Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Sunday, 15 February 2026

Accountability Above All

Accountability Above All

Why Tax Transparency Matters

I write this as someone who believes in the quiet power of rules, records and institutions. Recent remarks by Priyank Kharge (priyank.kharge@inc.in) — accusing the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) of opaque funding practices and even suggesting a "money laundering racket" while asking why the body is not paying tax — have reopened a larger public conversation about transparency, equality before law, and civic trust NDTV Moneycontrol.

Context matters. Elected officials often raise institutional concerns; journalists report them; and courts and enforcement agencies evaluate evidence. In this instance, Priyank Kharge (priyank.kharge@inc.in) articulated three distinct questions that any democracy must be able to answer with clarity:

  • Are legally mandated registration and reporting rules being observed?
  • Where do large flows of donation money originate and how are they accounted for?
  • Do exemptions or informal practices create unequal accountability under law?

I do not add to the heat of political rhetoric. My concern is institutional: when a public figure raises structural questions about money, registration and tax, the response should be procedural and transparent. That is good for the public, and it is good for the institutions being questioned.

Why this matters to me (and should matter to readers)

  • Rule of law and even-handed application of the tax code are foundational to civic trust. If similar entities are treated differently under the law, suspicion grows even where proof does not yet exist.
  • Transparency is not the same as partisan advantage. Clear disclosures reduce the space for rumor and politicized narratives.
  • Modern democracies need robust, auditable trails for large donations, especially cross-border ones, so compliance can be assessed without invoking conjecture.

I have long written about how fiscal opacity corrodes trust and how better systems can restore it. In earlier pieces I argued for stronger public reporting, incentives for whistleblowers and digital platforms that publish disclosures in near real time — practical measures that make investigations easier and public confidence higher I-T Dept cracks down on donors of unrecognised political parties. These are not partisan prescriptions; they are technocratic ones aimed at making oversight work.

What a measured public response should include

  • Independent review: If allegations about financial opacity are raised, a neutral regulator or court should be able to examine books and issue findings. This protects both accuser and accused.
  • Clear standards: Lawmakers should ensure that entities collecting donations above certain thresholds register and report consistently, regardless of ideology or purpose.
  • Publishable audits: When organisations claim informal categories (for instance, "collections" or "guru dakshina"), auditors should document source, intent and use. Public summaries of such audits reduce speculation.
  • Avoid criminal language without evidence: Public figures can and should push for scrutiny; alleging crimes in public forums carries reputational harm if not backed by evidence. The right way to test serious claims is through proper investigative and judicial channels.

Practical suggestions I still believe in

  • A central, searchable portal of large donations (local and cross-border) that authorities can flag for review.
  • Whistleblower incentives tied to verifiable recoveries, with strong anonymity safeguards.
  • Standardised registration for organisations that regularly mobilise public funds or run large programmes on public property.

Conclusion

When Priyank Kharge (priyank.kharge@inc.in) asks hard questions about registration, taxation and donation flows, the healthiest response in a democracy is not counter‑accusation but demonstrated transparency. Institutions win credibility by opening their books or by asking independent authorities to adjudicate. Citizens win when the process is fair, visible and rule-bound. That is how trust is repaired and sustained.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Open Pits, Closed Conscience

Open Pits, Closed Conscience

I watched the headlines and felt the same hollow ache

Weeks after a young software engineer drowned in a water-filled excavation in Greater Noida, another life—this time a three-year-old—was lost in a rain-filled pit in a village nearby. The news reports are shockingly familiar: a child playing near a temple feast, an open pit that filled with rain, frantic rescue attempts, and then silence. The coverage is here and here.[^1][^2]

I write this not merely as a commentator but as someone who believes civic design, technology and sustained public pressure can stop predictable tragedies. This is not about blame alone; it is about systems that allowed predictable danger to remain unaddressed until someone died.


What keeps happening

  • Open excavations and ponds, left unbarricaded and unmarked, become death traps after rain.
  • Residents complain; administrative responsibility is passed between departments or to private owners.
  • Rescue delays — whether due to lack of equipment, poor coordination, or hesitance — convert survivable accidents into fatalities.

These are not isolated failures. They are repeated failures of urban maintenance, governance and emergency preparedness.


Why this matters to me personally

I have been writing about road safety, urban design and the role of technology in preventing avoidable death for years.[^3][^4] My frustration has always been the same: good solutions exist, but implementation lags. When an unbarricaded pit kills a child or an engineer drowns while calling for help, the tragedy is both human and civic — avoidable and indicting.


What a humane response would look like

I am convinced that preventing these deaths requires a combination of simple fixes, administrative will, and targeted technology:

  • Rapid mapping and hazard tagging

  • Mandate a municipal audit of all open excavations and ponds after each monsoon; publish a live map.

  • Use simple crowdsourced reporting (phones + geotagging) with guaranteed 48-hour action timelines.

  • Mandatory physical safeguards on excavations

  • Temporary barricades, reflective markers, and life-saving signage for every dug plot or pond.

  • Legal obligation on developers/landholders and a fast-track municipal enforcement mechanism where liability is unclear.

  • Better rescue readiness

  • Equip local emergency units with basic water-rescue gear and trained divers; ensure district-level mutual-aid protocols.

  • Institute a public scoreboard: response times and equipment audits should be public and auditable.

  • Technology that doesn’t wait for permission slips

  • Low-cost sensors and periodic drone/foot surveys can detect newly waterlogged pits and auto-flag them for action.

  • Open-data platforms so residents, media and NGOs can see hazard maps and follow up.

  • Cultural changes

  • Civic education about avoiding and reporting hazards, and community watch programs that the municipality supports and honors.


Small ideas that scale

A few pragmatic nudges can reduce harm now:

  • Tie penalties and remediation costs to compliance: when developers or landholders are responsible, remediation must be immediate and visible.
  • Temporary municipal barriers placed by authorities with costs recoverable from owners if ownership is established later.
  • Reward citizens who report genuine hazards with small, verifiable incentives — not to create perverse reporting, but to mobilize vigilance.

These are not radical. They are what I argued in my earlier notes about urban safety and intelligent transport: diagnostics, data, and enforceable timelines make a difference.[^3][^4]


When the system is watching, tragedies fall

We have technology and social tools to measure, flag, and act. We have legal instruments to hold builders and authorities to account. What we lack, too often, is sustained public insistence and the discipline to convert outrage into permanent change.

If we allow headline cycles to pass without durable reforms — audits, rescue readiness, mandatory barricading, public hazard maps — then every rainy season will bring the same grief, recycled.


A plea

If you are reading this and you live in an urbanizing area: walk your neighborhood after rains. Photograph and geotag any open excavations, send them to local civic platforms and follow up. Pressure your local representatives not for promises but for timelines and proof of action.

If you lead a civic body: publish hazard maps, equip emergency teams, and make remediation measurable. Let transparency be the norm — and accountability, inevitable.


I mourn for the lives lost in Greater Noida and the villages around it. Mourn, yes — but act more. The structures that let these pits exist are not mystical; they are the sum of human choices. Change those choices.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

[^1]: Coverage example: India Today — "Toddler drowns in water-filled pit month after techie died in similar incident". https://www.indiatoday.in/india/uttar-pradesh/story/toddler-drowns-in-water-filled-pit-in-greater-noida-month-after-techie-died-in-similar-incident-2868832-2026-02-16

[^2]: Coverage example: NDTV — "3-Year-Old Drowns In Pond In Greater Noida, Weeks After Techie's Death". https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/greater-noida-child-drowns-in-pond-weeks-after-techie-janakpuri-deaths-11009083

[^3]: Earlier I explored institutional safety and technology interventions in urban transport — see "Young and dying on roads". http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2021/02/young-and-dying-on-roads.html

[^4]: My notes on Intelligent Transport Systems and safety interventions are consolidated here: http://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2017/10/intelligent-transport-system.html

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Hello Candidates :

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Bhiwadi Blaze

Bhiwadi Blaze

I woke up to the news of another industrial tragedy — seven workers burned alive in a fire and blast at an illegal unit in Bhiwadi. The images and reports from the scene are brutal: smoke, collapsed structures, frantic rescue efforts, and families left with an unfillable absence. The incident — reported across outlets such as Times of India and CNBC-TV18 — points to a pattern I have written about before: when profit, informality and regulatory gaps meet volatile materials, the weakest pay the price.

What happened — and what it reveals

From the reporting: the unit was operating where it shouldn’t have, storing highly combustible materials and, according to eyewitnesses, containing large quantities of gunpowder and cardboard that fed the blaze. A routine police patrol noticed the smoke, rescue teams arrived, and yet seven lives were lost — with others feared trapped or injured. Explosions during the fire made rescue harder and the damage more catastrophic.

This single event is a concentrated form of many systemic failures:

  • Weak enforcement of permits and safety inspections in industrial clusters.
  • The renting of disused factories to informal operators who ignore process safety in pursuit of quick margins.
  • A labour ecosystem that pushes vulnerable workers — often migrants with few options — into unsafe jobs.
  • Emergency response systems that are brave and diligent but stretched when faced with chemical fires and explosions.

A humane and structural response

My first response is always human: grief for the dead, urgency for survivors, and support for families who now face sudden economic ruin. Beyond compassion, this tragedy demands structural fixes:

  • Rigorous auditing and mapping of industrial units in high-risk zones, with immediate action against illegal operations.
  • Mandatory safety certification tied to utility connections and insurance — no power, no gas, no operations without verified safety.
  • Clear accountability for landlords and intermediaries who knowingly rent spaces for illegal activity.
  • Stronger protections for informal workers: registered employment, basic social security, and fast-track compensation and legal support after industrial accidents.
  • Investment in specialised firefighting capacity for chemical and explosive materials in industrial clusters.

These are not rhetorical demands. They are practical: clearer rules plus relentless implementation.

Why managers, owners and policymakers must act differently

I have argued before that management attitudes matter as much as laws. When employers, owners and regulators treat workers as expendable or see safety as a line-item to be minimized, disasters follow. In my past reflections on management and labour relations I urged a shift in attitude — to treat employees like family members in a joint enterprise, and to make safety and dignity central to how businesses operate Labour Laws vs Management Attitudes.

Policies can set boundaries, but culture drives compliance. A culture that rewards short-term margins over human life will always find ways to cut corners.

Small steps that can save lives — right now

  • Rapid inspection drives across known industrial clusters and immediate sealing of illegal units that store hazardous materials.
  • Emergency helplines and legal aid booths near industrial hubs so workers and families can access compensation quickly.
  • Publicly accessible registers of authorised manufacturers and certified plants — transparency deters illegality.
  • Local industry associations committing to peer inspections and whistleblower protections for safety concerns.

A personal ask

If you run, manage, or invest in industrial units — particularly in high-risk sectors — please do two things today:

  1. Walk onto your shop floor and ask a worker how secure they feel. Listen.
  2. If you cannot verify that your safety systems work under real conditions, pause operations until you can.

Every life lost is an indictment of systems we can change.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Flames on the Rooftop

Flames on the Rooftop

The rooftop that shouldn't have been a workshop

I watched the grainy video — flames, a sudden violent flare, people screaming, neighbours pouring onto the street — and my chest tightened in a way old memories do. A life-ending mistake, done in a place that was supposed to be home. The report I read on the incident in Bhubaneswar described an alleged attempt to assemble crude explosive devices on a rooftop and the terrible, predictable result: an explosion that killed two occupants and left others grievously injured. The footage that's circulating is being verified by investigators, but the image itself is already part of a new public memory source: Times of India.

What this violence tasted like — for me

I write in the first person because this kind of event always finds me on a personal wavelength: the smell of smoke, the helplessness of bystanders, the sudden collapse of ordinary life. I have written before about the terrible speed at which fire and poor safety practices take people from their daily routines into tragedy — whether in reflections prompted by Hiroshima's memory or in pleas for rigorous fire-safety enforcement after urban blazes see my earlier reflections on Hiroshima and building fires and on municipal fire tragedies and safety enforcement.

This rooftop blast brings together two things I've long worried about:

  • the lethality of uncontrolled chemical materials in dense urban neighbourhoods; and
  • how quickly private desperation or criminal intent can convert domestic space into a weapon factory.

The story is not just about criminality — it's also about environment and systems

Reports say forensic teams found remnants that suggest highly explosive compounds; investigators are trying to determine motive and whether this was part of a larger conspiracy. But while we wait for police and specialised agencies to conclude their work, there are immediate structural questions we must confront:

  • How are dangerous precursor materials getting into residential neighbourhoods?
  • Why do people attempt such perilous improvisations in homes — is it ignorance, intent, convenience, or the absence of safer alternatives?
  • What gaps in local enforcement, supply-chain oversight, and community awareness allowed this to happen?

When we look away from the criminal label and examine the conditions, we see a network of failures: porous retail controls on hazardous goods, inadequate inspections of hazardous storage and usage, social strains that push people toward violent solutions, and the power of online tutorials that normalise reckless behaviour.

What communities and authorities must think about — practical angles

I am not a law enforcer, but I have watched how policy and local practice interact. A few pragmatic steps I keep returning to:

  • Better control and tracking of key chemical precursors sold in bulk to small shops — especially in markets close to dense housing.
  • Targeted public-awareness campaigns in vulnerable neighbourhoods about the catastrophic risks of trying to make explosives at home.
  • Routine building-inspection programmes that prioritize fire and hazardous-material hazards (not only structural cracks), with teeth: closures or strict remediation orders where danger is found.
  • Quick-response forensic and medical triage capabilities so that when an incident does happen, survivable injuries are maximised and evidence is preserved.
  • Community hotlines and anonymous reporting channels for neighbours to flag suspicious stockpiling without fear of retaliation.

None of these alone will stop every tragedy, but the combination reduces the latent risk that turns ordinary ceilings into scenes of carnage.

On the circulation of video and public grief

The video of the explosion will be shared and reshared. It becomes a kind of evidence and a cultural artifact at the same time — used by investigators, consumed by the curious, weaponised by pundits. We should insist on two things in the public conversation:

  • Respect for victims and their families. Graphic footage has real human consequences; its circulation should be bounded by compassion and investigative need.
  • Patience with investigation. Viral clips can create pressure for premature conclusions. The agencies doing forensic analysis must be allowed to follow the evidence without being swamped by public narrative demands.

My small, stubborn hope

I remain convinced that tragedies like this are preventable at scale if civic systems and community norms change in lockstep. Years ago I tried to make the argument that memory — of Hiroshima, of urban fires, of collapsed lives — must become fuel for civic design and enforcement rather than mere rhetoric see my earlier reflections on Hiroshima and on municipal fire tragedies and safety enforcement where I urged stronger institutional accountability (for example, clearer liability for building-owners and safety chiefs) (see my post on the Mundka fire and our perennial problem of ignored safety warnings)(http://emailothers.blogspot.com/2023/10/458-of-many-how-many-lives-must-bget.html).

If we treat this as an isolated crime, we will miss the wider pattern: how dangerous materials, gaps in oversight, and social pressures collide in our cities. If we treat it as an occasion to strengthen supply controls, inspection regimes, emergency response, and community awareness — then perhaps the flames we see in a terrifying clip will have finally taught us something.

A simple checklist for neighbours and local leaders

  • Report suspicious stockpiles quietly and promptly.
  • Encourage local shops to keep safe inventory records for chemicals and tell them what legal limits exist.
  • Municipalities: publish simple guidance on hazardous substances in multiple local languages.
  • Hospitals and ambulances: run drills for mass-burn casualty triage with local clinics.

I know this subject is ugly to face. But looking away is a luxury that costs lives.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What practical steps can city governments implement quickly to reduce the risk of improvised explosive materials being assembled in residential areas?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Saturday, 14 February 2026

Faith: Agencies or Outsiders?

Faith: Agencies or Outsiders?

Faith: Agencies or Outsiders?

I woke up to another round of headlines today — a foreign outlet published a detailed claim about the cause of last year’s devastating crash, and our Minister of State urged patience: should we place faith in our own investigation agencies or in outside reporters? The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has been clear that the probe is still ongoing and that final conclusions will come only with the formal report. I find that admonition worth reflecting on, because it sits at the intersection of trust, expertise, media incentives and the rights of grieving families.

Quick context: several Indian outlets relayed the Minister’s call for faith in domestic agencies while an Italian paper reported preliminary conclusions attributed to investigators; the AAIB labelled those reports speculative and premature (Times of India, Moneycontrol).

Why this question matters to me

I have long worried about two related tendencies in public life: (a) the rush to judgment by eager commentators and (b) the chilling effect of public vilification on honest decision-makers. Years ago I wrote about how fear of media trials can paralyse officers and stifle necessary experimentation and inquiry — a culture that punishes honest mistakes rather than learning from them (Policy Paralysis: Can be Avoided). That same worry appears here, but inverted: the public also needs robust, independent scrutiny when institutions err.

So the tension is real and unresolved: trust institutions so they can function without constant second-guessing; yet keep them accountable so that trust is earned, not assumed.

Three principles I try to hold when headlines arrive

  • Respect the investigative process. Accident probes follow established international protocols; preliminary signals can be misleading until validated by cross-checks and data reconstruction. The AAIB’s caution — waiting for the final report before drawing conclusions — is consistent with that discipline (Moneycontrol).

  • Demand transparent communication. Trust grows when agencies communicate clearly about what they have (and don’t have), what methods they’re using, and expected timelines. Silence, or patchy information, invites speculation and fuels outside narratives.

  • Keep compassion central. The families of victims deserve sober, respectful reporting and a process that prioritises truth over headlines. Reckless attribution of blame in public, before facts are established, does real harm.

Practical steps we should push for now

  • Let the investigators finish their work unhindered. This is not an argument against international cooperation — cross-border expertise is often crucial — but against premature public verdicts.

  • Improve interim briefings. Agencies should provide periodic, factual updates that reduce the incentive for leaks and wild interpretation.

  • Institutional peer review. When a final report is ready, make available a technical annex and facilitate peer review by neutral experts so the findings are defensible beyond national constituencies.

  • Media discipline and editorial responsibility. Newsrooms should mark speculative pieces clearly, identify sources, and resist publishing assertions that carry the weight of official conclusions unless corroborated.

  • Protect investigators from undue pressure. If officers and experts fear reputational attacks for honest, methodical conclusions, the investigative process itself will suffer. My earlier writings about fear-of-failure and policy paralysis still seem relevant here: we need safety for truth-seeking, not incentives for concealment or performative quick fixes (Policy Paralysis: Can be Avoided).

Final thought — trust, but verify

I am sympathetic to the Minister’s appeal to trust domestic agencies; I am equally insistent that that trust be accompanied by transparency and robust external validation. Trust that is demanded but not demonstrably earned is fragile. The right response from all parties — investigators, government, media, and civil society — is patience, rigor, and humility.

We owe the victims and their families the truth, not a competing set of narratives.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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