Epstein Files vs India’s Open Graves of Justice ( Part 2 )

Why We Love Foreign Monsters and Protect Our Own


The internet is burning with rage.

Epstein Files.
Secret lists.
Western elites.
Hollywood predators.

Every WhatsApp group has suddenly turned into a moral court. Everyone is angry. Everyone is “shocked”. Everyone is an expert on justice.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

We are obsessed with Epstein because it is safe outrage.
It costs us nothing.
It implicates no one we vote for.
It threatens no power structure we depend on.

While we dissect horrors across the ocean, our own backyard has quietly become a graveyard for justice.

And we barely look down.


Let’s Talk About What’s Happening Here. Now. This Week.

Kuldeep Singh Sengar Walks. The Survivor Never Will.

Kuldeep Singh Sengar is not an allegation.
He is a convicted rapist.
Sentenced to life imprisonment.

And yet, the Delhi High Court has suspended his sentence.
Bail granted. Appeal pending.

Read that again slowly.

A man convicted of destroying a young woman’s life gets a pause.
The survivor gets a lifetime.

This is not law.
This is privilege wearing a judicial robe.


Hathras: From National Outrage to National Amnesia

Remember Hathras?

A young Dalit woman.
Brutality that shook the country.
Promises of justice shouted from every stage.

Fast-forward to reality.

Three of the four accused—Ravi, Luv Kush, and Ramu—are acquitted.
Free men.
No rape. No murder. Silence.

One conviction remains, stripped down quietly, carefully, until the original horror barely resembles the final judgment.

This is how justice dies in India.

Not with denial.
But with procedural suffocation.


Prajwal Revanna: Justice Didn’t Act. It Was Forced.

Yes, Prajwal Revanna is in custody now.
But don’t rewrite history.

It took:

  • Thousands of leaked videos
  • Public outrage
  • Media pressure
  • An international escape attempt

before the system even woke up.

And let’s be clear:
His father is out on bail.

Justice didn’t move swiftly.
It was dragged by the collar into action.

That is not justice.
That is damage control.


Godmen, Rapists, and the Luxury of “Temporary Relief”

Now let’s talk about the holy revolving door.

Gurmeet Ram Rahim

Asaram Bapu

Convicted.
Sentenced.
And yet—parole, medical bail, temporary reliefs.

Again and again.

Prison, for them, is not punishment.
It’s a waiting lounge.

Faith becomes a shield.
Followers become pressure groups.
Elections become leverage.

Tell me again how Epstein is the bigger scandal.


Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh: Charges Without Consequences

Formal sexual harassment charges.
Testimonies by national athletes.
Women who brought medals to this country begging to be heard.

And yet—
He is free. Comfortable. Untouched.

The wrestlers wait.
Their careers pause.
Their bodies age.

Justice?
It’s moving—at a speed slower than human endurance.


The Rare Exception That Proves the Rot

And then—once in a while—
a judge reminds us what justice should look like.

Justice B. V. Nagarathna.

She overturned the remission granted to the Bilkis Bano rapists.
She called out the abuse of state power.
She sent eleven convicted men back to prison.

That moment mattered because it was rare.

It reminded us that the law can still bite—
when courage sits on the bench.


Stop Pointing at Epstein. Look at Ourselves.

Epstein is dead.
His crimes are foreign.
His enablers are far away.

But our predators are alive.
They attend functions.
They get bail.
They get parole.
They get benefit of doubt.

We don’t lack laws.
We lack will.

Justice in India doesn’t collapse overnight.
It erodes:

  • One suspension order
  • One quiet acquittal
  • One “medical emergency”
  • One delayed charge sheet

Until outrage feels louder for American scandals than Indian survivors.


Ask the Only Question That Matters

Why do powerful men in India treat punishment as an inconvenience?

Why do survivors fight forever while convicts rest on bail?

Why is justice swift only when the accused has no influence?

Before hunting monsters in Hollywood or Washington,
ask yourself:

Why are monsters in our own districts walking free so easily?

That answer should scare us more than any list leaked from across the ocean.

Because Epstein is history.
This is our present.

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Hi, I’m Nishanth Muraleedharan (also known as Nishani)—an IT engineer turned internet entrepreneur with 25+ years in the textile industry. As the Founder & CEO of "DMZ International Imports & Exports" and President & Chairperson of the "Save Handloom Foundation", I’m committed to reviving India’s handloom heritage by empowering artisans through sustainable practices and advanced technologies like Blockchain, AI, AR & VR. I write what I love to read—thought-provoking, purposeful, and rooted in impact. nishani.in is not just a blog — it's a mark, a sign, a symbol, an impression of the naked truth. Like what you read? Buy me a chai and keep the ideas brewing. ☕💭   For advertising on any of our platforms, WhatsApp me on : +91-91-0950-0950 or email me @ support@dmzinternational.com