कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
A culture of excuses
The Statesman Delhi
|June 13, 2026
What is needed is not another condolence ritual but a structural shift. Minimum safety standards must be enforced across cities. Fire audits, building inspections, sewage management, and pollution control cannot remain optional. Codes exist but enforcement falters. Accountability must be decentralised, responsibility must be visible at every level, and excuses must be eliminated
Between light and shadow lies our reality, a land where triumph and fragility walk side by side.
Gleaming towers of achievement rise proudly, airports rival the best in Asia, metro systems move millions with precision, digital payment platforms astonish the world, and space missions place the tricolour among the stars. These moments of brilliance prove that when discipline, planning, and accountability converge, perfection is not only possible but enduring.
Yet, in the same breath, bridges collapse without warning, residential colonies burn in preventable fires ~ the Malviya Nagar inferno on 4 June killed 21 and left many critically injured ~ expressways crack within days of inauguration, and sewage flows unchecked into rivers. The contradictions are vivid and unsettling: excellence where accountability is enforced, fragility where excuses are allowed to thrive. Every wrong in India finds a ready-made excuse. A collapsed bridge is blamed on rain, a fire on faulty wiring, a flood on excessive monsoon, a road cave-in on heavy traffic. Rarely is governance blamed, rarely is accountability fixed. The safety valve theory operates relentlessly: when pressure builds, the valve is opened to release public anger, committees are formed, promises made, and responsibility deflected. The valve protects not citizens but those responsible to deliver.
Counterfeit currency rumours and whispers of another demonetisation illustrate this fragility. Why should such stories gain credibility? They gain credibility because governance leaves loose ends. In developed economies, currency management is transparent and stable; in India, secrecy and sudden shocks create panic. Citizens remember standing in queues during demonetisation, livelihoods disrupted, trust eroded. Rumours thrive because accountability is absent, and communication is opaque.
यह कहानी The Statesman Delhi के June 13, 2026 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Statesman Delhi से और कहानियाँ
The Statesman Delhi
Bengal climber lost fingers and toes to frostbite, blames TMC regime for subpar gear; urges BJP government for justice
Sumit Das (photo), a young mountaineer from West Bengal who aspired to put his life on the line for the nation by joining the Indian army, is now capable only of running his small photostat-xerox shop in Itampur village of Pandua in Hooghly since he can neither hold anything in his hands or walk properly.
3 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
36 hours of Raga: Indian Classical Maestros strike a historic note in Pune
In an age of shrinking attention spans and algorithm-driven playlists, four Indian musicians chose endurance over instant applause, immersion over interruption.
2 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
Ramgarh mine tragedy leaves four dead, raises illegal mining concerns
Four persons died after allegedly inhaling toxic gases inside an abandoned coal mine in Jharkhand's Ramgarh district on Saturday, bringing renewed attention to the persistent problem of illegal mining activities in disused coal blocks across the state's coal-bearing regions.
1 min
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
Arms recovered, drug traffickers, militants nabbed in Manipur
Security forces and Manipur Police carried out a series of operations across the state on 11 and 12 June, leading to the recovery of arms, ammunition and military equipment, the arrest of active militant cadres, and the seizure of narcotic substances, police today said.
1 min
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
US open home World Cup with 4-1 win over Paraguay
Folarin Balogun fired his second goal into the top far corner of Paraguay’s net and then led his American teammates to the corner of their home stadium, revelling in the frenzy created by their historic first half at their World Cup opener.
2 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
Postcard from Budapest
There are few rivers in the world that define a city as completely as the Danube defines Budapest.
4 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
Borders First
Only days ago, football invited us to believe that the World Cup’s greatest gift lies beyond victory itself.
2 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
The Fifth Stream ~ I
Is Hindu nationalism really an alien political ideology? Were the thoughts of Vinayak Damodar Savarkar a threat to national unity? Did the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh lay the foundations of division between Hindus and Muslims? Was the Hindu Mahasabha an ideology that divided the nation from within? Did all these together encourage fascist forces in India?
5 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
Crossing the Line
The deaths of three Indian sailors in an American strike on a commercial tanker off the coast of Oman mark a grim turning point in a conflict that has steadily expanded beyond its original protagonists.
2 mins
June 14, 2026
The Statesman Delhi
We must survive in order to thrive
Having accepted that control over energy reinforces super power status, the Contest of the Century has morphed into an intense rivalry between China as an electro-state, whilst the United States safeguards her position as the world’s hydrocarbon hegemon.
4 mins
June 14, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

