|
Politics/Nation |
|
|
The Bofors whistle-blower speaks out -
Hindu
Sten Lindström, the former head of the Swedish police who led the investigations into the Bofors-India howitzer deal, has disclosed that he was the one who fed the journalistic investigation that was published on the pages of The Hindu in 1988-89. The identity of the source has been a detail that The Hindu has steadfastly held on to for a quarter century. The “tell-all” interview that Mr. Lindström has now given Chitra Subramaniam-Duella, who was one of the journalists who had worked on the story while with The Hindu , from Europe, was published online on April 24 in ‘The Hoot.'
Read Full Article››
|
ABP-Neilsen survey: If polls held today, NDA may erase UPA -
Business Standard
|
No different from Left Front misrule -
Shikha Mukerjee, Pioneer
|
Maya memorials: Lokayukta indicts 199 for graft -
Indian Express
|
Reverse gear on electoral reforms -
Jagdeep S. Chhokar, Mint
|
Cabinet rejig in Kerala runs into rough weather -
VR Jayaraj, Pioneer
|
Amit Shah given charge of U.P. -
B Muralidhar Reddy, Hindu
|
2G scam: How roles reversed in the two parliamentary committees -
Pradeep Kaushal, Indian Express
|
Congress to struggle in Bihar, Maharashtra, Delhi, UP: survey -
Anuja, Mint
|
In Lalu's Muslim anxiety, Nitish holds the edge -
Santosh Singh, Indian Express
|
At 45°C, crowd hails Modi’s speech in Chhattisgarh -
Mohua Chatterjee, Times of India
|
Congress govt, Janata cabinet: What a ‘clean’ sweep! -
Neena Gopal, Deccan Chronicle
|
Judge Cyriac of NHRC fame gave 10 verdicts in 1,300 days -
Navtan Kumar, Sunday Guardian
|
‘Modi magic’ takes Chhattisgarh by storm -
Rabindra Nath Choudhury, Asian Age
|
Mamata: Two years, too little -
Subrata Nagchoudhury, Indian Express
|
Cong's Jharkhand dream may crash as CBI seeks to prosecute eight MLAs -
Rahul Tripathi, Indian Express
|
Was Sudipta Sen’s muckraking howl a TMC ploy to tarnish the President? -
SNM Abdi, Outlook India
|
D-Company's money-bunny trap for players -
Pramod Kumar Singh, Pioneer
|
Naveen's Roman script speech goes viral, draws flak -
Debabrata Mohanty, IE
|
Sonia Gandhi: The leader who never delivered? -
FirstPost
|
Collateral clean-up -
Mihir Srivastava, Open
|
Indian politics and its Lalu Prasad Yadav syndrome -
Vivek Kaul, FirstPost
|
The ‘incestuous relationship’ between Congress and media -
FirstPost
|
Is Nitish now receptive to UPA? -
Mukesh Ranjan, Asian Age
|
Advertising blitz can't hide UPA's failures -
Kalyani Shankar, Pioneer
|
It pays to be a sycophant -
Anuradha Dutt, Pioneer
|
|
|
|
 |
Verbatim |
There was for years an old "social contract" between politicians and business. This provided for complex rules and regulations that made it impossible to do business honestly in many fields. But it was possible to do business dishonestly, through pay-offs . Some called this "efficient corruption" : politicians took money and delivered clearances. However, the anti-corruption mood of the courts, and new fears of getting caught (like Pawan Bansal) have ended "efficient corruption" . Politicians may still take money but not deliver on clearances , what some call "inefficient corruption" that freezes investment and growth. The old social contract has broken down.
Swaminathan SA Aiyar |
| |
|
|
Split with Nitish will only boost BJP in Bihar - K Balakrishnan, LensOnNews WITH THE BJP seemingly decided on projecting Narendra Modi as its PM candidate and its close ally Nitish Kumar of JD(U) equally firm in his opposition to the idea, a split in the NDA alliance looks inevitable; most observers think it’s not a question of if, but when. |
|
Trending Topics |
| |
|
|
| |
|
| |
LensOnNews, Opinion
 |
LensOnElections |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
| |
| |
|
|
|