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EASY PART OVER, NOW FOR THE HARD TASKS

The Morning Standard

|

September 25, 2023

It's clear why the BJP did not pass the women's reservation bill in 2014, and it's equally clear why they did in 2023. The bigger effort now is to ensure an equable delimitation

- KAPIL SIBAL

IT was politics all the way. First, the presidency of the G20 which by rotation was to be hosted by India in 2022 was shifted to 2023. Thereafter, the promulgation of a special session of parliament, without an agenda, followed by speculation, with the media going abuzz with possible 'breaking news' scenarios.

Then, the element of secrecy and surprise which is typical brand Modi', allowing for mindless combative debates on channels competing for television rating points.

We were told that the government will introduce the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam 2023. This bill was destined to pass. No political party, no member of parliament could dare to oppose the bill. All this in the new seven-star, soulless parliament structure. A shaky Modi did this for 2024.

If this government truly wanted to politically empower women in India, this bill could have been passed much earlier. The BJP obtained an absolute majority in 2014.

With the open support of the Congress, the bill would have sailed through. By 2019, it would have been implemented. The reason why the BJP did not move the bill in 2014 is obvious. The reason why they have moved it now in 2023 is equally obvious.

From Sub-Saharan Africa to the Caribbean, and from Europe to Australia and South America, women are adequately represented in their respective parliaments.

Take the highest legislative bodies of BRICS countries: women's representation in South Africa is over a third, in China exactly a fourth, in Brazil almost a fifth, and in Russia 16 percent. India stands at the bottom with 15.2 percent, much less than the global average of 26.5 percent.

The Morning Standard'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Morning Standard

US revokes Colombian president's visa

THE US State Department said it would revoke the visa of Colombia's leftist President Gustavo Petro, who returned to Bogota on Saturday after being accused of \"incendiary actions\" during a pro-Palestinian street protest in New York.

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The Morning Standard

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The Non-Brahmin Priests of Hinduism

RESURRECTING FAITH

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SHREE CHARANI LIVING HER DREAM

21-year-old from Andhra Pradesh, who was juggling between various sports before cricket, is all set to play in a ODI World Cup. Gomesh S tries to understand the making of the spinner

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The Morning Standard

Promises kept, Bihar people will celebrate 4 Diwalis: Shah

SETTING the poll agenda for BJP workers and leaders ahead of assembly elections, Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday said people of Bihar will celebrate four Diwalis this year, each representing a different achievement or promise.

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2 mins

September 28, 2025

The Morning Standard

Drone sightings raise alarm at Danish military facilities

Repeated activity disrupts air traffic, raising Europe security concerns

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1 mins

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Siddu goes on rounds, suspends engineers and keeps contractors on toes

CHIEF Minister Siddaramaiah's event-filled Bengaluru rounds led him to lose his cool several times and order the suspension of an engineer on Saturday.

time to read

1 mins

September 28, 2025

The Morning Standard

'Inhuman and humiliating': She lived to tell her harrowing tale

Had to wear prison clothes until my return to India, says 73-yr-old after being deported from US

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The Morning Standard

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Battle for Asian high: More than just a final

Stage set for first ever Asia Cup final between India and Pakistan

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2 mins

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The Morning Standard

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TN steadily moving to top in agri sector: CM

CHIEF Minister MK Stalin on Saturday took pride in saying that Tamil Nadu has been steadily moving towards the top rank in the agricultural sector, coming first in crop productivity, second in production of maize, oilseeds and sugarcane, and third in millets and groundnuts. He said 47,000 acres of barren land have been brought back under cultivation.

time to read

1 mins

September 28, 2025

The Morning Standard

Flavour Factory

In 2018, Raipur brothers Akash and Ashish Agrawalla founded ZOFF Foods—short for “Zone of Fresh Foods”—with a bold idea: revive the forgotten aroma of Indian spices using zero-human-touch processing and cool grinding technology. Early skeptics were silenced when a Delhi retailer toured their fully automated, dust-free plant and came away impressed. ZOFF now employs a workforce that is 70 per cent from Chhattisgarh, with senior leaders choosing Raipur over metro cities. Its spices travel far beyond the state, reaching homes across India and even the Middle East. Running a business from a Tier II city, CEO Akash admits, has its hurdles—limited packaging vendors, testing labs, and slower freight timelines—but the benefits are clear: lower costs, access to fresh raw materials, and a community that celebrates their growth as its own.

time to read

1 min

September 28, 2025

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