Hasan Suroor

India has voted. But can it still trust the referee?

Record turnout and a decisive mandate underline India’s faith in the ballot. Yet doubts around the Election Commission’s conduct have sparked a wider debate on fairness and credibility

Why Pakistanis are questioning their government’s role in Iran talks

Pakistan’s sudden role in Iran war talks has put it back in the global spotlight. But at home, scepticism runs deep about how much influence it really wields — and who is actually calling the shots.

What if the four incumbents win again? Is that good for democracy?

Mamata, Vijayan, Himanta and Stalin are all facing anti-incumbency pressures. And yet they may return to power on May 4 because they appear to be better placed than their rivals. But is too much stability perhaps not productive for a dynamic democracy?

Article image for: How the Congress shaped Muslim distrust of the Left

How the Congress shaped Muslim distrust of the Left

A secular Left and a vulnerable minority should have been natural allies. So why do so many Muslims in north India still keep their distance?

Article image for: Prohibition is not working in other states. So, why does Kashmir want to go dry?

Prohibition is not working in other states. So, why does Kashmir want to go dry?

A renewed call for prohibition in Kashmir has sparked a wider debate on morality, governance and livelihoods. As revenue, tourism and jobs hang in the balance, the politics around liquor turns sharply opportunistic.

Article image for: Why the world's largest democracy needs a more representative Lok Sabha

Why the world's largest democracy needs a more representative Lok Sabha

India plans to expand the Lok Sabha — a long-overdue correction to one of the world’s most under-representative lower houses. But can it deliver better representation without triggering political and federal tensions?

Article image for: Why does the Commonwealth avoid taking a stand on wars that affect its own members?

Why does the Commonwealth avoid taking a stand on wars that affect its own members?

As a grouping of 56 countries spanning continents, the Commonwealth was meant to be a collective voice. Today, its silence on wars raises doubts about its purpose.

Article image for: Is Trump's Iran war aimed at dividing and weakening the Muslim world?

Is Trump's Iran war aimed at dividing and weakening the Muslim world?

Critics say this is exactly what America and Israel want: a more vulnerable Muslim "street" that is easy to manipulate

Article image for: As the bombing intensifies, the debate about Iran is missing the real point

As the bombing intensifies, the debate about Iran is missing the real point

As Washington weighs succession scenarios and Tehran trades missiles, the central question goes largely unasked: can Iran change without dismantling the clerical system that holds ultimate power? Until that is confronted, talk of regime change is theatre, at best hollow

Article image for: Why India’s real crisis is not religion, but religious illiteracy

Why India’s real crisis is not religion, but religious illiteracy

Festivals once brought neighbours together. Today, they risk becoming markers of division in societies losing their cultural literacy.

Article image for: Why the Left may turn Right on Sabarimala issue

Why the Left may turn Right on Sabarimala issue

With elections looming, Kerala’s Left Front may back a review of the Sabarimala verdict it once championed — a move critics see as electoral pragmatism trumping ideology. As faith, gender rights and culture wars collide, the party walks a tightrope between secular principles and political survival.

Article image for: Why can't we all be like ‘Mohammed Deepak’?

Why can't we all be like ‘Mohammed Deepak’?

From a gym owner’s quiet act of courage to incendiary speeches by chief ministers, the battle over India’s secular promise is playing out in plain sight. A new PIL asks: who will enforce the red lines the Constitution already draws?

Article image for: How Rahul Gandhi's “arrogance” is driving Muslim leaders out of the Congress party

How Rahul Gandhi's “arrogance” is driving Muslim leaders out of the Congress party

Shakeel Ahmad’s resignation is not an isolated rebellion but a warning flare. As Muslim leaders accuse Rahul Gandhi of neglect and fear-driven politics, the Congress risks losing its minority base without gaining a Hindu one in return

Article image for: The not-so-liberal face of the "liberal" Muslim youth

The not-so-liberal face of the "liberal" Muslim youth

A new generation claims liberalism, but sees the world almost entirely through religious identity — leaving little room for dissent or universal values

Article image for: A gradual shift in Muslim politics, and what it reveals

A gradual shift in Muslim politics, and what it reveals

As Indian politics becomes more polarised, Muslim political choices are growing more inward-looking. What this means for national parties is only beginning to emerge.

Article image for: How incendiary vigilantism is wrecking inter-faith marriages

How incendiary vigilantism is wrecking inter-faith marriages

India’s Constitution guarantees adults the freedom to marry across faiths. But vigilante politics, aided by police inaction, is steadily hollowing out that promise

Article image for: A new film revisits Shah Bano — and the change that never came

A new film revisits Shah Bano — and the change that never came

Forty years after a landmark Supreme Court verdict, a Hindi film holds up a mirror to the realities Muslim women still face. Reform that was promised, but never fully delivered

Article image for: How some Muslim groups are (mis)interpreting the Saudi deportations

How some Muslim groups are (mis)interpreting the Saudi deportations

A viral YouTube video claims Saudi Arabia’s deportation of Indian workers is retaliation for the treatment of Muslims in India. The evidence doesn’t support it, but the episode reveals how faith-based geopolitics is reshaping public perception and foreign policy debates

Article image for: Why Bollywood’s lazy portrayal of Muslims is misleading

Why Bollywood’s lazy portrayal of Muslims is misleading

The Hindi film industry is not biased against Muslims, but its depiction of the community is

Article image for: Why the hijab row is about more than Nitish Kumar

Why the hijab row is about more than Nitish Kumar

What should have ended with a simple apology has become a farce, laying bare India’s misogynist political reflexes, the cynicism of opposition outrage, and the uneasy coexistence between religious conservatism and a secular, modern public sphere

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