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How the Indian Court System Handles Criminal Cases

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India's criminal court system operates through a hierarchical structure that processes from initial magistrate hearings through sessions courts, High Courts, and ultimately the Supreme Court. The overwhelming majority of criminal matters — FIR registration, bail, remand, committal proceedings, and summary trial of minor offences — are handled by Executive Magistrates and Judicial Magistrates at the lowest court tier.  Sessions Courts (one per district, headed by a District and Sessions Judge) handle serious offences including those punishable by more than 7 years imprisonment; High Courts (one per state or group of states) exercise original jurisdiction in constitutional matters, appellate jurisdiction over sessions court decisions, and supervisory jurisdiction over all subordinate courts; the Supreme Court of India is the final court of appeal and constitutional court. Representational Image: How the Indian Court System Handles Criminal Cases The criminal justice system's def...

How Crime Works in India — Trends and Data

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India's National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) — established in 1986 under the Ministry of Home Affairs — publishes the definitive annual statistical record of crime in India, drawing on FIR data submitted by all police forces through the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS). The NCRB 2023 report (the last under the old IPC) recorded 6.24 million cognisable crimes — up 7.2% from 2022 — with a crime registered every five seconds.  The NCRB 2024 report (first year of BNS data) recorded 58.85 lakh (5.885 million) crimes — apparently down 6% from 62.41 lakh in 2023, but this decline is partly a statistical artefact of the BNS's reclassification of "simple hurt" as non-cognisable. The most significant trend across both years is unmistakable: traditional violent crime (murder, rape, robbery) is declining or stable while cybercrime is surging, reflecting India's rapid digitalisation and the criminal exploitation of its vulnerabilities. Representational I...

How India's New Criminal Laws Work

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India's three new criminal codes — the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS, replacing the Indian Penal Code), the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS, replacing the Code of Criminal Procedure), and the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA, replacing the Indian Evidence Act) — came into force on July 1, 2024, representing the most comprehensive reform of India's criminal law architecture since the IPC was enacted in 1860.  All three were passed by Parliament in December 2023; the transition from 160-year-old colonial statutes to the new framework was significant both substantively (adding new offences, modifying procedures, incorporating digital evidence standards) and symbolically (removing colonial terminology and framing the laws in an Indian constitutional context).  Representational Visualization: How India's New Criminal Laws Work Crimes committed after July 1, 2024 are prosecuted under the new codes; crimes committed before that date continue under the old IPC/CrPC framew...

How India's Police System Works

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India's police system is a federal architecture in which policing is constitutionally a state subject under the Seventh Schedule's State List (Entry 2). Each of India's 28 states and 8 Union Territories maintains its own police force governed primarily by the Police Act, 1861 — a colonial statute designed for garrison policing that most states still operate under despite 30 years of reform recommendations.  As of January 1, 2024, the sanctioned strength of India's state police forces was 27.55 lakh (2.755 million) personnel comprising civil police, district armed police, special armed police, and Indian Reserve Battalions; the actual working strength was 21.62 lakh — indicating a nationwide vacancy of approximately 21%. India's sanctioned police-to-population ratio is 197.44 per lakh, while the UN recommends 222 per lakh; the actual deployed strength falls significantly below both. Representational Image: How India's Police System Works The system's senior l...

Decoding The Most Honest Speech Rahul Gandhi Has Ever Made

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✍️ Written by Saket Suman India’s leader of the opposition in the Lok Sabha, RahulGandhi walked into the Constitution Club in New Delhi on June 8, 2026 and told twenty-five opposition leaders something that most of them already knew but had not yet said aloud in the same room, that India is no longer a functioning democracy in the conventional sense of things, that the instruments of electoral politics they have spent their careers mastering no longer work the way they once did and that if they did not understand this they would keep losing. File Photo: Decoding The Most Honest Speech Rahul Gandhi Has Ever Made; Via: PiQSuite on X What He Actually Said Rahul Gandhi positioned himself as Neelkanth, the blue-throated one who drinks the poison so that others may live and ends the speech with a guarantee. "I promise you, I will bear every single humiliation that I have to bear to knit this group together and make it succeed." In between...

What India's Foreign Policy Reveals About Its Great Power Ambitions

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India's foreign policy — its multi-alignment doctrine, its simultaneous participation in Quad and BRICS and SCO, its "Neighbourhood First" struggles, its Operation Sindoor military assertion, and its 2025 stress-test of strategic autonomy under simultaneous US tariff pressure, China border deployment, and Pakistan's post-Sindoor diplomatic windfall — reveals a country that is genuinely transitioning from a regional power to a global actor, but doing so against structural constraints and with a foreign policy toolkit that is still being calibrated to match its ambitions.  India is not yet a great power in the classical sense (ability to project and sustain power globally while shaping international rules); but it is unambiguously a major power — one whose support or opposition materially affects the outcomes of any major global issue. Representational Visualization: What India's Foreign Policy Reveals About Its Great Power Ambitions The Foreign Policy magazine...
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