Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
jason burkelatest news & developments
Indian authorities want to prevent porn becoming a social nuisance.

India blocks more than 800 sites in web porn crackdown

Sudden blanket ban on websites considered a ‘social nuisance’ is met with anger online and triggers debate on censorship and freedom.

Houses were reduced to rubble in Kathmandu following the 7.9-magnitude earthquake.

Nepal: Buried alive by poverty

Prime minister Sushil Koirala has said earthquake fatalities could more than double to 10 000, another blow to one of Asia’s poorest countries.

Show of force: Paramilitary soldiers arrive at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi after gunmen attacked it last week

More terror attacks inevitable in volatile region

News analysis: US interest in the Afghanistan region is now waning, but various extremist factions will remain.

Goodbye Gandhi: Indian Congress party posters of president Sonia Gandhi and vice-president Rahul Gandhi.

Outmoded: The Gandhi dwindling

Election surveys show the supremacy of India’s greatest political dynasty is at an end.

British high commissioner James Bevan

Britain and India talk business

Ten years after massacre, influential Indian politician meets with British high commissioner

The protests are in conjunction with GB Pant’s requests to have land

Deep economic reform is needed

India’s rapid progress may be halted if high public expenditure is not brought into check, writes Jason Burke.

No Indian distributor has bought the rights to the film adaptation of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children.

Will ‘Midnight’s Children’ see the light of day in India?

A new film adaptation of ‘Midnight’s Children’, Salman Rushdie’s novel about India after independence, might not be shown in his native land.

India suffered one of the worst blackouts in history last week

India: The dark reality

The path to prosperity in India is not as straight and smooth as many would like to believe.

Toulouse murders a wake-up call

Toulouse murders a wake-up call

French security has been sanguine about the Muslim fundamentalist threat but last week’s shooting may change things.

No hard evidence that al-Qaeda is funding militant Islamist group

In the fast-changing world of violent Sunni Muslim activism, it is reassuring to find that some things remain the same.

Satanic versus free speech

Satanic versus free speech

Salman Rushdie has damned politicians for giving in to the "false" leaders of India’s Muslims after he was threatened with violence.

Pakistan on the edge

The increasingly strained relations between the army and civilian leadership could lead to a coup.

Oprah draws stares on her first visit to India

Oprah draws stares on her first visit to India

Oprah Winfrey has managed to stop traffic and draw a crowd of hundreds when she visited a slum in Mumbai during her week-long visit to India.

Political prisoners walk free as Burma comes in from the cold

Aung San Suu Kyi ‘could lead Burma one day’

The personal political adviser of Burma’s President Thein Sein says Aung San Suu Kyi’s democratic party ‘can be the ruling party one day’.

‘I am just here for the violence’

‘I am just here for the violence’

Indian spectators are increasingly drawn to the guts, gore and glory of full-contact fighting.

Dalai Lama high court bid a ‘slam dunk’ case

India, China clash over Dalai Lama speech

A row over a speech by the Dalai Lama has scuttled key talks between India and China as the two nations vie for power and influence in the region.

The end of India’s ‘killing machine’

The end of India’s ‘killing machine’

The man accused of being one of the worst contract murderers is a product of his society, writes <b>Jason Burke</b>.

India’s birth rate grows unchecked

India’s birth rate grows unchecked

No one knows who will be the seven-billionth person on earth, but the chances are he or she will be born in northern India.

F1 cash and chaos for villagers

People near India’s Grand Prix track pay the price of getting millions for their land.

Women at the wheel challenge Saudi authority

Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world that bans women from driving.