Daily News & Analysis
  • Home
  • Mumbai
  • India
  • World
  • Money
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Speak Up
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sci/Tech
  • Academy
  • Gallery
  • Blogs
  • E-Paper
Sunday, November 22, 2009

Columns

Advanced Search

Arati R Jerath
Syndicate
this column

Arati R Jerath, political editor and Delhi bureau chief

Arati R Jerath has been tracking national politics for more than 25 years now. A ringside view of the momentous events of the past two-and-a-half decades has given her valuable insights into the political processes that shape India’s destiny and helped her make sense of the confusion that marks the growth and maturing of India’s fledgling democracy.

The journey has been an exciting one. It has given Jerath the opportunity to interact with a galaxy of personalities as diverse as the late Rajiv Gandhi and Mayawati. But it has also brought her face-to-face with some of the brutal tragedies scarring our progress, like the communal violence of the 1984 anti-Sikh riots in Delhi, caste prejudices in rural India, and the shocking assassination of a prime minister.

Jerath was drawn to journalism from her student days in the International School, the Philippines, where she was editor of the school newspaper. After a brief stint in India Today, she joined The Indian Express and spent 23 years there sharpening her reporting skills on crime stories before graduating to politics.

As the daughter of a diplomat, Jerath has maintained a keen interest in foreign affairs and follows international politics almost as closely as domestic politics. She anchored and co-produced a weekly programme on foreign policy called ‘Global Challenges’ for Doordarshan in 2004 before returning to print journalism in 2005 when she joined DNA as political editor and bureau chief in New Delhi.

more...
less...

Left in the lurch, literally

The PM’s telephone operators refused to put LK Advani through to Manmohan Singh when he rang up to express his distress over Nandigram.
March 18, 2007

UP battles go high tech

Forget bijli, paani and sadak. Why should UP ask for bread when it’s being offered an audio-visual feast of salacious propaganda instead?
March 11, 2007

Congress-Left ties get fishy

Sonia Gandhi’s refusal to touch hilsa fish, at Somnath Chatterjee’s dinner sent shivers down the spines of Congress and Left leaders.
February 25, 2007

A joke that got serious

The fur is flying in all directions after the Big B’s name surfaced as a possible Presidential candidate. Cong circles claimed it was Amar Singh’s brainchild.
February 17, 2007

Kamal Nath SEZ little

Gandhi and the PM are worried about the political fallout of the mega land transfers that are going on in the name of SEZs.
February 10, 2007

In the NAM of the Father

Sonia Gandhi paid meticulous attention to every detail to ensure that the venue of the Satyagraha conference was clean and well-prepared.
February 3, 2007

Indo-Russian roulette

The international arms bazaar has been buzzing lately about India hitting the market to replenish its ageing Air Force fleet.
January 27, 2007

Big B in big bother

Now Amitabh is smack in the middle of a controversy with the Samajwadi Party over a series of election ads featuring him.
January 20, 2007

Antony bats for soldiers

The sprawling bungalows of senior army officers hide the tragic reality of pitched tents in which soldiers on batman duty live in harsh conditions.
January 13, 2007

The skeletons of Nithari

It’s curious that the police refused to consider the organ racket angle right from the beginning, writes Arati R Jerath.
January 6, 2007

Sweet ‘n sour for BJP

Biryani and kababs were not on the menu at the BJP’s National Executive meet in Lucknow last week. It was back to RSS basics: all vegetarian fare.
December 30, 2006

Much ado about a deal

After nearly bringing down the govt, the Left’s new strategy is to serve as a watchdog and monitor the fine print instead of fighting the inevitable.
December 23, 2006

Shah Rukh Khan, MP?

Political circles are watching whether Khan, as Amitabh Bachchan’s emerging rival in Bollywood, also becomes Congress’s answer to him.
December 9, 2006
«
1
...
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
»


Interviews »
  • The party has become intolerant: Jaswant
  • 'We don’t rule out joining a Third Front govt'
Analysis
  • The baton passes to Rahul
  • UPA nixed at home, politically
Reports
  • China is bump on PM’s US route
  • Tell China to back off
  • China cloud hovers over PM’s US visit
  • Karnataka government crisis is a proxy for BJP-RSS war
  • Remembering the only man in her cabinet

Our columnists
  • Anil Dharker
  • Antara Dev Sen
  • Ayaz Memon
  • Cyrus Broacha
  • Dilip Vengsarkar
  • Gaurav Kapur
  • Javed Gaya
  • Madhu Jain
  • Magandeep Singh
  • Malavika Sangghvi
  • Mallika Sarabhai
  • Meghnad Desai
  • N Raghuraman
  • Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr
  • R Jagannathan
  • Ranjona Banerji
  • Robin Sharma
  • Sandeep Shanbhag
  • Sathya Saran
  • Siddharth Bhatia
  • Sidharth Bhatia
  • Suresh Nair
  • Venkatesan Vembu
  • Vinay Kamat
Contributors
  • Ankita Pandey
  • Arjun Parthasarathy
  • B Krishnakumar
  • Deblina Chakrabarty
  • Fahad K Samaar
  • Firoz Bakht Ahmed
  • Koel Purie
  • Manjula Pooja Shroff
  • MS Kamath
  • Mukul G Asher
  • Naini Setalvad
  • Pillman
  • Prof R Vaidyanathan
  • R N Bhaskar
  • Rakesh Bhatnagar
  • S Gangadharan
  • Shraddha Jahagirdar Saxena
  • Sumit Chakraberty
  • Vijay L Bhambwani
  • Vivek Kaul
  • Yatin Pandya
  • Zaheer Abbas
Popular Columns »
  • Suresh Nair : 2012: The end?
  • R Jagannathan: Fighting Hindi hegemony
  • Anil Dharker : For Muslims, the enemy lies within
  • Ayaz Memon: Twenty years is a couple of lifetimes in any sport
  • Mallika Sarabhai: Dubai: City of gold
  • Venkatesan Vembu: Before his Asia trip Obama should see 2012
  • Ranjona Banerji : Maharashtra’s issues come home to roost
  • Sandeep Shanbhag : Go for gold — the ETF way
  • R Jagannathan: Pink Panther strikes
  • Sidharth Bhatia : Laurel & Hardy are passé
About us | Contact us | Advertise with us | Subscription | Reprint rights
© 2005-2009 Diligent Media Corporation Ltd. All rights reserved.