Maldives Elects Mohamed Muizzu as New President, India-Friendly Mohamed Solih Loses

Muizzu, a former mayor of capital city Male, is the candidate from opposition coalition PPM-PNC, which is behind ‘India Out’ campaign.

New Delhi: Maldives has elected a new president with the opposition candidate Mohamed Muizzu in the lead with 54% of votes against the incumbent President Mohamed Solih in the second and final run-off for the presidential polls on Saturday.

The state broadcaster Public Service Media declared Mohamed Muizzu as the president-elect at around 8:45 pm local time.

More than 86% of eligible voters had turned out to cast their votes at the booths for the second round, which was much higher than the 79% recorded in the first round on September 9.

From the start of the counting at 5:30 pm, Muizzu had garnered a strong lead and Solih never really caught up. As per preliminary results, Muizzi got 53% of the votes to 46% for Solih.

The results were not a surprise as Muizzu had a big lead of five points over Solih in the first round too. In the end, President Solih did not have enough political allies to bridge the gap, with none of the other parties endorsing him.

One of the constituents of the ruling coalition, MDA had, in fact, withdrawn their support and endorsed Muizzu.

A former housing minister, Muizzu had been a mayor of the capital city Malé before he was fielded as the candidate for the opposition coalition of PPM-PNC. He had actually been the second choice for the presidential candidate as former President Abdulla Yameen Abdul Gayoom could not get relief from the court to stand for elections due to his conviction for money laundering and bribery.

The MDP-led government of President Solih had been perceived to be exceptionally close to India. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi attended the inaugural ceremony for Solih after the 2018 presidential elections. It had marked the end of a rocky five years of bilateral ties under President Yameen when he allowed Chinese influence to spread in Maldives.

The PPM-PNC had launched an ‘India Out’ campaign a couple of years ago to demand the withdrawal of any Indian troops in Maldives. The presidential campaign also saw a high-voltage pitch to tar Solih administration as having allowed Indian troops to be stationed on the Indian Ocean island.

A Tender for an Aircraft Has Landed Punjab’s AAP Government in Controversy

All major opposition parties have slammed the AAP government’s latest tender for a 8-10 seater jet aircraft to be hired for six months, bids for which closed on September 18.

Chandigarh: Before becoming Punjab chief minister last year in March, Aam Aadmi Party leader Bhagwant Mann often took digs at his predecessors for misusing state chequer on air ferries. Now, he finds himself in a political row over the same issue.

All major opposition parties including Shiromani Akali Dal have slammed AAP government’s latest tender for a 8-10 seater jet aircraft, to be hired for six months, bids for which closed on September 18.

The Punjab government already owns a helicopter at the permanent service of its chief ministers, past and present.

Since AAP and Punjab government have not clarified the reason over hiring aircraft for this short duration, political allegations are flying thick and fast.

The Shiromani Akali Dal alleged that the aircraft was being hired to facilitate the political campaigns of AAP national convener and Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal for the forthcoming Lok Sabha elections, with public money. Leaders of other political parties including Congress and BJP raised similar allegations.

A post on X from Patiala-based Right to Information Act (RTI) activist Manik Goyal, in which he shared aircraft’s tender document, sparked the whole matter. Goyal’s account is now no longer on X.

As soon as he posted the document, Punjab Police replied to his post and the said tender document was “sensitive document related to security of State functionaries facing serious and credible threats”.

“This document is not meant for open public circulation, rather only for those registered on the procurement platform,” the police replied, before asking him to remove it immediately and to not post documents related to the “safety of state functionaries” in the future.

Although Goyal told The Wire that he has not removed his account on X, the following notice now appears where his tweet should.

Immediately after Punjab police’s reply, the matter turned political with leaders as well as the general public flaying it as an infringement of the rights of voices critical to AAP government.

BJP leader Manjinder Sirsa tweeted, “What a downfall of the party (AAP) that talked of Inqlaab (revolution) and now suppressing every free voice!! This matter has become sensitive because Aam Aadmi Party wants to loot Punjab to please its boss Arvind Kejriwal.”

Senior Congress leader Partap Bajwa, also leader of opposition in the Punjab legislative assembly, wrote, “AAP govt can go to any extent to throttle the voice of those who have been exposing its irregularities and corrupt practices. ”

He then added, “Despite the fact the document was available on the Punjab Government’s website, a public domain, the AAP govt through Punjab Police tried its best to suppress the voice of this activist. Instead of working as a tool of AAP, the Punjab Police should work independently as per the law and constitution. ”

Harmilap Grewal, an RTI activist, also tweeted in response to Punjab Police reply, “I am surprised how an open tender becomes a security threat ?? I am literally shocked at the way you are trying to snub the voice.. this is absurd.”

Sukhbir Badal also said Shiromani Akali Dal strongly condemned the manner in which whistle blowers are being targeted and threatened with dire consequences by the Punjab Police at the instance of Punjab CM Bhagwant Mann.

As of now, the AAP social media handle, which otherwise remains active throughout out the day, has been silent on the criticism.

‘The easy route’

RTI activist Goyal told The Wire that Punjab is a relatively a small state that does not require a fixed wing aircraft. Punjab already possesses its own helicopter, which has been used by previous CMs and the current CM, he said, adding that this points to the flight’s use as a campaign aid.

“AAP did not try to hire through the Delhi government because there are chances that it would not be approved by the Lieutenant General’s office. So, the party found the easy route through Punjab,” he claimed.

He then said that last year too during Gujarat and Himachal elections, the Punjab government paid nearly Rs 1 crore on hiring aircraft in which both Kejriwal and Mann travelled to these poll bound states as part of campaigns.

Goyal said he received this information through two separate RTI applications in April last year. He added that when this became a political issue back home, the Punjab government declined all further RTIs he had filed on the CM’s air ferry expenses, citing security concerns.

Goyal said that before the 2022 assembly elections, Bhagwant Mann had often been critical of his predecessor Charanjit Singh Channi’s alleged use of the helicopter.

Maligning Muhammed Yunus Means Impeding Fight Against Poverty

Yunus brought glory to Bangladesh, not only through his Nobel Prize, but more importantly by the endorsement of his idea that poverty should be in the regular conversation in the business world.

In a unipolar world, where we worship markets as the ultimate solution – where doing good is a by-product of doing well, it is important to understand what Muhammed Yunus brought to the table and why he should be treated with dignity as he moves on in life. It is passe to say that Yunus has been in the news lately for all the wrong reasons, which usually implies that he is creating the news. Unfortunately for Yunus, the news is about him, possibly for not what he has done, but for what he is!

Unlike many people who come from the civil society side of the argument, and work as outsiders questioning the status quo, the journey of Yunus is of a critical insider. He has not questioned the logic of the status quo, but contested it with an alternative model while continuing to largely play by the rules of the status quo.

Also read: Bangladesh Top Court Orders Nobel Laureate Muhammad Yunus to Pay $1.3 Million in Taxes

There are two phases in the life and work of Yunus that we need to examine – the first phase of working on an innovative microfinance model that led up to his Nobel Peace Prize; and crusading a model of social business. In both initiatives, he has engaged with the markets, with the structures, while providing alternative models of ownership and profit distribution. This is clearly seen in the paradox of microfinance in India, where his operative model was used to provide access to financial services, without the attendant ownership model – resulting in the enrichment of the investors.

When Yunus introduced the concept of microcredit in Bangladesh, he was providing for the reimagination on how the credit markets could operate at the last mile, with the poor. Information asymmetry between the lender and the borrower was bridged through an intervening group mechanism; standardisation and aggregation of transactions, that provided a social collateral and also brought in transaction efficiency. All these would delight any commercial outfit.

Yunus never argued for subsidies, and in fact, charged market rates of interest. So, what was different?  The basic paradigm that Yunus questioned was not about the commercial viability of the operations but the mode of distribution of the residual profits. Both in the microfinance model – where the Grameen Bank was owned by the women who were customers – and in the social business model, he argued for ploughing back the profits to benefit the community rather than the investors. He formulated a redistribution model while arguing that the investors should get a fair (but not disproportionate) return. This is an important paradigm for people looking for a more equitable and just society while recognising the imperatives of commerce and markets.

By persecuting and maligning Yunus, the damage being done is not just to his person, but to the larger idea that he represents. It is important that we assess the implications of this. As stated earlier, Yunus’ innovation in microcredit was easily a commercial innovation – a clear evidence of that can be found in how the Grameen model is replicated in India. The Indian replication of Grameen is in the operational detail, while the ownership is not moving towards the redistribution of wealth. Instead, it resulted in polarisation in the hands of the investors. It is an irony that the report on the Social Stock Exchange claims that the microfinance sector turned in superior returns to the investors, when benchmarked with the average returns of the private equity firms.

Yunus represented a voice of credibility and conscience – a person who appreciated the operating model but never hesitated to criticise the ownership model, be it when the celebrated SKS Microfinance in India hit the stock market or when the leading Mexican microfinance organisation Compartamos came out with an Initial Public Offering. He represents the argument for equity in the world of commerce.

Is Yunus a threat to either the political dispensation or to anybody else?

It beats any logic to see him as a threat. Yes, he tried to float a political party under pressure from his admirers but soon abandoned it. He figured that while he could engage with the business world, it was quite different to engage with the political world. The business world has not seen him as a threat, but has constantly engaged with his ideas, whether it is the transnational Danone, or any of the organisations that examine the way of doing social business – a business with a heart.

Also read: 105 Nobel Laureates Write to Sheikh Hasina Against ‘Continuous Judicial Harassment’ of Muhammad Yunus

Yunus brought glory to Bangladesh, through not only his Nobel, but more importantly by the endorsement of his idea that poverty should be in the regular conversation in the business world. People, including the business world, must continuously engage in these conversations to ensure equity. While the state has the primary function of taxation and redistribution, Yunus stands for a larger idea of equity. An idea that does not need the state to do redistribution if the business world itself becomes more equitable. He has demonstrated the idea with credible and alternative business models. But by doing this, he has only enhanced the brand of Bangladesh. While the current regime can claim to have ushered in better human development indicators for the small country, it is nobody’s case to persecute Yunus. It just destroys a wonderful brand and puts it on par with despotism.

It is sad that countries fail to celebrate their heroes for petty considerations. India did it to MF Hussein, Bangladesh is doing it to Yunus. It is important to handle our living legends with greater care. Yes, they are human and fallible, but we should not be losing a sense of balance. Particularly with someone like Yunus who has not only had an impact on the banking systems of Bangladesh but has immensely contributed to the idea of women’s participation in banking in India and much more!

M.S. Sriram is a Professor at the Centre for Public Policy, Indian Institute of Management Bangalore. Contact: mssriram@pm.me

Ex-Servicemen Repeat Appeal to PM for Release of 8 Navy Veterans Imprisoned in Qatar

The Ministry of External Affairs had first told the press then that their immediate release and repatriation was a matter of high priority for the officials. But later in April, 2023, it said that India will not “interfere” in the Qatari legal process.  

New Delhi: The Indian Ex-Servicemen Movement, an association of veterans, has once again appealed to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the release and repatriation of eight Indian Navy veterans, who were arrested and put in solitary confinement by the Qatar government over a year ago.


When eight ex-servicemen were arrested on August 30, 2022, without being informed of the charges against them, the matter had turned into a diplomatic and political row. The eight veterans – Captain Navtej Singh Gill, Captain Saurabh Vasisht, Commander Purenendu Tiwari, Captain Birendra Kumar Verma, Commander Sugunakar Pakala, Commander Sanjeev Gupta, Commander Amit Nagpal and Sailor Ragesh – were then working at Dahra Global Technologies and Consultancy Services, a Omani national-owned security company.

The Omani national was a former squadron leader of the Royal Omani Air Force. He too was arrested but was subsequently released in November. However, the eight Indian veterans have still been languishing in the Qatari prison. 

The Indian Ministry of External Affairs had told the press then that their immediate release and repatriation was a matter of high priority for the officials. But later in April, 2023, it said that India will not “interfere” in the Qatari legal process.  

Immediately after their arrests, the Indian officials convinced the Qatar authorities to let the arrested veterans speak with their families, and the MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi had said that the Union government was making all possible efforts to bring them back. 

But since then, the matter has only lingered on. In the absence of any clarity over the charges they are facing, The Tribune in April, 2023 reported that the veterans have been charged with spying for Israel and could be sentenced to death. Many other news reports speculated that the detention may have been owing to Qatari officials’ suspicion over a “friendly conversation” between the veterans and an Indian diplomat posted in Doha three months before their arrest. 

This was around the same time when the MEA said that it was unwilling to interfere in the Qatari legal process. There have been at least two hearings on the matter in April and May in a Qatari court. 

Writing for the Indian Express, Nirupama Subramanian said, “Managing Director (of the security company Dahra) Commander Purnendu Tiwari (retd) received the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman award in 2019 for his services in furthering the bilateral relationship between India and Qatar. He is the only person from the armed forces to have received the award. He was feted in Doha by then Indian Ambassador P Kumaran, and a former head of the Qatar defence forces’ International Military Cooperation. The function was held at the Indian Cultural Centre. Captain Kapil Kaushik, of the Indian Navy, who was the defence attache at Embassy of India at the time, was also present at this event.”

Meanwhile, the Congress party in India has been attacking the Modi government for its failure to repatriate the decorated veterans.

Congress spokesperson Jairam Ramesh said in a statement, “An Omani national who had been arrested along with the ex-Navy personnel was released in November, the Indian citizens remain in detention.” He alleged that the Modi government may be unwilling to rub the Qatar government the wrong way to protect the Adani group as the Qatar government has invested heavily in Adani Electricity Mumbai.  


Responding to the Congress’s allegation, Bagchi had then defended India’s stance. “If I were to extrapolate that, it would be as if, if a country has good relations with India, their nationals would not be subject to our laws. I don’t think that’s the line that we want to take,” Bagchi had told The Hindu. 

He, however, added, “Our embassy continues to remain in touch with the families of the detained Indian nationals and also extending necessary consular as well as legal assistance. We have also requested for another round of consular access. Government attaches high priority to the matter and remains engaged with the Qatari authorities regarding the case. I don’t think the charges have yet been opened. The legal process is underway and we will keep a close watch on that.”

As the matter is in limbo, the families of the veterans have run from pillar to post as they make appeals to expedite the repatriation process. Dr. Meetu Bhargava, sister of Purnendu Tiwari, too had posted a tweet back in November, 2022, detailing the conditions of the arrested veterans. 

Madras HC Upholds Conviction of 269 Officials in the 1992 Vachathi Rape Case

The case pertains to the rape of 18 women from Vachathi tribal village in Tamil Nadu’s Dharmapuri village during a raid carried out in the village in an alleged sandalwood smuggling case.

New Delhi: The Madras high court has upheld the conviction of 269 government officials in the 1992 Vachathi case, dismissing their appeals challenging the verdict of a sessions court.

The case pertains to the rape of 18 women from Vachathi tribal village in Tamil Nadu’s Dharmapuri village during a raid carried out apparently to nab sandalwood smugglers. Extensive destruction of the property of the villagers was also reported in the raid that was carried out on June 20, 1992.

The high court on Friday, September 29, upheld the 2011 verdict of the sessions court in Dharmapuri, which found 126 forest personnel, including four Indian Forest Service officers, 84 policemen, and five revenue department officials guilty. During the course of the trial, 54 out of 269 accused died, and the others (215) were sentenced to a jail term of one to 10 years.

“This court finds that the evidence of all the victims and prosecution witnesses are cogent and consistent, which are reliable,” Justice P. Velmurugan of the high court said, dismissing pleas against the sessions court order, Indian Express reported.

The high court ordered the session court to issue directions to secure the custody of all the guilty to ensure they serve the remainder of their prison terms.

The court also instructed the Tamil Nadu government to pay Rs 10 lakh in compensation to rape survivors, as per the 2016 order of a division bench. It also told the government to collect 50% of the compensation amount from the convicts.

“To save actual smugglers and big shots, the officials played a big stage drama in which innocent tribal women got affected…the pain and difficulties faced by them have to be compensated in terms of money and jobs,” the judge said, according to the Times of India.

Accusing the then district collector, superintendent of police, district forest officials, among others of shielding the accused, the court said, “From the evidence of the witnesses, it is clear that all the officials, including the District Collector, District Forest Officer and the Superintendent of Police, even though knew who were the real culprits, for the reason best known to them, they did not take any action against them and to safeguard the real culprits, the innocent villagers were victimised. Therefore, this court comes to the conclusion that prosecution has proved that all the appellants committed the offence.”

The court also ordered the officials concerned to provide suitable jobs to the rape survivors or to their family members. It also sought information on the welfare measures taken for Vachathi villagers after the 1992 incident.

The case was handed over to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) in 1995, which chargesheeted 269 accused.

More Than 2,500 Died or Went Missing in the Mediterranean This Year: UN

More than 102,000 people have tried to cross the Mediterranean from Tunisia in 2023 so far in 2023 – a stunning 260% increase from last year.

Over 2,500 people have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean so far in 2023 while trying to cross into Europe, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said on Thursday in New York.

That is a stark increase from the 1,680 dead or missing migrants in the same period last year.

Migrants and refugees “risk death and gross human rights violations at every step”, Ruven Menikdiwela, director of the UNHCR New York office, told the Security Council.

This comes on the same day when European Union interior ministers met in Brussels to discuss how to handle people migrating to Europe by sea amid growing concern from member states Italy and Germany.

Member states and the European Parliament have been negotiating for years on far-reaching reforms to the bloc’s common asylum system but without results.

What did the UN say?

Some 186,000 people have already arrived in Europe via the Mediterranean Sea between January and September 24 of this year, according to the UNHCR.

Of this, 130,000 have arrived in Italy, marking an 83% increase compared to last year. Others landed in Greece, Spain, Cyprus and Malta.

As for the origin of the migrants, 102,000 crossed the Mediterranean from Tunisia and another 45,000 from Libya.

Roughly 31,000 people were rescued at sea or intercepted and disembarked in Tunisia and 10,600 in Libya, Menikdiwela said.

Menikdiwela reminded the Security Council that the land journey from sub-Saharan African countries, where many migrants originate, to the departure points on the coast of Libya and Tunisia “remains one of the world’s most dangerous”.

“Lives are also lost on land, away from public attention,” Menikdiwela said.

This article was originally published on DW.

‘Not Welcome’: Indian Envoy to UK Stopped by Radical Sikhs from Entering Gurudwara in Scotland

Vikram Doraiswami was invited for a meeting with the gurudwara committee of Glasgow Gurudwara on Albert Drive in Scotland.

New Delhi: India’s high commissioner to the UK, Vikram Doraiswami, was on Friday, September 29, stopped from entering a gurudwara in Scotland by radical Sikh groups.

According to the Times of India, a pro-Khalistani youth said some of them had found that Doraiswami had a meeting planned with the gurudwara committee of the Glasgow Gurudwara on Albert Drive.

“A few people turned up and told him he is not welcome and he left. There was a slight confrontation. I don’t think the gurudwara committee is happy about what happened. But Indian officials are not welcome in any gurudwara in the UK,” the Khalistan supporter told the newspaper.

An Instagram page called ‘Sikh Youth UK’ posted a video in which tables are kept ready to serve langar to the high commissioner. It also shows one of the youths there confronting a gurudwara committee member over the invitation to the high commissioner.

The Instagram page also posted another video in which two youths walk to the high commissioner’s car and try to open the door, which was locked from inside. The car then reverses and leaves from the spot.

Another member from the radical group told TOI, “This is exactly how we should greet anyone from the Indian government who comes to the gurdwara in an official capacity under any excuse of doing visa applications, or whatever it might be. We know the games they are playing. We know what is happening in Canada. It is a slap in our faces when the Canadian PM has openly condemned India and expelled Indian diplomats and our people who run our gurudwara committees openly invite them.”

On the incident, a press statement from the Indian high commission in London said, “Three persons – all from areas outside Scotland – deliberately disrupted a planned interaction by the Gurudwara Committee for the community, the High Commissioner, and the Consul General of India. This interaction was to discuss community and consular issues.”

The statement said organisers included senior community leaders, ladies and committee members, and a member of the Scottish parliament. “They were threatened and abused by these elements. In an effort to prevent any potential altercation, the HC and CG decided to leave the premises shortly upon their arrival.”

The high commission statement said that “one of the non-local extremist elements” tried to force open the high commissioner’s car but was prevented by one of organisers.

The matter has been reported to the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) and to the Metropolitan Police, the statement added.

Anne-Marie Trevelyan, UK’s minister of state for Indo-Pacific, has also expressed “concern” over the incident. “The safety and security of foreign diplomats is of utmost importance and our places of worship in the UK must be open to all,” she said.

Note: This copy has been subsequently updated with the statements of the Indian high commission in London and the UK’s minister of state for Indo-Pacific, after it was first published. 

India Can’t Put a Green Sheet Over its Paradoxical World-Domestic Outlook

A pivot towards Asia now by world powers reflects a startling shift in the priorities attributed towards developing countries. But is India in a position to make best use of it?

In terms of hype, the culmination of India’s G20 Presidency, the pivoting of a South-centred world order under India’s anchor role, the African Union’s inclusion in the G20, and consensus on issues affecting other members of the developing Global South were projected to represent India’s big coming out party.

The moment has been clouded in a recent controversy surfacing as a diplomatic tussle between Canada and India that’s already making members of the G7 (and the “five eyes”) respond strongly to Canada’s claims soliciting India’s active participation.

How India and also Canada position their response and take their relationship forward will not only define a troubled bilateral relationship, but may also shape India’s medium-term relationship with the powerful G7 nations (from where India needs capital and technological transfers), and who, are likely to back Canada against India. 

A lot remains to be seen but there are some of the ‘good’ takeaways from the G20 summit that merit mention. 

India’s ability to forge a consensus on a joint declaration deserves all praise. It is truly a diplomatic triumph given how broken, multipolar, the geo-economic and political scenario has been at the moment. The inclusion of the 55-nation African Union – the second regional bloc after European Union to join the G20 during India’s presidency remains vital to India’s ‘Global South’ representative status and for locating the agency voice of the Global South in the global multilateral framework. 

Also, the nature of consensus arrived on reforms to the Multilateral Development Banks, promoting digital public infrastructure, financial inclusion, restructuring of loans of stressed countries such as Sri Lanka, were some other highlights from the summit.

Further, the announcement of the Global Biofuel Alliance (GBA), whereby, the alliance will “promote demand for biofuels and technology transfer for producing biofuels” is great news for India’s clean energy push.

And, the establishment of the multimodal India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) is good news for countries willing to expand their economic integrative capabilities and connectivity with India.

So, while one saw forward-looking agreements that appeared vital to India’s expansive global interests, the domestic political economic context in which the summit happened in India – amidst risen tented sheets hiding urban slums across Delhi roads, reflect poorly on India’s domestic political eco-system and status.

India’s domestic environment now is a lot more polarised amidst the targeted persecution of minorities across India; socially in-cohesive; and economically fragile – even though India’s growth numbers don’t appear to say so – than before. 

It’s important to understand how India’s carefully built decades-long work towards playing a more important role in the global political order is based on the strength and robustness of its democratic fundamentals, independence of the parliamentary system, a rights-based constitutional order. These, when intact, have also provided a strong foundation for growth and investment in India. 

Also read: The Undeniable Rise of Oligarchic Capitalism in Modi’s India

Also, a pivot towards Asia now by world powers (like the US and the EU) reflects a startling shift in the priorities attributed towards developing countries – something that didn’t seem possible back in the earlier decades.

It would be buffoonish for India’s foreign policy ecosystem to believe it enjoys an undistilled faith amongst the (still) powerful G7 countries if the tools for channelising instruments of economic integration operate sans the basic domestic pre-requisites of: realised social cohesion; a safeguarded rights-based constitutional order, ensured by the separation of powers – with independent functioning of the legislative, executive, and judiciary, all, remain a must. India can hardly compromise on these pre-requisites if it is serious about playing a more important role in a complex, multi-polar world.

The West’s more accommodative position on a number of contested issues – when it comes to India’s position on Ukraine-Russia war, on human rights, minority issues, and freedom of press in India – is explained by their greater contempt for an authoritarian China under Xi, than say, a need for developing bonhomie with the India that India is. 

Modi’s India may unfortunately fall in the same category of authoritarian nation states (or turned ‘illiberal democracies’) if India continues to treat all counter-veiling powers as India’s enemies.  

The Indian strategic base and core diplomatic circle may well realise, for example, that a tit-for-tat diplomatic response against Canada’s allegations will only anger the West (anchored by the G7). This could affect their cooperative position.

Somewhere, ‘India’s moment’ to assert its position and shine from a well-organised summit that otherwise saw thousands of tax-payers’ crores spent on public relations on India’s ‘Mother of Democracy’ status may all fall flat if it continues to antagonise powers from where most technology-transfers and capital may actually come in (for India’s own benefit and growth). 

As Pankaj Mishra recently pointed out

“Those hoping to recruit Modi’s Bharat as a Western ally should consider the plain historical fact that, as the scholar Nirad Chaudhuri wrote in 1954, the most ineradicable aspect of Hindu nationalism is “xenophobia, both personal and ideological.” The sentiment may be muted “when and where the military and political strength of the foreigner” is overwhelming but nevertheless thrives on an “incessant campaign of slander and denigration. Certainly, neither of the two main commonplaces about the world’s most populous nation – that it is a rising, vibrant democracy or that it is descending into authoritarianism – will seem adequate in the treacherous months and years ahead. More historically grounded analyses will be needed as yet another batch of reactionary modernists rises in the east.”

 Also, a greater openness shown by the US toward the priorities of the Global South and flexibility on the war language comes as China is gaining influence in the BRICS forum, an expanding grouping of strategically important actors like Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – which excludes Washington. It is easier to guess that American interests wouldn’t have aligned with the likelihood of a failed G-20 summit, which would have given the Chinese a win at India’s expense. The US and the rest therefore are happy to put their weight of confidence behind India for the time being.

Also read: The Limitations of India’s Obsession With Short-Term GDP Growth Data

From inward-outward outlook, India’s domestic economic fragility presents a serious concern for its future ability to expand infra-based regional and international connectivity and trade capacity. While since after 1991, Indian economy saw high growth, a service-sector led expansion, accompanied with a higher employment rate and an urban-focused growth model with a swelling middle class, what we are experiencing now is perhaps the opposite. 

Growth is weak, debt is high, fiscal deficit is widening when private investment levels remain low, potential of the service sector remains the key but the Modi government keeps pushing for a struggling manufacturing sector-led growth model (yielding mixed results), and the macro-employment rate remains poor, given the demographic potential India has. These are all issues that the government needs to more urgently acknowledge and fix, rather than put a green sheet over to hide the existence of.

Deepanshu Mohan is Professor of Economics and Director, Centre for New Economics Studies, O.P. Jindal Global University. He is a Visiting Professor to the School of International Development and Global Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada, and an Honorary Research Fellow, Birkbeck College, University of London this Fall.

Seattle Cop Heard Laughing After Death of Indian Student ‘Administratively Reassigned’

Kandula died upon being hit by a different Seattle cop driving over the speed limit. Daniel Auderer was heard joking over Kandula’s death soon after he arrived at the scene and seemed to say her life was of “limited value”.

New Delhi: Daniel Auderer, a Seattle police officer who was heard joking following the death of 23-year-old Indian woman Jaahnavi Kandula, has been “administratively reassigned to a non-operational position”, the Seattle Times quoted local police as saying.

Kandula, a student at Northeastern University’s Seattle campus, died in January this year upon being hit by a car driven by Kevin Dave, another Seattle police officer.

An investigation into the incident determined that Dave was driving at 119 km/h – close to 80 km/h over the speed limit – while on the way to a drug overdose scene, soon after which he hit Kandula, the Seattle Times reported.

Daniel Auderer had arrived at the scene as a drug recognition expert to determine if Dave had been impaired.

A bodycam he was wearing at the time recorded him laughing and joking about Kandula’s death soon after.

“No, it’s a regular person … Yeah, just a write a cheque … [laughs] Eleven thousand dollars. She was 26 anyway, she had limited value,” Auderer is heard saying in bodycam footage uploaded by the Seattle Times.

He also misstated the speed of Dave’s car when it hit Kandula as 80 km/h, when it was actually 101 km/h, news agency AP reported.

Auderer was also vice president of the Seattle Police Officers’ Guild. He was quoted saying the above while on a call with the guild’s president.

A Seattle police employee reported Auderer’s conversation to a department lawyer when they viewed it as part of an investigation into the incident, the Times reported.

Following this, a local police accountability body began an investigation into the matter.

Local prosecutors are reviewing the case and considering whether to pursue charges against Kevin Dave, the Times reported.

India’s consulate in San Francisco said earlier this month that the media reports about the “handling” of Kandula’s death were “deeply troubling”.

“We have taken up the matter strongly with local authorities in Seattle & Washington State as well as senior officials in Washington DC,” it said on X (formerly Twitter).

Auderer has since said that his bodycam footage was being taken out of context and claimed that he was mocking how lawyers would try and minimise liability for Kandula’s death.

“I intended the comment as a mockery of lawyers – I was imitating what a lawyer tasked with negotiating the case would be saying and being sarcastic to express that they shouldn’t be coming up with crazy arguments to minimise the payment,” he said in a letter to the police accountability body earlier this month.

Prison Blocks, Racehorses, a Dismissal: Things Named after Cricketers

Indian Test cricketers have seldom lent their names to cricket grounds in India. But they have influenced an assortment of names of objects around the world.

The following is an excerpt from The Great Indian Cricket Circus: Amazing Facts, Stats and Everything in Between, a book by Abhishek Mukherjee and Joy Bhattacharjya, published by HarperCollins India.

As we saw elsewhere, Indian Test cricketers have seldom lent their names to cricket grounds in India—though stands, ends and pavilions have been named after them, as have been awards and tournaments. At the same time, they have influenced an assortment of names of objects around the world. The list is long and probably more diverse than one would think …

Roads

It is not unexpected for Indian roads or landmarks to be named after Indian cricketers. There is an Anil Kumble Circle in Bengaluru as well as an Anil Kumble Road in Kumbla Town (also spelled as Kumble Town), Kerala, where the great man has ancestral roots. There is also a Dilip Sardesai Chowk in Mumbai.

What is interesting is the mark they seem to have made in cities far away from their birthplaces. There is a Gavaskar Place and a Kapil Grove in Khandallah, Wellington, New Zealand – but then, the streets in Khandallah are named after Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Gaya, Ganges, Kohima, and so on. There is also a Ravi Street and a Shastri Terrace in Khandallah, though they may not have cricketing connections.

In nearby Australia, in the City of Melton on the ‘western rural- urban fringe’ of Melbourne, there is a Tendulkar Drive, a Kohli Crescent and a Dev Terrace.

Cricket grounds

There is a Sunil Gavaskar Cricket Stadium in Zanzibar, Tanzania, and a Sunil Gavaskar Ground in Leicester, England. In fact, two oceans away, in a land where cricket still strives to seek acknowledgement, there is a Sunil Gavaskar Cricket Field in Louisville, Kentucky.

‘The Great Indian Cricket Circus: Amazing Facts, Stats and Everything in Between,’ Abhishek Mukherjee and Joy Bhattacharjya, HarperCollins India, 2023.

Prison block

Delhi’s Tihar Jail, the largest prison complex in Asia, had named one of their blocks after local cricketing hero Manoj Prabhakar. The authorities changed the name of the block in 2001 after Prabhakar was named in the match-fixing scandals the year before.

Pool

Not the water body. When the Under-19 World Cup was revived in 1998, the sixteen teams were split into four pools for the preliminary round. Hosts South Africa, India, Kenya and Scotland were in the Gavaskar Pool. The other teams were in pools named after Don Bradman, Colin Cowdrey and Garry Sobers.

Racehorses

That racehorses have exotic names is well known but not many are named after cricketers. Still, racing historian John Randall has compiled a reasonably long list. Tendulkar came third in the 2001 Dewhurst Stakes in Newmarket, while one Bishan Bedi won several races at Dundalk. Both were trained by Adrian O’Brien.

A dismissal

India were playing an Australian XI in Sydney on their first tour after 1947. At the non-striker’s end, Bill Brown took a couple of steps outside the crease before Vinoo Mankad released the ball, and the latter warned him. When Brown repeated the offence, Mankad ran him out. Three days later, Brown pulled off the same stunt in another tour match in Brisbane. Mankad warned him again, but let him go this time.

Then, in a Test match in Sydney, Mankad ran Brown – once again outside the crease at the non-striker’s end – out without a warning. Brown found little sympathy; the Australian press generally sided with Mankad, as did Brown’s captain, Don Bradman. Years later, this legal mode of dismissal by a bowler came to be known, unofficially, as Mankading, something Mankad’s family is divided on. By the 1960s, the term had stuck.

A mango

Horticulturist Haji Kaleemullah Khan of Malihabad, Uttar Pradesh, develops new varieties of fruits, particularly mangoes which he names after well-known Indians. That has earned him both the Padma Shri and the moniker ‘Mango Man’. He famously grew over three hundred varieties of mango on the same tree.

In 2010, he bred a new hybrid mango – a cross between gudshah and chausa – and named it after Sachin Tendulkar.

A spider

While pursuing a PhD in spider taxonomy at the Gujarat Ecological Education & Research Foundation, Dhruv Prajapati discovered two new species of spiders of the ‘Indomarengo and Marengo genus of Asian jumping spiders’. He promptly decided to name one of these two species Marengo sachintendulkar, after his favourite cricketer.

Food and beverages

The ‘Dravid rasam’ at Café Mysore, Mumbai, may not officially be on the menu, but the Feral Brewing Company in Australia does have a Mango Ganguly – ‘a Mango lassi IPA … packed with fresh mango, spicy cardamom, lactose and dry hopped with an assortment of American and New Zealand hops’ – on offer.

While it is common practice for cricketers-turned-restauranteurs to name the restaurants after themselves, the Dhoni & Kohli Restaurant in Kandivali, Mumbai, is owned by neither.

Honourable mention: Also a road, but…

In 2001, one Tom Gueterbock wanted to sell his GBP 495,000 house in the South London district. There is nothing unusual about that

… only the fact that he requested the Wisden website to publicize the sale. It would help him attract Indians as clients, he thought.

The house on 10, Dulka Road is perhaps the closest one can get to living in a place that sounds like ‘Tendulkar’.