
The dog-whistles and complicit silences of New India

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Time of India
3 minutes ago
- Time of India
Gaming industry gears up to challenge Centre's gaming bill in court
As senior executives from the industry huddle together to chart their next move in a fight for survival, legal luminaries see the law being contested in court on standpoints ranging from constitutional protection to the right to trade, and more. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads In the aftermath of the Lok Sabha passing the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025 , senior executives of companies in this space are huddling together and deciding on next steps, which will include approaching the courts against the proposed and lawyers told ET that the legal challenges will look to test the Supreme Court 's stance on skill-based gaming against the proposed per the bill, the definition of online real money gaming looks to lump together skill-based games and chance-based games under a single regulatory net, and this could endanger skill-based operators, which have so far survived legal scrutiny.'The Punjab and Haryana High Court was actually the first to say back in 2017 that fantasy sports should be treated as a game of skill. Since then, the Supreme Court has repeatedly turned down review petitions challenging that view. But the new law has changed the game completely…acting almost like a killswitch for the industry. Plans are being finalised to challenge the bill in court,' a senior executive proposed law, which also seeks to set up a regulator to decide which games can legally operate, risks stripping that protection from fantasy sports, rummy, e-poker, and other skill-led formats offered by companies such as Dream11, Gameskraft, Games 24x7, Pokerbaazi, Rupee, and Winzo Games, people said.'While typically any new statute passed by parliament gets tested on its own merits, in this case, given past protections, especially in the context of games of skill, there could be a degree of overlap that gets tested,' said Mihir Rale, partner, Cyril Amarchand whether real money gaming companies will have constitutional protection, Rale said, 'This appears to be virtually an existential question for the sector. That factor alone demands a degree of care and scrutiny to be applied to its passage and judicial oversight that will likely follow.''The key question is whether this is the only way that public interest can be served and no other measure that preserves businesses or jobs while effectively remedying public harm is possible,' he a letter to home minister Amit Shah on Tuesday, India's leading online gaming industry associations urged his intervention in the government's move to introduce legislation to ban real-money games, warning that it could cripple the sector, cost the exchequer nearly Rs 20,000 crore annually, and drive millions of users to unsafe offshore a joint letter to the home minister, the All India Gaming Federation (AIGF), E-Gaming Federation (EGF), and the Federation of Indian Fantasy Sports (FIFS) said the bill, which seeks to prohibit all online games with a monetary component, including those based on skill, would 'strike a death knell' for the industry.'While an Act of Parliament can override earlier Supreme Court rulings by changing the definition of gambling, such a law must still survive constitutional scrutiny, and a blanket prohibition is open to being struck down as disproportionate and arbitrary,' Nazneen Ichhaporia, partner, ANB Legal, online gaming industry employs more than 200,000 people, has attracted Rs 25,000 crore in foreign direct investment (FDI), and contributes over Rs 20,000 crore in annual tax revenues, they bill also seeks to curb online real money gaming by declaring any advertisement or promotion of such games as an offence, while also banning the facilitation of any transaction or authorisation of funds by banks or financial institutions for such a central legislation, the government has moved away from fragmented state regulations on gambling and betting – by looking to ban real money games in one fell swoop.'Gaming is a state subject under the Constitution, and there could be an argument that prohibiting an entire sector that has been in existence for years and contributes revenue is a violation of Article 19(1)(g) (which accords the right to trade). However, the Union government seems to have relied on…its power to regulate the internet and interstate commerce. We will certainly see this being debated in the courts on constitutional grounds,' said Aprajita Rana, partner at corporate law firm AZB & Partners.


Time of India
3 minutes ago
- Time of India
Online gaming companies prepare for legal battle against new bill
Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills In the aftermath of the Lok Sabha passing the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025 , senior executives of companies in this space are huddling together and deciding on next steps, which will include approaching the courts against the proposed and lawyers told ET that the legal challenges will look to test the Supreme Court 's stance on skill-based gaming against the proposed per the bill, the definition of online real money gaming looks to lump together skill-based games and chance-based games under a single regulatory net, and this could endanger skill-based operators, which have so far survived legal scrutiny.'The Punjab and Haryana High Court was actually the first to say back in 2017 that fantasy sports should be treated as a game of skill. Since then, the Supreme Court has repeatedly turned down review petitions challenging that view. But the new law has changed the game completely…acting almost like a killswitch for the industry. Plans are being finalised to challenge the bill in court,' a senior executive proposed law, which also seeks to set up a regulator to decide which games can legally operate, risks stripping that protection from fantasy sports, rummy, e-poker, and other skill-led formats offered by companies such as Dream11, Gameskraft, Games 24x7, Pokerbaazi, Rupee, and Winzo Games, people said.'While typically any new statute passed by parliament gets tested on its own merits, in this case, given past protections, especially in the context of games of skill, there could be a degree of overlap that gets tested,' said Mihir Rale, partner, Cyril Amarchand whether real money gaming companies will have constitutional protection, Rale said, 'This appears to be virtually an existential question for the sector. That factor alone demands a degree of care and scrutiny to be applied to its passage and judicial oversight that will likely follow.''The key question is whether this is the only way that public interest can be served and no other measure that preserves businesses or jobs while effectively remedying public harm is possible,' he a letter to home minister Amit Shah on Tuesday, India's leading online gaming industry associations urged his intervention in the government's move to introduce legislation to ban real-money games, warning that it could cripple the sector, cost the exchequer nearly Rs 20,000 crore annually, and drive millions of users to unsafe offshore a joint letter to the home minister, the All India Gaming Federation (AIGF), E-Gaming Federation (EGF), and the Federation of Indian Fantasy Sports (FIFS) said the bill, which seeks to prohibit all online games with a monetary component, including those based on skill, would 'strike a death knell' for the industry.'While an Act of Parliament can override earlier Supreme Court rulings by changing the definition of gambling, such a law must still survive constitutional scrutiny, and a blanket prohibition is open to being struck down as disproportionate and arbitrary,' Nazneen Ichhaporia, partner, ANB Legal, online gaming industry employs more than 200,000 people, has attracted Rs 25,000 crore in foreign direct investment (FDI), and contributes over Rs 20,000 crore in annual tax revenues, they bill also seeks to curb online real money gaming by declaring any advertisement or promotion of such games as an offence, while also banning the facilitation of any transaction or authorisation of funds by banks or financial institutions for such a central legislation, the government has moved away from fragmented state regulations on gambling and betting – by looking to ban real money games in one fell swoop.'Gaming is a state subject under the Constitution, and there could be an argument that prohibiting an entire sector that has been in existence for years and contributes revenue is a violation of Article 19(1)(g) (which accords the right to trade). However, the Union government seems to have relied on…its power to regulate the internet and interstate commerce. We will certainly see this being debated in the courts on constitutional grounds,' said Aprajita Rana, partner at corporate law firm AZB & Partners.


India Today
31 minutes ago
- India Today
Rise in attacks on minorities, forced conversions of Hindus: Pak human rights body
There has been an alarming rise in violence against religious minorities during the last year apart from forced conversions and underage marriages of Hindu and Christian girls, Pakistan's top human rights body has said.'Streets of Fear: Freedom of Religion or Belief in 2024/25,' a report by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) released here on Tuesday documents a 'deeply troubling year' for religious freedom and minority rights' referring to the Ahmadis, Hindus and Christians in the has been an alarming rise in violence against religious minorities, including targeted killings of the Ahmadis and the demolition of their protected places of worship,' the report said. There has been persistent forced conversions and underage marriages of Hindu and Christian girls in Punjab and Sindh province exposing the systematic failure to enforce child marriage restraint laws, the HRCP HRCP said that there has been a trend of mob lynching of those especially minority members accused of blasphemy. 'Now the most chilling account is that of extra-judicial killing of minority members accused of blasphemy,' it individuals accused of blasphemy were extra-judicially killed by police while seeking protection from hostile mobs, it said and added that such incidents underscore the urgent need for reform within law enforcement and accountability report also pointed out the rise in hate speech ranging from threats against the chief justice of the Supreme Court to public vilification of elected representatives. This is because of shrinking civic space and emboldened extremist elements, the report said it is shocking to see the increasing tilt of the bar associations towards positions aligned with extremist religious extremist groups. 'This trend undermines the independence of the legal profession,' the report said even as it documented allegations of collusion by the state institutions in cases where several hundred young men and women were entrapped in accusations of blasphemy and extorted. 'This is one of the most alarming trends.'The report asked the Pakistan government to establish an inquiry commission based on the findings of the National Commission for Human Rights with respect to entrapment in allegations of blasphemy.'The authorities should also monitor those seminaries that are frequently involved in the conversion of underage girls,' it report further said that law enforcement forces also need to be better equipped to protect individuals from mob violence, with vital police training in intelligence gathering, crowd management, reading early signals of riots, and community policing.'Swift action should be taken against those who instigate such mobs. The government must urgently establish an independent statutory national commission dedicated to the rights of minorities, ensuring equal representation for all religious communities,' the HRCP report demanded.- EndsMust Watch