ThePrint's TheFinePrint | Monday, 26 August 2024 | TheFinePrint By Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri, Senior Associate Editor | | |
Bangladesh’s students, after leading the charge to topple the Sheikh Hasina ‘dictatorship’, are now busy with a new task—flood relief. From collecting donations to ensuring the delivery of food and clean water to affected areas, the students are at the forefront yet again. “We fought for our country’s freedom and ousted the dictator. Now this is ours to build,” a Dhaka University student told ThePrint’s Ananya Bhardwaj, reporting from a country in the midst of a political transition. She also found that many Bangladeshis are angry with India for “harbouring a killer”. Sheikh Hasina’s stay in India after fleeing Dhaka and the Indian media’s portrayal of the student movement as an issue of minority repression, among other factors, have become sore points. “Don’t tell people you’re an Indian journalist, you won’t return in one piece,” a Dhaka local warned her. Read Ananya Bhardwaj’s ground report. Meanwhile, back in India, the horrific rape and murder of a trainee doctor at Kolkata’s RG Kar Hospital has brought under scrutiny West Bengal's civic volunteer scheme. Sanjoy Roy, the primary suspect in the RG Kar case, was himself a civic volunteer. Moushumi Das Gupta explores how this initiative was started but lost its way over the years. In Kashmir, the Awami Ittehad Party (AIP) led by jailed parliamentarian Engineer Rashid is preparing to field nearly three dozen candidates in the upcoming Jammu and Kashmir assembly elections. ThePrint's Political Editor D.K. Singh delves into how this move has added a new layer of uncertainty about the nature of the mandate. | | Opinion Pakistan’s failure to eliminate violence from its heartlands, at the junction of Punjab, Balochistan and Sindh, reveals the nation-state’s fragility. And it raises questions about its ability to fight larger threats like jihadists, writes Praveen Swami, contributing editor, ThePrint. Experts worldwide agree that the success of mangrove projects hinges not just on scientific cultivation and government funding but on community involvement, knowledge-sharing, and active participation. The Tamil Nadu plan recognises this, writes Aneesa PA, ThePrint. | Video Due to changing lifestyles, environmental conditions and different types of pollution, India is seeing a rise in skin conditions. Twelve years after the rape-murder of a Delhi physiotherapist created national concern over sexual violence against Indian women, forensic investigation in India remains dogged by anaemic capacity and poor standards. That won’t change, it’s clear, until there's a deeper public understanding of what forensic investigation can achieve, and the dangers of junk science. | From Today's Newspapers 5 reports you should read: Chardham road project: SC panel stressed on environmental study for Gangotri route, BRO says not needed, The Indian Express Attacking Hezbollah, Israel fighter jets launch strikes across Lebanon, The Hindu BJP plans to highlight prompt rollback of lateral entry scheme to counter Oppn, Hindustan Times Tata Sons Repays ₹20,000-crore Debt in Bid to Stay Private, The Economic Times Food delivery platform Zomato eyes a new 'District' with third super brand, Business Standard 5 opinions of the day: Truth about women’s abuse in Malayalam cinema is out. Does anyone really care? by Padmapriya Janakiraman in The Indian Express The polity of J&K is at an inflection point by Peerzada Ashiq in The Hindu Social awakening is key to fighting heinous crimes by Shashi Shekhar in Hindustan Times Affirmative action’s impact on jobs has been limited, a fact lateral entry was making public by Rathin Roy in The Economic Times US elections: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris focus more on domestic issues by TNC Rajagopalan in Business Standard | | We hope you enjoyed our newsletter. If you have questions or feedback, please do contact us. | |