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A special committee of women MLAs in Maharashtra will now review laws on religious...

  • dhadakkamgarunion0
  • 1 day ago
  • 3 min read

🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*

A special committee of women MLAs in Maharashtra will now review laws on religious conversion and sexual harassment in private companies. This move signals recognition that existing frameworks are inadequate to protect vulnerable citizens and employees. Too often, cases of coercion, exploitation, and harassment are brushed aside or lost in bureaucratic delays. By placing women legislators at the center of this review, the state acknowledges that those most affected must shape reforms. The committee’s work must go beyond symbolic gestures—it should recommend enforceable safeguards, stricter accountability for institutions, and mechanisms to ensure victims are heard without fear. True justice lies not only in punishing offenders but in creating systems that prevent abuse. If implemented sincerely, this initiative could mark a turning point in workplace and social protections.

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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*

Sanjay Raut’s latest attack on six MPs who left Uddhav’s Shiv Sena faction for Shinde’s camp reveals the party’s double standards. Until yesterday, these MPs were loyal soldiers with no complaints against them. Today, they are branded traitors, liars, and incompetent. Raut presented data showing each received between ₹14–19 crore in central funds over two years, yet none utilized more than 27% for approved projects. This proves two things: the central government provided adequate funds and permissions, and the MPs failed to deliver. Ironically, the same leaders who constantly criticize Delhi now admit its efficiency, while exposing their own colleagues’ failures only after they defected. The disclosure, born of political hurt, at least gave voters transparency. Sometimes betrayal forces truth into the open.

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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*  

Maharashtra’s solar pump revolution has transformed farming. CM Devendra Fadnavis revealed that over 60% of India’s agricultural solar pumps are installed in Maharashtra, a model now recommended by the Centre for other states. Before 2014, farmers relied on erratic electricity and costly diesel, often irrigating fields at night. With up to 95% subsidy, lakhs of farmers now use solar pumps—rising from almost none in 2014 to nearly 9 lakh today. In December 2025, Maharashtra even set a Guinness World Record by installing 45,911 pumps in just 30 days. The impact is clear: farmers irrigate by day, save thousands on diesel, grow multiple crops, and boost incomes. Solar pumps eased pressure on the grid and made agriculture more sustainable. This is not just a scheme—it is a rural energy revolution.

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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*

In the past 24 hours, Kashmir has seen arrests that expose the deep nexus between government jobs and terror networks. A power department employee, Mohammad Shafi, was held for sheltering Lashkar militants; forest worker Tariq Ahmad was accused of aiding Jaish operatives; and three Hizbul terrorists—Ejaz, Arbaz, and Nasir Ahmad—were caught with grenades and explosives. All had secure careers and state benefits, yet chose jihad over stability. This pattern shows terrorism is not born of poverty alone but of ideology. Meanwhile, sections of media and leftist voices still downplay the Kashmiri Pandit genocide and deny links between radical Islam and militancy. The reality is stark: those entrusted with public service betrayed the nation. Until accountability and truth replace denial, Kashmir’s wounds will remain open and bleeding.

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🖋️ *From The Desk of Abhijeet Rane*

The Parbhani temple tragedy raises a question beyond collapsed walls—it asks who allowed devotees inside an unfinished structure. In India, disasters follow a familiar script: condolences, compensation, committees, and then blame-shifting. But responsibility lies with those holding authority, not just workers or contractors. Were safety checks done? Was a certificate issued? Did management assess crowd risks? Faith may be blind, but law does not permit blind administration. The dead were not statistics—they were parents, children, lives cut short while trusting temple authorities. If blame is pushed only onto laborers, decision-makers will escape accountability in every future disaster. Justice must mean more than finding scapegoats; it must uncover truth. Maharashtra mourns, but grief demands answers: “Our loved ones died—who is truly responsible?”

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