Twenty-five years after the massacre of thousands of Sikhs in India, following the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1984, the country’s government has failed to bring to justice those responsible.
Twenty-five years after the massacre of thousands of Sikhs in India, following the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1984, the country’s government has failed to bring to justice those responsible.
Please Join Protest Against Hate Fear and Intimidation in Kandhmals
Write to the Election Commission, New Delhi Fax: 011-23739933
April 10, 2009
To,
Shri Navin Chawla Chief Election Commissioner New Delhi Shri Yakub Qureishi Election Commissioner, New Delhi
Cc: Shri Alok Shukla, Deputy Election Commissioner, New Delhi
Cc: Shri Jaiprakash, Deputy Election Commissioner, New Delhi
Dear Sir,
This is to bring to you kind attention the issue of an atmosphere of utmost fear and (…)
As thousands representing a cross-section of peoples’ movements from around the globe protest on the streets of London against the G-20 Summit, one is reminded of a time a few decades ago when the idea of peoples’ movement was in its infancy. The more obvious solidarity was of the ‘working class’. One could not have imagined this kind of pan-continental ‘front’, comprising over 150 unions, environmental and feminist groups, gay rights activists and similar micro-movements from across the (…)
With the military defeat of the LTTE imminent, the terrible plight of civilians in the Vanni has attracted worldwide concern and sympathy, and rightly so. While the circumstances are completely different, the civilian death toll in the Vanni over the past few months (over 2700) is already triple the number of civilians killed in the Gaza massacre of December-January, and is still mounting. The thousands who suffer serious injuries are further victimised by the delay or lack of medical (…)
Press Statement by Arundhati Roy
Issued at the Raipur Satyagraha for the Release of Dr Binayak Sen April 6, 2009 / Raipur, Chattisgarh
Dr Binayak Sen has been in prison for 22 months, arrested under one of India’s most draconian laws, the Chattisgarh Special Public Security Act. This Act has such a vague, diffused definition of ’Unlawful Activity’ that it renders every person guilty unless he or she can prove their innocence. Dr Sen’s bail application was dismissed twice, both times at (…)