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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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A strange relationship

The ripples set off by Priyanka Vadra’s meeting with her father’s would-be assassin, Nalini Sriharan, have yet to subside.
May 4, 2008

Season of silly revolts

The summer has heralded a season of discontent in both our national parties. For the BJP, it started with Gopinath Munde’s very public revolt in Maharashtra
April 26, 2008

Vilasrao still rocks on

Here’s the latest twist to the ongoing soap opera starring Vilasrao Deshmukh. The man apparently tipped to replace him is back in action in the power ministry.
April 20, 2008

Modi writes a book too

Welcome the latest addition to the growing tribe of politicians-turned-authors — Narendra Modi. The Hindutva demagogue has penned a book in praise of the RSS
April 13, 2008

CPM’s story gets fishy

The leadership line-up at the CPM party congress in Coimbatore looked quite strange without veterans Jyoti Basu, Harkishan Singh Surjeet and Somnath Chatterjee
April 6, 2008

How to kiss and makeup

Will the cow jump over the moon? Or can the little dog finally laugh to see the dish run away with the spoon?
March 30, 2008

No country for Taslima

Pranab Mukherjee and Buddhadeb Bhattacharya must have heaved a collective sigh of relief when exiled Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen finally boarded the plane to Europe last week.
March 23, 2008

US sweetens Mukherjee

The Americans are wooing external affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee these days with same single-minded intensity they showed when they decided to cultivate LK Advani.
March 9, 2008

‘Why should we withdraw support from UPA?’

CPM leader Sitaram Yechury, the Left’s main interlocutor with the Congress, says its unlikely unless the government goes ahead with the nuclear deal.
March 9, 2008

Silly season for partying

In these times of fractured mandates and coalition governments, all political leaders are playing the field. Sonia Gandhi too has plunged into the game.
March 2, 2008

The MEA vs navy drama

There is a background to the friction between the two wings of South Block. It has to do with the emergence of India as a major player in the international arms bazaar.
February 24, 2008

No takers for Washington

The government seems to be in no hurry to find a replacement for the present envoy, Ronen Sen, who announced recently that he would head home once his tenure ends next month.
February 17, 2008

New kid on Gandhi block

Sonia Gandhi appears to have zeroed in on a young up-and-coming bureaucrat to join the legion of family favourites in the civil services.
February 10, 2008
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