Power, Silence and the Scripted Crowd A POCSO case involving the son of a Union minister lays bare the architecture of impunity in Indian public life — and the slow colonisation of social media by political money May 20, 2026 | 8 min read | Telangana The question, for many Indians watching the events unfold across television screens and smartphone feeds, seemed almost too obvious to ask: why does the son of a cabinet minister take six months to surrender to the police after a court declines his interim bail? The answer, when it eventually crystallised, said rather more about Indian democracy than any single criminal case can be expected to bear. The affair of Bandi Sai Bhagiratha — charged under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, known as POCSO — became, as one Telugu-language commentator put it, "a classic case" for diagnosing the real condition of the republic. The sequence of events was revealing in its detail. On the evening of ...
Operation Rising Lion and Operation Epic Fury have redrawn the Middle East's military map. Whether the United States and Israel have won the war—or merely a series of battles—depends on six questions whose answers will not be known for years. Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan | Hyderabad, India O n June 11th 2025, Israeli jets crossed into Iranian airspace and began the most audacious military operation in the Middle East since the Gulf War. Twelve days later, a ceasefire brokered by Donald Trump halted what both sides were already calling the defining conflict of the region's modern era. Nine months later, the United States joined in earnest, launching Operation Epic Fury on February 28th 2026—a campaign that lasted 71 days, struck more than 9,000 targets, and gutted Iran's navy, air defences, and ballistic-missile stockpile. On May 5th, Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared offensive operations concluded. The guns, for now, have fallen silent. The silence, however, is not the ...