in “unvetted” and vowed to remove individuals he deemed dangerous.
USCIS said the guidance follows the administration’s earlier halt on Afghan refugee resettlement and further strengthens vetting procedures to prevent similar incidents.
The Devbhoomi Sangharsh Samiti on Thursday said it would not allow Friday prayers at the disputed Sanjauli mosque, urging the Muslim community to avoid visiting the site in order to maintain communal harmony.
Samiti members have been protesting in Sanjauli for the past ten days and on Thursday performed ‘Shastra Puja’ as part of their ongoing agitation.
Co-convener Vijay Sharma said the organisation is awaiting its scheduled meeting with the administration on November 29, after which it will decide how to proceed. “If the meeting fails to produce positive results, we will intensify our agitation against the mosque,” he said.
Sharma claimed prayers were still being offered at the structure despite the court declaring it illegal and ordering its demolition, calling the situation “very unfortunate.”
The dispute has heightened tensions in the area, with authorities keeping a close watch ahead of Friday.