Tuesday, 12 September 2023

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Monday, 11 September 2023

36 women cadets among 197 Officers Training Academy pass-outs this year in Chennai

These include six women from Bhutan, two men from Maldives and two men and two women from Tanzania.

36 women cadets among 197 Officers Training Academy pass-outs this year in Chennai
Officers celebrate during the passing out ceremony at OTA, Chennai. 

CHENNAI: On the occasion of the graduation of cadets from the Officers Training Academy, a Veer Nari gallery, a tribute to widows of war heroes, was inaugurated at the Officers Training Academy by Archana Pande, president of the Army Wives Welfare Association and wife of Chief of Army Staff General Manoj Pande.

The passing out parade, in which 197 cadets, including 36 women cadets, took part was inspected by General Pande.“Gender has no boundaries when it comes to serving the nation,” Pande said in his address. “While training has equipped you to operate on the battlefield, you will have to learn on the job each day,” he said.

Debashree Banerji, who lost her husband Major Subroto Adhicary of the 22 Jat regiment in 2013, said, “Training in OTA is completely different from civilian life. It tears down the facet of personality with which one enters the academy and brings out a stronger, better version of you.”

OTA Chennai trains the widows like any other cadet and passes out as army officers to serve the nation as their husbands did. The Veer Nari gallery displays photographs and life stories of such women.

Navteshwar Singh, son of Maj Harminder Pal Singh of 18 Grenadiers, who died fighting terrorists in a classified operation at Baramulla, recalls how he wanted to follow his father’s footsteps despite his mother’s initial reluctance. This year 12 cadets from foreign countries also completed their training. These include six women from Bhutan, two men from Maldives and two men and two women from Tanzania.


"Nothing To Do With Hinduism", Rahul Gandhi Hits Out At BJP At Paris Event

Rahul Gandhi's jabs invited a predictably furious response with BJP Lok Sabha MP Tejasvi Surya taunting his rival for "crying... while Bharat achieves global consensus" - a reference to the the weekend's G20 meet. 

"Nothing To Do With Hinduism", Rahul Gandhi Hits Out At BJP At Paris Event
Congress MP Rahul Gandhi is in France as part of a week-long tour of Europe.

New Delhi: Congress MP Rahul Gandhi hit out at the Bharatiya Janata Party and its ideological mentor, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh on Sunday, declaring neither “have nothing to do with Hinduism” and that “there is nothing Hindu about what the BJP does…”. Mr Gandhi was at an event in France on Sunday, when he said, “I have read the Gita, a number of the Upanishads and many Hindu books… absolutely nothing Hindu about it (the BJP)… “

“I have not read anywhere in any Hindu book, or heard from any learned Hindu person, that you should terrorise or harm people weaker than you. This idea… this word — ‘Hindu nationalist’ — this is a wrong word. They are not ‘Hindu nationalists’… they have nothing to do with Hinduism,” Mr Gandhi emphasised.

Interacting with students at Paris’ Sciences PO University, he ripped into the government, which has been widely criticised for suppressing opposition leaders’ voices within the country, accusing them of being “out to gain power at any cost”.

“They (BJP and RSS) have nothing to do with Hinduism. They are out to gain power at any cost… and will do anything to ensure the caste structure and social structure of my country is not threatened,” he said.

“They seek the dominance of a few… that is what they are about.”

Mr Gandhi’s comments came after a question about the “scary radicalisation of youth by Hindutva forces”. This is not the first time he has attacked the BJP on this topic. In 2021, he called them “fake Hindus” who “use” religion for their benefit.

The jabs invited a predictably furious response with BJP Lok Sabha MP Tejasvi Surya taunting his rival for “crying… while Bharat achieves global consensus” — a reference to the “100 per cent” declaration from the weekend’s G20 meet.

The very fact Rahul Gandhi thinks Hinduism is practiced by referring to ‘books’ shows how shallow his understanding of our dharma,” Mr Surya gloated on X (formerly Twitter).

“That he has been reduced to crying before a handful of people in some far away European city, while Bharat is achieving global consensus at G20, is telling of how the nation has rejected his brand of politics in the last decade,” he declared.
And Then The ‘Sanatan Dharm’ Row

Mr Gandhi’s jabs also come amid a fight over Tamil Nadu minister Udhayanidhi Stalin’s comment about ‘Sanatan Dharm’, which the BJP and right-wing commentators have claimed is a “call for the genocide of people with Sanatan thoughts”.

Earlier this month Mr Stalin said, “Sanatana (Dharma) ought to be eradicated like malaria, dengue and mosquito…”

An apoplectic BJP hit back, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and several members of his cabinet and party targeting him. Mr Stalin was even the target of a ₹ 10 crore bounty allegedly issued by a temple priest in Uttar Pradesh’s Ayodhya.

Mr Gandhi has not, so far, responded directly to this controversy, although his party has, flip-flopping between support and criticism. Karnataka minister Priyank Kharge disavowed any religion that does not treat all people as equals. However, Congress boss Mallikarjun Kharge, his father, seemed to want distance, declaring “there is no need to mix religion, politics”.


Sunday, 10 September 2023

'Ball of fire swallowed up everything': Families in Morocco weep for victims of deadly earthquake

Television channels broadcast aerial images showing entire villages of clay houses in the Al-Haouz region completely destroyed.

'Ball of fire swallowed up everything': Families in Morocco weep for victims of deadly earthquake
A woman is helped as she reacts to the death of relatives in an earthquake in the mountain village of Tafeghaghte, southwest of Marrakesh, on September 10, 2023. 

TAFEGHAGHTE: Moroccans on Sunday mourned the victims of a devastating earthquake that killed more than 2,000 people as rescue teams raced to find survivors trapped under the rubble of flattened villages.

The strongest-ever quake recorded in the North African country has killed at least 2,012 people and injured over 2,000, many seriously, according to the latest official figures.

Friday’s 6.8-magnitude quake struck 72 kilometres (45 miles) southwest of the tourist hub of Marrakesh, wiping out entire villages in the hills of the Atlas mountain range.

“I’ve lost everything,” said Lahcen, a resident of the mountain village of Moulay Brahim, whose wife and four children were among those killed.

Rescue workers recovered the bodies of Lahcen’s three daughters from the rubble of their home, but had not yet found the remains of his wife and son.

“I can’t do anything about it now, I just want to get away from the world and mourn,” he said.

Troops and emergency services have scrambled to reach remote mountain villages where victims were still feared trapped under the rubble of houses, many of which were constructed from mud bricks.

Al-Haouz province, site of the epicentre, suffered the most deaths with 1,293, followed by Taroudant province where 452 lives were lost, authorities reported.

Citizens on Sunday rushed to hospitals in Marrakesh to donate blood to help the many injured.

‘Everyone lost family’
Bouchra, another resident of Moulay Brahim, dried her tears with her scarf as she watched men wielding pickaxes to dig graves for the victims.

“My cousin’s grandchildren are dead,” she said. “I saw the devastation of the earthquake live and I’m still shaking. It’s like a ball of fire that swallowed up everything in its path.

“Everyone here has lost family, whether in our village or elsewhere in the region.”

Many residents of the usually bustling tourist hotspot of Marrakesh spent a second night sleeping out on the streets, huddled together under blankets and among bags filled with their belongings.

Fatema Satir, a Marrakesh resident, said many were sleeping in the street for fear of their houses collapsing.

“Look where all these people are sleeping,” said Satir. “There is no help for us. Our houses have been cracked, others destroyed — like my daughter’s house which was wiped out. We are in a chaotic state.”

In the city’s historic Jemaa el-Fna square, about 20 people were huddled on the ground, wrapped in blankets, while others were staying on the lawn of the nearby town hall, with its 12th century ramparts partially collapsed.

“We spent the night outside the old town, in a safe place,” said Maria, a Spanish tourist.

The kingdom declared three days of national mourning while countries including France, Israel, Italy, Spain and the United States have offered aid.

US Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer said: “We’ve got search and rescue teams ready to deploy… We are also ready to release funds at the right time.”

Spain meanwhile said it would send search and rescue teams and other aid after it received a formal request for help from Rabat.

Algeria, which has long had rocky relations with neighbouring Morocco, opened its airspace, which had been closed for two years, to flights carrying humanitarian aid and evacuating the injured.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose country in recent years established ties with Morocco, offered to send search-and-rescue teams, declaring that “Israel stands by Morocco in its difficult time”.

‘Under the debris’
The Red Cross warned that it could take years to repair the damage.

“It won’t be a matter of a week or two… We are counting on a response that will take months, if not years,” said Hossam Elsharkawi, its Middle East and North Africa director.

The village of Tafeghaghte, 60 kilometres (37 miles) southwest of Marrakesh, was almost entirely destroyed by the quake, an AFP team reported, with very few buildings still standing.

“Three of my grandchildren and their mother are dead,” said 72-year-old Omar Benhanna. “They’re still under the debris. It wasn’t so long ago that we were playing together.”

Residents buried around 70 victims on Saturday, cries and screams punctuating the funeral rites.

In the evening, television channels broadcast aerial images showing entire villages of clay houses in the Al-Haouz region completely destroyed.

“The public authorities are still mobilised to speed up rescue operations and evacuate the injured,” the interior ministry said.

The tremor was also felt in the coastal cities of Rabat, Casablanca and Agadir, where many panicked residents rushed onto the streets in the middle of the night.

The quake was the deadliest in Morocco since a 1960 tremor destroyed Agadir, a disaster in which more than 12,000 people died.


New Delhi, Paris join hands to manufacture advanced defence tech

The decisions were arrived during bilateral talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron. 

New Delhi, Paris join hands to manufacture advanced defence tech
FILE: Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron. 

NEW DELHI: India and France on Sunday decided to strengthen defence cooperation through partnerships in the design, development, testing and manufacture of advanced defence technologies and platforms, and expanding production in India.

The decisions were arrived during bilateral talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron.

“We discussed a series of topics and look forward to ensuring India-France relations scale new heights of progress,’’ said Modi, who had nine bilateral meetings on Sunday. The other bilateral meetings Modi had were with Canada, Germany, South Korea, Turkey, Comoros and South Korea. India and Saudi Arabia will have a bilateral meeting on Monday.

During his talks with Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, Modi raised concerns about the anti-India activities of extremist elements in Canada. The extremists are promoting secessionism and inciting violence against Indian diplomats, damaging diplomatic premises, and threatening the Indian community in Canada. Trudeau said Canada believes in freedom of expression and peaceful protests but doesn’t condone violence.

During his talks with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Prime Minister Modi spoke about enhancing trade, and continuous collaboration on clean energy. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hailed India’s G20 Presidency and complimented PM Modi on the Delhi Declaration.


Friday, 8 September 2023

India or Bharat? 'Panic reactions, distraction tactics,' says Rahul Gandhi

Gandhi also said such controversies seem to play out every time his party raises concerns about "crony capitalism".

India or Bharat? 'Panic reactions, distraction tactics,' says Rahul Gandhi
Representational Image: Congress MP Rahul Gandhi.

LONDON: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said on Friday that the debate around the country’s name that erupted on social media following the G20 Summit invitations going out in the name of the “President of Bharat” are “panic reactions” and “distraction tactics” by the government.

Gandhi also said such controversies seem to play out every time his party raises concerns about “crony capitalism”.

The dinner invitation from President Droupadi Murmu to foreign leaders attending the G20 summit this weekend comes in the name of “President of Bharat”.

It triggered a war of words on social media, with BJP leaders clashing with the Opposition and several celebrities and sports personalities also wading into the row.

Addressing a media conference in Brussels, the Congress MP claimed that the Opposition naming its alliance Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance (I.N.D.I.A.) has “disturbed” Prime Minister Narendra Modi enough that he wants a name change for the country.

“I’m perfectly happy with the names that we have in our Constitution. India, that is Bharat, works perfectly well for me,” he said when asked which name he prefers. “But I think these, in a sense to me, are panic reactions. There’s a little bit of fear in the government. These are distraction tactics,” he said.

“We of course came out with the name I.N.D.I.A. for our coalition, and it’s a fantastic idea because it represents exactly who we are, We consider ourselves to be the voice of India and so the word works very well. But it’s obviously disturbed the Prime Minister enough that he wants to change the name of the country, which is absurd, but that’s what it is,” Gandhi said.

“It’s also interesting that every time we raise the issue of Mr Adani and crony capitalism, the Prime Minister comes out with some dramatic new diversion tactic. It’s curious that just after I did a press conference on Adani, this entire diversion was put into place. It’s interesting,” he added.

Gandhi on Thursday sought a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) probe into reports that Adani family associates secretly invested “hundreds of millions” in the company through opaque investment funds based in Mauritius.

The debate around the country’s name was one of several topics raised with Gandhi during his media interaction in Belgium, the first stop on his European tour which next covers France followed by the Netherlands and Norway.

Gandhi said the idea behind the tour was to have an “exchange of ideas” on global issues with European parliamentarians, interact with the Indian diaspora in these regions and also shed light on some of the challenges faced by India.


Sunak arrives in Delhi for G20 summit, says free trade agreement between UK and India not guaranteed

The most obvious hurdle toward a deal is India's desire for the UK to make more visas available for its students and employees of Indian companies, particularly its software businesses, a report said

Sunak arrives in Delhi for G20 summit, says free trade agreement between UK and India not guaranteed
FILE - British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with his wife Akshata Murthy.

A free trade agreement between the UK and India is not guaranteed, reports quoting British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said.

The 43-year-old Sunak, who tagged himself “India’s son-in-law,” accompanied by his wife Akshata, arrived in Delhi, the first prime minister of Indian heritage to visit the country, on Friday for the G20 summit.

BBC quoting Downing Street said, the “historic” visit will be “a powerful reminder of the living bridge between the two countries.”

Speaking on the way to the summit, Sunak said he was “excited to be back” in India, calling it “a country that is very near and dear to me”.

He said: “It’s obviously special. I saw somewhere that I was referred to as India’s son-in-law, which I hope was meant affectionately!”

Sunak, according to The Guardian, is hoping to use the weekend meeting to overcome some of the final hurdles that remain in the way of a free trade deal, including the politically sensitive question of visas for Indian workers and students coming to the UK. But he warned in advance that success was far from guaranteed, even after 18 months of tortuous negotiations.

London and New Delhi, Daily Mail reports, had a £36billion trading relationship in 2022/23 but Sunak is keen to finalise an economy-boosting trade agreement with the country that has a population of 1.4 billion people.

Boris Johnson originally targeted an October 2022 completion deadline, but one of the hold-ups to a trade pact has been India’s push for more visas to be granted to work in Britain.

Downing Street said the UK would not bend on its immigration stance in order to achieve a free trade deal, with no target date set by Sunak for signing off on new trade terms. There has been speculation about another visit later in the year to seal an agreement, Daily Mail said.

The Sky News suggested that the most obvious hurdle toward a deal is India’s desire for the UK to make more visas available for its students and employees of Indian companies, particularly its software businesses, which are among its biggest exporters.

This adds a layer of complexity because one of the biggest beneficiaries of such an agreement could be Infosys, one of India’s biggest software and outsourcing companies, which was founded by Sunak’s father-in-law and in which his wife retains a significant shareholding, according to Sky News.

Yet visas appear to be a red line for Sunak, as the PM’s spokesperson made clear this week: “The prime minister believes that the current levels of migration are too high.

“To be crystal clear, there are no plans to change our immigration policy to achieve this free trade agreement and that includes student visas.”

For the UK, according to Sky News, the key priority is for India to reduce its tariffs, which are seen as among the world’s most protectionist. Just 3% of UK exports to India are tariff-free — while by contrast, about 60% of Indian exports to the UK incur no tariffs.

Some of the UK’s biggest exports are heavily taxed, most famously Scotch whisky, which attracts a 150% tariff.

Another stumbling block, as negotiations between the two countries enter a 13th round, is India’s approach to intellectual property.

One of India’s biggest exports is generic drugs — sometimes described as “copycat” drugs — cut-price versions of medicines that were once protected by patent, but which are no longer.

Leaders of the G20, which includes the European Union and the likes of China, the US, Brazil, and Russia, began holding summits following the 2008 global financial crisis, creating a top-level forum to discuss international challenges, Daily Mail said.

Two of the most powerful men in the world were on the guest list, but aren’t turning up. Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi will not be attending the summit.


Indian-Sri Lankan descent Democratic party official left bloodied in carjacking attack

"Four very young men, all carrying guns, beat me violently down to the ground in front of our kids," Shivanthi Sathanandan said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.

Indian-Sri Lankan descent Democratic party official left bloodied in carjacking attack

        Democratic party official Shivanthi Sathanandan was attacked by armed men in her driveway.

WASHINGTON: A Democratic Party official of Indian and Sri Lankan descent has been attacked by unknown gunmen in her driveway in front of her children in the US state of Minnesota.

Shivanthi Sathanandan, second vice chairwoman of the Minnesota Democrat-Farmer-Labour Party, said she suffered a broken leg, bruises, cuts, and deep lacerations on her head in the attack by a group of armed men who carjacked her in the driveway of her Folwell neighbourhood home on Tuesday evening.

According to the police report, officers later found Sathanandan’s vehicle abandoned and recovered it, Washington Times reported.

“Four very young men, all carrying guns, beat me violently down to the ground in front of our kids,” she said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.

“The young men held our neighbours up at gunpoint when they ran over and tried to help me. All in broad daylight,” she said, posting a photo of herself with blood streaking down her face.

Sathanandan went on to demand consequences, saying, “We need to get illegal guns off the street, catch these young people who are running wild creating chaos across our city and”, changing into screaming all capital letters, “hold them in custody and prosecute them. Period.”

There are currently no details available on the suspects.

Minnesota DFL Chairman Ken Martin said, “I am heartbroken at the news of Shivanthi’s attack. It is my sincere hope that the people who assaulted Shivanthi are quickly brought to justice and face punishment commensurate with the severity of their crimes. My heart goes out to Shivanthi and her family and I hope their recovery from such a horrifying experience is as swift as possible.”

Her account on Facebook quickly went viral, not just because of the brutality of the attack, but because of a three-year-old post showing Sathanandan was among those on the left targeting the Minneapolis Police Department after the May 2020 killing of George Floyd at the hands of an officer.

Social media users quickly pointed out the pre-and post-attack discrepancy in her views.

“You literally did everything in your power to dismantle the police. Now you’re reaping what you sowed,” said the first comment on her latest Facebook post.

Another commenter said: “No one should have this happen to them, children present or otherwise. Not ever. Nevertheless, HOW COULD Sathanandan NOT SEE THIS COMING, considering the efforts of her party? If you fight for a lawless state, lawlessness happens in broad daylight.”

Power Line editor John Hinderaker said he appreciated Sathanandan’s call to prosecute the offenders in a post entitled, “A Neoconservative is a Liberal Who Has Been Mugged.”

Hinderaker gave her credit, saying it was “nice to see that Sathanandan is now thankful to ‘the incredible Minneapolis 4th Precinct Officers’.”

The Minneapolis 3rd Precinct headquarters was destroyed after rioters set it on fire on May 28, 2020.

Three years later, the building’s charred remains are still fenced off.

A city ballot measure to restructure and reduce the authority of the Minneapolis police department was soundly defeated by voters in November 2021.


Is it India? Is it Bharat? Speculations abound as Modi govt pushes for country's Sanskrit name

The possibility is resonating with Hindu nationalists who form the prime minister's core vote base. But the reasons — political, cultural, historical — run far deeper.

Is it India? Is it Bharat? Speculations abound as Modi govt pushes for country's Sanskrit name
FILE - A screenshot shows 'Bharat' as the country's official name, as seen on the G20 official mobile app in New Delhi, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 2023.

NEW DELHI: It began with a dinner invitation. How it ends could affect more than a billion people.

State-issued invites sent to guests of this week’s G20 meeting referred to India’s president, Droupadi Murmu, as “President of Bharat.”

Suddenly, in many circles, the question was everywhere: Would the country of more than 1.4 billion now be called by its ancient Sanskrit name?

Since then, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ministers, his Hindu nationalist supporters, Bollywood stars and cricketers have made similar public proclamations: India should officially be rebranded as Bharat. India is known by two names: India, used worldwide, and the Sanskrit and Hindi nomenclature of “Bharat.”

Now, Modi’s government is signalling that Indians should shed the name India and instead call their country Bharat. The possibility is resonating with Hindu nationalists who form the prime minister’s core vote base. Their stated reason: the name “India” is tied to colonialism and slavery, a sentiment that Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party has long shared.

But the reasons — political, cultural, historical — run far deeper.

There are some precedents, but India’s situation is singular

A name — be it of a person or an entire country — is many things. It’s descriptive, emotionally important and deeply wrapped up in identity. So when it comes to a whole nation, a name change is not a small thing.

Around the world, there have been some notable national rebrandings in recent decades as nations shed names inflicted by colonial rulers. Ceylon was changed to Sri Lanka in 1972. Rhodesia was rebranded as Zimbabwe in 1980. Burma became Myanmar in 1989.

And last year, Turkey was officially changed to Türkiye. The list goes on — Cambodia to Kampuchea, Swaziland to Eswatini, Malaya to Malaysia.

In India, the country’s renaming demands stem from a more cultural and religious perspective. They are often invoked by Hindu nationalists who say the name Bharat is more authentic to the nation’s past.

Officially, the Indian government has made no decision and issued no statement, and one senior leader dismissed the speculations of a name change as “just rumours.”

But India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, seemed to advocate the increased use of Bharat this week. “‘India, that is Bharat’ — it is there in the constitution. Please, I would invite everybody to read it,” Jaishankar said Wednesday.

Indeed, India’s constitution uses the term Bharat just once: “India, that is Bharat, shall be a Union of States.” Everywhere else, the country is referred to as India in English. The name Bharat is an ancient Sanskrit word that many historians believe dates back to early Hindu scriptures.

“India” has etymological roots in the Indus River, which was called “Sindhu” in Sanskrit. Another popular but not legally recognized name for the country is Hindustan, which means “land of the Indus” in Persian. All three names were in use long before British rule.

But Modi’s government, which won the 2014 national polls and returned to power in 2019, has a penchant for changing names. It has done so with various cities, towns and prominent roads that were long associated with British rule and Muslim heritage, arguing it is an ongoing effort to salvage the country from the taint of colonialism and so-called Muslim invaders.

Prominent among such efforts is the government’s renaming of the northern city of Allahabad — named by Muslim Mughal rulers centuries ago — to the Sanskrit word “Prayagraj.”

Politics is at centre of debate

The name-changing exercise is fraught with a political motivation that is an essential ingredient of the ruling government’s revisionist agenda and has, under Modi’s rule, come amid increasing attacks by Hindu nationalists against minorities, particularly Muslims.

A largely Hindu country that has long proclaimed its multicultural character, India has a sizable Muslim minority — 14 per cent of the population. Already, Indians and even foreigners are tacitly being nudged to get used to the revised nomenclature of the country.

A government-made mobile application for media and G20 delegates attending the summit says Bharat is the official name of the country — a first public proclamation of its kind during any global event. Visiting guests for the summit are also being welcomed to the host’s capital city with giant billboards that refer to the country as both Bharat and India.

Efforts to change India’s name have been made in the past through court cases, but judges have so far steered away from the issue. However, an upcoming session of the federal Parliament — a surprise announcement made by the Modi government without disclosing any agenda — has prompted speculation.

Opposition parties say an official rebranding could very well be in the cards.

In July, India’s opposition parties announced a new alliance called INDIA in an effort to unseat Modi and defeat his party ahead of national elections in 2024. The acronym stands for “Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance.”

Since then, some officials in Modi’s party have demanded that the country be called Bharat instead of India. The formation of that alliance, says Zoya Hasan, an Indian academic and political scientist, “could be the immediate provocation here.”

“It’s a political debate which is aimed at embarrassing the opposition who have re-appropriated the nationalism platform with their new name,” Hasan said. “This rattled the ruling establishment, and they want to regain their monopoly over nationalism by invoking Bharat.”

She also said the timing of suddenly using Bharat is curious given one particular recent event.

Mohan Bhagwat, the chief of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a radical Hindu movement widely accused of stoking religious hatred with aggressively anti-Muslim views, recently urged Indians to use the Sanskrit name more often.

The RSS is the ideological mothership of Modi’s party, and the prime minister has been its lifelong member. “They can call it Bharat. It’s one of the official names. But there’s no need to erase India,” Hasan said, adding that the furore is a “needless controversy” as both names “have happily coexisted.”

Modi’s party leaders, meanwhile, have celebrated what they call a much-needed change.

“REPUBLIC OF BHARAT — happy and proud that our civilisation is marching ahead boldly towards AMRIT KAAL,” BJP politician Himanta Biswa Sarma wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“Amrit Kaal” is a Hindi phrase meaning “auspicious era” that Modi often uses to describe what he calls India’s resurgence under his government.

Modi’s opponents have been less welcoming, with many saying the government’s priorities are misplaced amid more pressing crises like increasing unemployment, widening religious strife and the backsliding of democracy.

They also say his government is rattled by the INDIA grouping, and have — at least sarcastically — suggested they might change the alliance’s name as a countermove.

“We could of course call ourselves the Alliance for Betterment, Harmony And Responsible Advancement for Tomorrow (BHARAT),” opposition lawmaker Shashi Tharoor wrote on X.

“Then perhaps the ruling party might stop this fatuous game of changing names.”


G20 summit: President's dinner to be an evening of musical journey

The highlights of this part will be devotional songs — Vaishnav Janto and Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram and also an iconic song promoting national integration — Mile Sur Mera Tumhara.

G20 summit: President's dinner to be an evening of musical journey
The Bharat Mandapam in Delhi's Pragati Maidan where the G20 summit will be held on Sept. 9 and 10, 2023. 

NEW DELHI: An ensemble comprising 78 instrumentalists from across states is set to enthral delegates attending the G20 Summit at Bharat Mandapam. The Ministry of Culture has planned a unique harmonious performance — Bharat Vadya Darshan (The Musical Journey of India) — at the dinner President Droupadi Murmu will be hosting on Saturday.

The three-hour show, starting at 6 pm, is divided into three parts. The performances will be in ascending tempo from Vilambit Laya (slow tempo composition), to medium or Madhya Laya, to fast or Druta Laya (concluding section).

The Vilambit Laya comprises Raagmalika and Rajasthani and Kashmiri folk songs. The middle section will have traditional songs of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Punjab, Assam, Sikkim, and Jammu & Kashmir besides Rabindra Sangeet and Raaga — Bihag, Pilu, Bhupali, Desh, Khamaj and Malkouns.

The concluding section includes performances based on different raags such as Darbari Kanada, Mohnam, folk music of Maharashtra, Goa, Gujarat, Sikkim, and Meghalaya.

The highlights of this part will be devotional songs — Vaishnav Janto and Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram and also an iconic song promoting national integration — Mile Sur Mera Tumhara, which is based on Raag Bhairavi and Dadra.

The song composed by renowned vocalist Bhimsen Joshi was telecast on Doordarshan for the first time in 1988 after the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi delivered his speech from the ramparts of the Red Fort on Independence Day.

Several rare instruments of India such as Surbahar, Jaltarang, Naltarang, Vichitra Veena, Rudra Veena, Saraswati Veena, Dhangli, Sundri, Bhapang and Dilruba will be used during the presentation.
“Bharat Vadya Darshan is envisaged as a sequence of instrumental music performances, wherein the audience will be taken on a one-and-a-half hour journey of India through the representative music of different States of the country.

What truly sets this ensemble apart is the inclusion of 34 Hindustani musical instruments, 18 Carnatic musical instruments, and 26 folk musical instruments featuring 78 artists including 11 children, 13 women, six differently-abled (Divyang) artists, 26 young men and 22 professionals,” said officials privy to arrangements.

The responsibility to curate the event was entrusted with Sangeet Natak Akademi under the Ministry of Culture. The performance has been conceptualised by the chairman of the Akademi Sandhya Purecha. Chetan Kumar Joshi is the music director.

“Some of the prominent styles included in the presentation are Hindustani, Carnatic, folk and contemporary music. This journey will take us through all parts of India through their representative music,” officials added.

‘Mile Sur Mera Tumhara’

  • 78 instrumentalists from across states will enthral delegates at President’s dinner on Saturday
  • They will perform a 3-hour-long ‘Bharat Vadya Darshan’ (The Musical Journey of India)
  • It will feature the iconic song ‘mile sur mera tumhara’
  • Rare instruments such as surbahar, jaltarang, naltarang, vichitra veena, rudra veena, saraswati veena, dhangli, sundri, bhapang and dilruba will be used


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