يحاول ذهب - حر
Fall of the Oxford Union: Bastion of free speech to pawn of the Pakistani deep state
December 07, 2025
|The Sunday Guardian
In recent years, the Union has repeatedly allowed its prestige to be exploited for partisan propaganda, particularly in debates involving contentious subjects like Pakistan and terrorism.
The Oxford Union, founded in 1823, has long been regarded as one of the world's foremost platforms for rigorous debate and fearless exchange of ideas.
For two centuries it welcomed statesmen, scientists, revolutionaries and thinkers. From Winston Churchill to Albert Einstein, it earned a reputation as a temple of open discourse guided by the principle of seeking truth above all else. Its motto, “Non sibi sed toti”, translating as not for one, but for all, encapsulated a commitment to universal truth seeking.
Yet in recent years, the Union has repeatedly allowed its prestige to be exploited for partisan propaganda, particularly in debates involving contentious subjects like Pakistan and terrorism. The events of 27 November 2025 represent a particularly stark illustration of this erosion.
Senior advocate J. Sai Deepak, a prominent legal scholar and author of the widely acclaimed book “India, Bharat and Pakistan”, was formally invited in July 2025 by the incumbent president of the Oxford Union, Moosa Harraj, to oppose the motion “This House Believes That India’s Response to Pakistan is a Populist Strategy Sold as Security Policy”.
The originally announced Pakistani speakers included former Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, former Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Zubair Mahmood Hayat, and Pakistan's High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Dr Mohammad Faisal. On the Indian side, several high profile names were circulated in the media like clickbait. Most like India’s former Union Minister Subramanian Swamy had either declined months earlier or like the Congress MP from India, Sachin Pilot, had never even received formal invitations.
Just two days before the event, the Union urged Sai Deepak to assemble a UK based team citing last minute cancellations, at extremely short notice. He promptly proposed Jammu & Kashmir expert Manu Khajuria and Dharmic scholar Pt Satish K. Sharma as capable opposition speakers.
هذه القصة من طبعة December 07, 2025 من The Sunday Guardian.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Sunday Guardian
The Sunday Guardian
RS data exposes reality of AAP’s ‘education revolution’: Ashish Sood
Delhi Education Minister Ashish Sood mounted a strong attack on the former Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government, asserting that data presented in the Rajya Sabha has exposed the true reality behind its widely promoted \"education revolution\".
2 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
The President we never had
Shivraj Patil, former Union Minister, Governor and Speaker, who passed away on Friday, was an exceptional politician, perhaps the only one from his state to have been elected to the Lok Sabha seven consecutive times.
3 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
TALENT TRUMPS TECH: HOW INDIA VAULTED T0 #3 IN THE Al WORLD
Diplomatically, occupying the third spot changes the nature of India’s engagement with the world. When global leaders gather to discuss AI safety, India is no longer justa participant; itis a heavyweight. We can now shape rules of the road rather than just follow them.
5 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
Time to call out the hypocrisy of the woke ecosystem
Tragedy is that loudest champions of tolerance have become intolerant. Those who claim to defend inclusion now practise exclusion.
5 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
GST reforms may reduce retail inflation by 35 basis points
The decline in Consumer Price Index (CPI) or retail inflation due to massive GST rate rationalisation has been around 25 bps so far in the September-November 2025 period, according to estimates put forth by SBI Research.
1 min
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
INDIA'S FOREX RESERVES UP BY $1.03 BILLION
India's foreign exchange reserves rose marginally, by USD 1.033 billion in the week that ended December 5 to USD 687.260 billion, driven by a jump in gold reserves, the Reserve Bank of India's latest 'Weekly Statistical Supplement' data showed.
1 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
CBDCs more superior to Stablecoins as they satisfy all attributes of money
Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are digital tokens like Stablecoins, but they are inherently superior since they satisfy all the attributes that money should have, RBI Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar argued.
2 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
NEW DIGITAL TOOLS TRANSFORM INDIA'S LAW ENFORCEMENT MATRIX
Officials familiar with global policing trends say the tools now used in India place the country within the same broad class of investigative capability of Western nations such as the United States and the United Kingdom.
4 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
What media and experts got wrong about Vladimir Putin’s India visit
On the eve of Putin's visit, a majority of national dailies and prime time TV debates were projecting big ticket announcements.
4 mins
December 14, 2025
The Sunday Guardian
PRESIDENT TRUMP, A CAUTIONARY TALE
Rising US joblessness and higher rates of inflation is the perfect cocktail for the disaster of any government.
3 mins
December 14, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
