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Latest Issue | Current Issue - Frontline Magazine | Frontline

Exploring the Intersections of Identity, Geopolitics, and Mental Health in New Indian Publishing A Story of Childhood Friendships Ruptured by Rising Communal Rhetoric in Rural South India Notes from Ginza Shihodo Shop: A Quietly Healing Read Migrant crisis to war shock: India’s fragile safety nets India Hit by Hormuz Crisis as Iran War Sends Oil Prices Soaring Why the Iran War and Internal Contradictions Signal the End of Dollar Hegemony The Great Nicobar Project: Documenting the Costs of "Haste Dressed Up as Vision" Beyond Statist Tropes: How Kinship and Trade Redefine the Himalayan Borderlands Defining Modern Hinduism: Rajmohan Gandhi on the Shift from Ethic to Identity Inside ODI Art Centre: Preserving Odisha’s living heritage Noida Unrest and the Reality of India’s Workers Intercaste Marriage Violence in India: Who Protects Women? How the Supreme Court hardened UAPA bail rules in Delhi riots case BJP’s Women’s Reservation Push Faces Opposition Revolt Purvanchal Emerges as Key Battleground for UP Election 2027 Ketaki Sheth’s Flashback: Rare Glimpses of Film Sets Tulika at 30: Radhika Menon on Children’s Books in India Can the Stage Contain Theyyam’s Wildness? This Is Where the Serpent Lives: Power, class, and desire NCR Worker Protests: Low Wages, State Crackdown Gaza Genocide Blueprint: B’Tselem’s Yair Dvir Speaks Will Didi prevail over Delhi? Punishing the South: Modi’s Delimitation Plan and the Politics of Control India Census 2027: Who Gets Counted—and How? SIR West Bengal Voter Exclusion Case 2026 Healthcare’s Breaking Point India’s Elderly Boom: Care Gaps and Policy Failures AI chatbots fill mental health gaps in India, but risks grow Substandard Drugs in India: The Hidden Public Health Threat India Healthcare Costs Crisis: Who Pays the Price? ASHAs hold India’s fragile health system together but are woefully underpaid Occupational Health Crisis in India: Silicosis and Beyond Techno-Elitism vs. Universal Care: The Growing Access Gap in India’s Health Revolution India’s Health System: The Broken Promise of Primary Care Partha Chatterjee’s For a Just Republic and the Limits of the People-Nation Why Jerry Pinto’s 'A Good Life' is Essential Reading for India’s Evolving Healthcare System Ambedkar Caste Critique: Justice Beyond Reform India’s Missing Middle: Trapped Between Health Insurance and Care Hungary Election 2026: Orbán Defeated, Magyar Wins Big Sewage, Neglect, and Governance Failure Mark India's Water Crisis The Hidden Ecosystem Inside our Homes Women’s Health in India: Inequality by Design Absolute Jafar: Nostalgia and restlessness in frames Anita Nair’s Why I Killed My Husband Review: Powerful Themes, Uneven Storytelling Iran War Ceasefire Signals a Shift Toward Multipolar Deterrence How Deepti Priya Mehrotra’s Walking Out, Speaking Up Recovers the Radical History of Indian Feminist Agitprop Lalit’s Lyrical Shift Writing New History China’s rise tests US power but avoids global confrontation Why The Dig Fails to Unearth the Material Reality of Keeladi Archaeology Ferdino Rebello on Goa land protests, TCP Act, and casino politics John Irving on Queen Esther, Politics, and the Writing Process Inside the Studios of Contemporary Indian Artists Hind Rajab and the Limits of Representation in Cinema How Muslims and Tea Tribes may Decide Assam Elections Tamil Nadu Election 2026: How Gender and Gen Z Voters are Reshaping the Dravidian Power Struggle Inside BJP’s Strategy to Win Puducherry Assembly Flesh Review: A stark, experimental Booker winner LDF, UDF, BJP Rework Kerala Campaigns Amid Gulf Crisis Assam election 2026: Polarisation shapes BJP vs Congress fight Tamil Nadu 2026 Elections: New Forces and Voter Trends West Bengal election arithmetic favours Trinamool, says Biswanath Chakraborty Electoral Roll Purge and Political Polarisation Shape Bengal’s High-Stakes Election Kerala Election: LDF, UDF in Tight Battle Lakshadweep Land Acquisition 2026: Constitutional Concerns and Tribal Displacement on Agatti Island Gurmeet Ram Rahim Acquitted in Ram Chandra Chhatrapati Murder Case, Questions Persist US-Israel Iran war: how religion and politics are colliding Trump Iran War Fallout: Strategy Unravels Fast Moral Collapse and the Crisis of Justice UP’s ‘Half Encounter’ Policing Faces Sharp Judicial Rebuke Women of Mathematics Exhibition 2026: Rewriting Science’s Gender Gap Pop History meets Romila Thapar: A Review of Speaking of History From Kerosene Lamps to Electric Lights in Palluruthy Gen Z Wave Propels Balen Shah and RSP to Power in Nepal Chipko Movement and Power of Nonviolent Resistance Right to Recall: Accountability Tool or Political Risk? Mani Shankar Aiyar Attacks Tharoor’s Stand on US Power and Iran War India Poverty Rate Debate 2026: 5% or 24%? Beyond Global Islam: Faisal Devji on the Crisis of Modern Muslim Sovereignty and the Fall of Khamenei The Paradox of Preservation: Why India’s Ajanta Caves Face a 50-Year Countdown to Disappearance Inside Kochi-Muziris Biennale 2025: Art in the Everyday Tamil Nadu 2026: Can Vijay and Seeman Challenge Dravidian Politics? Iran–Israel War Escalates, Shaking Security Across the Gulf George Saunders’ Vigil: A Dark Meditation on Death Why Amitav Ghosh’s Ghost-Eye Fails to Convince How Iran’s Shi'ite Ideology Shapes its War with the US and Israel A French 'grandmother' brings alive the early days of Santiniketan INDIA Bloc Leadership Debate Puts Rahul Gandhi Under Spotlight Iran War 2026: US Strategy and Global South Crisis Called by the Hills: Anuradha Roy’s Himalayan memoir Governor’s Office Reform: Tamil Nadu Panel Seeks Federal Reset How the US–Israel War on Iran Defied International Law India, Israel and Iran: The Tightrope After Modi’s Trip Rafale Expansion vs Tejas Setback: India’s Air Power Crossroads How Sankar reshaped Calcutta in popular fiction R. Nallakannu Dies at 101: CPI’s Resistant Voice How the Absence of Shame is Reshaping Indian Democracy M.K. Stalin Can Unite Opposition Against Hindutva Meghalaya Rat-Hole Mining: A Deadly Economy in Plain Sight Kumar Shahani: Visionary filmmaker who pushed Indian cinema’s boundaries
West Asia Volatility and India’s Economic Vulnerability Amidst Domestic Political Rhetoric
Vaishna Roy · 2026-04-29 · via Latest Issue | Current Issue - Frontline Magazine | Frontline

West Asia remains fraught. The US is unable to bully Iran into submission. Equally, the US itself is firmly under Israel’s thumb, with “the world’s most powerful man”, Donald Trump, unable to rein in the maniacal Benjamin Netanyahu, who, with all eyes on Iran, is overseeing the appropriation of more and more land in the West Bank, Gaza, and now Lebanon. I personally do not see a full and fair peace in this region in the near future, but the immediate effects of the situation on the global economy are worrying, with India not immune to the shocks and, in fact, woefully underprepared for it.

Despite its energy security being highly import-dependent, India has not diversified its sources enough; about 50 per cent of its oil comes from West Asia and about 30 per cent from Russia. This puts India in a bind: the war has interrupted the former pipeline while the US dictates the latter. It also has only a 74-day petroleum buffer; compare this with 245 days in Japan, another oil importer. Equally, e-vehicle migration has been too slow: India has 1 charging point for about 235 EVs with ~8 per cent EV penetration, while China has 1 charger for 7-9 EVs and ~45 per cent penetration.

Add this lack of preparedness to existing structural fault lines such as high unemployment and reverse migration caused by recurring urban crises, and you see why the slowdown is worrying and why it might prolong. In parallel, there might be other fallouts, such as a weakening of the dollar economy and perhaps a rethinking of the neoliberal order, with some indications that economists and countries are looking at the possibilities of state-led transformation for more equitable growth. Three eminent thinkers, Ashoka Mody, Radhika Desai, and Ashwini Deshpande, explore these ideas in our current issue.

Meanwhile, on the day I write this, Assembly elections are being held in Tamil Nadu and West Bengal in an atmosphere vitiated by the Election Commission of India’s stark negligence of its primary duty: to conduct “free, fair, and peaceful elections”. Its lapses are compounded by the Supreme Court shrugging off its responsibility as the “ultimate guardian of the Constitution”. Both have instead become extended arms of the executive. That is why the Prime Minister is able to convert “an address to the nation”, an instrument that heads of state use to convey the gravest of news to citizens, into a partisan political harangue. That he does so when election campaigns are ongoing in two States is a gross breach of the Moral Code of Conduct. Let me quote from Section 7, which is directed at the “Party in Power”. It says: “... misuse of official mass media during the election period for partisan coverage of political news... with a view to furthering the prospects of the party in power shall be scrupulously avoided.”

Over and above this violation, let us examine the Prime Minister’s speech itself, for address it was not. He repeatedly claimed that the Women’s Reservation Bill was defeated on April 16. Fact: It was the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill that was defeated. He repeatedly claimed that the opposition was against women’s reservation. Fact: The Women’s Reservation Bill was passed unanimously in September 2023. The Prime Minister used the Hindi word “bhrun-hatya” to describe the Bill’s defeat. The word means foeticide, and is mostly used for female foeticide. In similar vein, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath called the defeat “cheer-haran”, which means stripping off a woman’s clothes. The use of such terms reveals a mentality that performs empowerment but practises misogyny. Four days earlier, with a similar grand disregard of facts, BJP Minister Piyush Goyal had said in Pudukottai that the DMK had “ruined Tamil Nadu”, especially pointing to healthcare and infrastructure. Fact: Tamil Nadu ranks No. 2 in the NITI Aayog Health Index. And stays steadily in the Top 5 in roads, power, SEZs, capex on infrastructure, and logistics.

The truth is, no fact-checking can keep pace with the speed at which the BJP’s functionaries spread half-truths and innuendoes. For this government, facts are tripwires to its ideological goals, so it does not acknowledge them. Just as it refuses to acknowledge, and therefore work towards solving, the looming economic crisis. But the warning lights are blinking.

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