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Home     Courage To Go Beyond 

Courage, says the dictionary, makes one confront extreme danger and difficulty without retreating. That requires a certain amount of foolhardiness. At THE WEEK, we believe that there is a method in the madness called courage. It is what made us go after India's own secret torture chambers, when the whole world was discussing Guantanamo Bay, and the hideous torture methods employed by the Americans in the prison they had built on Cuban soil. Our police and security forces were no better, as we realised while chasing the story.

THE WEEK's cover on the secret prisons evoked nationwide umbrage, became a topic of discussion in Parliament and resulted in a departmental investigation. We won international recognition for the project when it was selected to the final of the Daniel Pearl award, the Oscar of investigative journalism, along with our own cover story on the secret rendition programme of Indian intelligence agencies.
 
We are willing to travel that hazardous mile and bring out the truth because we value your right to accurate information. We would also like to hear what you have to say about such stories and invite you to share your experience with us.  

Celebrate the Courage to Go Beyond with THE WEEK.

India's bookie kings
By Neeru Bhatia/Ahmedabad, Mumbai & New Delhi
They come in all shades and hues. Some hold true to stereotypes of the Bollywood-esque underworld don, some are anything but suave and sophisticated. You would not recognise some, even if they were sitting next to you in a rocking nightclub. They are the biggies, the men who are almost never seen in action, but are always spoken about. They are right on top of the chain of punters and small-time...
The nasty and the northeast
The ISI, Chinese masters, Bangladeshi crooks, local insurgency groups, the Naxalites... the northeast needs a massive clean-up
Dry rot
In Rahul Gandhi's pet project, scooters become tractors and contractors are paid many times their due! A sample report from Bundelkhand
Ticking minefield
Serene, pristine. These words can no longer describe the Terekhol river, which flows along the Goa-Maharashtra border. Today, the river is a whirlpool of controversy over the building of 
a mini-port without environment clearance.The mini-port is being built, at Aronda jetty, by a Mumbai-based company, White Orchid Estate Private Limited. The intention is to enable loading of iron ore on to...
An informer's confession
Approver alleges that ATS officers asked him to implicate innocent people in Malegaon blasts, allowing real bombers to strike elsewhere
External affair
Befriending enemy's enemy is an old tactic. The Naxals and the northeastern insurgent groups, who have a common enemy in the Indian government, seem to have formed a friendship to tackle the tough times. Three recent Military Intelligence reports, which THE WEEK accessed, reveal how the Naxals were trained by commanders of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and the United National...
Goan mining scam
Official report says the Goan mining scam is worth Rs 35,000 crore. Activists peg the volume at Rs 1.4 lakh crore. Farmers point to something priceless: ecology
Bodo riots: Victims speak
Dams and damning facts
Medical rip-off
No rain nor shine
Gift warped!
It’s show time
What in Goddess’s name!
Damned lives and statistics
Inside the Ulfa camp
Rhino poaching
Koodankulam: Dollarisation of dissent
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Last Word  |  Patrick French
Single? Not ready to mingle
Anuradha Sengupta in Kolkata and Kiran in Ankleswar are two among the thousands of single women—with or without children, divorced or unmarried—who face rage, hatred and threats of violence on a daily ...  »
Power Point  |  Sachidananda Murthy
All strike, no work
As one more Parliament session went down the drain, the blame game began immediately. The BJP has developed a reflexive action of killing the question hour and all other proceedings in support of its demand. The ...  »
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