It unfolds every time a terror attack occurs in India, even though the act itself is no tamasha, what follows is nothing short of black comedy or black tamasha. It goes this way (better put by B Shantanu):
- The Attack
- The Appeal for calm
- The Condemnation
- The Blame Game (which Shantanu somehow missed)
- The suspected “Foreign Hand”
- The Arrests
We will continue from where B Shantanu leaves, the arrested are prosecuted then sentenced to death or put in jail after many years of trail, then mercy petitions are filed with the president, which remains pending like the unattended files in our government offices or the judgment itself leads to outrage which causes more blasts or the convicts are released as ransom for a VIP or his son or daughter or the passengers of a hijacked plane, these escaped terrorists in turn mastermind more attacks. Invariably, the great Indian Tamasha continues unabated adding to miseries of the amm admi (ordinary man).
Filed under: India, Indian Politics, Terrorism | Tagged: Amm Admi, Government, India, mercy petition, President, Tamasha, Terrorism, VIP

[...] The Great Indian Tamasha [...]
[...] Indian Raksa writes on the system's failure to address lapses of security, outlining the usual series of events after an attack. * The Attack * The Appeal for calm * The Condemnation * The Blame Game (which Shantanu somehow missed) * The suspected “Foreign Hand” * The Arrests … the arrested are prosecuted then sentenced to death or put in jail after many years of trail, then mercy petitions are filed with the president, which remains pending like the unattended files in our government offices or the judgment itself leads to outrage which causes more blasts or the convicts are released as ransom for a VIP or his son or daughter or the passengers of a hijacked plane, these escaped terrorists in turn mastermind more attacks. Posted by Neha Viswanathan Share This [...]
[...] The Great Indian Tamasha [...]
[...] sul Indian Raksa si ricorda come il sistema indiano non sia riuscito ad occuparsi delle falle nell'apparato di [...]
[...] The Great Indian Tamasha [...]