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Betrayal in Uniform: How Insider Have Endangered India’s National Security from Within

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Betrayal in Uniform: How Insider Have Endangered India's National Security from Within 2

Nationalism in India is often reduced to speeches, flags, and slogans, but real betrayal happens quietly—between files, inside encrypted chats, and across secret meetings. The arrest of retired Air Force officer Kulendra Sharma from Tezpur, Assam, is not an isolated incident. It is another link in a long and disturbing chain where individuals in uniform, or once in uniform, loudly project themselves as patriots while silently punching holes in India’s national security. History is clear on one uncomfortable truth: India has suffered more damage from “insiders” than from enemies standing across the border.

It is a harsh reality that many individuals who have served in India’s defence establishments continue to carry sensitive institutional knowledge long after retirement. Their memory, networks, and experience do not retire with them. Enemy intelligence agencies understand this well and exploit it ruthlessly. Greed, ego, resentment, financial stress, or ideological confusion—each becomes a lever. When such people break, the loss is not limited to leaked documents; it costs soldiers’ lives, strategic advantage, and national confidence.

A look back shows how old and recurring this pattern is. As early as the 1970s, India learned that rank and uniform are not guarantees of loyalty. In 1975, a senior Indian Navy commander was arrested for spying for a foreign intelligence agency. A man entrusted with maritime security was feeding sensitive information to hostile powers. At the time, the issue was quietly buried to protect “institutional image”—placing optics above accountability, a mistake India continues to repeat.

In the 1990s, as Kashmir burned and Pakistan intensified its proxy war, multiple cases emerged where information was leaking from within India’s own security apparatus. Some officers were found in direct contact with ISI handlers; others claimed they had shared details “unknowingly.” This excuse deserves no sympathy—espionage is rarely accidental. Information that enables terror attacks does not travel by mistake.

One of the most alarming episodes surfaced in the early 2000s involving espionage networks linked to DRDO and the Ministry of Defence. Scientists, clerks, and officers were caught leaking classified data on missile programs, radar systems, and defence procurement. These were not fringe elements; they were trained professionals who often wrapped themselves in nationalist rhetoric. Their loyalty became clear not through speeches but through bank transactions and call records.

After 2010, espionage evolved into an even more dangerous form. Intelligence agencies no longer needed trench coats or embassies. Facebook friend requests, fake female profiles, LinkedIn connections, and conversations disguised as “academic research” became the new tools. Several serving and retired officers fell into these traps. Many believed they were merely offering “analysis,” not realizing—or pretending not to realize—that strategic analysis itself is a weapon.

Cases from Rajasthan and Haryana exposed how Indian Army personnel were honey-trapped using fake Pakistani profiles. Some exchanged information for money, others for attention and validation. All lofty claims of nationalism collapsed the moment a video call or a few dollars entered the picture.

In 2018, leaks related to the BrahMos missile system—one of India’s most critical strategic assets—sent shockwaves through the security establishment. Those involved were not outsiders but insiders with legitimate access. The real question was not whether arrests were made, but how such individuals gained prolonged access and why detection took so long.

The role of retired officers is particularly worrying. After retirement, many struggle with a loss of status and relevance. Enemy agencies exploit this psychological vacuum expertly. A simple line—“We value your experience”—is often enough to start the slide. Conversations turn into disclosures, disclosures into documents, and documents into outright betrayal.

The greatest deceit occurs when such individuals publicly posture as nationalists while privately undermining national security. They appear on television debates praising the armed forces, wave the tricolour on social media, and simultaneously feed adversaries with insights into vulnerabilities. This dual character is far more dangerous than open hostility because it corrodes trust from within.

The consequences are not abstract. When adversaries gain accurate intelligence on troop deployment, preparedness, or weaknesses, attacks become more precise and deadlier. After incidents like Uri and Pulwama, questions were raised about how terrorists obtained such detailed information. The blame was conveniently pushed outward, while serious introspection about internal leaks remained limited.

India also suffers from a chronic lack of institutional transparency in espionage cases. Matters are labeled “sensitive,” names are withheld, facts are diluted, and the public is kept in the dark. As a result, society never fully understands the nature of the threat. Without visible consequences, deterrence remains weak.

It must be stated clearly: the vast majority of retired defence personnel live with honour and dignity, continuing to serve the nation in various capacities. But in matters of national security, even a handful of compromised individuals can endanger the entire system.

India must now move beyond emotional nationalism to practical national security. Clear post-retirement conduct rules, regular counter-intelligence briefings, lifetime restrictions on sensitive access, and strict monitoring of suspicious activity are not signs of mistrust—they are necessities.

The Kulendra Sharma case is a reminder that threats do not always stand across borders. Sometimes they sit in living rooms, hide in call logs, and lie buried in old files. When those who claim to be the loudest nationalists begin to weaken the nation from within, it is not just a crime—it is a failure of collective vigilance. And India has paid the price of that failure too many times already.

9 Dead, 23 Injured After Bus Plunges Off Ghat Road in Andhra Pradesh’s Alluri Sitaramaraju District

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9 Dead, 23 Injured After Bus Plunges Off Ghat Road in Andhra Pradesh’s Alluri Sitaramaraju District 4

Nine people were killed and 23 others injured when a bus fell off a ghat road and overturned in Andhra Pradesh’s Alluri Sitaramaraju district early Friday, police said. The bus, carrying 37 passengers including the driver and cleaner, was en route to Telangana. Six passengers escaped without injuries.

Superintendent of Police Amit Bardar said the accident occurred around 4:30 am on the Chintoor–Maredumilli ghat road near a Durga temple. “At least nine people were killed, and 23 were injured as the bus fell off the ghat road and turned turtle. Four of the injured are critical,” Bardar told PTI.

Preliminary reports suggest the driver may have missed a curve due to heavy fog. The bus plunged from an upper stretch of the ghat road and landed upside down on a lower road near the China Wall, a structure built to prevent such falls.

Police said they do not expect the death toll to rise, noting that the four critically injured are “doing okay”. The passengers were from the Chittoor region and had completed a trip to Araku. They were on their way to the Sri Rama temple in Bhadrachalam, Telangana.

A case has been registered at Mothugudem police station under Section 106 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita for rash and negligent driving.

Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu expressed deep anguish over the tragedy and spoke with officials to review the medical care being provided. Injured passengers have been shifted to Chinturu and other nearby hospitals for treatment.

The Democracy News Honoured with NAI Award for Best Digital News Platform

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The Democracy News Honoured with NAI Award for Best Digital News Platform 6

The Democracy News, a proud sister platform of Afternoon Voice, has been awarded the Newspaper Association of India (NAI) Award for Best Digital News Platform at the 33rd NAI Achievement Awards held at the NDMC Convention Centre, New Delhi.

The award was presented by renowned screenwriter and Rajya Sabha MP V. Vijayendra Prasad, Gajender Yadav, MLA from Delhi, and Dr. Vipin Gaur, General Secretary of NAI. The association recognized The Democracy News for its distinguished contribution, exemplary dedication, and outstanding excellence in digital journalism. The NAI certificate also commended the platform’s unwavering commitment to truth, integrity, and meaningful service to society and the nation.

As part of the Brandbuzz Multimedia Group, The Democracy News was envisioned by Founding Editor Vaidehi Taman, who has been a strong advocate of fearless journalism and democratic dialogue. Her vision for the platform has always been rooted in empowering citizens with credible, independent, and thought-provoking news content. She has consistently emphasized that digital journalism must uphold the highest ethical standards while embracing innovation and accountability.

Under her leadership, The Democracy News has grown into a dynamic digital ecosystem known for its sharp political interviews, grassroots reportage, and unbiased storytelling. The platform reflects Vaidehi Taman’s belief that journalism must remain a pillar of democracy—transparent, responsible, and accessible to every citizen.

The recognition from NAI marks a significant milestone in the platform’s journey and further strengthens its commitment to delivering honest, impactful, and people-centric journalism. As The Democracy News continues to expand its reach, it remains firmly aligned with the vision of its founding editor: to create a news space that informs, inspires, and upholds the true spirit of democracy.

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Veteran Congress Leader and Former Union Minister Shivraj Patil Passes Away at 90

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Veteran Congress Leader and Former Union Minister Shivraj Patil Passes Away at 90 8

Senior Congress leader and former Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil passed away at the age of 90 in his hometown Latur on Friday morning, family sources confirmed. Patil died at his residence, ‘Devghar’, following a brief illness. His funeral is expected to take place on Saturday.

He is survived by his son Shailesh Patil, daughter-in-law Archana—who contested the last assembly election on a BJP ticket against Congress MLA Amit Deshmukh—and two granddaughters.

Born on October 12, 1935, Patil began his political career as president of the Latur municipality (1966–1970) before being elected MLA for two terms. Between 1977 and 1979, he served as both Deputy Speaker and Speaker of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly.

Patil later represented the Latur Lok Sabha constituency seven times and held the post of Lok Sabha Speaker from 1991 to 1996. Although he lost the 2004 Lok Sabha election to BJP’s Rupatai Patil Nilangekar, he continued to serve the party as a Rajya Sabha member.

During his long career in national politics, Patil held key Union portfolios, including Defence, Commerce, and Science & Technology. He served as Union Home Minister from 2004 to 2008, stepping down after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. He was appointed Governor of Punjab and Administrator of Chandigarh from 2010 to 2015.

Patil was widely respected for his dignified conduct and refusal to engage in personal attacks, whether in public or private. Known for his deep reading, meticulous study and command over Marathi, Hindi and English, he was regarded as an articulate and authoritative voice on constitutional matters.

Rajasthan HC Live-In Ruling Raises Safety Fears for Minors, Says BJP Leader Chitra Wagh

Chitra wagh on rajasthan high court
Rajasthan HC Live-In Ruling Raises Safety Fears for Minors, Says BJP Leader Chitra Wagh 10

BJP Mahila Morcha state president Chitra Kishor Wagh has strongly criticised the Rajasthan High Court’s recent ruling on live-in relationships, saying it creates a troubling situation where minors appear to receive indirect consent to enter such arrangements. She warned that the judgment poses a serious threat to India’s cultural ethos, family structure and, most importantly, the safety of young girls.

Wagh said that in Indian society, protecting daughters, preserving family values and safeguarding cultural norms are foundational responsibilities, not merely legal concerns. At a time when minor girls are increasingly vulnerable to online grooming, emotional manipulation and exploitation, allowing them to enter live-in relationships could heighten these risks, she cautioned.

Speaking “as a mother, a sister and a responsible Indian woman,” Wagh said the ruling is neither appropriate nor safe for the country’s children. She urged that the long-term social consequences of such decisions be examined with utmost seriousness to prevent harm to minors and preserve societal stability.

Aviation in Freefall: IndiGo’s Collapse Exposes India’s Two-Tier Air System”

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Aviation in Freefall: IndiGo’s Collapse Exposes India’s Two-Tier Air System” 12

India loves to boast about being the world’s fastest-growing aviation market, but the recent IndiGo crisis has stripped away the glossy PR and exposed a far more embarrassing reality: our aviation system works smoothly only for the powerful, while the common citizen is treated as an afterthought. As politicians, industrialists and celebrities glide through the skies in private jets without a minute’s delay, ordinary Indians were left stranded in terminals, sleeping on cold floors, staring helplessly at departure boards filled with cancellations. This is not turbulence; this is a systemic failure that both IndiGo and the government helped create through complacency, arrogance and poor planning.

IndiGo controls more than 65% of India’s domestic market—an unhealthy dominance in any functioning democracy. When a single airline gets this big, it is effectively running a parallel aviation system. Any crack within its operations becomes a national crisis. Crew shortages, scheduling gaps, and mounting fatigue warnings did not appear overnight. These were known issues, predicted by aviation analysts, ignored by the airline, and under-enforced by the regulator. When the meltdown finally hit, IndiGo reacted with predictable corporate coldness—vague statements, robotic PR lines, no real accountability and complete indifference to the thousands stuck at airports. Passengers were not seen as customers worth protecting. They were reduced to statistics.

The government did not fare any better. DGCA had announced tougher fatigue rules, digital licensing procedures, ATC upgrades and stricter audits long ago. These reforms were not surprises; they required airlines to hire more staff, modernize their systems and build buffers. IndiGo had enough time to prepare. It did not. The government had enough time to enforce compliance. It did not. In India, rules remain rules only on paper until a crisis erupts and the embarrassment becomes too big to hide.

The contrast between India’s aviation aristocracy and its ordinary travellers is now sharper than ever. While common citizens were battling chaos, VIPs were stepping effortlessly out of private jets that receive quicker clearances than passengers waiting for boarding announcements. This is the real two-tier India. The skies belong to the wealthy, while the rest fight for scraps of information and refunds that rarely arrive on time. The IndiGo crisis did not create this divide; it only exposed it in the harshest possible light.

Behind all this chaos is a quiet, simmering tension between the government and IndiGo—an undeclared tug-of-war over compliance, safety audits, staffing data and monopoly influence. The airline believes the government is tightening controls too quickly. The government believes IndiGo is dragging its feet and hiding behind its market dominance. Yet instead of resolving this friction transparently, both sides let it spill onto passengers, who paid the price for a conflict they had no role in.

The absence of a strong passenger-rights regime is another glaring failure. In any serious aviation market, mass cancellations without clear explanation would trigger lawsuits, penalties and parliamentary scrutiny. In India, we get a meeting, a press note, and a promise that the matter is being “looked into.” Meanwhile, families remain stranded, refunds crawl through the system, and call centres collapse under pressure. The aviation sector keeps growing in numbers but shrinking in credibility.

The truth is brutal but unavoidable: India has built an aviation bubble, not an aviation system. Overdependence on a single airline is a recipe for disaster. Regulators hesitate to act decisively. Airports get upgraded for optics, not capacity. Airlines push staff to the edge in the name of efficiency. And passengers, the very backbone of the system, are treated as expendable.

If India wants to be taken seriously as a global economic power, it cannot have a system where VIP aircraft glide smoothly while taxpayer-funded terminals turn into refugee camps every time a major airline coughs. Real reform requires competition, transparency, hard-edged audits, mandatory compensation for delays and cancellations, and penalties that hurt enough to force behavioural change. It demands a government willing to discipline monopolies instead of tiptoeing around them. And it demands airlines that treat passengers as human beings, not collateral damage.

The IndiGo crisis is not just a bad week for aviation—it is a warning shot. A country that cannot protect the dignity of its own travellers cannot pretend to be an aviation hub for the world. India faces a choice: confront the hard truths and rebuild the system with honesty, or continue letting the skies remain a playground for the privileged and a battlefield of frustration for everyone else.

Inquiry Confirms Irregular Spending at Vasantrao Naik Marathwada Agricultural University

Vasantrao Naik Marathwada Agricultural University
Inquiry Confirms Irregular Spending at Vasantrao Naik Marathwada Agricultural University 14

A series of financial and procedural irregularities at the Vasantrao Naik Marathwada Krishi Vidyapeeth (VNMKV) has come under official scrutiny after questions were raised in the Maharashtra Legislature. Allegations included spending nearly ₹19 crore on research and development works, repairs, and building upgrades without obtaining mandatory approval from the Executive Council and the Maharashtra State Agricultural Council

Responding to questions from legislators Shri Vikram Kale and Smt. Satyajeet Chahande, Agriculture Minister Dhananjay Munde confirmed that the allegations of bypassing tender procedures and failing to follow prescribed norms were partly true. He further stated that these concerns were serious enough to warrant a formal probe.

A five-member committee was constituted under the Maharashtra Agricultural Education and Research Council, Pune, to investigate the financial and administrative lapses at the university. The committee has completed its inquiry, and its report has been submitted to the government.

Minister Munde added that the report is under examination at senior administrative levels, and any officials found guilty will face appropriate action. He also confirmed that there are no pending questions from the government’s side at this stage.

The matter has raised concerns about oversight and accountability within state agricultural universities, prompting demands for stricter monitoring mechanisms.

‘Walkout Reveals Their True Fear’: Amit Shah Says Opposition Protecting ‘Illegal Immigrant Vote Bank’

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'Walkout Reveals Their True Fear': Amit Shah Says Opposition Protecting 'Illegal Immigrant Vote Bank' 16

Home Minister Amit Shah on Wednesday said the Opposition’s dramatic walkout from the Lok Sabha over his reference to “ghuspathiye” (illegal immigrants) had exposed the “real agenda” behind its two-day attack on the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. He alleged that the Opposition was trying to protect an illegal-immigrant vote bank that SIR would remove from voter lists.

Shah’s remarks came during a debate on election reforms. Although the Opposition remained seated as he accused Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi of historic instances of “vote chori,” they walked out the moment he turned to illegal immigrants being included in voter rolls.

“The Opposition wants to normalise and formalise the ‘ghuspathiye’ and add them to electoral rolls,” Shah said. After the walkout, he reiterated that despite boycotts, the NDA would continue its policy to “detect, delete and deport” illegal immigrants. “Can a democracy be safe if prime ministers and chief ministers are decided by ‘ghuspathiye’?” he asked.

Rejecting allegations that SIR was partisan, Shah said it was a long-standing, routine procedure used by successive governments to remove deceased voters, add new 18-year-olds and delete foreign nationals “one by one.” He listed multiple rounds of SIR conducted under Nehru, Shastri, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, Narasimha Rao, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh.

He accused the Opposition of propagating “one-sided falsehoods” for months, not to protect democracy but “to tarnish India’s image” and shield a vote base they feared losing.

At the political level, Shah escalated his attack on the Congress leadership, citing three examples of alleged “vote chori.” He referred to Nehru’s elevation as PM despite lower support among Congress leaders post-Independence, Indira Gandhi granting herself immunity after her election was set aside, and the case questioning Sonia Gandhi’s voter registration before acquiring citizenship.

Shah said the Congress blames everyone except its leadership for electoral defeats. “If someone asks them a question, he’s a BJP agent. If they lose a case, they blame the judge. If they lose an election, they blame EVMs,” he said, adding that electronic voting machines had ended “election chori,” which is why the Opposition now targets them.

He dismissed claims that the government resisted discussions on SIR, saying it falls under the Election Commission’s domain. Once the Opposition broadened the demand to “electoral reforms,” the government agreed immediately, he said, but Opposition MPs used the debate to reignite the SIR controversy.

By the end of his speech, Shah sharpened his political charge: the timing of the walkout proved, he claimed, that the Opposition’s core worry was not electoral reform but the deletion of illegal immigrants from voter rolls — a process they feared would erode what he called their “vote bank.”

From Sacred to Stolen: Maharashtra’s Criminal Neglect of Temple Lands

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From Sacred to Stolen: Maharashtra's Criminal Neglect of Temple Lands 18

Maharashtra prides itself on being the land of saints, temples, and timeless spiritual heritage—yet ironically it has become one of the easiest hunting grounds for land sharks preying on temple properties. What began centuries ago as acts of devotion—farmers, kings, saints, and common devotees donating fertile lands to ensure temple upkeep—has now turned into a modern tragedy where thousands of acres meant for nitya-puja, festival expenses, and community service have been swallowed by a nexus of land mafias, corrupt revenue machinery, and a shockingly apathetic state system. If this isn’t an assault on heritage, then what is? The betrayal is not merely administrative; it is civilizational.

The rot runs deep, and the method is deceptively simple. Temple lands, especially Devasthan Inam lands classified as non-transferable, were protected by law for decades. But when greed meets government files, records turn into clay. Local revenue officers, village clerks, and well-connected middlemen systematically tampered with Inam registers and village record books. In entry after entry, the name of the temple quietly disappeared and was replaced with the names of benami holders, or so-called “tenants,” who magically emerged as legal owners. Thousands of acres slipped out of temple hands without a single puja stopping or a single devotee knowing. The theft was bloodless, silent, and brilliantly engineered.

The Western Maharashtra Devasthan Management Committee alone reports encroachment on more than 671 land parcels under its jurisdiction. And this is just one committee in one region; the statewide picture is far more horrifying. Under the disguise of tenancy rights and exploitation of loopholes in the Maharashtra Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, mafias converted temple property into private estates. Land grabbing became not just profitable—it became institutionalized. And Maharashtra looked away.

What blows the lid off the nexus are cases from Vidarbha. The Maharashtra Mandir Mahasangh fought legal battles to restore temple lands whose valuations run into tens of crores. Yet officials had “sold” such plots for a few thousand rupees. In Amravati, a fifty-crore plot belonging to Shri Someshwar Devasthan was transferred for just 960 rupees—less than the price of a modest dinner bill. In Akola, Balaji temple land worth ₹30 crore was almost gifted away under the table. Only after the Mahasangh intervened, litigated, and fought tooth and nail did some justice emerge. But justice delivered after decades is nothing but posthumous consolation. The painful truth is that temples—centers of faith for millions—had to beg the courts and activists to reclaim their own property while the state’s revenue protectors became the plunderers.

If this sounds familiar, it should. Medieval invaders stormed temples with swords; today’s mafia storms their land records with pens. Different weapons, same objective. Gajni, Tughlaq, Babar, Aurangzeb attacked temples openly; their modern descendants operate through registries, mutation forms, and sub-registrar offices. Calling them land sharks is almost polite. They are nothing less than the updated machinery of cultural erasure.

The judiciary, to its credit, has not been asleep. The Supreme Court in A.A. Gopalkrishnan vs Cochin Devaswom Board made it crystal clear: protecting temple property is the state’s bounden duty. The Bombay High Court re-affirmed in April 2025 that deleting “Devasthan Inam” from land records does not erase its religious character or ownership. Yet, what good are judicial pronouncements when the state lacks the spine to criminalize the theft? Maharashtra is embarrassingly behind states like Gujarat, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Assam that passed stringent anti-land-grabbing laws years ago. In those states, grabbing land is a jail-worthy, non-bailable offense. Gujarat prescribes 10–14 years imprisonment and penalties equal to market value. Karnataka has jail terms, fines, and special courts. Maharashtra? Here, stealing temple land is treated like a polite civil disagreement, to be resolved leisurely in civil courts over decades. This legal softness is the oxygen that fuels land mafias.

When the law is toothless, criminals grow fangs. Maharashtra’s refusal—or inability—to declare land grabbing a criminal offence has given open licence to encroachers. Devotees who donated land 200 years ago would turn in their graves knowing that their offerings are being converted into private villas, real estate ventures, gated colonies, and speculative assets. You can throw a stone anywhere on the outskirts of any major city—Pune, Nashik, Kolhapur, Nagpur—and find temple land either grabbed, litigated, or under dispute. Builders often target dilapidated or poorly managed temples, adopting the “free real estate” model: allow the temple to crumble, let the priesthood weaken, then swoop in with fabricated records and buy-off officials. Within a few years, what was once a sanctified space becomes the foundation pit for a high-rise.

India is failing its temples not because the laws are weak everywhere, but because Maharashtra—the state that prides itself on progressive governance—refuses to evolve. When thieves walk faster than lawmakers, heritage falls first. Temples are not protected by sentiment; they are protected by statutes, enforcement, and political will. And Maharashtra has sadly shown none.

The government has taken a few steps, thanks to relentless public pressure. Revenue Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule imposed a temporary freeze on all transactions involving Devasthan lands until a new policy is framed and formed a committee headed by the Revenue Principal Secretary. Admirable, yes. Sufficient, absolutely not. Committees do not scare land mafias; criminal laws do. Circulars do not reclaim stolen lands; special investigation teams do. Strong speeches do not protect cultural heritage; strong statutes do. Maharashtra cannot keep pretending that goodwill and guidelines will fix what only handcuffs and courtroom convictions can.

The truth is uncomfortable but unavoidable: the state needs to declare war on the land-grab ecosystem, and it needs to do so now. No more waiting for the next Assembly session. No more consultations that drag on for years. No more apologetic half-measures. Maharashtra must immediately issue an Anti-Land Grabbing Ordinance modelled on Gujarat and Karnataka. The offence must be cognizable and non-bailable and carry a minimum 10–14 year prison sentence not just for the mafias but also for the officials who enabled, hid, or facilitated the fraud. Accountability must run downward and upward—clerks, tahsildars, deputy collectors, and even senior officers must answer for every fraudulent mutation, every vanished entry, and every forged note. Until fear enters the system, justice will not.

Alongside the law, a state-level Special Investigation Team must review all temple land transfers over the last 20–25 years. Let the truth spill out. Let every illegal transfer be reversed. Let every fraudulent document be cancelled. Let every officer who signed off be prosecuted. The SIT should not be a ceremonial tiger—it must have claws, arrest powers, and a mandate to report directly to the Chief Minister. Anything less is eyewash.

There is also an urgent need for Special Fast-Track Courts dedicated exclusively to temple land cases. Justice delayed is justice extinguished. Temples cannot afford to wait for decades while land sharks profit year after year. A six-month resolution window, as practiced in Gujarat, should be the benchmark.

Equally important is stakeholder inclusion. The Maharashtra Mandir Mahasangh, representing thousands of temples across the state, must be invited to participate in drafting the law and policy. Those who have fought in the trenches understand the battlefield better than those who only study files in Mantralaya. If temple lands are to be reclaimed, temple voices must be heard.

The irony screaming beneath all this is heartbreaking: temples that once fed entire villages now struggle to pay for lamps and daily rituals, while the lands meant for their upkeep have been converted into profit farms for mafias. Devotees donate coins while criminals enjoy acres. Priests struggle to maintain ancient traditions while builders negotiate the next skyscraper on sacred soil. This moral inversion is unbecoming of Maharashtra, the land of Shivaji Maharaj, who fiercely defended temple honour not just with faith, but with a sword of justice.

The state today needs that same spirit—firm, unapologetic, protective. Maharashtra stands at a crossroads: either it restores the dignity of its temples or it allows them to be slowly cannibalized by greed. The millions of devotees, thousands of temple trustees, and countless communities who draw cultural sustenance from these sacred spaces are watching. They are waiting. And their patience is not infinite.

If Maharashtra truly considers temples the heart of its identity, then protecting their lands is non-negotiable. The government must act not as a commentator but as a guardian. Enact the law. Punish the guilty. Reclaim what was stolen. Restore what was betrayed. Anything less will be remembered as cowardice.

Temples have survived invasions, plunder, and centuries of upheaval. It would be a shame—a historic shame—if they fall today not to marauders but to paperwork and greed. The time for hesitation is over. The time for decisive action is now.

Maharashtra Ends Decades-Old Fragmentation Barrier, Granting Land Rights to 3 Crore Citizens

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Maharashtra Ends Decades-Old Fragmentation Barrier, Granting Land Rights to 3 Crore Citizens 20

In a landmark move ending decades of hardship for urban homeowners, Maharashtra has passed the Maharashtra Land Revenue Code (Second Amendment) Bill, 2025, freeing nearly three crore citizens from restrictive fragmentation laws that prevented them from securing legal land titles or selling small plots.

Approved on December 9, the amendment brings long-awaited relief to around 60 lakh families who have lived in legal uncertainty despite owning homes for generations. Under the old rules, countless citizens occupied tiny urban plots yet remained excluded from land records, and transactions on parcels as small as 5–10 gunthas were nearly impossible due to repeated non-agricultural (NA) permissions and procedural hurdles.

The new law eliminates the requirement for separate NA approvals in areas covered by sanctioned Development Plans or Regional Plans. Instead, homeowners can complete the process with a one-time premium, enabling swift land title issuance and individual 7/12 entries without bureaucratic delays. Introducing the bill, Revenue Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule said it corrects an “unjust system” that kept legitimate homeowners in limbo for decades.

The amendment triggered strong debate in the Assembly. Shiv Sena (UBT) MLA Bhaskar Jadhav declined support, warning the law might benefit builders more than citizens. Congress leader Vijay Wadettiwar argued that without proper Development Plans, land regularisation alone would not address basic infrastructure gaps.

However, several MLAs—including Nana Patole, Suresh Dhas, Pravin Datke, Amit Deshmukh, Rahul Kul, Krishna Khopde, Hiramana Khoskar, Prashant Solanke, Abhijit Patil, Sanjay Gaikwad and Ravi Rana—strongly backed the bill and praised Bawankule for delivering long-awaited justice.

Representatives Chandradeep Narke, Vikram Pachpute and Ramesh Bornare urged that similar relief be extended to rural regions, where low holding limits still obstruct land transactions.

Bawankule clarified that the amendment is intended to empower citizens, not builders. He emphasised that reservations will remain unaffected and that all eligible cases before October 15, 2024, will receive full benefit, although fragmentation after that date will not be permitted. He also instructed district collectors to work closely with local representatives during implementation.

The reform marks a decisive shift away from outdated land policies—finally granting millions of ordinary Maharashtrians the legal certainty, dignity and ownership they have been denied for generations.