3.3 C
New York
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Home Blog

Venezuela denounces Trump’s airspace closure warning as a “colonialist threat”

0

Venezuela has accused US President Donald Trump of making a “colonialist threat” after he said the airspace around the country should be considered closed.

The country’s foreign ministry called Trump’s comments “another extravagant, illegal and unjustified aggression against the Venezuelan people”.

The US does not legally have the authority to close another country’s airspace, but Trump’s online post could lead to travel uncertainty and deter airlines from operating there.

The US has been building its military presence in the Caribbean, which officials say is to combat drug smuggling. Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro has dismissed US claims of drug trafficking as an attempt to oust him.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump wrote: “To all Airlines, Pilots, Drug Dealers, and Human Traffickers, please consider THE AIRSPACE ABOVE AND SURROUNDING VENEZUELA TO BE CLOSED IN ITS ENTIRETY.”

The White House did not immediately respond to the BBC’s request for comment.

With Trump ratcheting up his threats, Democrat and Republican members of US Congress have expressed anger that he has not sought legislative approval.

“President Trump’s reckless actions towards Venezuela are pushing America closer and closer to another costly foreign war,” top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer posted on X on Sunday.

“Under our Constitution, Congress has the sole power to declare war,” he added.

Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, until recently a close Trump ally, said: “Reminder, Congress has the sole power to declare war.”

Trump’s comments come days after the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) warned airlines of “heightened military activity in and around Venezuela”.

In a statement on Saturday, Venezuela’s foreign ministry said that the US had “unilaterally suspended” its weekly migrant repatriation flights.

“We call directly on the international community, the sovereign governments of the world, the UN, and the relevant multilateral organizations to firmly reject this immoral act of aggression,” it said.

Also Saturday, Venezuela’s military conducted exercises along coastal areas, with state TV showing anti-aircraft weapons and other artillery being manoeuvred.

Venezuela on Wednesday banned six major international airlines – Iberia, TAP Portugal, Gol, Latam, Avianca and Turkish Airlines – from landing there after they failed to meet a 48-hour deadline to resume flights.

The US has deployed the world’s largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald Ford, and about 15,000 troops to within striking distance of Venezuela.

It has insisted that the deployment – the largest by the US in the region since it invaded Panama in 1989 – is to combat drug trafficking.

On Thursday, Trump warned that US efforts to halt Venezuelan drug trafficking “by land” would begin “very soon”.

US forces have carried out at least 21 strikes on boats they said were carrying drugs, killing more than 80 people. However, the US has not provided evidence that the boats carried drugs.

The Venezuelan government believes the aim of the US action is to depose Maduro, whose re-election last year was denounced by the Venezuelan opposition and many foreign nations as rigged.

The US has also designated Cartel de los Soles, or Cartel of the Suns – a group it alleges is headed by Maduro – as a foreign terrorist organisation.

Labelling an organisation as a terrorist group gives US law enforcement and military agencies broader powers to target and dismantle it.

Venezuela’s foreign ministry has “categorically, firmly, and absolutely rejected” the designation.

Venezuela’s interior and justice minister Diosdado Cabello, who is alleged to be one of the high-ranking members of the cartel, has long called it an “invention”.

The US state department has insisted that the Cartel de los Soles not only exists, but that it has “corrupted Venezuela’s military, intelligence, legislature, and judiciary”.

Lab-created diamonds are having a detrimental impact on the African economy that has historically relied on natural stones

0

In a village outside Botswana’s capital, Keorapetse Koko sat on an aging couch in her sparsely furnished home, stunned that a career — and an entire nation’s economy — built on diamonds had fallen so far, so fast.

For 17 years, she had earned a living cutting and polishing the gems that helped transform Botswana from one of the world’s poorest nations into one of Africa’s success stories. Diamonds were discovered in 1967, a year after independence, an abrupt change of fortune for the landlocked country.

Botswana became the world’s top diamond producer by value, and second-largest by volume after Russia. Diamonds are woven into the national identity, with local Olympic champion runner Letsile Tebogo heading a De Beers campaign celebrating how the industry funds schools and stadiums.

The stones that Koko and thousands of others dug and polished over the decades have funded Botswana’s health, education, infrastructure and more. The country risked the “resource curse” of building its economy on a single natural asset — and unlike many African nations, it was a success.

But Koko lost her job a year ago, joining many others left adrift as Africa’s trade in natural diamonds buckles under growing pressure from cheaper lab-grown diamonds mass-produced mainly in China and India.

“I have debts and I don’t know how I am going to pay them,” said the mother of two, who had survived on about $300 a month and relied on her employer for medical insurance. It had been a decent situation for a semi-skilled worker in a country where the average monthly salary is about $500. “Every month they call me asking for money. But where do I get it?”

‘Diamonds built our country’

Botswana, which has unearthed some of the world’s biggest stones, has prided itself on prudently managing its natural wealth, avoiding the corruption and fighting that have plagued many African peers. Its marketing message has been simple: Its stones are conflict-free and help fund development.

“Diamonds built our country,” said Joseph Tsimako, president of the Botswana Mine Workers Union, which represents about 10,000 workers in the nation of 2.5 million people. “Now, as the world changes, we must find a way to make sure they don’t destroy the lives of the people who helped build it.”

He warned that new U.S. tariffs under the Trump administration could worsen Botswana’s downturn, triggering staffing freezes, unpaid leave and more layoffs. The U.S. has imposed a 15% tariff on diamonds that are mined, cut and polished there.

Diamond exports, roughly 80% of Botswana’s foreign earnings and a third of government revenue, have tumbled.

Debswana, the largest local diamond producer and a joint venture between the government and mining giant De Beers, saw revenues halve last year. It has paused operations at some mines as Botswana and Angola enter talks to take over controlling stakes in De Beers’ diamond mining unit.

In September, Botswana’s national statistics agency reported a 43% drop in diamond output in the second quarter, the steepest fall in the country’s modern mining history. The World Bank expects the economy to shrink 3% this year, the second consecutive contraction.

The rise of synthetic diamonds

The global rise of synthetic diamonds has been swift. They have “given stiff competition, especially in lower-quality stones,” said Siddarth Gothi, chairman of the Botswana Diamond Manufacturers Association.

The gems emerged in the 1950s for industrial use. By the 1970s they had reached jewelry quality. Lab-grown stones now sell for up to 80% less than natural diamonds. Once making up just 1% of global sales in 2015, they have surged to nearly 20%.

Glitzy social media videos have fueled the appeal of synthetic gems made in weeks under intense heat and pressure and marketed as cheaper, conflict-free and eco-friendly alternatives to stones formed over billions of years.

Environmental groups have said natural diamond mining can drive deforestation, destroy habitats, degrade the soil and pollute the water. But environmental claims about the synthetic gems also face scrutiny, with critics noting that production remains energy-intensive, often powered by fossil fuels.

From “a marginal phenomenon,” an “unprecedented flood” of synthetics now threatens the natural diamond’s value and future, World Federation of Diamond Bourses president Yoram Dvash warned in July.

Lab-grown stones now account for most new U.S. engagement rings, he said. Natural diamond prices have fallen roughly 30% since 2022, leaving the industry at what Dvash called “a critical juncture.”

Hollywood stars, including Billie Eilish and Pamela Anderson, and Bollywood celebrities have boosted synthetic diamonds’ allure, along with Gen Z influencers.

“The new generation of youngsters getting engaged, they’ve got far more important things to spend their money on than a diamond,” said Ian Furman, founder of Naturally Diamonds, which sells natural and synthetic diamonds in neighboring South Africa. “So, it’s become so attractive to them to buy lab diamonds.”

Furman said that for every 100 diamonds his company sells, around 95 are synthetic when just five or six years ago it was overwhelmingly natural diamonds.

African producers feel the pain

The shift is felt beyond Botswana. Across southern Africa, falling production of natural diamonds and revenue have led to job cuts and financial strain.

To counter the trend, Botswana, Angola, Namibia, South Africa and Congo in June agreed to pool 1% of annual diamond revenues, translating into millions of dollars, into a global marketing push led by the Natural Diamond Council to promote natural stones. The nonprofit’s members include major mining companies such as De Beers Group and Rio Tinto, which have invested heavily in natural diamonds.

Last year, the council launched a “Real. Rare. Responsible” campaign starring actor Lily James in a bid to recast natural diamonds as unique and ethically sourced.

Kristina Buckley Kayel, the council’s managing director for North America, said restoring natural diamonds’ “desirability” is essential to protect producer economies, particularly in southern Africa.

With its diamond income no longer assured, Botswana’s government in September created a sovereign wealth fund focused on investment and diversification beyond mining, although details about its value and investors sketchy. Suddenly, the country’s elephant-heavy tourism industry and other mining options, including gold, silver and uranium, are more important than ever.

But for Koko, the laid-off diamond worker, the policy shift may have come too late.

“I was the breadwinner in a big family,” she said. “Now I don’t even know how to feed my own. Looking for another job is very difficult. The skills I learned are only relevant to the diamond industry.”

She never owned a diamond herself. Even the smallest would be a luxury beyond her means.

Khaleda Zia of Bangladesh admitted to hospital in ‘extremely critical’ state | Latest Updates

0

Ex-prime minister’s family calls for prayers for her early recovery after hospitalisation for a lung infection.

Bangladeshi former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia has been hospitalised in “very critical” condition, according to members of her party, as her family and supporters urged well-wishers to pray for her speedy recovery.

Zia’s personal physician, Dr A Z M Zahid Hossein, told reporters late on Saturday that the 80-year-old politician, who was taken to the Evercare Hospital in Dhaka on November 23, remains in intensive care.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

She was admitted with symptoms of a lung infection and Hossein said she appeared to be responding to the treatment.

“At this moment, I can say her condition has been in the same stage for the last three days. In doctors’ language, we say ‘she is responding to the treatment’,” he was quoted as saying by the Daily Star news website.

“Please pray so that she can continue to receive this treatment.”

Hossein’s comments came a day after the secretary-general of Zia’s Bangladesh National Party (BNP), Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, told reporters that her “condition was very critical”.

According to the Daily Star, Zia has “heart problems, liver and kidney issues, diabetes, lung problems, arthritis, and eye-related illnesses”.

She has a permanent pacemaker and previously underwent stenting for her heart, the outlet reported.

Activists in support of Bangladesh’s former prime minister, Khaleda Zia, hold a banner with her portrait as they pray for her recovery in front of the Evercare Hospital in Dhaka on November 29, 2025 [Munir UZ Zaman/AFP]

Earlier on Saturday, BNP’s vice chairman, Ahmed Azam Khan, told reporters that an air ambulance was on standby to take Zia abroad for advanced treatment if her medical condition stabilises.

Zia’s eldest son, Tarique Rahman, who has been based in London since 2008, called on the people of Bangladesh to pray for his mother’s recovery.

“We express our heartfelt thanks and gratitude for all your prayers and love for the highly respected Begum Khaleda Zia,” Rahman, 60, said in a social media post on Saturday.

“We fervently request you to continue your prayers for her early recovery.”

Zia, who served three terms as prime minister, was jailed for corruption in 2018 under recently ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government, which also barred her from travelling abroad for medical treatment.

She was released last year, shortly after Hasina’s removal.

Despite her ill health, Zia has promised to campaign in elections expected in February 2026, in which the BNP is widely seen as a frontrunner.

Waiting in front of the hospital since morning, Liton Molla, a driver for a private company, said he rushed there after hearing about Zia’s condition, describing her as his “dear leader”.

“I just pray she recovers and can contest in the election,” Liton, 45, told the AFP news agency.

“At this moment, Bangladesh needs a leader like Khaleda Zia.”

Bangladesh’s interim leader, Muhammad Yunus, also issued a statement.

“During this transitional period to democracy, Khaleda Zia is a source of utmost inspiration for the nation. Her recovery is very important for the country,” he said on Friday night.

Ryan Garcia selects his boxing Mount Rushmore

0

If there were a Mount Rushmore for popular fighters in the 21st century, Ryan Garcia would have a fair shout at taking one of the four slots.

The 27-year-old is a polarising figure — movie-idol looks, millions of social-media followers and a career that has been nothing short of a rollercoaster. But on February 21, ‘King Ry’ looks set to challenge Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title, an announcement Garcia made on social media.

Garcia’s own career may be light years from being mentioned among the sport’s all-time greats, but covers.com asked the Californian for his personal boxing Mount Rushmore.

“This is my boxing Mount Rushmore: Floyd Mayweather. Sugar Ray Leonard. Muhammad Ali. Henry Armstrong.”

Mayweather famously beat Garcia’s current promoter, Oscar De La Hoya, in a generational super-fight 18 years ago. ‘Money’ went on to amass astronomical riches and collect world titles across five weight classes.

Leonard may not be the greatest Sugar of all time, but he could easily be regarded as the finest boxer of the 1980s. Mayweather was a defensive genius; Leonard was equally gifted on defence and attack. Legacy-defining wins over Wilfred Benítez, Roberto Durán, Thomas Hearns and Marvin Hagler ensured his place among boxing’s pantheon of greats.

Muhammad Ali would be a lock for most fans’ Mount Rushmore. ‘The Greatest’ combined blurring hand speed with footwork more befitting a middleweight than a heavyweight. His roles in The Rumble in the Jungle and The Thrilla in Manila — beating George Foreman and Joe Frazier respectively — are career highlights, alongside victories over Sonny Liston, Ken Norton, Leon Spinks and more.

Go further back and you find Henry Armstrong, a 5ft 5½in terror whose career ended with 101 knockouts in 180 fights. During a 15-year run he held three world titles — when only eight divisions existed — simultaneously. With nineteen welterweight title defences in just two years, the ferocious ‘Homicide Hank’ earned both notoriety and acclaim.

Armstrong also won featherweight and lightweight titles either side of his welterweight reign in the 1930s — a true phenomenon in every sense.

Judge rules in favor of Taylor Swift fans, allowing lawsuit against Live Nation and Ticketmaster to move forward

0

A federal judge ruled that Taylor Swift fans can move forward with most of their lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment and Ticketmaster over the 2022 ticket sale for the ‘Eras Tour.’

In 2022, a group of Taylor Swift fans, referred to as Swifties, sued the ticketing giant after demand outstripped supply during the presale for the Eras tour,  ticketed by Live Nation-owned Ticketmaster, and promoted by rival AEG.

The lawsuit claimed that, “millions of fans waited up to eight hours and were unable to purchase tickets as a result of insufficient ticket releases”.

Ticketmaster apologized to Swift and her fans in a blog post published in November 2022, which was originally deleted, and then republished. The platform noted in the post that over 3.5 million people pre-registered for Taylor Swift tickets, which it said was “the largest registration in history.”

“While the Court is once again ‘left to guess’ the terms of the contract, the Court will allow [Swift fans] one last opportunity.”

George Wu, US DIstrict Judge

On November 21, US District Judge George Wu denied Live Nation and Ticketmaster’s motion to dismiss some claims in the lawsuit, while dismissing fraud, negligent misrepresentation and negligence claims without allowing further amendments. He granted the fans’ chance to revise their breach of contract allegations.

Judge Wu wrote: “While the Court is once again ‘left to guess’ the terms of the contract, the Court will allow [Swift fans] one last opportunity.”

The ruling came after oral arguments on Live Nation’s motion to dismiss the fourth amended complaint. Wu adopted a tentative ruling issued earlier as his final decision, according to a court filing, which you can read here.

Wu’s decision to dismiss the fraud claims centered on whether Live Nation made promises it never intended to keep.

The judge cited a recent Ninth Circuit case involving AT&T Mobility, where a customer lost $24 million in cryptocurrency after hackers bypassed security measures the phone carrier had promised.

The appeals court ruled that even if AT&T knew its security could be evaded, that didn’t prove the company never intended to implement the protections. “Making ‘a promise with an honest but unreasonable intent to perform is wholly different from making one with no intent to perform’ and thus cannot be ‘false,’” Wu wrote, quoting the Ninth Circuit.

“Plaintiffs have failed to sufficiently allege that Defendants made promises with no intent to perform. Plaintiffs’ reliance on the aftermath of the presales cannot support a plausible fraud theory.”

George Wu, US DIstrict Judge

Referring to that reasoning, Wu said the Swifties failed to show Live Nation and Ticketmaster made promises with no intent to follow through.

“Plaintiffs have failed to sufficiently allege that Defendants made promises with no intent to perform. Plaintiffs’ reliance on the aftermath of the presales cannot support a plausible fraud theory,” Wu wrote.

The fourth amended complaint also lacked allegations suggesting defendants had no reasonable grounds for believing their statements were true when made.

Wu added: “As such, the Court still finds dismissal of both the fraud and negligent misrepresentation claims appropriate.”

“In dismissing these same claims from the Third Amended Complaint, the Court had recommended that Plaintiffs ‘clearly separate out each alleged misrepresentation, followed (or joined) immediately by the ‘who, what, when, where and how’ details that must accompany the allegation, along with an explanation for how the statement/representation was misleading/false when made.’”

Speaking to Reuters, Jennifer Kinder, a lawyer for the fans, said the plaintiffs were “excited to move closer to our day in court.”

Taylor Swift’s record-breaking Eras Tour has become the first tour in history to generate gross revenues of over $1 billion, according to Pollstar.

Disney+ announced in October that it will stream two Taylor Swift projects in December focused on the Eras Tour, a year after the concert series wrapped up as the highest-grossing concert tour in history with $2.08 billion in ticket sales.

The streaming platform secured rights to a six-part docuseries and a complete concert film, both premiering December 12.

Music Business Worldwide

Reimagined Leathermans and Swiss Army Skeletons: The Best Multitools of 2025

0

After a rather slow year in multitools that saw us bring knives into the mix in 2024, 2025 saw more multitool debuts than we could keep up with. Many of them were rather underwhelming – limited utility, weird forms, copycats and other subpar debuts – but a few stood tall above the pack.

Continue Reading

Category: Knives and Multitools, Gear, Outdoors

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Uncovering the Unsung Heroines in Forgotten Photographs

0

Alkazi Collection of Photography In this monochrome photo, Lilavati Munshi, a Congress leader from Gujarat, stands defiantly outside a boycotted British store in Mumbai. She is wearing a sari and glasses, and is surrounded by the policeAlkazi Collection of Photography

Lilavati Munshi, a Congress leader, standing defiantly outside a boycotted British store in Mumbai

In India, a set of recently discovered photographs is drawing attention to the role of women in one of the country’s biggest anti-colonial movements, known as the civil disobedience movement, led by Mahatma Gandhi in 1930-31.

The images do not simply capture female participation. They are visual proof of how women commanded and dominated political activity, often relegating men to the sidelines.

In April 1930, Gandhi concluded his pivotal salt march, breaking the British monopoly on salt production – a charged symbol of colonial misrule. Raising a handful of muddy salt from the sea, he declared himself to be “shaking the foundations of the British Empire”.

Afterwards, Gandhi presided over waves of civil disobedience protests, encouraging supporters of the Indian National Congress to manufacture contraband salt, boycott foreign goods, and face down phalanxes of lathi-wielding policemen. Just a few months before, the Congress had declared purna swaraj (complete independence) as its political objective for India.

Historians have long recognised the civil disobedience movement as an important turning point in Indian politics.

Alkazi Collection of Photography The monochrome photo shows a group of children, many of whom are carrying steel pots filled with sewater on their heads. The boys are dressed in loose shirts, shorts and caps, while the girls are wearing saris. Alkazi Collection of Photography

Women and children carry seawater from a Mumbai beach to their homes to make contraband salt

Alkazi Collection of Photography Two women, who are members of a women's volunteer force and are dressed in saris, struggle with police officers as they try to seize their provisional national flagAlkazi Collection of Photography

Members of a women’s volunteer force clash with British police officers in Mumbai

First, women joined anti-colonial activities in greater numbers. When Gandhi began his salt march he forbade women from joining, but several female leaders eventually convinced him to accord them a greater role.

Second, Congress leaders harnessed modern media technologies like radio, film, and photography, which helped their political struggle reach an international audience.

About 20 years ago, one album of photographs from the movement appeared at a London auction. Tipped off by an antiquarian dealer in Mumbai (formerly Bombay), the Alkazi Foundation, a Delhi-based art collection, acquired the album.

Small in size with a coal-gray cover, the album gave few clues about its provenance.

Scrawled on its spine were the words “Collections of Photographs of Old Congress Party- K. L. Nursey.”

No one knew the identity of KL Nursey. Typewritten photo captions were brief and rife with spelling and factual errors. The album remained undisturbed in the Alkazi Foundation’s collections until its curator and two historians from Duke University began to reexamine it in 2019.

They were shocked by what they found.

Despite their unknown origins, the photographs of the Nursey album told a dramatic and detailed story.

Pictured here were the streets of Bombay, tense and bristling with thousands of volunteers aligned with the Congress. Unlike earlier photographs of political activity in India, these are not posed-for images: they capture violent confrontations with police, wounded volunteers loaded onto ambulances, boisterous marches amidst monsoonal downpours, and endless streams of protesting men and women through Bombay’s Indo-Gothic streetscape. There is an electric energy running through the black-and-white images.

The Alkazi Collection of Photography A wide-angle shot of India's bustling streets as men and women, most of whom are protesters, walk through the traffic along a boulevard dotted with shopsThe Alkazi Collection of Photography

A boycott procession led by women winds its way through a Bombay market

Alkazi Collection of Photography Three women and two men are seen crouched on the shores of Mumbai's Chowpatty Beach, ready to make contraband salt. A crowd, mostly comprising women, stands behind them and watches on. Alkazi Collection of Photography

Women gather on the shores of Bombay’s Chowpatty Beach, ready to make contraband salt

Above all, the album brings to light, perhaps better than any other source, how women used the civil disobedience movement for their empowerment.

“We were immediately struck by the emphasis on women in action,” says Sumathi Ramaswamy of Duke University, who, along with her colleague Avrati Bhatnagar led the detailed examination of the album.

In one picture, Lilavati Munshi, an intrepid Congress leader from Gujarat, instructs a group of men raiding a government-owned salt pan. In another, Munshi stands defiantly before the entrance of a boycotted British department store, uncowed by a group of British police officers towering over her – and stylishly dressed in a sleeveless sari blouse.

This visual record of female leadership is unique. Despite its leftward leanings and Gandhi’s prodding, Indian nationalist activity had remained an overwhelmingly male endeavour, with its own distinct patriarchal flavor.

As recently as the noncooperation movement in 1920-22, women played a far more circumscribed role. Now, however, women’s involvement took a quantum leap.

Beyond recognisable figures like Munshi, the Nursey album documents thousands of completely unknown female volunteers.

Women gather on the shores of Bombay’s Chowpatty Beach, ready to make contraband salt. Members of the Desh Sevika, an all-female volunteer force, wrestle with police attempting to snatch away their provisional national flag. Perhaps most striking of all was how many female volunteers brought along their young daughters, inducting new generations of women into anticolonial politics.

The Nursey album also points to remarkable inversions of gender dynamics.

Long processions of women, many of them bearing a takli or spindle to honour Gandhi’s commitment to homespun khadi cloth, take over Bombay’s streets, quite literally pushing men to the very margins. Elsewhere, middle-class men, many of whom had rarely set foot inside a kitchen, hold impromptu classes where they instruct volunteers on boiling and cooking salt.

It is these nameless men and women who help us better understand this chapter of India’s history. “We associate the civil disobedience movement with Gandhi,” Ms Ramaswamy says. “But when we began studying the album, we were soon convinced that it made a different argument: that the people of Bombay made the movement that in turn made Gandhi globally famous.”

The Alkazi Collection of Photography Two women in saris and with their heads covered, are seen leading a boycott procession in India. The photo, which is monochrome, shows them walking along a busy street. The woman on the right is wearing glasses and is holding a provisional national flag. The Alkazi Collection of Photography

Women leading a boycott procession while holding the provisional national flag

The Alkazi Collection of Photography A procession led by women to encourage hand spinning in Mumbai passes through a busy street in India. The women are all wearing saris and have their heads covered. They are surrounded by men, most of whom are wearing caps and kurtas, on both sides of the street. The Alkazi Collection of Photography

A women-led procession in Mumbai promotes hand spinning, with participants carrying the takli (spindle) to honour Gandhi’s commitment to homespun khadi

Here, the camera played a critical role. In ways that could not be captured in written sources, photographs demonstrate women taking nationalist activities into their own hands: challenging policemen, drumming up support for boycotts, addressing crowds, directing salt production, and courting arrest.

“Participation in the nationalist movement was not only a catalyst for the political awakening of Indian women,” Ms Bhatnagar says. “It also created new possibilities for them to step into public roles and occupy civic spaces in ways that had rarely been seen before.”

Many of the photographed women look directly at the camera, conscious of their political activity being documented for posterity. In this way, Ms Bhatnagar continues, “they claimed freedom from colonial rule but also from prevailing gendered division of spaces, between the domestic and the public”.

The Nursey album is also a stunning testament to the urban transformation of Bombay.

Below the domes and spires of a colonial metropolis, a discernible transfer of power is evident, as khadi-clad Congress volunteers outnumber pith-helmeted policemen and army soldiers. They commandeer the city’s most prominent landmarks, rallying outside Victoria Terminus (today’s Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus) and climbing onto the neoclassical Fitzgerald Fountain at Dhobi Talao. Colonial authorities, meanwhile, transform the Worli chawls – tenement housing for cotton mill workers – into makeshift prisons for detained nationalists.

“Though photography already had a century-long history in Bombay, political activism was captured by the lens for the first time in the Nursey album,” says Murali Ranganathan, a historian of Bombay.

These photographs in the Nursey album are now back in public circulation.

Ramaswamy and Bhatnagar recently released a book titled, Photographing Civil Disobedience, which includes many of the images alongside articles by a number of scholars. In October, they opened two museum exhibits, both titled Disobedient Subjects, at the CSMVS Museum in Mumbai and Duke’s Center for Documentary Studies.

The women volunteers of the civil disobedience movement are getting a belated acknowledgement of their defining role in one of India’s biggest mass movements.

Nearly a century later, their resolve and determination are as palpable as they were when first captured on camera.

Disobedient Subjects runs at the CSMVS Museum in Mumbai through 31 March 2026 and at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University through 19 January 2026.

Challenging the client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Six people killed and dozens wounded in extensive overnight Russian assault on Ukraine

0

Vast Russian overnight attack on Ukraine kills six, wounds dozens