Veteran journalist and researcher Sadiq Jafri announces the release of his book, The Delayed Line: Partition of British India and the Perfect Crime, now available in print across Pakistan and online globally through Amazon. Based on years of research, declassified documents, official records, survivor testimonies, and a journalist’s eye for detail, the book re-examines the Partition of 1947 as not just a hurried imperial withdrawal, but a calculated operation that manipulated timelines, silenced provinces, and reshaped borders with chilling precision. Key features of the book include a compelling case against Lord Louis Mountbatten and Sir Cyril Radcliffe for their roles in delaying boundary announcements and enabling pre-planned violence; unequal treatment of Punjab and Bengal through minority votes overruling majorities; the total denial of political voice to Muslims of UP, Bihar, Bhopal, Junagadh, Hyderabad, Assam, and Kerala and the overlooked massacres, displacement, and demographic engineering done under the pretext of independence. This also includes a fresh revisit of the Two Nation Theory as understood by Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah and its relevance today. With 352 pages of carefully sourced analysis, The Delayed Line bridges the gap between academic history and investigative reporting. It is essential reading for students and scholars of South Asian history, Pakistan Studies, post-colonial politics, and for all those whose families carry the trauma of Partition. The book is published by SHJ Publishers — Research & Discovery, Lahore, and distributed locally by Ilm-o-Irfan Publishers. Speaking to Business Recorder , Jafri stated that it took him six years to resolve complex questions surrounding the Partition of the subcontinent. He said that he undertook extensive research to address the historical intricacies of the 1947 division. “After years of chronicling real-time politics, I turned my gaze backward— toward the silences of history. This book was born from the same urge that always guided my journalism: to seek what’s been unsaid, and to speak it clearly. If this work adds even a fraction to that conversation, I will have reason to be content.” A senior journalist Shaukat Ali, in his review on the book, observed that the book pulls the curtain back on one of the most manipulated transitions of power in modern history, with forensic attention to detail and a sense of moral urgency. “The central premise of the book is bold and uncomfortable: the Partition was not just a hurried or flawed exit, but it was a deliberate crime. The author terms it “The Perfect Crime,” committed in broad daylight under the watch of the departing British Empire, with complicity from Congress leadership and the blind eye of the global community,” he said. The book, Ali said, builds a compelling case against Lord Mountbatten and Sir Cyril Radcliffe, holding them responsible for the manipulated border demarcation and the deliberate delay in its announcement.