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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 week full of glamour

So, now we know that there are two kinds of politicians in this part of the world, the glamour puss ones and the glamour-struck ones.
September 30, 2007

India season in New York

Adding colour to the high level political presence is the ‘India at 60’ celebrations organised by the tourism ministry in partnership with the CII.
September 22, 2007

The men who dared Mulayam

Ever since he picked a fight with Mulayam Singh Yadav and got himself expelled from the Samajwadi Party, Raj Babbar has been at a loose end. In parliamentary language, he’s an ‘unattached’ MP, that is, he doesn’t belong to any party. And that’s his problem.
September 9, 2007

BJP makes Advani blink

If Prime Minister Manmohan Singh received a lesson in realpolitik this week, so did Leader of Opposition LK Advani.
September 2, 2007

The Congress’s men of crisis

We know about Pranab Mukherjee and Ahmed Patel. They’ve been troubleshooting for the UPA government since its inception.
August 26, 2007

Sons and daughters club

With politics fast becoming a family business, a ginger group has sprung up in Parliament, formed mainly of power sons and daughters.
August 19, 2007

Pratibha bowls them over

Pratibha Patil was warm and gracious and clarified that she bore no grudge against BJP for the personalised campaign it ran against her during the election.
August 5, 2007

Divided stands BJP

The former vice-president has been dropping dark hints about a return to active politics (read: the BJP) now that he no longer holds a constitutional position.
July 28, 2007

Kalam leaves his footprints

President APJ Abdul Kalam’s five years in Rashtrapati Bhavan will be more than a mere photograph on the wall in the gallery of former Presidents.
July 21, 2007

One more needless race

Cronyism of the Congress variety has again reared its head in the Ministry of External Affairs, sending diplomatic postings into a tailspin.
July 14, 2007

The BJP’s pack of cards

But what really tickled Mamata was the way the PM clucked and nodded sympathetically through her rant against CPM ‘terror’ in Singur and Nandigram.
July 8, 2007

Replay of old dirty tricks

The Reddy pamphlet was the worst kind of yellow writing, replete with lascivious details about his 'affairs' with various women, names and places included.
July 1, 2007

A fistful of dirty tricks

The presidential poll has turned messy with a level of muckraking never seen before in an election for the highest post in the land.
June 24, 2007
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