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HindustanTimes Mon,20 May 2013
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Editorials

Don’t keep it all in the family

Businesses run by politicians’ relatives must be transparent and open to public scrutiny.

It’s time to talk the talk

Sanaullah’s death undermines India’s interests. Now, it is morally and politically bound to bring his killers to justice.

A purple patch amid the blues

A soaring Sensex is good news but slow project implementation still hampers the Indian economy.

A bit to cheer for the Congress

The Karnataka assembly poll verdict is a case of choosing the bad over the worse. In what is perhaps the only silver lining in a perilously dark cloud, the Congress has left the BJP in its dust in the Karnataka assembly elections.

Coal tars UPA and CBI

It really couldn't get any worse for the government. As recommended by the Supreme Court, there is an urgent need to make the CBI a truly independent body.

It’s all heading south

As Karnataka goes to the polls, the BJP is on a slippery slope. But the Congress has not gained from this slide

A joint tribunal may just work

India and Pakistan must safeguard the interests of civilians caught in the geopolitical crossfire.

Know where to draw the line

The real question that should be asked is whether there is something more to the Chinese intrusion than the traditional tit-for-tat game that both militaries play.

Fast forward to growth

India must focus on the unreformed sector to put itself on the path to join the league of high-income nations.

They’re at home as leaders

Reservations in panchayats have been a catalyst in empowering women, writes George Mathew.

Are the scales of justice lopsided?

The Devinder Bhullar case shows that attitudes towards mental illness can affect institutional clemency. Suryapratim Roy writes.

The parts of the sum

Wrongful prosecution is a vital area in the criminal justice system as it imperils the life and liberty of a person, violating Article 21 of the Constitution, writes RR Kishore.

Emotions can’t guide the law

Some of the statements made by those leading the angry crowds and by Bollywood stars are likely to damage the progress made in trying to minimise these heinous crimes.

In the RBI’s interest

A drop in commodity prices will offer temporary relief to an economy battered by low growth.

A force that marches to its own beat

The primary cause of the Delhi Police malfunctioning is the lack of external supervision over the organisation. Ashok Kapur writes.
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