Weekend Reads
- In the Indian Express, Pratap Bhanu Mehta disagrees with the contention that the new Goods and Services tax will cut down the autonomy of the states in the Indian Union.
- In the Times of India, Ajmer Singh, an ex-Indian Army officer asks if Kashmir is an integral part of the Union, why are pellet guns, not used anywhere else, deployed there?
- On his blog, Shekhar Gupta takes Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar to task for his absurdly draconian prohibition law.
- On Al Jazeera, Sadanand Dhume debates Rana Ayyub over her book indicting the Gujarat administration over the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom [video].
- In the News Minute, Tushar Dhara points out the unfairness of India’s Union government negotiating deals in secret, keeping state governments out of the loop.
- In the Nation, Ammar Anwer traces the rise and fall of the subcontinent’s most influential Islamic seminary, Deoband.
- In the Mint, Arun Janardhan complains about advertisements on the Mumbai local trains.
- In the New York Review of Books, Mervyn King explores the contours of a post-Brexit Europe.
- In the Boston Review, Elizabeth Anderson points out the odd situation of how, in the United States, social insurance became confused with socialism.
- In the Hindu Business Line, Garima Gupta explores a new dish that has exploded onto Delhi food scene: the Moradabadi biryani.
- In the Indian Express, Chandrima Pal checks out Kalman, one of Kolkata’s oldest cold storages, famous for their Hungarian sausages, duck and beefsteaks.