India that every Indian envisages for
A little bit more than patriotism. A little bit lower than jingoism. --- Nirendra Dev
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Jamaat in poll-bound Bangladesh promises women in cabinet, youth at the helm
Congress and other opposition women MPs again moved towards the treasury benches
Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi Vadra hit back at the ruling party, alleging that the Prime Minister avoided the House due to the protest. “He got scared and that is why he did not arrive in the House,” Priyanka Gandhi said.
She also took a swipe at Union Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw and BJP MP Nishikant Dubey, claiming they “ran away like a bullet train”.
Women MPs gheraoed PM's chair: What happened inside Lok Sabha minutes before speech
Sources said that after the House was adjourned, Congress and other opposition women MPs again moved towards the treasury benches, advancing up to two rows behind the Prime Minister's chair and heading in the direction of BJP MP Nishikant Dubey.
Assam Rifles in Career building role .... launches coaching centres for IAS aspirants
What happens when glass ceilings are shattered?
*** Let"s move on.
Take this: Any security related organisation has multiple functions to perform. National security is one important facet. It's the mission. But organisations such as The Assam Rifles has things to perform, transform reform. Late it has given upon itself another task -- Career Building for the youths.
This is what Assam Rifles is doing.
Over the last few years - it has been running coaching classes with free lodging and food for NEET and JEE aspirants.
Multiple such centres have been set up in Medziphema and Mokokchung in Nagaland and also a few in Mizoram and also Ukhrul in Manipur.
Now the para military forces has started something extra ordinary. COACHING CENTRE FOR IAS aspirants in Mizoram.
This is basically an outreach programme being undertaken at the initiative of DG Assam Rifles.
It's simply a salutary effort and will have both short term and long term impacts, says retired government servant Pu Lalrinsingliana. "I particularly welcome this move because Mizos have immense talent pool. So far good prospective careers eluded poor and rural people. I hope this initiative of Assam Rifles will have verg good results".
One young graduate Ms Evelin in remote Champhai town says : "I am really excited about the coaching centre for IAS aspirants. Moreover it will be in Mizoram and we do not have to move in hostels in Kolkata or New Delhi to join such coaching centres. It will change the broader youth related scenario in Mizoram".
Serving officers say -- we are to do our work. This coaching centre is one such mission where in Assam Rifles will get yet another methodology to live up to its goal as Friends of the Hill People.
The response is good. The first batch already has 25 students and to start with there are plans to keep the classes in hybrid format.
As a very old force in north east; The Assam Rifles know the strength of the efficacy of people to people contract.
This coaching centre will be an ideal example of that effort.
Ends
Kuki Zo Council opposes formation of BJP led Govt in Manipur
In a major development as a consequence of fast moving political developments in Manipur, the Kuki Zo Council has disapproved formation of Y Khemchand ministry in the state.
In a strongly worded statement, the KZC asserted that "any Kuki-Zo MLA who chooses to disregard the collective decision" will be doing so in their individual capacity and KZC shall not be held accountable for the consequences arising from such unilateral decisions.
In its statement, the Kuki Zo Council reiterated its firm and consistent position regarding the formation of the Government of Manipur.
In the KZC Governing Council Meeting held on 30 December 2025-comprising all constituent tribes, apex bodies, and regional organisations it was unanimously resolved that, in view of the unspeakable atrocities committed against the Kuki-Zo people and the enforced physical separation imposed by the Meiteis, the Kuki-Zo people cannot and shall not participate in the formation of the Government of Manipur.
This collective resolve was further reaffirmed on 13 January 2026 at the joint meeting of the Suspension of Operations (SoO) groups, the Kuki-Zo Council, and Kuki-Zo MLAs-popularly known as the Lungthu Meeting-held in Guwahati.
The meeting resolved that the Kuki-Zo people shall not participate in the formation of the Manipur government unless the State and Central Governments provide a clear and written assurance committing to the political demand of the Kuki-Zo people.
Till date, KZC stands unwavering in this decision.
The Kuki-Zo people have been forcibly and physically separated by the Meiteis, and therefore have legitimately demanded a separate administration from the Meitei government in the form of a Union Territory with a legislature.
Under these circumstances, it is neither logical nor acceptable for the Kuki-Zo people to join a government formed with those from whom we have been violently separated.
The Kuki-Zo Council urged all concerned MLAs to respect the collective will, sentiments, unity and political aspiration of the Kuki-Zo people.
The statement issued by Information & Publicity, Kuki-Zo Council (KZC).
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Heavy rush for BJP ticket aspirants in Assam means Saffron party has come up the ladder: but there may be complexities too
We firmly believe that the way to get ahead was to work as hard as humanly possible.
But physics teaches us that, for systems susceptible to chaotic forces, this actually makes us more fragile.
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| Dipayan Chakraborty |
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| Joy Jyoti De : Workaholic ticket seeker in Udarbond |
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| Amarendra Pal |
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| Sandhya Acharjee |
Illegal Bangladeshi Muslim infiltration is something more complex ... than we may presume !!
Assam is the only state placed in a standalone “Special Revision” (SR), designed to cater for its unique NRC-linked demographic verification history.
Unlike SIR states, BLOs here are not collecting the detailed enumeration forms tied to 2003 records. Instead, they are cross-checking existing entries against pre-filled registers while simultaneously rationalising polling stations — reducing the voter count per booth from 1,500 to 1,200, as it is being done in SIR states.
House-to-house verification began on November 23, 2025 and the qualifying date for eligibility was January 1, 2026.
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| Lumding Rail station in Assam : snap by blogger |
Now in the run up to the assembly elections in Asssam; analysts say the SR has already shown its positive impact.
There are three point benefits, they say.
1. The SR has able to identify a large number of alleged Bangladeshi infiltrators. Hence, there is "objection" to these names being included in voters list. In the process, there is a strong sentiment of "discouragement" against getting Bangladeshi infiltrators included in voters' list unlike the Congress era under Late Tarun Gogoi or even Late Hiteshwar Saikia.
2. There is a growing section of "such Bangladeshi Muslim infiltrators" who are slowly realizing the reality and could even prepare fast to go back 'home'.
3. Thirdly, those who have been "sheltering" infiltrators may now realize that such strategies to change state's demography cannot work anymore.
Bangladeshi infiltration into Assam has multiple facets that deserve close scrutiny. One key methodology has been --
the influx of Bangladeshi Muslim women as "house maids" to get employment at much cheaper payments.
They take assistants from local Masjid Committees or other Muslim informal bodies and rich individuals to gradually get mingled with local population.
That Muslim men are allowed have more than one wife is also often mischievously used to help the illegal infiltrators.
The simpleton issue of 'insiders/natives and outsiders' is precisely very vast and hotly talked about
issues in Assam and other northeastern states. Some of these issues came up for closer analyses naturally.
But it also ought to be appreciated that in Christian and tribal dominated states such as Nagaland, Meghalaya and
Mizoram --- all non tribals are 'outsiders'. Muslims in general are called Miyas.
The outsiders in Mizoram are called 'Vai Naupang'; they are 'plain manu' in Nagaland and 'Dhwaker' in
Meghalaya. These definitions do not differentiate between Bangladeshis and 'other Indian citizens' or between
Muslims or Hindus.
In the context of Assam, it is always a case to argue that statistics often conceal more than what they
reveal. But for people of Assam, these census figures are like hot potatoes!
Assam’s Muslim population has increased in 2011 to 34.22 per cent, a quantum leap of over four per cent from
2001 while the Hindu population has been around 61.46 per cent. Some claims are now being made
that the Muslim population has probably witnessed further north-bound graph between 2011 and 2021.
During the UPA regime, Home Minister P Chidambaram had said that illegal immigration had been
'one major issue', but that point often gets lost in the din. That’s the paradox of North-east India and precisely
a factor for 'agony' of Assam.
Let us revisit the official data released by the Census authorities. The Muslim population increased between 2001 and 2011
by 28.8 percentage points in Darrang district, 14.88 points in Kamrup, 13.86 points in Nalbari and 11.37 points in Barpeta.
Interestingly, in districts bordering Bangladesh, Dhubri saw a rise of 5.67 points and Karimganj 4.08 points.
So does this imply — as Muslims are growing in numbers in districts away from the international border —
that there’s a decline in the Bangladeshi influx?
But this could be a fallacy. Sociologists maintain that 'substantial Bangladeshis' have made ways in states like Kerala and various parts of Assam, Maharashtra and West Bengal essentially for employment.
Guest column - Sanjay Das :::: "MGNREGA did not live mainly in files or speeches. It lived in homes"
What MGNREGA Meant for Rural India
It lived in village kitchens where a few weeks’ wages meant food on the stove. It lived in households where families delayed migration just long enough for a child to finish a school term. It lived in the lives of women who could earn money close to home, whose work was finally recognised by law rather than treated as informal help.
The Act did not promise prosperity. It promised something simpler and more urgent: breathing space. And for the poor, breathing space often means survival. It is the difference between coping and collapse, between staying rooted and being forced to leave, between dignity and despair.
Under MGNREGA, a worker did not beg for employment. She applied for it. She demanded it. She went to the panchayat with her job card and the law on her side. That mattered. It told her that her survival was not a favour—it was a right. It told her, plainly: your life matters enough for the state to respond.
The Moral Vision Behind the Law
MGNREGA began with an uncomfortable but necessary truth: poverty is rarely a personal failure. It is shaped by landlessness, caste and gender exclusion, climate shocks, and an economy that creates wealth for some while leaving others with nothing but uncertain labour. The law refused to pretend otherwise. From this honesty came its moral logic. If the market cannot provide work, the state must step in. If lack of work leads to hunger, the state cannot look away. And if dignity depends on having a livelihood, then livelihood cannot depend on charity—it must be protected as a right.
For nearly two decades, MGNREGA served as a law that held responsibility in place. It was imperfect and often delayed, but its purpose was clear. It told the poorest citizen something the Indian legal system had rarely said before: you are allowed to ask, and the state is required to answer.
The State’s Obligation and Its Withdrawal
When a worker applies for work and is told to come back next month, what she experiences is not a policy debate—it is absence. Democracy is not something she feels in speeches; she feels it in whether the state responds when she needs to survive.
The legitimacy of democratic power rests not only on elections, but on whether the state takes responsibility for those with the least power to protect themselves. A society shows its character not when the economy is growing, but when people are struggling.
MGNREGA recognised this. It treated unemployment as a long-term reality, not a temporary inconvenience. It treated hunger as a public responsibility, not a private shame. By guaranteeing work on demand, it turned concern into duty.
The repeal of MGNREGA and its replacement with a discretionary, capped, centrally controlled framework breaks that duty. What has been withdrawn is not just a programme, but a promise.
There was a time when the state said: if there is no work, we will provide it. A time when it said: hunger is not your fault. A time when it said: dignity does not require permission.
Today, the message is different. Workers are asked to wait. They are told funds have run out. They are expected to adjust, migrate, and endure. And often, the state says nothing at all.
This is not a technical delay. It is the state stepping away from its responsibility. It is not governance under pressure. It is abandonment.
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