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This week, host Shivnarayan Rajpurohit is joined by Newslaundry’s Pratyush Deep and reporter Ankita Dhar Karmakar.
Pratyush reported on the mining mafia that built two illegal roads through forests and farms in the Aravallis. He explains how this violated rules and regulations, and it “enables the mining mafia to exploit the location and situation”, given its geographical location. “This illegal mining is not just done by mafias but also a nexus of local politicians and some government administrations are involved,” he says.
Ankita talks about her report on the falling standards of Delhi School of Journalism, established with the hope of being India’s Columbia School of Journalism. She says it’s plagued by poor infrastructure, ill-equipped classrooms and high fees. She also explains how over half of its governing body is populated by members linked to the BJP or RSS.
Tune in.
Timecodes
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:01:13 - Mining mafia in the Aravallis
00:06:42 - Delhi School of Journalism
00:33:23 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Ankita
What Killed Mukesh Chandrakar
Pratyush
An elephant never forgets his phandi
Shivnarayan
2 roads expose how forests, farms and laws were flattened for Aravallis’ mining mafia
Repression, Hindutva and the fall of Delhi School of Journalism
Produced and edited by Saif Ali Ekram, recorded by Anil Kumar.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.9
2626 ratings
This week, host Shivnarayan Rajpurohit is joined by Newslaundry’s Pratyush Deep and reporter Ankita Dhar Karmakar.
Pratyush reported on the mining mafia that built two illegal roads through forests and farms in the Aravallis. He explains how this violated rules and regulations, and it “enables the mining mafia to exploit the location and situation”, given its geographical location. “This illegal mining is not just done by mafias but also a nexus of local politicians and some government administrations are involved,” he says.
Ankita talks about her report on the falling standards of Delhi School of Journalism, established with the hope of being India’s Columbia School of Journalism. She says it’s plagued by poor infrastructure, ill-equipped classrooms and high fees. She also explains how over half of its governing body is populated by members linked to the BJP or RSS.
Tune in.
Timecodes
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:01:13 - Mining mafia in the Aravallis
00:06:42 - Delhi School of Journalism
00:33:23 - Recommendations
Recommendations
Ankita
What Killed Mukesh Chandrakar
Pratyush
An elephant never forgets his phandi
Shivnarayan
2 roads expose how forests, farms and laws were flattened for Aravallis’ mining mafia
Repression, Hindutva and the fall of Delhi School of Journalism
Produced and edited by Saif Ali Ekram, recorded by Anil Kumar.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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