top of page

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

  • dhadakkamgarunion0
  • Apr 22
  • 4 min read

Updated: Apr 23

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

The brutal killing of former Karnataka DGP Om Prakash has shocked the entire nation and exposed the dark underside of domestic conflict—even in the homes of the powerful. This was not just a murder—it was a cold, calculated act allegedly committed by someone within his own household, his wife Pallavi. Her alleged confession, calling him a “monster,” and later dialing the police herself, paints a chilling picture of deep-rooted resentment and possibly long-standing psychological trauma or vengeance.What makes this case even more unsettling is that Om Prakash had reportedly expressed fears for his life to close associates. Despite being a seasoned IPS officer, even he couldn’t escape the dangers within his own four walls. The motive seems to extend beyond marital strife—property disputes and personal bitterness are emerging as strong undercurrents.This raises serious questions: how does a high-profile cop with access to the entire law enforcement machinery end up brutally stabbed in his own home? Was this a crime of passion or a premeditated act of revenge masked as domestic conflict?

🔽

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

The Maharashtra government's decision to spend a staggering ₹150 crore on a temporary setup for a cabinet meeting in Choundi, a small village in Jamkhed taluka, is not just absurd—it’s an outright insult to the people of rural Maharashtra. Instead of investing this astronomical amount on real, long-term development—roads, healthcare, schools, water supply—the administration is choosing to build grand pandals, stages, AC setups, and parking for a one-day event. What’s worse? The village doesn’t even have basic infrastructure!With ₹150 crore, the government could transform the entire village of Choundi and its surrounding areas. Permanent solutions to long-standing issues like drinking water, sanitation, employment, and education could be implemented. Yet, the state chooses optics over outcome, decoration over development.This is a classic case of "event politics", where showmanship trumps substance. If celebrating Ahilyabai Holkar’s legacy truly mattered, building lasting infrastructure in her memory would have made sense—not this wasteful spectacle. It's high time taxpayers question: are we funding real change, or just political drama?

🔽

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

During a high-stakes diplomatic engagement between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. Vice President JD Vance, what should have been a focused and respectful meeting was turned into a casual family affair — with Vance bringing his children to the table. Is this a trade negotiation or a kindergarten picnic?This move is not just baffling — it’s borderline insulting. When the elected leader of the world’s largest democracy is sitting across the table, is this how the U.S. chooses to show respect? Would they pull this off in a meeting with any other major world leader — like Xi Jinping or Vladimir Putin? Highly unlikely.Let’s not sugarcoat it: Bringing kids to an official meeting with Narendra Modi dilutes the seriousness of the moment, weakens the tone of diplomacy, and reeks of a patronizing attitude. It feels like a subtle way to undermine India’s stature or trivialize the meeting’s intent — wrapped under the garb of soft power.Prime Minister Modi deserves full diplomatic courtesy, not distractions or gestures that shift focus from core issues. India is not here to pose for pictures with children — we’re here to talk business, strategy, trade, and national interests.

🔽

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

Chandrapur, once known for its coal mines, is now being roasted alive at 45.6°C—the hottest city not just in India, but the entire world. This isn’t just a weather report; this is a damn climate emergency. And what are our leaders doing? Tweeting “stay hydrated” while people are collapsing under the sun like flies!Where’s the action plan? Where’s the emergency water distribution, shaded shelters, and health camps? Cities like Chandrapur, Akola, and Amravati are burning, and the system is sleeping. This is not just about climate change—this is about criminal negligence.How many more deaths will it take for the government to wake up? For the administration to stop building statues and start building heat-resilient infrastructure?If we can spend crores on political rallies and PR stunts, why can’t we invest in green cover, solar-reflective roads, and public cooling centers? Chandrapur is giving us a terrifying preview of India’s climate future. If this doesn’t set off alarm bells, what will?

🔽

🖋️ From the desk of Abhijeet Rane:

What kind of joke is this? A man like Valmik Karad gets arrested, and yet his terror continues to rule inside the very jail that’s supposed to hold him down? What kind of a prison system is this—a five-star resort for criminals or a temple of justice?

This isn’t just a case of weak administration—this is outright failure. DYSP Golde’s casual and arrogant response isn’t just disrespectful, it reeks of either fear or favouritism. Is the system scared of Karad? Or is it benefiting from his reign of fear?

How can an activist-turned-criminal control jail operations from the inside? Who is protecting him? Who is enabling him? This is not just a law-and-order issue, this is a full-blown collapse of governance.And while the public burns with rage, all we get are vague statements and no action. If higher authorities don’t step in now, then be ready to see goons running the system and cops becoming spectators.Beed's jail is not a correctional facility anymore—it's a den of influence, threats, and political sheltering. Either clean it up, or stop pretending you care about law and order at all.

🔽







 
 
 

Comments


  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Copyright © 2020 Abhijeet Rane

  • What's App
  • Telegram
bottom of page