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Jharkhand: Muslims pelt stones at Ram Navami procession in Dhanbad, police tie Hindus with rope and parade them like criminals, NHRC issues notice

On 1st April, a video surfaced on social media showing a Hindu organiser of a Ram Navami procession in Dhanbad being tied and paraded by the police along with other detainees following a clash that broke out after Muslims pelted stones.

A complaint in the matter had been filed a few days earlier by Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha district president Shashank Raj on 28th March before the National Human Rights Commission.

According to the notice accessed by OpIndia, NHRC observed that the allegations prima facie indicate a human rights violation and issued a notice to the Chief Secretary and Director General of Police of Jharkhand, seeking an action taken report.

According to the complaint, the religious procession in Bhikrajpur village of Baliapur was attacked by Muslims. They pelted stones on Hindu devotees, leading to injuries. The incident escalated into a clash, following which persons from both sides were detained by the police.

Allegations against police action

In his complaint, Shashank stated that instead of taking action strictly against those responsible for the violence, the police subjected Hindu organisers and participants to degrading treatment. He asserted that the organisers, including Shatrughan Mahato, a social worker, were tied with ropes around their waists and paraded publicly in the marketplace.

Source: Shashank Raj/Facebook

He termed this act as a violation of human dignity and an abuse of power by the police. He further stated that individuals who were engaged in organising the religious procession and social work were treated like hardened criminals in full public view.

What the complainant Shashank Raj told OpIndia

OpIndia spoke to Shashank Raj, President of BJYM Jharkhand and the complainant in the matter. He reiterated the allegations made in the complaint and questioned the conduct of the police.

He said that members of the Muslim community pelted stones on devotees participating in the Ram Navami procession, leading to the clash. He added that while people from both sides were taken into custody, the manner in which Hindu organisers were treated raised serious concerns.

NHRC takes cognisance, issues notice

Taking note of the complaint, NHRC Chairperson Priyank Kanoongo stated in a post on social media that a complaint had been received regarding stone pelting during the procession and the subsequent police action in which Hindu devotees and organisers were allegedly tied with ropes and humiliated.

Source: NHRC

The NHRC has issued notices to the Chief Secretary and Director General of Police of Jharkhand, seeking a detailed report on the matter. The authorities have been directed to submit an Action Taken Report within seven days.

UK launches independent probe into Pakistani Grooming Gangs after decades of institutional failures: Read how previous probes failed and why new inquiry is announced

The British government has announced a statutory independent inquiry into the Pakistani grooming gangs, which targeted and sexually exploited thousands of minors across the country. The inquiry panel, headed by the former Children’s Commissioner, Anne Elizabeth Longfield, will, inter alia, examine how factors such as ethnicity, religion and culture of the perpetrators and the victims influenced the offending patterns and institutional response to the group-based exploitation.

To maintain transparency and provide regular updates relating to its work, the public hearings to be organised by the inquiry will be livestreamed, and their transcripts will be published after each hearing. The findings of the inquiry will be published progressively instead of being published altogether in a final report. The inquiry has a maximum period of three years. till March 2029, and a budget of £65m to conclude their investigation.

Talking about the independent inquiry, Longfield said that it intends to address the systemic failures which led to victims of child sexual abuse being disbelieved, dismissed or blamed. “Children across England and Wales were and are sexually abused and exploited. When they asked for help, they were too often disbelieved, dismissed or blamed. That is the reality this inquiry exists to address,” Longfield said. “Victims and survivors have every right to ask whether this inquiry will be any different from those that came before. My answer is this: where we can, we will publish our findings as we go, not in a single report years from now. There will be no opportunity for institutions to quietly manage what we find. We will follow the evidence wherever it leads. We will not flinch from uncomfortable truths,” she added.

On December 9, 2025, the Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, published the draft terms of reference of the inquiry, laying down the scope of the inquiry, and announced the name of Baroness Anne Elizabeth Longfield as the inquiry panel’s chairperson. The panel includes two other panellists, Zoë Billingham CBE, a former Inspector at His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and current Chair of Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust, and Eleanor Kelly CBE, the former Chief Executive of Southwark Council. The panel consulted with victims and other stakeholders on the draft terms of reference, and the final terms of reference, prepared in agreement with the Home Secretary, were published on March 31, 2026. The final terms of reference will be laid before the Parliament on 13 April 2026, when the inquiry will start its work.

    Scope of operations of the inquiry panel

    As per the terms of reference published by the inquiry, it will look into the failures of institutions, including the police, local authorities, health services, social care services and schools in tackling grooming gangs in England and Wales, while focusing on the experiences of victims and survivors during and after abuse. The inquiry aims to scrutinise a wider (and non-exhaustive) range of organisations with an extended time frame for issues that it can cover, from 1 January 1996 to 31 March 2029. A separate inquiry into group-based child sexual abuse in Scotland will be established by the Scottish Government.

    The inquiry will have the power to summon witnesses to give evidence and organisations to produce any documents. The panel can refer to criminal conduct by professionals to Operation Beaconport, the national policing operation launched last year to review hundreds of previously closed investigations. The panel will conduct local investigations in areas where significant response failures have been identified with respect to child sexual exploitation by grooming gangs. Oldham has been confirmed among the first such areas where the investigation will be conducted. The terms of reference will be laid down before the Parliament on 13th April.

    Previous investigations into Pakistani grooming gangs

    After several cases of organised child sexual abuse by grooming gangs primarily comprising Pakistani men, and the failure of public authorities came to light in areas like Derby, Rochdale and Oxford, several local-level inquiries into the organised crime were conducted. In July 2014, the then Home Secretary Theresa May announced a non-statutory inquiry panel to look into how authorities responded to the incidents of organised sexual exploitation by these grooming gangs. Following objections by the victims, the inquiry panel was upgraded in February 2015, under the Inquiries Act 2005 and was conferred the power to compel witnesses.

    In March 2015, a statutory inquiry, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), was established to examine cases of organised child sexual abuse across England and Wales. The IICSA published its final report, containing 20 recommendationsin October 2022, including improvements in data collection and the maintenance of records relating to cases of child sexual abuse, setting up separate Child Protection Authorities for England and Wales, stricter background checks for staff working with children, mandatory reporting of child sexual abuse, victim support and legal reforms. In May 2023, many of the IICSA recommendations were accepted by the government, but none were implemented. Meanwhile, many local investigations were carried out into the organised sexual exploitation, but they proved inefficient as they were limited in scope and powers.

    In July 2024, the Oldham Council unanimously approved a motion for the council’s chief executive to write to the Home Secretary requesting a Home Office-led Public Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in the borough of Oldham. However, the request was rejected by the Minister for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls, Jess Phillips. Subsequently, the issue came to be discussed widely by the public and the media at the national and international levels.

    In January 2025, the then Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, told the House of Commons that none of IICSA’s recommendations had been implemented. Cooper made two announcements: first, that the government would create a timeline to recommend the IICSA implementations, and second, she directed Baroness Louise Casey of Blackstock to conduct a rapid national audit of the scale and nature of gang-based exploitation across the country. In April 2025, the government published the time-table of the implementation of the IICSA recommendations.

    What led to the announcement of the national inquiry

    In the rapid national audit report published in June 2025, Baroness Louise Casey highlighted that the authorities were reluctant to act in cases of gang-based sexual exploitation due to the ethnicity of perpetrators. As most of the accused were Pakistani Muslims, police feared that they will be accused of racial bias if any action was taken, and chose to ignore the cases.

    It was in response to Baroness Casey’s national audit that the government decided to establish a national inquiry to address the gaps in the previous inquiries, such as the rule of ethnicities and cultural backgrounds of the victims and perpetrators and to make recommendations for a stronger legal framework, better data collection and maintenance, and improved coordination between authorities.

    According to Yvette Cooper, Baroness Casey’s national audit had not recommended “another overarching inquiry” on the model of IICSA, but had instead recommended a time-limited inquiry with a more specific purpose “to challenge what the audit describes as continued denial, resistance and local wrangling among local agencies”.

    Organised sexual exploitation of minors by Pakistani grooming gangs in the UK

    According to the official figures, it is estimated that nearly 19,000 minors in England were sexually groomed in 2019 alone. Reportedly, the local authorities in England have identified around 18,700 suspected victims in 2018-19, up from 3,300 five years ago. The highest rates of child grooming victims in Britain were reported in areas including Birmingham, Lancashire, and Bradford.

    In 2015, the Birmingham Mail, West Midlands Police published a Child Sexual Exploitation Problem Profile, which detailed the similarities in the modus operandi of the on-street and online grooming gangs there with those in Rotherham. The 2015 report found that out of the 75 grooming suspects identified, a large proportion are from a Pakistani ethnic background (62%), 12% are White and 5% African Caribbean.

    ‘This is not our war’: Keir Starmer announces UK will not be dragged into Iran war while Trump threatens to pull out of NATO, calls it ‘paper tiger’

    On the 1st of April 2026, Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, made an unambiguous announcement that his country will not be “dragged” into the US-Iran war. The announcement came amidst US President Donald Trump’s repeated verbal attacks on Europe for failing to deploy warships to aid US forces in clearing the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

    In a national address, PM Starmer said, “The conflict in the Middle East has now entered a second month. And while we are working at pace for de-escalation and peace, it is now clear that the impact of this war will affect the future of our country. So today, I want to reassure the British people that no matter how fierce this storm, we are well-placed to weather it and that we have a long-term plan to emerge from it a stronger and more secure nation.”

    “First – let me say once again: this is not our war. We will not be drawn into the conflict. That is not in our national interest,” Starmer asserted.

    The British Prime Minister, however, stressed that while the UK will not enter the Iran war directly, it does not mean the country will simply stand aside.

    He said that Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper will host an international summit to discuss the imperative of reopening the Strait of Hormuz, currently blockaded by Iran.

    In what holds a special significance amidst shifting loyalties and changing geopolitical dynamics, Starmer emphasised that the UK’s relations with the European allies are not mere diplomatic niceties but are central to the country’s interests.

    “We will continue to stand up for the British national interest, and we will continue to do what we must to guide our country calmly through this storm. However, it is increasingly clear that as the world continues down this volatile path, our long-term national interest requires closer partnership with our allies in Europe and with the European Union,” Starmer said.

    When asked about Trump’s declaration that the US would not come to the UK’s aid anymore, and how the British Prime Minister sees it, Starmer said, “Firstly, NATO is the single most effective military alliance the world has ever seen, and it has kept us safe for many decades, and we are fully committed to NATO. Whatever the pressure on me and others, whatever the noise, I am going to act in the British national interest in all decisions that I make. That’s why I have been absolutely clear that this is not our war, or we are not going to get dragged into it.”

    Trump threatens to pull US out of NATO, calls it ‘paper tiger’, as Europe remains reluctant to join the Iran war

    On Wednesday, 01 April 2026, US President Donald Trump expressed his dismay over NATO allies refusing to send warships to aid in clearing the Iran-imposed blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which has led to global oil and gas supply disruptions and a price spike. Donald Trump said in an interview that the possibility of the US withdrawing from the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), is now “beyond reconsideration”. He described the defence bloc as a “paper tiger”.

    “Oh yes, I would say [it’s] beyond reconsideration,” he said when asked if he would revisit US membership. I was never swayed by NATO. I always knew they were a paper tiger, and Putin knows that too, by the way,” Trump said.

    Trump further lamented that while the US was there for Ukraine when Russia launched an offensive in 2022, even as it was not America’s problem, now, when there is a need for NATO allies to aid the US in its military offensive against Iran, the bloc says this is not our war.

    “Beyond not being there, it was actually hard to believe. And I didn’t do a big sale. I just said, ’Hey, you know, I didn’t insist too much. I just think it should be automatic. We’ve been there automatically, including Ukraine. Ukraine wasn’t our problem. It was a test, and we were there for them, and we would always have been there for them. They weren’t there for us,” Trump said.

    The American President bashed the UK in particular for failing to deploy warships in the US-Israel war against Iran. Trump resorted to mocking the British navy and said, “You don’t even have a navy. You’re too old and had aircraft carriers that didn’t work. I’m not going to tell him what to do. He can do whatever he wants. It doesn’t matter. All Starmer wants is costly windmills that are driving your energy prices through the roof.”

    It is interesting to note, however, that while the UK may have refused to deploy warships and troops to West Asia to aid American forces against Iran, and is facing Trump’s anger, the country continues to allow American warplanes to land at its bases.

    In recent weeks, US warplanes, including B-1B Lancer bombers and AC-130J Ghostrider gunships, have landed at the UK’s Royal Air Force (RAF) bases, particularly the RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire. These deployments are a part of the US’s expansion of the presence of American troops and warships in West Asia, which indicates that Washington might be planning a ground invasion of Iranian territory.

    However, Donald Trump has continuously been complaining about European countries refusing to join American forces in clearing the Strait of Hormuz blockade. France, UK, China, South Korea, Australia and Japan, one after the other, America’s ‘allies’ declined Trump’s appeal to join American forces in reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

    The frustration has reached a point where Trump urged France and other countries which want to secure oil or gas to either buy it from the US, or go to the Strait, and “get your own oil”.

    “All of those countries that can’t get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, I have a suggestion for you: Number 1, buy from the U.S., we have plenty, and Number 2, build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT. You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself; the U.S.A. won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us. Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done. Go get your own oil!” Trump wrote on Truth Social on 31st March.

    The American President has been attacking UK and other countries for refusing military aid against Iran to clear the Hormuz blockade, even as it is the US and Israel themselves to blame for the blockade and its detrimental global impact. On one hand, Trump is shifting the blame for the prolonged Hormuz blockade to Europe’s non-participation in the war, and is threatening to pull out of NATO; on the other, he is planning on pressuring the Gulf countries targeted by Iran into paying for the war expenses. All this while, Trump also announced that the US may wind up the military offensive against Iran in two to three weeks, even without any deal with the Iranian regime.

    Basically, Trump wants NATO to fix the mess he orchestrated, or he will pull the US out of the bloc. He also wants the Gulf to cover war expenses, while he gets the ‘peacemaker’, ‘liberator’ and ‘tough guy’ tag, and casually vaunts bombing Kharg Island “just for fun”.

    This is not the first time that Trump has threatened to pull out of NATO. He did the same during his first tenure, although under different circumstances. It is essential to note, however, that Congress has already passed a law (National Defence Authorisation Act), Sec. 1250A of which says a President cannot withdraw from NATO unilaterally without either a two-thirds Senate vote or separate new legislation.

    After a 15-year gap, India’s first fully digital Census 2027 starts on 1st April: All you need to know about the questionnaire and the process

    Census 2027 will be the 16th in the series and the 8th after Independence. This census, which is starting from 1st April, 2026, will prove to be historic for India as it is going to be the first completely digital census of the country after a gap of fifteen years.

    Census in India is not just a process of collecting statistical data but a strong pillar of the socio-economic planning of the country. Systematic census in India started in 1872 during the British period. The tradition of conducting a census every ten years has been going on continuously since 1881. The last in this series was the 15th census conducted in 2011, which gave a clear picture of the population and geographical situation of India as per the data at that time.

    In India, the Census is conducted under the provisions of the Census Act, 1948 and the Census Rules, 1990, as amended from time to time. As per the rules, the 16th Census was to be conducted in the year 2021. However, the process had to be postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic that spread across the world in 2020 and the nationwide lockdown imposed due to it. This was the first time in the history of independent India that a decade-end census was delayed.

    This time, instead of paper forms, information will be collected through mobile apps and ‘Self Enumeration’ portals, which will demonstrate the digital transformation of modern India. The Central Government has announced a list of 33 questions for the House Listing and Housing Census (HLO) and has also made 33 FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) available on the portal.

    It is noteworthy that the Central Government has approved a total budget of ₹11,718.24 crore for the upcoming 16th Census. This amount will be used mainly for the honorarium of the employees associated with the census work and their intensive training. In addition, since this time, the census is digital for the first time, adequate provisions have also been made in the budget to create a strong IT infrastructure, build data centres, and provide necessary logistics facilities. 

    Census preparations

    To ensure the Census 2027 is flawless, a complete ‘pre-test’ (rehearsal) was conducted in 5000 blocks across the country in November 2025, in which all digital methods from appointment to data processing were tested. To ensure accuracy in this enumeration, the administrative boundaries of 7,092 districts, talukas and about 6.39 lakh villages of all 28 states and 8 Union Territories of the country have been frozen from 1st January 2026 to March 2027, so that no geographical changes become a hindrance during the enumeration. 

    A robust three-tier training structure has been prepared for this massive national campaign, in which 45,000 field trainers have been trained by 100 national trainers and 2000 master trainers. These field trainers are now providing intensive training to approximately 31 lakh enumerators and supervisors across the country in about 80 thousand batches. All training materials have been provided to these enumerators in their regional languages, so that they can collect quality and accurate information from the people on time without any hassle. It is noteworthy that this time the census will be conducted in 2 phases.

    First stage begins on 1st April

    The first phase of the 16th Census of India will officially begin from 1st April, 2026 and will continue till 30th September, 2026. According to Registrar General of India (RGI) Mrityunjay Kumar Narayan, the field operation will be carried out as per the different schedules decided by various states and union territories. Hence, the operation will start in some parts of the country in April, while in other parts, the process will be carried out in June, July or August as per geographical and administrative convenience.

    The first phase of the census, known as the ‘House Listing and Housing Census’ (HLO), will be conducted from April to September 2026. Each state and union territory will complete this work by fixing any 30 days of these six months, at its convenience. The speciality of this phase is that exactly 15 days before the enumerator visits your home, an option of ‘self-enumeration’ will be given, through which the details can be filled in manually through online means.

    The main objective of this first phase is to know the condition of houses and the lifestyle of families in the country. It will mainly collect information on what kind of house it is, what basic facilities like drinking water, electricity and toilets are available to the family and what assets like TV, vehicle or internet are available in the house. A list of questions that will be asked for this process has also been released.

    The census work will begin at different stages in different states of the country. The first group includes Andaman and Nicobar, Delhi (NDMC and Cantonment), Goa, Karnataka, Lakshadweep, Mizoram, Odisha and Sikkim. Citizens in these states will be able to do ‘self-enumeration’ online from 1st to 15th April, 2026, while enumerators will go door-to-door from 16th April to 15th May to record details of houses.

    The second group includes states like Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Chandigarh, Chhattisgarh and Haryana. The period for self-enumeration in these states has been fixed from 16th to 30th April, 2026, after which the process of house listing will be carried out from 1st to 30th May. The detailed schedule of all the remaining states and union territories has been given in the appendix issued by the government.

    State/Union TerritorySelf-Enumeration PeriodHouse Listing and Housing Census (HLO) Period
    Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Delhi (NDMC/Cantonment), Goa, Karnataka, Lakshadweep, Mizoram, Odisha and Sikkim1st April to 15th April16th April to 15th May
    Gujarat, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu5th April to 19th April20th April to 19th May
    Uttarakhand10th April to 24th April25th April to 24th May
    Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Chandigarh, Chhattisgarh and Haryana16th April to 30th April1st May to 30th May
    Bihar17th April to 1st May2nd May to 31st May
    Telangana26th April to 10th May11th May to 9th June
    Punjab30th April to 14th May15th May to 13th June 13
    Delhi (MCD), Maharashtra, Meghalaya, Rajasthan and Jharkhand1st May to 15th May16th May to 14th June
    Uttar Pradesh7th May to 21st May22nd May to 20th June
    Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh and Puducherry17th May to 31st May1st June to 30th June
    Himachal Pradesh1st June to 15th June16th June to 15th July
    Kerala and Nagaland16th June to 30th June1st July to 30th July
    Tamil Nadu and Tripura17th July to 31st July1st August to 30th August
    Assam2nd August to 16th August17th August to 15th September
    Manipur17th August to 31st August1st September to 30th September
    West BengalWill be announced later.Will be announced later.

    How will the process be done?

    Census 2027 will be India’s first fully digital census. In this process, enumerators will use their smartphones and a special mobile application instead of paper and pen. The information they collect from door to door can be directly submitted online through the app. To make this process easier, the mobile app and the ‘self-enumeration’ portal will be made available in a total of 19 languages, including Gujarati, Hindi and English, so that accurate information can be collected without language barriers.

    The facility of ‘self-enumeration’ is an important aspect for the citizens this time. People will be able to fill in the details of their families by going to the online portal themselves. Apart from this, a state-of-the-art central portal has been created to manage the entire campaign. 

    This portal will handle the appointment of enumerators, generation of their ID cards, allocation of work to them and management of their training. This digital system will also enable real-time monitoring of the extent to which the enumeration work has been completed.

    To bring accuracy at the administrative level, this time ‘House Listing Blocks’ (HLBs) will be prepared using ‘Web Mapping Application’, so that no house or area is left out of the census. Being a digital medium, sufficient vigilance has also been taken regarding the security of people’s personal information. Extremely strong firewalls and protocols have been implemented for data security, so that the data of citizens remains completely safe and confidential.

    How can self-enumeration be done?

    In Census 2027, a special facility has been provided to the citizens, through which they will be able to fill out their details online even before the enumerator comes to their home. For this, one will have to log in to the official SE portal (se.census.gov.in) using their mobile number. This process can be completed anytime and from anywhere, as per their convenience.  

    After logging in to the portal, the person will have to mark the exact location of their house on the map and fill in the necessary details of the family. After filling in all the information, when the form is submitted, a 16-digit unique ‘Self-Enumeration ID’ (SE ID) will be generated by the system. This ID is very important because when the census staff visits the house in person, they will have to give only this SE ID.

    Notably, self-enumeration is an additional optional facility provided to the citizens. Even if a person is unable to fill in the details online, the enumerators will still visit the house in person and collect the information just like in the previous census. The staff will also visit the houses of those who have filled in the details online for verification, but instead of asking them for all the details again, the data will be confirmed only through SE ID, and the person will be included in the census.

    Second stage is the important phase of the Census

    The second and most important phase of the census, called ‘Population Census’, will be mainly conducted during February 2027. However, in snow-covered and inaccessible areas like Ladakh, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh, this process will be completed earlier, i.e. in September 2026. The biggest feature of this phase is that, as per the government’s decision, this time, along with the population census, a caste-based census will also be conducted, which will help in obtaining social statistics.

    During this second phase, enumerators will collect personal and detailed information about every citizen of the country. This includes important aspects such as a person’s education, social and economic status, residential migration and fertility. The exact questions that will be asked for this phase and its exact dates will be officially announced by the government in the near future.

    Which FAQs (questions) are included in the first phase?

    During the first phase of the census, citizens will be asked 33 questions, the list of which has been announced on Monday, 30th March. The main objective of these 33 questions is to get accurate information about the standard of living of citizens, housing facilities, family structure and use of technical devices. Now, let’s know what those 33 questions are, which will have to be answered in every household.

    Building and residence details:

    • 1. Building Number: A number assigned by a municipality, local body, or census.
    • 2. Calculation House Number: A number for the unique identification of the house.
    • 3. Flooring material: The main material used in the flooring of a house (tiles, cement, wood, etc.).
    • 4. Wall material: The main material used in building the walls of the house (brick, stone, concrete, etc.).
    • 5. Roof material: What material is the roof of the house made of (thatch, pipes, sheets, etc.)?
    • 6. Use of the house: Details of whether the house is used for residence, shop or other purpose.
    • 7. House condition: The current condition of the house (new, old or dilapidated).

    Family and Head Details:

    • 8. Number of families: The number of families living in a house.
    • 9. Total number of persons: Total number of members usually living in the household.
    • 10. Name of the head of the household: Name of the head of the household.
    • 11. Gender of the head: Is the head male, female or transgender?
    • 12. Social Class: The majority belong to the Scheduled Caste (SC), the Scheduled Tribe (ST) or other classes.
    • 13. Ownership status: Is the residence owned or rented?

    Accommodation facilities:

    • 14. Number of rooms: How many rooms does the family have to live in?
    • 15. Married couples: Number of married couples living in the household.
    • 16. Source of drinking water: Where is the water obtained from (tap, hand pump, well, etc.).
    • 17. Availability of water: Is drinking water available within the premises, or does it have to be brought from outside?
    • 18. Source of light: The main source of light in the house (electricity, solar, kerosene, etc.).

    Hygiene and cooking:

    • 19. Toilet facilities: Whether there is a toilet in the house or not.
    • 20. Toilet type: What type of toilet is it (flush, pit, etc.)?
    • 21. Wastewater disposal: Details of the drainage or sewerage system.
    • 22. Bathing facilities: Whether or not there is a separate space or bathroom for bathing in the house.
    • 23. Kitchen and gas connection: Is there a separate kitchen and LPG/PNG connection facility or not?
    • 24. Cooking fuel: What fuel is mainly used for cooking (gas, wood, electricity, etc.)?

    Assets and resources:

    • 25. Radio/Transistor: Is this device available in the house or not?
    • 26. Television (TV): Whether there is a TV facility or not.
    • 27. Internet facility: Whether or not there is an internet access facility in the house.
    • 28. Laptop/Computer: Whether or not there is a computer or laptop in the house.
    • 29. Phone facility: Availability of landline, mobile or smartphone.
    • 30. Two-wheeled vehicle: Whether it is a bicycle, scooter or motorcycle. 
    • 31. Four-wheeled vehicle: Availability of a vehicle such as a car, jeep or van.

    Other details:

    • 32. Main grain: Which grain (wheat, rice, millet, etc.) does the family mainly use in food?
    • 33. Mobile Number: Family’s mobile number for future contact and verification.

    Change in current calculation

    The biggest difference between the previous census and the upcoming 2027 census is in its methodology. While the process was completely paper-based from the British era till 2011, the 2027 census will be India’s first ‘fully digital’ census. This time, enumerators will use a mobile app, and citizens will get a new facility of ‘self-enumeration’ in 16 languages, which will reduce the data processing time from years to just 6-9 months. At the technological level, real-time monitoring will be done by making the exact location if each house through GPS tagging and geofencing, which will be more accurate than the physical mapping method of 2011. 

    In terms of time and phases, the earlier census was conducted simultaneously, whereas in 2027, two clear phases were decided. The first phase (April-September 2026) will be for the list of houses and amenities, and the second phase (February-March 2027) will be for personal details. There are also important changes in the questionnaire. In which banking questions have been removed and new details like internet, smartphone and mobile number have been added as per the digital age. The questions on migration have also been kept more detailed this time.

    A historic change from a social and administrative perspective is the ‘Caste Census’; in 2011, only SC/STs were counted, but in 2027, for the first time since independence, a complete caste census will be conducted for all communities. The central government has allocated a budget of ₹11,718 crore for this massive digital infrastructure, which is much higher than the expenditure in 2011. A major part of this amount will be used for training 31 lakh employees and building a robust IT infrastructure.

    The previous census was traditional and relatively slow, while the 2027 census will be more transparent, fast and inclusive. With new protocols for data security and privacy through digital means, this census will present an accurate picture of the changing geographical and social situation of the country. The data collected through this census, especially the caste-based enumeration and personal details of the second phase, will prove to be a strong pillar in accurate policy making for welfare schemes like education, health and housing for the next decade.

    (This article is a translation of the original article published on OpIndia Gujarati.)

    Russian tanker reaches Cuba with humanitarian cargo of 700,000 barrels of oil: Read how US embargo is crippling the country as Trump tries another regime change

    On 31st March (Tuesday), the United States permitted a Russian-flagged ship “Anatoly Kolodkin” bearing 100,000 tonnes of oil to enter Cuban seas. The vessel reportedly arrived at the Matanzas port of the island nation reeling under severe fuel blockade by the White House, prompting a critical energy crisis which has even resulted in deaths.

    “I can only confirm that this issue was indeed raised in advance during contacts with our American counterparts,” mentioned Dmitry Peskov while confirming the development, reported CNN. The spokesman for President Vladimir Putin added that “its their duty to step up and provide necessary assistance to our Cuban friends.”

    There is no moderation in our policy: US

    However, the Trump administration declared that it would determine the extent to which foreign oil flows to Cuba on an individual basis. It indicated that Washington’s stance of upholding the interdiction against Havana has not changed by enabling access to a Russian oil tanker.

    “This is not a policy change. There has not been a formal change in sanctions policy. As the president said last night, we allowed this ship to reach Cuba in order to provide humanitarian needs to the Cuban people,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt stated before the media. She added, “The US still reserves the right to seize vessels, if legally applicable, that are headed toward Cuba and violate US sanctions policy.”

    “We have a tanker out there. We don’t mind having somebody get a boatload, because they have to survive. If a country wants to send some oil into Cuba right now, I have no problem with that, whether it’s Russia or not. I’d prefer letting it in, whether it’s Russia or anybody else, because the people need heat and cooling and all of the ​other things that you need,” President Donald Trump expressed, a day earlier.

    He insisted, “Cuba is finished. They have a bad regime. They have very bad and corrupt leadership, and whether or not they get a ​boat of oil, it’s not going to matter.”

    The tensions in West Asia triggered a massive interruption in global supply chain of energy and the prices skyrocketed after which the US granted a license for the sale of Russian oil that is stranded at sea. The authorisation which expires on 11th April does not cover Iran, North Korea, Cuba and Crimea. However, the Russian oil is going to offer only modest relief to the 10 million strong nation and won’t even last long.

    Mexico tries to resume oil shipments to Cuba

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum stated that governments of Mexico and Cuba are collaborating to resume oil exports via their respective trade agreements.

    “Mexico has every right to send fuel, whether for humanitarian or commercial reasons, but we do not want to harm the country with tariffs resulting from Donald Trump’s oil embargo. We are working with them on both issues,” she conveyed and pointed out that her government “always seeks (to send) humanitarian aid, and it ​is in that context that ​we will make the decision.”

    According to Sheinbaum, private Cuban enterprises, including hotels, reached out to the country about acquiring oil from Pemex, the state-owned energy company. “There are private companies that buy oil from Mexico and report where they are taking it. Because it’s not necessarily a government-to-government agreement, there are companies that specialise in fuel transportation,” the president highlighted.

    She promised that Mexico would keep delivering humanitarian help to the Caribbean country and voiced, “There should be no blockades, because trade blockades harm the people. Formally, they’re directed against governments, but who do they harm? The people. Mexico has been shipping hydrocarbons to Cuba since 1993 in small quantities, but the volume rose dramatically in 2024, one month after Sheinbaum took power.

    On the other hand, two sailboats transporting humanitarian aid from southern Mexico to Cuba disappeared for several days and were spotted by the Mexican Navy after which they anchored at Havana on 28th March (Saturday). On 20th March, the boats with 8 or 9 passengers from Poland, France, Cuba and the US on board left Quintana Roo’s Isla Mujeres and lost contact giving rise to alarm. “They were located 80 nautical miles northwest of Havana,” Mexico revealed.

    The sailing convoy’s coordinator, Adnaan Stumo, later disclosed that the delay was brought on by inclement weather as they were forced to take an extended course, but the sailors were “never in any serious danger.”

    Cuba faces mounting problems and US threatens military intervention

    According to President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Cuba had not received an oil tanker in 3 months, aggravating an energy shortage that caused regular nationwide blackouts for many hours, inflation, rigorous gasoline rationing and put public transit, hospitals and agricultural output in danger of crumbling. “A total disconnection of the SEN (Electro-Energy System) has occurred. The causes are being investigated and protocols for restoration are beginning to be activated,” Ministry of Energy and Mines posted on 16th March.

    Havana has similarly seen power outages, a build-up of trash as hospitals are finding it difficult to accommodate patients and maintain operating rooms. Cuban health professionals fear that the situation has heightened a possibility of death for cancer patients, particularly youngsters. The lack of fuel has prompted the United Nations to alert people of an approaching humanitarian “collapse” there.

    The present circumstances are the outcome of punishing American action to exert pressure on President Miguel Diaz-Canel’s communist government. Long-standing structural issues and policy moves, such as lack of investment in the energy sector, have contributed to Cuba’s economic and energy woes, but Trump’s return to office deteriorated the situation.

    On 11th March, Trump pronounced that Cuba will not be given “more oil or money” from Venezuela which endured a US incursion. On 29th January, his administration published an executive order vowing to levy taxes on any country that provides fuel to Cuba. According to senior US officials, the ultimate objective of these efforts is to liberalise Cuban economy and politics, including the potential ouster of Miguel.

    “Cuba’s non-functional economy cannot be fixed unless they undergo dramatic political and leadership change, but there has been no formal change,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio has reiterated frequently. Interestingly, his parents migrated from Cuba to Florida prior to Fidel Castro’s rule.

    Trump also alluded at an attack on Cuba, repeating military operations in Venezuela and Iran. “I built this great military. I said, you’ll never have to use it. But sometimes you have to use it. And Cuba is next, by the way,” he threatened on 27th March (Friday) and then added, “But pretend I didn’t say that.”

    On 16th March, Trump remarked, “I think Cuba is seeing the end.” Moreover, he declared intend to earn the “honour” of “taking Cuba in some form” and alleged that he could “free it” or “take it” and is even capable of doing “anything” he wants with the “very weak” country.

    Meanwhile, US officials asserted that negotiations are underway, and Trump suggested that a deal might be concluded. However, alternative possibilities are available. He noted that all attention will be directed at Cuba after the war in Iran.

    ‘War may end soon’: Donald Trump says US forces may wind up campaign against Iran within two-three weeks, possibly without any deal with Iranian authorities

    The US-Israel joint front’s war against Iran has become a theatre of mind games and ego. While the war rages on, US President Donald Trump has claimed that the US forces could end their attacks on Iran within two to three weeks, even if Tehran does not make a deal, and the war may “end soon”.

    ‘We will leave Iran within two-three weeks’,Trump said that US forces may end campaign even if Tehran does not cut a ‘peace’ deal

    During a media interaction at the White House on Tuesday, Trump said, “We’ll be leaving very soon. I would say within two weeks, maybe three. We knocked out a tremendous amount of missile-making facilities.”

    When asked if a diplomatic agreement is to be credited for the potential end of war, Trump said, “Iran doesn’t have to make a deal, no…No, they don’t have to make a deal with me.”

    Trump, however, asserted that America’s military offensive against Iran would conclude only after Iran had been “put into the Stone Age”. He added that when Iran’s ability to develop a nuclear weapon is destroyed, “Then we’ll leave,” he said.

    Trump hints at end of Iran war as IRGC threatens to strike the offices of major US tech companies

    The US President’s ‘end of war’ statement comes right after Iran’s military, Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) threatened to target American tech giants including Apple, Meta (Facebook), Google, Microsoft, Intel, IBM, Dell, Tesla, Nvidia, Boeing, HP, Cisco, Oracle, Planter, JP Morgan, GE, Spire Solutions, and G42. The IRGC describes these as “terrorist” companies, which provided intelligence and technical assistance to Israel and the US, making it easier to locate and kill Iranian leaders. 

    Frustration over Europe not joining US in attacking Iran: Trump goes from ‘Get your own oil’ or ‘we’ll leave soon’ within 48 hours

    Interestingly, just hours before giving a tentative timeframe of the end of the Iran war, Trump had expressed frustration over the refusal of major allies refusing to join American forces in clearing the Strait of Hormuz blockade, amidst supply disruptions and skyrocketing prices. He urged France and other countries which want to secure oil or gas to either buy it from the US, or go to the Strait, and “get your own oil”.

    Ironically, the Strait of Hormuz blockade was caused by the US and Israel, by attacking Iran.

    “All of those countries that can’t get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, I have a suggestion for you: Number 1, buy from the U.S., we have plenty, and Number 2, build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT. You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself; the U.S.A. won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us. Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done. Go get your own oil!” Trump wrote on Truth Social on 31st March.

    This came after China, France, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom and other countries refused Trump’s call to deploy their warships to clear the Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. Soon after, Australia and Japan also declined Trump’s appeal.

    Trump says war against Iran will end soon and US forces will leave within two weeks, while the Pentagon expands military presence in West Asia

    It appears that Donald Trump is playing mind games against the Iranian regime by throwing hints of US forces backing out, that too, without forcing the Mullah regime into entering a US-favouring ‘peace’ deal. On one hand, Trump is bashing allies for refusing to come to America’s aid and hinting at winding up the military campaign against Iran; on the other, the Pentagon is rapidly fortifying its forward presence in the Gulf states, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, UAE, and Saudi Arabia, as staging grounds and logistics hubs for contingencies. The rapid expansion of the presence of American troops and warships in West Asia indicates that Washington might be planning a ground invasion of Iranian territory.

    As per the US Central Command, the USS Tripoli, carrying 3,500 sailors and Marines from the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, had arrived in recent weeks. So far, 5,000 United States troops, including 2,500 Marines, have made their way to West Asia, waiting for a go-ahead from the American Commander-in-Chief to launch a ground invasion against Iran.

    In the last week of March 2026, around 2,000 to 4,000 paratroopers from the elite 82nd Airborne Division were being flown in as an “Immediate Response Force” prepared for quick insertion operations, in addition to over 4,000 Marines and sailors onboard USS Tripoli and USS Boxer (2,500 Marines and sailors). These reinforcements, which could increase the total ground-force presence to 17,000 if further waves of up to 10,000 troops are approved, would aid the campaign of the American forces to pound Iranian infrastructure in the oil-export hub, particularly in Kharg Island, and sites near the Strait of Hormuz.

    Earlier, Trump had said expressed interest in occupying Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil export hub, and has said that seizing control of Iran’s oil is a preferred option. He had also said that the Island might be targeted again “just for fun”.

    Amidst domestic pressure over dragging America into distant and prolonged wars, inflicting human and economic costs, reports indicate that America might be pressing Gulf countries targeted by Iran to cover war expenses.

    These pressures, coupled with the mounting embarrassment of failing to subjugate the IRGC, are perhaps forcing Trump to wind up the offensive against Iran as early as possible. The Iranian regime’s recalcitrance is only hurting Trump’s ego and self-asserted peacemaker image. Moreover, Trump’s emphasis on winding up the military campaign, in line with America’s history of “no-conditions exit” strategy, against Iran only after the West Asian nation’s ability to develop nuclear weapons, which Israel sees as an existential threat, is obliterated, is all the more reason to believe that the US offensive might end within two or three weeks, but not without ground invasion and Trump’s vacillating rhetoric is only a deflection tactic.

    UP: Kanpur police bust kidney racket, 6 including 5 doctors arrested. Read how a Rs 50,000 dispute exposed multi-crore organ trade; Exclusive details

    On the intervening night of 30th March and 31st March, Kanpur police in Uttar Pradesh busted a multi-crore illegal kidney transplant racket involving at least six doctors and eight others. The information about the organ trade came to light over a dispute of Rs 50,000. One of the ‘donors’, who was promised Rs 10 lakh in exchange for his one kidney, received only Rs 9.5 lakh. Irked by the loss of Rs 50,000, he approached the police and revealed details of the racket.

    Police have booked six doctors, Dr Surjeet Singh Ahuja, Dr Preeti Ahuja, Dr Rohit, Dr Vaibhav, Dr Anurag and Dr Afzal, Shivam Agarwal, Rajesh Kumar, Ram prakash Kushwaha, Narendra Singh and others in the matter. At least six people have been arrested so far. OpIndia accessed the FIR registered in the matter, which has been registered on the complaint of Sub Inspector Mukesh Kumar under Sections 18, 19 and 20 of the Transplantation of Human Organs Act, 1994 and Sections 143 and 3(5) of the Bharatiya Nyay Sanhita (BNS).

    Source: UP police

    Multiple hospitals are involved in the racket, including Priya Hospital and Trauma Centre, Ahuja Hospital and Medlife Hospital. Media reports suggested that Dr Afzal, Dr Rohit, Dr Vaibhav and Dr Anurag were the key masterminds behind the racket, while Dr Surjeet and his wife owned Ahuja Hospital where operations were carried out.

    How Rs 50,000 dispute exposed the racket

    According to media reports, a kidney donor approached the police claiming that he had been cheated of Rs 50,000 from the agreed amount. The donor has been identified as Ayush, an MBA student who hails from Samastipur in Bihar and has been living in Meerut. He claimed that he agreed to sell one of his kidneys for Rs 10 lakh due to financial distress.

    However, he received only Rs 9.5 lakh, which triggered the dispute. Frustrated by repeated delays and short payment, he approached the police, which set off an investigation exposing layers of an organised organ trade running in the city.

    Donors lured through deception, organs sold at huge profits

    During the investigation, police found that an ambulance driver from Kalyanpur, identified as Shivam Agarwal, used platforms such as Telegram to lure financially vulnerable youth. He posed as a facilitator for medical needs and convinced donors that kidneys were required for relatives.

    In Ayush’s case, the kidney was allegedly sold to the family of a woman from Muzaffarnagar for amounts ranging between Rs 60 lakh and over Rs 90 lakh, while the donor received only a fraction of the total transaction. In another suspected instance, a female student was reportedly paid around Rs 4 lakh, while her organ may have been sold for Rs 45 to Rs 50 lakh.

    Three-hospital model used to avoid detection

    Police investigations indicate that the racket followed a structured three-hospital model to evade scrutiny. The kidney extraction was carried out at one facility, after which the donor and recipient were briefly kept together before being shifted to separate hospitals for post operative care.

    Ayush was moved to another hospital under a different identity, while the recipient was shifted elsewhere. This ensured that no single hospital had complete records of the transplant process.

    What the FIR says

    OpIndia accessed the FIR in the matter. According to the FIR, police were alerted about the kidney racket at Ahuja Hospital when they were on duty checking suspicious persons and vehicles near Maswanpur crossing. The informant told police that doctors not from the hospital were conducting transplants on individuals brought from other places by luring them with money. He also told police that an operation was underway at that time.

    Source: UP police

    Police immediately swung into action and informed senior officials. A team of additional police personnel and a medical team led by Assistant Chief Medical Officer Dr Ramit Rastogi was formed. They reached the hospital and first encountered Shivam Agarwal, who initially denied knowledge of any transplant activity and directed them to Dr Surjeet Singh Ahuja.

    When Dr Ahuja and his wife Dr Preeti Ahuja saw the police, they became nervous. Initially, they denied any wrongdoing. However, when questioned, it was found that the CCTV cameras at the hospital were not functioning, and Dr Ahuja admitted that they were deliberately switched off on days when illegal transplants took place.

    According to the FIR, both doctors and Shivam admitted to being involved in the illegal activity for financial gain. They confirmed that an illegal transplant had been conducted in the hospital’s operation theatre the previous night. They further told police that it was Shivam’s job to arrange donors and patients. The hospital’s operation theatre was used for surgeries in exchange for Rs 2,75,000 in cash.

    The surgical team for the transplant was led by Dr Rohit along with Dr Vaibhav, Dr Anurag, Dr Afzal and others, who reportedly arrived from outside, conducted operations at night and left thereafter. The FIR further stated that all medicines and arrangements were handled by this external team, and after surgery, the donor and recipient were shifted separately to different hospitals.

    During inspection, four cartons containing medicines and equipment used in the operation were recovered and sealed. The FIR noted that the recipient, Parul Tomar, and the donor, Ayush Kumar, were traced to separate hospitals, where medical officers confirmed that both had undergone kidney surgery.

    The FIR also recorded that hospital admissions were made without documentation and that Shivam Agarwal admitted to facilitating multiple such cases since 2024. Following recovery of evidence and interrogation, the accused were taken into custody.

    Investigators said Dr Afzal allegedly identified patients at dialysis centres and persuaded them to undergo transplants, while surgical teams were reportedly brought in from cities such as Lucknow and Noida to carry out operations.

    Organised nexus spanning hospitals and medical professionals

    Investigators believe that the racket was not an isolated operation but a coordinated nexus involving brokers, hospital operators and medical professionals. Brokers arranged donors, hospitals facilitated illegal procedures and doctors allegedly conducted transplants without proper documentation. Operations were often conducted late at night, and patients were shifted immediately after surgery to avoid detection.

    Inter-state and international links suspected

    Police Commissioner Raghuveer Lal indicated that the network could have links beyond Kanpur, extending to cities such as Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata, and even internationally to Nepal and South Africa.

    Preliminary findings suggest that between 40 and 50 illegal transplants may have been carried out, including on foreign nationals.

    Further investigation is underway.

    Mamata resorts to erasing Bengali with Urdu to appease Muslims: Read how the TMC chief is dividing Hindus and rallying Muslims using her language politics

    The language politics in West Bengal have once again come into sharp focus, with claims that Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee is promoting Urdu at the cost of Bengali identity to consolidate support ahead of elections. BJP MP Saumitra Khan claims to replace Bengali cultural markers with Urdu in public and political communication.

    As mentioned in the X post by Saumitra Khan, “Stop Urdu imposition. From ‘Khela Hobe’ to ‘Ishtehar,’ you’re erasing Bengali culture for Urdu.” It can be noted that the manifesto of Mamata Banerjee being referred to as “Ishtehar,” which is an Urdu term, even though the text itself is written in Bengali. It can thus be noted that these changes are not merely changes in the use of Bengali or Urdu but are a part of a larger trend.

    Mamata Banerjee’s Eid speech in Urdu

    Mamata Banerjee addressed a huge gathering of Muslims on the occasion of Eid. She delivered the entire speech in the Urdu language instead of Bengali and Hindi.

    In her speech, she referred to her long-held wishes in her heart. She said, “Allah has already accepted them. May Allah bless them for their well-being and their families. Whoever wants to target Bengal will go to hell.”

    The decision of Mamata Banerjee to deliver her speech in Urdu sparked controversy, as her decision to choose Urdu over other languages for this public event is nothing but a hidden agenda to attract voters from the Muslim community, especially in these critical times.

    Urdu as the second language in West Bengal

    The controversy is also connected to a decision made by the state government earlier. Under the previous government headed by Mamata Banerjee, the status of Urdu as a second language was granted in those areas where the population of Urdu-speaking people is over 10%.

    The decision applies to those areas covered by the Calcutta Municipal Corporation and other municipalities such as Islampur in North Dinajpur district, Garulia, Kamarhati, Bhatpara, and Titagarh in North 24-Parganas district, and Chapdani, Bansberia, Rishra, and Bhadreshwar in Hooghly district.

    Two blocks in North Dinajpur Goalpokhor I and II were also included. Later, more areas were added, including regions under the Asansol Municipal Corporation, Bally in Howrah, and Kulti and Jamuria in Burdwan.

    According to this decision, Urdu can be used in government offices, official documents, and educational institutions. The state also intends to open primary schools with Urdu as the medium of instruction and introduce Urdu as an elective subject in secondary schools and colleges. Government offices will also respond in Urdu to letters written in Urdu. Employees conversant in the language will be posted in the areas. This decision is part of the election manifesto of Mamata Banerjee.

    Why Urdu has become politically important

    Urdu has a long history in India, especially from the Mughal period when it developed as a language used in administration, poetry and everyday communication in many parts of North India. Over time, it came to be associated with sections of the Muslim community, even though people speak it from different backgrounds.

    This perception is now being used politically in West Bengal, where promoting Urdu is seen as a way to connect with Muslim voters. At the same time, Mamata Banerjee’s repeated references to “outsiders” have added another layer to the debate.

    From blaming people from Bihar after unrest in Uttar Dinajpur to linking Ram Navami violence to outsiders, and earlier remarks during elections targeting people from Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Rajasthan, her statements have often focused on non-Bengali groups. She has also used similar language in other contexts, including political campaigns outside the state and during protests in Kolkata.

    Such remarks create fear among Bengalis that their identity is under threat, while also making migrants and non-Bengali speakers feel targeted in the state.

    Conclusion

    The ongoing debate shows how language and identity have become central to politics in West Bengal. Mamata Banerjee is promoting Urdu in governance and public messaging; she is also encouraging people to see non-Bengali-speaking communities as “outsiders.”

    This approach is creating a divide, bringing one group together through language-based outreach while pushing another away, raising concerns about social harmony in the state ahead of elections.

    India at the end of Naxalism: How a violent movement was born, sustained and finally crushed — tracing the shift from political ambiguity to a decisive national security doctrine

    The 31st of March 2026 marks the Modi government-set deadline for the absolute eradication of Naxalism or Left-wing extremism (LWE) in India. Union Home Minister Amit Shah has repeatedly affirmed this deadline, describing it as the end of decades of red terror that once controlled vast swathes of central and eastern India. As India becomes free from the menace of Maoist-Leftist terrorism, here is a look back at the birth, life and death of Naxalism in India.

    The birth and life of Naxalism: From 1970s to 2010s

    Naxalism in India traces its origin back to May 1967 in the village of Naxalbari in West Bengal’s Darjeeling district. Some local peasants, tribals, landless labourers, led by radical CPI(M) leaders Charu Majumdar, Kanu Sanyal, Jangal Santhal, among others, rose against those they described as exploitative landlords and jotedars over land, debt, and feudal oppression. Inspired by Mao Zedang’s Chinese model, these people, armed with bows, arrows, and lathis, began raiding granaries and declared a “protracted people’s war”.

    With the state’s crackdown resulting in the death of over a dozen tribals who joined the Naxalites, the ideology garnered support and state units of CPI (M) in Uttar Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir, and some sections in Bihar and Andhra Pradesh joined in.

    While the ‘uprising’ was crushed within weeks by the state police, it sparked a nationwide ideological fire that even went on to devour thousands of Indian people over the decades.

    Charu Majumdar

    Majumdar was the principal ideologue behind the Naxalite ‘movement’. He founded the Communist Party of India (Marist-Leninist) in 1969, and authored the ‘Historic Eight Documents’ which formed the ideological foundation of the violent campaign. Majumdar essentially argued for the overthrow of the Indian state, labelling it a “bourgeois-landlord” regime. He infamously advocated that “power grows out of the barrel of a gun”.

    After Majumdar’s death, rebels split from mainstream communism, forming the CPI(ML) and later factions, including the People’s War Group (PWG) and Maoist Communist Centre (MCC). These groups rejected parliamentary democracy; instead, they laid emphasis on armed ‘revolution’ to overthrow the “semi-feudal” and “semi-colonial” Indian state. These Maoists posited themselves as the ‘protectors’ of adivasis and the poor people against ‘exploiters’ to consolidate power.

    Their tactics often involved extortion, an illegal levy on businesses, contractors, and even government schemes. In addition, they resorted to landmine ambushes, beheadings, and selective killings of mainstream political leaders and armed forces personnel to enforce control, deter informants, and instil fear in the hearts of locals opposed to their violent methods.

    Disgracefully, some state governments and political ecosystems treated the Maoist-Naxalite menace as a ‘socio-political’ and ‘law and order’ issue rather than existential terrorism and a national security issue. This flawed approach led to periodic ceasefires, peace talks, and even negotiations, like the infamous 2004 in Andhra Pradesh under YS Rajashekhara Reddy, which collapsed after Maoists regrouped. Similar attempts were made in Odisha and Jharkhand. These talks and the political coddling of Naxalites gave the latter breathing spaces and media attention.

    For decades, a network of urban sympathisers of Naxalites, or simply Urban Naxals, comprising leftist academics like Arundhati Roy, activists, lawyers, and journalists, provided ideological justification, whitewashing of violent Naxalite activities, legal aid, media coverage, and sometimes even logistical cover. This ecosystem, coupled with pliable political leadership, essentially helped sustain recruitment and international narratives framing the Indian Republic as an aggressor while the violent Naxalite terrorists as ‘heroes’.

    On 28th March 2010, author and radical leftist activist, Arundhati Roy, spent around two weeks in Maoist-controlled Dantewada. She wrote essays, articles and even a book glorifying Naxalites, their violent tactics and anti-national activities.

    Just a month later, on 6th April 2010, Maoists carried out a massive attack in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada, wherein 75 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and state police personnel were killed in the Mukrana forest.

    The CRPF team was attacked while they were taking a break after a long, tiring night of travelling. The team had completed its three-day anti-Maoist operation and was on its way. They took a break at around 6 am after travelling all night, when they were ambushed by up to 1,000 Maoists positioned on the neighbouring hilltop. The Naxals, fully aware of the CRPF troop movement, launched an attack with deadly precision, giving the soldiers no chance to mount a response. They blew up an anti-landmine vehicle and then began firing indiscriminately.

    Instead of unleashing hell on Maoist terrorists, Home Minister P Chidambaram begged them to announce a 72-hour ceasefire and hold talks with the government. Emboldened by the Congress government’s embrace of cowardice, Maoist terrorists rejected the ceasefire ‘request’.

    While Maoists/Naxalites carried out attacks after attacks, be it the Dantewada ambush in April 2010, Naxal ambush in Narayanpur, which killed 26 CRPF personnel in June 2010, Jnaneswari Express train derailment in May 2010, wherein 48 passengers lost their lives in the incident and more than 200 passengers were injured, or the IED attack by Naxalites on Congress cadres in Darbha Valley, Chhattisgarh, wherein 27 people, including Chhattisgarh Congress leaders, including state secretary Nand Kumar Patel, his son Dinesh, former Union minister VC Shukla and former state minister Mahendra Karma, the Congress-led Central government prioritised talks or tough action, coddling over crackdown.

    Killings, beheadings, and kidnappings of government officials, including the much-talked-about kidnapping of Malkangiri collector R V Krishna by Maoists and the release of Maoists in exchange, were the norm in the 2000s.

    The soft approach of the previous Congress-led government continued even as the human cost of Maoist-Naxalite terrorism exceeded 12,000 since 2000 alone, including over 4000 civilians, 2,723 security force personnel, informants, and tribals brainwashed into joining the Naxalite armed ‘movement’. Tribals and villagers in the Dandakaranya region bore the brunt of extortion, forced Naxalite recruitment on one hand, summary executions of informers, and displacement on the other. Local economies were shattered, and governance was disallowed to operate. People willing to join the mainstream were either killed, terrorised into silence or brainwashed into joining Maoist terrorism.

    While Prime Minister Manmohan Singh once called Maoist terrorism India’s “single biggest internal security threat”, this statement was confined to mere acknowledgement and did not trigger any policy shift for decisive action. The result? Maoist insurgency survived and sustained, found ideological sympathisers and glorifiers across cinema, media, and fascinated those who emerged as pro-Naxal ‘intellectuals’.

    Discarding previous ‘socio-political’ issue approach, Modi government declared Naxalism as national security threat: How a change in approach led to end of Naxalism

    The historic victory of the Bhartiya Janata Party-led NDA marked the beginning of a new era on multiple fronts, particularly in national security. The Modi government reframed Naxalism unambiguously as a national security and terrorism issue, not a socio-political or development bargaining chip. This zero-tolerance approach birthed a coordinated national strategy against Naxalism, which comprised security operations, targeted development, choking lifelines, and rehabilitation schemes for those willing to surrender and join the mainstream.

    The last few years have witnessed massive, intelligence-driven operations by the police in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana, encompassing the entire Naxal-infected Dandakaranya region. The state police departments expanded Andhra Pradesh’s greyhounds model, and elite forces intensified the anti-Naxal crackdown.

    With coordinated efforts and a strong political will, HM Amit Shah soon began yielding results as a leadership decapitation in the Maoist camp began. Top Maoist commanders, like Basavaraju and Madvi Hidma, among others, were neutralised in large numbers while surrenders hit record highs, crossing over 2000 in 2025 alone.

    In addition to eliminating intransigent Naxalites, the authorities focused on draining the Maoist financial lifelines. Dedicated NIA verticals, Enforcement Directorate probes, raids, and state action resulted in the seizure of assets worth crores. Demonetization, coupled with tighter banking and telecom penetration in forests, and a crackdown on extortion rackets operating in the Dandakaranya region, starved the Maoists of cash and logistics, while their mainstream ideological sympathisers cried victimhood.

    The Modi government also gave special attention to not giving attention to the open letters, pleas, and propaganda peddled by Urban Naxals against the state crackdown on Maoists.

    In May 2025, Indian security forces achieved a major breakthrough in the war against left-wing extremism or Naxalism by eliminating top Maoist terrorist Nambala Keshav Rao, also known as Basavaraju. The Maoist leader was killed in an encounter in the Abujhmadh (also spelt Abujmarh) forests of Chhattisgarh’s Narayanpur district.

    Nambala Kesava Rao alias Basavaraju was among the 26 Naxal terrorists killed by the security forces on the 21st of May 2025. Basavaraju, the general secretary of the banned outfit Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-M). The 70-year-old Maoist leader was among India’s most wanted Maoist leaders and had a bounty of Rs 1.5 crore on his head. He was behind the 2010 Chintalnar massacre of 76 CRPF jawans and the 2013 attack in Jhiram Ghati, wherein several Congress leaders were killed.

    Abujh means what cannot be understood, while Madh means hill. Abujhmadh has been the only piece of land in India which has had no revenue map; villagers have no title deeds (patta) to the land they live in or cultivate, even though the area (4000 km) is bigger than the state of Goa.

    Due to Naxalism, this area had little to no civil administration. With a population of around 40 to 45 thousand, mostly Abhujhmadhia tribe people, Abujhmadh included the Orcha block and some regions of the Narayanpur district. Abujhmadhia are among the Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) of Chhattisgarh and are entitled to special benefits and rights from the government meant for endangered groups like them. The area also includes the parts of Dantewada and Bijapur in Chhattisgarh, and Gadhchiroli in Maharashtra.

    There has been no roads, hospitals and other basic facilities in Abujhmadh since the Naxalites would not allow any development work or any step towards mainstreaming of this region and its people take place. As per locals, Naxalites used to set buses ablaze if they entered villages in Abujhmadh. Maoists made sure that no land deeds were earmarked in Abujhmadh, no motorable roads are constructed and no development ever reaches the villages on this hill. To ensure this, the Maoist terrorsts would either resort to violence or propaganda, mostly both.

    By 2000s, the Maoists transformed Abujhmadh into their stronghold. They destroyed roads, burnt over 50 schools and cut off the region from whatever connected it to the mainstream. The Maoists began operating “Jantana Sarkar” in Abujhmadh. They ran their own schools in Murumwada and Botor, where, even till the recent years, Maoists taught their own syllabus.

    Abujhmadh is covered by the single Assembly constituency of Narayanpur. Around 90 per cent of its area remains unsurveyed. Back in April 2017, a revenue survey was conducted in Akabeda and other villages with the assistance of IIT-Roorkee; however, the survey could not make much progress due to security concerns and a lack of infrastructure.  

    Abujhmadh got its first operation theatre and two new mobile towers in 2023; however, over most of the area has been without a mobile network.

    In December 2024, a District Reserve Guard (DRG) head constable was killed by Maoists in Abujhmadh’s Kohkameta during an encounter. Maoists have also been killing former Sarpanch (village leaders) in areas controlled by them. In 2024, two ex-sarpanches, including a BJP functionary, were killed by Maoists in Bijapur district under south Bastar. In 2023, an ex-Sarpanch named Ramji Dodi from the Zara village in Abujhmadh was abducted by Maoists along with his two nephews and taken to a jungle area where he was strangled to death. The sarpanch was brutally murdered by Maoists for being a ‘Mukhbir’ or police informer.

    Despite the challenges, the security forces and the government relentlessly continued their efforts to end the Naxal menace not only in Abujhmadh but also in the entire Dandakaranya region.

    The elimination of Basavaraju, who once dominated the unofficial headquarters of Maoists, Abujhmadh, shocked the remaining Maoist cadres and their Urban Naxal supporters. With his death, the end of Naxalism began to appear inevitable even to the Modi government’s ideological adversaries.

    In November 2025, it was reported that around 80% of the Naxals active in the Abujhmad region of Chhattisgarh had laid down their weapons.

    Before this,  security forces conducted ‘Operation Black Forest’ to break the backbone of Naxals near Karreguttalu Hill (KGH) at the Chhattisgarh-Telangana border. The 21-day-long operation carried out by the joint forces of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and state police between April 21 and May 11 neutralised 31 Naxals carrying a bounty of Rs 1.72 crore. A total of 214 Naxal hideouts and bunkers were destroyed in the operation, and a total of 450 IEDs, 818 BGL shells, 899 bundles of Codex, detonators and a huge amount of explosive material have been recovered during the searches. In addition, nearly 12,000 kilograms of food supplies have also been recovered.

    The government launched Operation Kagar in January 2024, a multi-pronged strategy combining aggressive military operations, enhanced coordination between Central and State forces, and development efforts to address the root causes of Naxalism. Under this operation, around 1 lakh para-military troops, including the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), its elite CoBRA units, District Reserve Guards DRG), and state police, have been deployed in the left-wing terrorism affected areas. These security personnel are equipped with modern technology like drones for information gathering, AI for intelligence gathering, and satellite imagery, among others. The security forces have been undertaking operations in the Naxal-infected Dandakaranya region spanning multiple states.

    Apart from neutralising Naxal leaders and urging Maoist cadres to surrender, the government is also carrying out development work in Naxal-affected regions to connect them to the mainstream. The government has constructed 11,503 kilometres of highways in Naxal-affected areas. The minister added that 20,000 kilometres of rural roads were built.

    One of the biggest game-changers in this transformation has been the work done by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO). According to a report by The Indian Express, over the last 15 months, the BRO has built 20 Bailey bridges and completed 75 km of road construction in extremely difficult terrain across Maoist-affected districts like Bijapur and Sukma.

    In November 2024, the BRO was assigned the task of developing a 130-km road network in these districts, areas that had seen some of the worst Maoist violence. The project includes over 10 separate road works that had remained incomplete for years due to constant threats from Naxals.

    A BRO official highlighted the challenges, saying, “80% of the road projects were lying dormant for over half a decade on account of poor response from local contractors due to constant threat from Naxals.”

    In the past, Maoists frequently targeted road construction. Equipment was destroyed, contractors were killed, and even security personnel deployed for protection were attacked. As recently as last year, a contractor was killed in Bijapur’s Pamed area.

    As the flame flickers before extinguishing, Maoists continued to make last-ditch efforts to ‘fight back’. Officials revealed that Maoists had planted a 50-kg improvised explosive device (IED) in Basaguda, which was later defused by the CRPF.

    Meanwhile, Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai made a strong statement on 18th March, stating that Naxalism in the state is effectively over.

    “Naxalism has ended. Only a formal declaration awaits,” he said while speaking to reporters. He added, “It is indeed welcome that due to the strong leadership of our Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Home Minister, and the courage of our security forces, the government’s commitment to eliminate Naxalism across the country by March 31, 2026, is being fulfilled…”

    Operation Kagar’s success can be understood from the fact that from 2015 to 2025, the number of Naxal-affected districts reduced from 106 to 18. Of these districts, 12 were considered the worst-affected by Naxalism. However, this number was further reduced to only 6 worst Naxal-affected districts, including Bijapur, Kanker, Narayanpur, and Sukma in Chhattisgarh, West Singhbhum in Jharkhand, and Gadhchiroli in Maharashtra.

    On 19th February, Bihar authorities announced that the state is now “Naxal-free” after the surrender of prominent Maoist Suresh Koda, also known as Mustakim, who had a reward of Rs 3 lakh. He surrendered himself to the Special Task Force (STF) of the Munger district police a day ago. It is pertinent to note that the number of districts affected by left-wing extremists (LWE) has also decreased to seven, as per a recent analysis of the affected region. 

    In January this year, the Centre released a detailed 10-point plan to ensure that areas cleared of Left-Wing Extremism remain peaceful. The plan is meant for the post-Left-Wing Extremism phase and focuses on stabilising districts that have lived through years of violence.

    The Modi government’s new security doctrine, a clear message to Maoists, give up arms or die, resulted in voluntary surrenders, elimination of intransigent Naxalites, clearing of Naxal strongholds, and return of countless surrendered Naxalites into the mainstream.

    As pressure began to build and the Maoist structure began to collapse, calls for a “ceasefire” suddenly grew louder. These appeals were amplified by left-leaning activists and sections of civil society that had long argued for talks. But this was not a peace initiative, but a pressure tactic from a weakening insurgency.

    Ceasefires have historically allowed Maoist groups to regroup, rearm, and regain relevance. The government’s refusal to pause the operations shows confidence. Negotiations are tools of resolution, not rescue mechanisms for collapsing movements. By rejecting ceasefire demands, the state made its intent unmistakable: this phase was not about managing Naxalism’s decline, but taking the fight against Naxalism to its decisive conclusion.

    Jayaram Reddy, Nambala Keshava Rao alias Basavaraju, Pappu Lohara, Prabhat Ganjhu, Tulsi Bhuiyan, Sudhakar alias Gautam, Sahdeo Soren, Madvi Hidma, Meturu Joga Rao, are among the top Naxalite leaders killed by the security forces in 2025 alone. These killings created a leadership vacuum with the Politburo and Central Committee shrinking from 45 to less than 10 members.

    As pointed out by Home Minister Amit Shah on the floor of the Parliament on 30th March 2026, a Red Corridor had been created across 12 states, including Chhattisgarh, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Bihar, Bengal, Kerala, parts of Karnataka, and 3 districts of Uttar Pradesh. In these areas, 12 crore people lived in poverty for years, and 20,000 youths lost their lives. Who is responsible for this? Shah said that the root cause of Naxalism is not the demand for development, but Left-wing ideology, which was accepted by the leader of the then ruling party to win the Presidential election in 1969.

    The movement that started from Naxalbari spread to 12 states, covering 17% of the country’s land area and more than 10% of its population, with the tacit backing of the previous ruling dispensation. However, the Modi government has crushed this Red corridor and freed it from the disease of Naxalism. The end of Naxalism today reflects a decisive shift in treating an armed ideology-driven insurgency as a national security issue and unleashing proportionate measures, instead of begging for talks, mollycoddling gun-yielding terrorists and letting a whole leftist cabal run propaganda humanising the enemies of the Indian Republic.

    What a change in approach towards tackling internal national security threats like Naxalism brought can be understood from how times changed from the Indian government requesting Maoists to declare a ceasefire and hold talks under Congress rule to Maoists writing letters and relaying radio messages begging the Modi government to pause anti-Naxal operations, and allow them time to coordinate the surrender of other Naxalites.

    OpIndia earlier reported how the leftists in an open letter blatantly sided with the Maoist terrorists and emphasised that the government should discontinue its anti-Naxal crackdown. However, despite all the challenges and hurdles brought up by Maoists and their cheerleaders in politics and ‘civil society’, the Modi government and the security forces have continued their crackdown on the Naxalites unabated.

    Now, as the Red Terror crumbled, the supporters of left-wing terrorists came out last year, using the pretext of protesting against air pollution in Delhi to demonstrate their support for the infamous slain Maoist Madvi Hidma with his posters, amid slogans of “Comrade Hidma Amar Rahe.”

    While the pockets of residual extremism may linger quite some more time, the ‘Kitne Hidma maaroge’ brigade might make headlines once or twice in a year to find relevance for their dead cause, the organised threat of Naxalism that terrorist vast regions of India for nearly six decades stands defeated at the hands of Indian security forces and the Modi government right on the pre-decided deadline, 31st March 2026.

    From peddling fake news and cropped videos to misleading narratives: A deep dive into the propaganda handles that were restricted in India

    In recent days, several social media accounts and content platforms such as 4PM, Molitics, and National Dastak have been withheld in India. Immediately after the restriction, sections of the left ecosystem framed the move as an attack on free speech, claiming that dissent was being silenced, and the claims gained traction across platforms. However, such a characterisation raises a more fundamental question: was this action arbitrary, or did it precede a consistent pattern of content warranting closer scrutiny?

    A closer look at what these platforms are putting out suggests the problem isn’t as simple as it seems. In many cases, their content seems to depend on sensational framing, selective fact-picking, and claims that are sometimes proven wrong by subsequent information or later verification. From narratives later deemed misleading and from repeated cases of speculation presented with a degree of certainty, the pattern points to a style of content in which impact often takes precedence over accuracy. In that context, the focus shifts from a singular act of restriction to a broader question of accountability within digital information ecosystems.

    The Ecosystem: Platforms, Personalities, and Narrative Building

    At first glance, Platforms such as 4PM, Molitics and National Dastak portray themselves as alternative voices. They present their content as bold, independent and unfiltered. Their appeal largely rests on the claim of challenging mainstream narratives and “speaking truth to power.” However, their content strategy appears to prioritise high-impact presentation over substantiated reporting.

    Common features include dramatic thumbnails, strong headlines, and framing that elicits an emotional response. Complex issues are frequently reduced to simplified narratives, in which speculation is presented with a degree of certainty while verification remains unclear or absent.

    This creates an ecosystem in which speculation is presented as near-certainty, isolated developments are framed as systemic collapse, and opinion-driven narratives are packaged as factual reporting. This is not just about where you stand on issues. Media platforms across the board have strong opinions. But the difference in the method is whether claims are supported by verifiable proof, or whether proof comes after the claim.

    On these platforms, the repeated use of amplification rather than authentication raises important questions about editorial standards and intent. Just not one post; this bigger ecosystem helps us understand why the government may have gotten involved. 

    Layer 1: When Presentation Alters Perception

    A misleading post by National Dastak

    In one instance, a post amplified by National Dastak referred to accused individuals using partial identifiers such as “Rajput” and “Rana.” This appeared to suggest as a Hindu identity. However, additional context later indicated that the individuals’ full identities did not align with the implied narrative. Actually, the accused names were “Azeem Rana” and “Azad Rajput”. Both accusers belonged to the Muslim identity, but the National Dastak was portraying the case as a crime committed by Hindu individuals.

    Notably, a community Note flagged the post as misleading, stating that partial naming was used in a way that could create a false impression. In other instances, claims or presentations circulated by these platforms were later found to be incomplete, misleading, or contradicted by additional context.

    One of the most widely amplified examples involved assertions that a significant portion of India’s gold reserves, valued at over ₹1 lakh crore, had gone “missing” from the Reserve Bank of India. The claim was presented in an alarming manner, often suggesting institutional opacity or large-scale financial irregularity. However, the Press Information Bureau has officially fact-checked the unit and later clarified that the claim was misleading, noting that the figures had been misinterpreted and taken out of context.

    Despite this clarification, the narrative continued to circulate across multiple handles, often without reference to the correction. The persistence of such claims highlights how high-impact financial misinformation can continue to shape perception even after being addressed.

    Taken together, these instances demonstrate how National Dastak and similar media organisations use selective presentation, the omission of context, or partial interpretation of facts to significantly alter public understanding of an issue.

    Layer 2: Visual Narratives and Context Gaps

    Another recurring pattern emerges in the use of short video clips and selective visuals, often presented without full context. In one instance, a clip showing Nitish Kumar holding an aarti plate was circulated with the caption “Samrat Chaudhary snatched the aarti plate from Nitish Kumar’s hands” It was presented in isolation; the visual appeared to suggest a particular message. However, without the full sequence of events or surrounding context, such interpretations remain, at best, partial.

    This method of presentation is not uncommon in high-velocity digital content ecosystems, where short clips are often detached from their original setting and repurposed to align with a broader narrative. In such cases, what is omitted can be as significant as what is shown. The concern here is not merely about a single video, but about a broader pattern in which visuals are curated to appear to support pre-existing conclusions. When context is limited or absent, audiences are left to interpret fragments as a complete reality. Over time, repeated exposure to such selectively framed visuals can reinforce specific perceptions regardless of whether the full context supports those conclusions.

    Layer 3: Sensationalism as a Content Strategy

    Beyond what is said or shown, another critical dimension lies in how content is packaged and presented to audiences. Platforms like Molitics rely consistently on high-intensity, attention-grabbing language. Phrases such as:“घपलेबाजी पकड़ी गई” (Scam exposed), “बड़ा खुलासा” (Big revelation), “तहलका मच गया” (Shockwaves created), “मोदी को बड़ा झटका” (Big blow to Modi) , “घपलेबाजी पकड़ी गई,” “नफरती हिंदुत्व,” and “आतंकी संगठन” are presented with a tone of certainty, often positioning complex or contested issues as settled conclusions.

    They are frequently used in thumbnails, captions, and video titles, often conveying a sense of urgency and certainty, even when the corresponding evidence is not clearly presented.

    This style of presentation is deliberate. Thumbnails act as the first point of engagement. Their framing shapes viewer perception before the content is consumed. Consistent use of dramatic language creates an environment in which every development is framed as a major scandal or crisis. Most of the time, their framing work is based on the Anti-Hindutva narrative, where Hindus are shown as the villain or oppressor. News with no significance is run through as sensational.

    Sometimes, the intensity of the claim in the thumbnail or headline does not appear to be proportionate to the verifiable documentation or primary sources within the content itself. This gap between presentation and substantiation becomes significant, particularly when such content reaches large audiences.

    Over time, repeated exposure to such framing can normalise a perception of constant upheaval and systemic wrongdoing, irrespective of whether each claim holds up under scrutiny.

    Layer 4: Escalation into Defamatory and Speculative Narratives

    Beyond patterns of sensationalism and selective framing, certain instances reflect a shift towards speculative, and at times potentially defamatory, assertions involving public institutions and individuals.

     One such example involves content posted by the account named Dr Nimo Yadav 2.0, run by Prateek Sharma, which raised questions suggesting that offices of Union ministers were linked to an individual allegedly involved in terrorist training activities.

    The post framed this as a possibility and called for investigation, despite no publicly established evidence being cited to substantiate such a serious implication. Even though they are worded as questions, these kinds of statements, especially when they are spread to large groups of people, can strongly suggest things that aren’t true.

    In another case, commentary that accompanied a picture of Indian Army officials seemed to use satire to link their appearance to a policy decision on mid-day meals. Humour and satire are part of public discourse, but this kind of framing could be seen as making fun of or belittling institutions that people generally respect, and it also shows the mentality of those who make fun of their own army that fights to protect them.

    The one who has never achieved in their life will always make fun of people who are running and protecting the whole country. Nimo Yadav and these accounts run on the payroll of the Anti-India agenda, where their whole work is to shift the narrative from talking about India to making fun and creating against India 

    Also, posts about India’s foreign policy and energy choices reached conclusions suggesting strategic or economic failure, even though publicly available data showed more complex realities, such as India securing cheaper crude oil from Russia despite global pressure.

    Similarly, certain claims hinted at high-level diplomatic manoeuvres involving unrelated personalities, without citing verifiable evidence, thereby contributing to speculative narratives presented with an air of plausibility. 

    In addition to speculative assertions, certain instances involve highly provocative and offensive language directed at specific communities. For example, while reporting, the reporter of National Dashtak stated these provocative lines against the Brahmin community. He stated that the “Brahmins are a disgrace, beat them with shoes and throw them out” Such statements raise serious concerns about the normalisation of extreme language in public discourse and targeting a specific community.

    These types of organisation then demand “free speech but the question is whether freedom of speech also exists for the brahmin community, on which they spread their narrative. When such content is amplified without restraint, it risks deepening social divisions and lowering the threshold of acceptable expression.

    Taken together, these examples reflect a pattern in which accounts that make serious allegations and are framed as questions use satire to intersect with sensitive institutions and complex geopolitical developments, and are simplified into definitive conclusions, with the end goal of spreading misinformation and creating a fearmongering situation among civilians.

    Layer 5: Predictive narratives presented as certainty

    A video by 4pm

    A particularly noticeable trend is the recurrence of political predictions, most notably in content from YouTube channels like 4PM. A review of their video titles, thumbnails and recurring narratives indicates a consistent projection of imminent political upheaval. Their entire content relies on a surge of fear-mongering, with phrases suggesting that the government is on the verge of collapse, that major “game-changing” developments are underway, or that leadership transitions are imminent, appearing with notable frequency.

    These claims are often presented with a high degree of urgency and frequently portrayed as some insider information or unfolding developments. However, when we observed it over time, many such predictions do not appear to materialise as suggested.

    This creates a recurring cycle that starts with Thumbnails featuring shocking words, a high-impact claim is introduced, amplified through dramatic presentation, and gradually replaced by a new prediction without acknowledging earlier outcomes. Over time, this pattern contributes to a perception of constant political instability, even in the absence of corresponding real-world developments.

    It is important to note that political analysis and speculation are legitimate aspects of media discourse. However, the distinction lies in how such speculation is presented. When predictive assertions are repeatedly framed as near-certainties without any verifiable grounding or subsequent accountability. It  raises questions about editorial intent and credibility. In effect, the issue is not a single incorrect prediction but a sustained pattern in which speculation is elevated to the level of expectation.

    The Pattern That Emerges

    Individually, each of these accounts, which are withheld in India, might be viewed as editorial choice, opinion or even a single error. However, when analysed collectively, a more consistent pattern emerges. From making false financial claims to identity framing to visual presentation, the content exhibits certain repeating features. Facts may be presented selectively or incompletely, claims may be unsubstantiated, and narratives may not fit with recent developments.

    This trend is perpetuated by how content is packaged and distributed. Sensational headlines, emotionally charged images, and definitive language provide the impression of certainty even when the underlying evidence is uncertain or debatable.

    Over time, such repetition can significantly shape audience perception. What begins as a claim or speculation can,  through consistent amplification, acquire the appearance of credibility. There is a famous quote by Joseph Goebbels: “A lie told once remains a lie, but a lie told a thousand times becomes the truth.” The whole narrative of these accounts revolves around this quote.

    The initial stage of this narrative begins with hating the government, which gradually turns into hatred for India, which eventually reflects in their content. For example, in the above section of Layer 4: Escalation into Defamatory and Speculative Narratives, the account named Nimo Yadav made fun of the Indian Army, which is not related to any political party, as the army of this country is far above politics, but these types of accounts are unable to stop at a critical level.

    The concern, therefore, is not limited to individual posts but extends to a broader content ecosystem where narrative construction and engagement may take precedence over verification and contextual accuracy.

    Conclusion: Between expression and accountability

    The debate surrounding the restriction of these accounts has largely been framed in terms of free speech versus censorship. However, such a binary framing overlooks the underlying context. Freedom of expression remains a fundamental pillar of any democratic society. The ability to question, critique, and dissent is essential to public discourse. At the same time, the scale and speed at which information travels in the digital ecosystem introduce new challenges, particularly when content has the potential to misinform or mislead large audiences.

    In this context, the issue is not about suppressing viewpoints, but about examining whether repeated patterns of selective framing, unverified claims, and narrative-driven content can be treated as reliable information dissemination. As submissions before the Delhi High Court indicate, concerns raised by authorities include the spread of misleading narratives, defamatory content, and potential implications for public order.

    At the same time, platforms have raised questions about proportionality and due process, highlighting the complexity of regulating digital speech. Therefore, the conversation is not a simple one. But one aspect remains clear: when content consistently prioritises impact over accuracy, and repetition over verification, it invites scrutiny.