Indian parliament attack - A case studySource: The News International
The attack on the Indian parliament on Dec 13, 2001. by five unidentified gunmen turned out to be a watershed in the tumultuous course of Indo-Pak relations.
Ghost of Terrorism visiting IndiaSource: Opinion Maker
Indian Home Minister P.Chidambaram, while inaugurating a three-day conference of directors-general and inspectors-general of police convened by the Intelligence Bureau on September 13, 2009 has been reported as saying that Pakistan-based groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mo …
Draconian laws, delete themSource: TwoCircles.net
Dr. Binayak Sen will now be out on bail but not without celebrating the second anniversary of his needless detention. He was detained under Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act and the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act.
Relatives tell a tale of terror for Muslim inmates of Sabarmati Central JailSource: http://twocircles.net/2009mar30/relatives_tell_tal
Ahmedabad: Even as the prison authorities on Monday submitted in the Gujarat High court that there was no "severe beating" of the Sabarmati jail inmates, mostly Muslims, the relatives of the inmates who met them inside the jail today said that as many as 22 inmates were sever …
Gujarat: A blot on the face of secularismSource: http://dailymailnews.com/200904/01/dmcolumnpage.ht
RECENTLY, Supreme Court's appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) of Gujarat police brought out the involvement of politicians and officials in the Gujarat riots of 2002.
India's New Anti-Terror Laws Draconian Say Activists Source: countercurrents
NEW DELHI, Dec 19 (IPS) - Following the late November terror attacks in Mumbai, India has passed two tough laws being seen by rights activists as potentially eroding the country's federal structure and limiting fundamental liberties.