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Sunday, November 22, 2009

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Arati R Jerath
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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.

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Maya’s style and substance

A humble Mayawati is hard to picture but after her party’s shock defeat in Bhadohi in UP, the Queen Bee of Dalit politics has been trying for an image correction.
March 15, 2009

A cloak and dagger turn

The history of elections all over the world shows that jingles and ditties do not win an election.
March 8, 2009

A mad, mad political whirl

Interestingly, no-one expects either of the two known formations, UPA and NDA, to survive in the post-election scenario.
February 28, 2009

Grounded before take-off

According to Congress circles, Rahul Gandhi has advised his mother to be pragmatic, that the party needs as many seats as it can get.
February 22, 2009

When business meets politics

The one circle in which the Ambani-Karat pow wow caused anxiety was in the Samajwadi Party. It is a high stakes game.
February 14, 2009

Playing politics with security

The NDA turned the Indo-Pak standoff in 2002 after the attack on the Parliament into a joke. The UPA is doing the same.
February 7, 2009

When the Left comes calling

When CPM general secretary Prakash Karat sent a bouquet of flowers and a get-well-soon message to Manmohan Singh, there was more than mere courtesy to the gesture.
January 31, 2009

Googling for Advani

No secret remains that way for long in the capital city of gossip. That’s what a Google team realised when it presented similar packages to the Congress and the BJP.
January 24, 2009

Great political soap operas

The run up to the upcoming Lok Sabha polls is the battle of the Bollywood stars. It’s the newest soap opera to hit the idiot box Great political soap operas.
January 18, 2009

The cold winds of change

With the world superpower in transition between Bush and Barack Obama, the Indo-Pak standoff is stuck in No Man’s Land.
January 11, 2009

Mum it was who cleared the path for Omar

Omar Abdullah’s English mother, Mollie, is famously quoted as having once said about her son, “He will join politics over my dead body.”
January 3, 2009

Two iron ladies and a Marxist

Many in the CPM don't quite know what to make of general secretary Prakash Karat's recent political moves.
December 28, 2008

A new broom for old rules

Those baying for National Security Adviser MK Narayanan’s blood after the 26/11 attack have gone silent.
December 20, 2008
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