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Tag: delhi

  • Pakistan Points Finger at India Over Suicide Blast

    Pakistan blamed India-backed militants for a suicide bombing that killed 12 people in Islamabad on Tuesday, raising the prospect of renewed tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals, as India’s prime minister vowed to hunt down the perpetrators of a car explosion in New Delhi the day before.

    A blast on Monday near a metro station by New Delhi’s historic Red Fort set several nearby cars on fire, killed eight and injured at least 20 others, Indian police said. The car had three or four passengers, all of whom died in the explosion, said police, who haven’t determined the cause of the blast.

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  • Opinion | ‘Does India Even Have Any Cards?’

    Sadanand Dhume writes a biweekly column on India and South Asia for WSJ.com. He focuses on the region’s politics, economics and foreign policy.

    Mr. Dhume is also a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. Previously he worked as the New Delhi bureau chief of the Far Eastern Economic Review (FEER), and as Indonesia correspondent for FEER and The Wall Street Journal Asia.

    Mr. Dhume is the author of “My Friend the Fanatic: Travels with a Radical Islamist,” (Skyhorse Publishing, 2009), which charts the rise of the radical Islamist movement in Indonesia. His next book will look at India’s transformation since the election of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2014.

    Mr. Dhume holds a bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Delhi, a master’s degree in international relations from Princeton University and a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, and travels frequently to India.

    Sadanand Dhume

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  • Trump Organization Expands in India, Where Many of Its Partners Face Accusations

    GURUGRAM, India—When the Trump Organization in April announced another luxury real-estate project in India, Eric Trump gave a shout out to his local partners for helping accelerate the brand’s expansion.

    “We’re incredibly excited to launch our second project in Gurgaon,” Eric Trump, who runs day-to-day operations, using the former name for the city near New Delhi. “And even prouder to be doing it once again with our amazing partners.”

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    Rory Jones

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  • The Black Market for Oil Blunts Trump’s India Tariffs

    Based on what’s happening in the black market for oil, the White House’s new import levy on India is backfiring.

    President Trump last week doubled India’s tariff rate to 50% to punish it for buying sanctioned Russian oil. Indian refineries have become major buyers of Moscow’s crude since the war in Ukraine began.

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    Carol Ryan

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  • Indians are spending big on travel, but most of that money isn’t leaving the country

    Indians are spending big on travel, but most of that money isn’t leaving the country

    The world famous Gateway of India monument in Mumbai, India was built during the 20th century to commemorate the visit of king George V and Queen Mary. It is located on the waterfront of the Apollo Bunder area of south Mumbai and is the city’s top tourist attraction.

    Darren Robb | The Image Bank | Getty Images

    India’s travel landscape is changing as the country emerges as a powerhouse in the tourism sector.

    Their willingness to spend big while traveling is going, but research shows that most Indians are traveling domestically — not overseas.

    Indian travelers took 1.7 billion leisure trips in 2022 but most never left the country, and only about 1% traveled abroad, according to Booking.com and McKinsey.

    Indian travelers are projected to be taking 5 billion leisure trips by 2030, and 99% of those will be within the country as well, said the report published October.

    The world’s most populous country is set to be the fourth-largest global travel spenders by 2030, largely due to a growing middle-income population that will see household earnings grow by $35,000 annually by that time.

    In addition, the population is young, with the median age at 27.6, “more than ten years younger than that of most major economies,” McKinsey said on its website. “What’s more, consumption of goods and services, including leisure and recreation, is forecast to double by 2030.”

    Spending on travel and tourism is predicted to hit $410 billion — a surge of more than 170% from $150 billion in 2019, the report showed.

    Here are the top 10 spots for Indians traveling within their own country, according to Booking.com and McKinsey.

    1. New Delhi 
    2. Bengaluru 
    3. Mumbai 
    4. Chennai 
    5. Pune 
    6. Hyderabad
    7. Gurugram 
    8. Jaipur 
    9. Kochi
    10. Kolkata

    According to the “How India travels 2023” report, about 2,000 Indians and 42,000 global tourists between 18 and 54 years booked leisure travel trips in 2022 and plan to do the same this year.

    New Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai and Chennai retained the top four spots since the previous study in 2015 — Kochi is the only new city on the list.

    “India’s travel ecosystem is maturing and there are multiple government schemes that are making the country more connected and ensuring it develops into a tourist hub,” Kanika Kalra, managing partner at McKinsey Mumbai, told CNBC.

    Smaller cities are gaining traction

    Tourists shopping for clothes at a local street market in Jodhpur, India, on Nov. 22 2022.

    Mayur Kakade | Moment | Getty Images

    In addition to cosmopolitan cities like New Delhi and Mumbai, those like Jodhpur, Dharamshala, Bodhgaya, Bilaspur, Kodagu and Raipur are also catching the attention of international hotel chains keen to carve out market share in India’s booming travel industry.

    “Branded hotels are currently focusing on Tier 2 cities for expansion owing to the increasing business opportunities and travelers’ increasing willingness to pay for standard services,” Deepak Rao, director of revenue management at Hyatt Hotels in India and Southwest Asia, said in the report.

    French hotel chain Novotel opened its doors to travelers in Jodhpur in May, while Radisson Hotel Group announced in June it will start welcoming visitors to Raipur in 2025. 

    About half (52%) the hotels in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities will be branded hotels by the end of 2023 — up from 27% in 2015, the report showed.

    Growing interest in traveling to smaller Indian cities is largely attributed to the transportation infrastructure boost that is underway, said Mckinsey’s Kalra. 

    At its annual budget announcement in February, India’s finance ministry said it plans to pump up capital expenditures by 33% to 10 trillion rupees ($120.96 billion), as the country is poised to become the second largest economy by 2075. 

    Indian airlines have ordered over 1,000 new aircraft, which will bring the total number of planes to between 1,500 to 1,700 by 2030, the report showed.

    “So we will see this landscape change quite dramatically and we will see a new wave of travelers to smaller towns,” Kalra said.

    Top international destinations 

    Of the 1% of Indian travelers going overseas, here are the top 10 places they are visiting.

    1. Dubai 
    2. Bangkok 
    3. Singapore 
    4. London 
    5. Paris 
    6. Ho Chi Minh City 
    7. Ubud 
    8. Hanoi 
    9. Phuket 
    10. Kathmandu

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  • Delhi Police busts drug trafficking ring, seizes 45 kgs of marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Delhi Police busts drug trafficking ring, seizes 45 kgs of marijuana – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Delhi Police Crime Branch has arrested three men and seized 45 kgs of fine quality marijuana hidden in specially designed cavity under the rear seat of a car, an official said on Saturday.

    The accused were identified as Akhilesh Bhagat (29), a resident of Swaroop Nagar, Delhi, Naresh Kumar (19) and Prakash Sharma (32) both residents of district Madhubani in Bihar.

    Special Commissioner of Police (Crime), Ravindra Singh Yadav, stated that they had received information about a consignment of narcotics substances (Ganja) being supplied in the Delhi/NCR area.

    Further information was gathered through field sources and technical analysis, which revealed that narcotics substances were being transported in a Maruti SX4 from Andhra Pradesh to Delhi.

    “Suspected phone numbers were placed under surveillance,” said Yadav, adding that consequently, a trap was set on the service road near Bhalswa Jheel in Delhi, resulting in the interception of the car and the apprehension of three men.

    Upon conducting a detailed search of the car, it was discovered that the car’s trunk was smaller than the standard size.

    During the interrogation, it was disclosed that the rear seat of the car was foldable, and a concealed cavity had been specially designed under the rear seat for hiding contraband.

    “After folding the rear seat, a concealed cavity was found beneath it, covered with a wooden plate fixed with screws. The wooden plate was opened, and 45 kilograms of high-quality Ganja were…

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  • Where to stay in India? Here are 8 former palaces that are now hotels

    Where to stay in India? Here are 8 former palaces that are now hotels

    The Maharajas of India’s past built magnificent palaces as a symbol of their power.

    But in 1971, India abolished “privy purses,” or governmental payments made to these rulers. Several of them transformed their vast estates into heritage hotels, or leased them to renowned hotel chains which carefully restored them to their former glory.

    From the eastern state of Odisha to Rajasthan in the north, here are eight regal retreats where travelers can live like kings and queens.

    1. Jehan Numa Palace — Bhopal

    Visitors can step back in time at Jehan Numa Palace in Bhopal, which has a neoclassical style and a 19th-century exterior.

    Jehan Numa Palace.

    Source: Jehan Numa Palace

    This pristine white building was built by General Obaidullah Khan, son of the last ruling Begum of Bhopal, and transformed into a 100-room hotel by his grandsons in the 1980s. The hotel contains salvaged original artifacts and Raj-era photos as well as modern luxuries, such as a palm-lined pool and Chakra spa services.

    Its palatial charm lingers among the racehorses that gallop around the track encircling the hotel. Travelers can dine on Italian and Mediterranean cuisine here, but Indophiles opt for the hotel’s legendary Bhopali fare prepared from secret palace recipes in a restaurant named Under the Mango Tree. 

    2. Haveli Dharampura — Delhi

    Once a nobleman’s home, the 19th-century Haveli Dharampura was meticulously restored over six years under the leadership of the prominent political figure Vijay Goel.

    Haveli Dharampura.

    Source: Heritage Dharampura

    It’s now a 14-room boutique hotel, which received an honorable mention in 2017’s UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation. The atmospheric Mughal-era hotel has red sandstone-arched colonnades, a marble courtyard, Arabesque tile-work and intricate stone and wood details that echo the opulence of yesteryears. 

    The in-house Lakhori restaurant prepares historic Mughal recipes, while the breezy rooftop provides a delightful setting for drink-in-hand lounging while listening to the muezzin’s call from the nearby Jama Masjid — a soul-stirring reminder that you are in the heart of Old Delhi.

    The hotel has guided heritage walks, kite-flying and high tea on the roof terrace, and kathak performances on Saturday and Sunday, where guests can enjoy an evening of Indian classical dance.

    3. Taj Lake Palace — Udaipur

    Accessible by boat, this stark white edifice in the heart of Lake Pichola (as seen in the 1983 James Bond flick “Octopussy”) was originally a summer pleasure palace for Mewar royalty in the 1740s.

    It was transformed into a heritage hotel in the 1960s and is now impeccably managed by the Taj Group.

    Taj Lake Palace

    Source: Taj Lake Palace

    Straight out of a fairy tale, the Taj Lake Palace boasts domed pavilions, ornamental turrets, crystal chandeliers, and 83 antique-filled rooms and suites, some which overlook a gleaming courtyard that hosts nightly folk dances.

    It has four dining options serving globe-trotting menus, a spa boat and butler service.

    4. Taj Falaknuma Palace — Hyderabad

    Perched nearly 2,000 feet above sea level, this hilltop hotel has 60 rooms and suites, which increase in lavishness as you move up its room classes.

    Taj Falaknuma Palace.

    Source: Taj Falaknuma Palace

    By the time you reach the Nizam Suite — graced with fine tapestry, a private pool and personal butler — it’s easy to envision the lifestyle of the Nizam of Hyderabad, who lived in the palace in the 19th century.

    The rooms aren’t the only lure. The 130-year-old edifice is known for its state banquets of yore-style food, grand gardens, billiard room with monogrammed cues and ivory balls, and a library modeled on the one at Windsor Castle. Staterooms are decked out with Venetian chandeliers, royal portraits and heirlooms from the Nizams’ era.

    5. Taj Usha Kiran Palace — Gwalior

    This palace dating to the 1800s was, in its past life, a guesthouse and later royal residence of the ruling family of the state of Gwalior.

    Taj Usha Kiran Palace.

    Source: Taj Usha Kiran Palace

    Today, it’s a lavish Taj hotel that balances old-world vibes with contemporary style. Its interiors contain ancient stone carvings, filigree work and rich tapestries. For a regal experience, travelers can take a heritage tour through the sprawling estate and stay in one of the Royal Suites, which are kitted out with four-poster beds, Venetian mirrors and mother-of-pearl mosaics.

    The hotel also offers plenty of facilities to help guests unwind, including a spa, outdoor pool, and an Art Deco-style bar.

    6. Rambagh Palace — Jaipur

    Set in 47 acres of gardens that are home to peacocks, this former hunting lodge and royal abode of the Maharaja of Jaipur, dates back to 1835. It is now a heritage hotel managed by the Taj Group.

    Rambagh Palace.

    Source: Rambagh Palace

    Exquisite antique furnishings, silk drapes, domed wooden ceilings and four-poster beds give the 78 rooms and suites a regal feel.

    Many other features make Rambagh Palace an unforgettable retreat: heritage walks around the premises conducted by the palace butler, golf putting green, original palace dining room with chandeliers and gilded mirror, a Polo bar festooned with trophies and memorabilia of the Jaipur polo team, and a spa with Indian healing services.

    The palace has hosted the likes of King Charles, Louis Mountbatten and Jacqueline Kennedy.

    7. The Belgadia Palace — Mayurbhanj

    Nestled in the charming town of Baripada, The Belgadia Palace has been with the descendants of the same royal family since it was built in 1804, giving it an authenticity that is hard to replicate.

    The Belgadia Palace.

    Source: The Belgadia Palace

    A portion of this historic palace has been converted into an 11-room hotel by Mrinalika and Akshita Bhanj Deo, royal descendants of the family. It boasts lofty ceilings, marble corridors and artifacts.

    There’s also a lavish dining hall that serves Odisha-style meals, and elegant verandas on which to drink tea. The palace arranges activities such as traditional Chhau dance performances on the pristine lawns, handicraft village tours and other excursions. 

    8. Chittoor Kottaram — Kochi

    The height of exclusivity, the Chittoor Kottaram — which once belonged to the king of Cochin — hosts only one group of no more than six people at any one time.

    Chittoor Kottaram.

    Source: Chittoor Kottaram

    Nestled amid coconut groves by the edge of the lagoon backwaters of Kerala, the three-room abode boasts beautiful Athangudi floor tiles and wooden ceilings.

    Precious artworks by Lady Hamlyn of The Helen Hamlyn Trust, the restorer of this 300-year-old palace, lend the property something of a museum feel. A personal chef prepares traditional Keralan dishes that can be eaten at a waterside gazebo or in the lush garden.

    Ayurvedic massages and private cultural shows can be arranged, as can a private sunset cruise on the serene waterways.

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  • India is a rising force in Southeast Asia as region seeks to counter China’s dominance

    India is a rising force in Southeast Asia as region seeks to counter China’s dominance

    Indian Army T-90 Bheeshma tanks roll past during the full dress final rehearsal for the Indian Republic Day parade in New Delhi on January 23, 2009. (Photo credit RAVEENDRAN/AFP via Getty Images)

    Raveendran | Afp | Getty Images

    India is taking major strides to expand its influence in Southeast Asia, a move that will allow countries to counter China’s dominance in the region.

    “India certainly is becoming more ambitious in Southeast Asia. There is no doubt about it,” said Harsh V. Pant, vice president for studies and foreign policy at Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank.

    It has also become “more forceful and more upfront” about its ties with the region, he added.

    Growing rivalry between India and China is seen as influencing New Delhi’s strategic calculation in strengthening its presence.

    For a long time, Indian leaders had been “hesitant and reticent” about the country’s role in the region, due to its own tensions with China along the Himalayan border, noted Pant.

    Relations have been fraught since a border clash with Chinese forces in 2020, which killed at least 20 Indian soldiers, according to the Indian army.

    “I think the understanding in New Delhi had been: Let’s not wade into waters where China might be more uncomfortable,” Pant told CNBC, adding that Beijing has “enormous potential to create trouble for India.”

    Since China hasn’t “budged” on the border issue, India “now feels there has been no real return for its cautious attitude towards Southeast Asia,” he added. 

    India’s foreign ministry did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

    In June, India’s external affairs minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, highlighted the border conflict was affecting relations between the two countries.

    Until Sino-India relations achieve “some sense of normalcy,” Pant said, New Delhi has few options but to ramp up ties with countries — “big or small around China’s periphery, to ensure it has some leverage.”

    Tightening ties

    In recent months, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has stepped up its outreach to regional countries aimed at balancing Beijing’s aggression.

    The move reinforces India’s ongoing comprehensive strategic partnership with Southeast Asia.  

    In June, New Delhi said it was giving a naval warship to Vietnam, in the latest sign of growing defense ties between both nations, said Satoru Nagao, non-resident fellow at Hudson Institute, based in Tokyo.

    “India also trains pilots and ground crew of fighter jets of the Vietnam Air Force. Indian naval ships visited Vietnam constantly,” he added.

    Vietnam is now planning to buy supersonic missiles and surface-to-air missiles from India, said Nagao, who specializes in defense strategy, foreign policy and security alliances.

    India’s ‘Look East’ policy began in 1991, well before China’s growing assertiveness was a real problem in Southeast Asia,” said Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at the Rand Corporation.

    “But by 2014, when Modi turned the policy into ‘Act East,’ it was apparent that the region and world was dealing with a different kind of China — Xi’s China — which sought to flex its power more often and farther from Chinese shores,” he said referring to Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

    Activists display anti-China placards and flags during a protest at a park in Manila on June 18, 2019, after a Chinese vessel last week collided with a Philippine fishing boat which sank in the disputed South China Sea and sailed away sparking outrage. Photo by TED ALJIBE / AFP) (Photo by TED ALJIBE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Ted Aljibe | Afp | Getty Images

    India caused a stir in late June when its foreign minister and his Filipino counterpart, Enrique Manalo, issued a joint statement, urging China to abide by The Hague’s 2016 arbitration decision on the South China Sea.

    The joint statement sparked speculation that New Delhi was shifting away from its neutral posture on competing territorial claims in the region.

    In a landmark ruling on the South China Sea dispute, the international tribunal in The Hague unanimously ruled in favor of the Philippines in a historic case against China.

    China has rejected the 2016 ruling, describing it as “illegal and void.”

    Beijing claims almost the entire South China Sea — an assertion that is rejected by Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and the Philippines among others, in competing claims for the resource-rich waterway.

    India “is bolstering strategic ties — diplomatic, economic, and security — to Southeast Asian states to help them balance or hedge against, or outright counter Chinese power,” said Rand’s Grossman.

    “This is particularly salient to the maritime sphere, namely the South China Sea, where overlapping sovereignty disputes threaten regional stability and openness,” he added.

    Complex dynamic

    China’s expanding influence through its Belt and Road Initiative in Southeast Asia is also driving India’s calculation, according to Joanne Lin, co-coordinator of the ASEAN Studies Centre at ISEAS, at Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

    As a result, “safeguarding India’s security, especially maritime security will be important,” Lin added.

    Most countries in the region have supported China’s mega infrastructure project — Xi’s signature policy initiative aimed at expanding Beijing’s influence through a network of road, rail and sea connections across Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

    Observers note Beijing’s more strident foreign policy, coupled with the political and economic leverage it could exert through the Belt and Road, has raised concerns in the region.

    India is not a camp follower of either side. It continues to maintain a very independent streak in its foreign policy, which suits a large number of Southeast Asian countries.

    Harsh V. Pant

    Observer Research Foundation

    Readjusting to an evolving international order defined primarily by the China-U.S. rivalry has also proven particularly challenging for Southeast Asian countries. 

    Regional countries are “engaging India because it is a power in its own right,” noted Prashanth Parameswaran, a fellow at the Wilson Center and founder of the weekly ASEAN Wonk newsletter.

    They see India as an “important piece of a broader strategy of shaping a more multipolar order rather than one that is centered around China or dominated by U.S.-China bipolar competition,” he added.

    A regional survey published by the ASEAN Studies Centre at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute showed India’s standing has improved greatly among Southeast Asian nations, despite its neutral stance in Russia’s war against Ukraine. 

    “India is the third top option for the region in hedging against the uncertainties of the US-China rivalry. Its ranking more than doubled from the last spot in 2022 to the third spot this year,” said ISEAS’s Lin, one of the authors of the survey. 

    ‘A way out’

    Observers say that New Delhi also offers “a way out” for countries that seek to remain neutral in the U.S.-China conflict. 

    “India is not a camp follower of either side,” said Pant from New Delhi’s Observer Research Foundation. “It continues to maintain a very independent streak in its foreign policy, which suits a large number of Southeast Asian countries.”

    While China remained the most influential and strategic power in Southeast Asia, its standing has diminished, the Southeast Asia survey from February showed.

    ASEAN chief says the 5-point consensus remains the 'main political document' to assist Myanmar

    China continues to be regarded as the most influential economic power by 59.9% of the respondents. However, its influence has declined significantly from 76.7% in 2022, as countries grew more wary of Beijing.

    For several states that “most distrust China in the region — namely the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Singapore,” India is “an additional partner to help counter Beijing,” noted Rand’s Grossman.

    Still, New Delhi’s latest moves to deepen regional ties won’t go unnoticed by Chinese leaders, analysts noted.

    China will be “cautious” about the developments, said Lin from ISEAS. “India’s growing influence in Southeast Asia and enhanced defense cooperation,” among other issues “will cause unease in Beijing,” she added.

    Pant noted: “China will be watching this carefully and sending its own messages out.”

    But given Southeast Asia “is a central pillar to India’s own Indo-Pacific strategy,” that will not deter New Delhi,” he added. “India’s push into the region will only continue to gather momentum.”

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  • Parineeti Chopra, Raghav Chadha Engagement: Here are the latest updates

    Parineeti Chopra, Raghav Chadha Engagement: Here are the latest updates

    Tomorrow, Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha will be getting engaged in New Delhi. The engagement will happen at the Kapurthala House which is the main office of the AAP. The couple will be marrying later in the year. Parineeti Chopra was clicked at the airport in a maroon suit with Gucci mules. The couple also enjoyed a IPL match at Mohali some days back. Parineeti Chopra and Raghav Chadha have decided to keep it a low key affair. Priyanka Chopra, Nick Jonas and Malti Marie will be flying in from the US for the big day. Madhu Chopra, the mother of Priyanka told Pinkvilla that she is very happy for the couple. It seems the whole family is very excited. They have given them their blessings.

    Decoration outside Raghav Chadha’s home
    A news agency has shared visuals of Chadha’s home. We can see that there are floral rangolis and diyas lighting up the place. Raghav Chadha had said at the wedding of Bhagwant Mann that his mom was keen on his nuptials.

    We also saw how Parineeti Chopra’s home has been decked in Mumbai for the big day. A few celebs are expected to be in Delhi for the engagement.

    Parineeti Chopra will be wearing a subtle outfit from Manish Malhotra for the big day. He is also coming for the engagement to Delhi. Raghav Chadha will don an Achkan designed by his maternal uncle Pawan Sachdeva. It seems it is a very minimal outfit as he does not like embroidery or anything too loud. Both the couple will wear ivory outfits.

    The actress’ brothers Sahaj and Shivaang are looking after the menu. There will be quite a feast for guests. The specialty includes kebabs while vegans will have some choices too. Karan Johar, Manish Malhotra, Sania Mirza and some other Bollywood celebs are expected for the do.

    Stay tuned to BollywoodLife for the latest scoops and updates from Bollywood, Hollywood, South, TV and Web-Series.
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  • India’s ties with Russia remain steady. But Moscow’s tighter embrace of China makes it wary

    India’s ties with Russia remain steady. But Moscow’s tighter embrace of China makes it wary

    Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, India Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and China’s President Xi Jinping prepare to leave at the concluding session of the BRICS summit at Taj Exotica hotel in Goa on October 16, 2016. (PRAKASH SINGH/AFP via Getty Images)

    Prakash Singh | Afp | Getty Images

    India’s relationship with Russia remains steadfast as both sides seek to deepen their economic ties. But Moscow has also grown close to Beijing since invading Ukraine, and that raises critical national security concerns for New Delhi.

    Indian external affairs minister S. Jaishankar recently said the country was ready to restart free trade negotiations with Russia.

    “Our partnership today is a subject of attention and comment, not because it has changed, but because it has not,” he said, describing the relationship as “among the steadiest” in the world.

    Russia also wants to “intensify” free trade discussions with India, Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov said during a visit to Delhi. Manturov is also Moscow’s trade minister.

    Despite the display of economic cooperation, India’s leaders are “carefully watching” as Russia becomes more isolated and moves closer to “China’s corner,” said Harsh V. Pant, vice president for studies and foreign policy at Observer Research Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank.

    Russia’s “weak and vulnerable position” and growing reliance on China for economic and strategic reasons, will definitely be worrying for India, he told CNBC.

    It’s becoming “more difficult with every passing day because of the closeness that we are witnessing between Beijing and Moscow,” Pant noted. “The pressure on India is increasing, it certainly would not like to see that happen.”

    New Delhi will try as much as possible to avoid a potential “Russia-China alliance or axis,” Pant added. “As that will have far reaching consequences and will fundamentally alter India’s foreign policy and strategic calculation.”

    There are national interest reasons “why India continues to buy cheap Russian oil and trade with them, this FTA is part of that,” said Sreeram Chaulia, dean of the Jindal School of International Affairs in New Delhi.

    But it appears “this relationship is going down from being a very high-value strategic partnership to a transactional one,” he noted, adding Moscow’s “tighter embrace of China” doesn’t bode well for India’s national security needs.

    India, which holds the current G-20 presidency, still hasn’t condemned Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

    A reliable partner?

    In its latest foreign policy doctrine published in late March, Russia noted it will “continue to build up a particularly privileged strategic partnership” with India.

    New Delhi’s longstanding ties with Moscow date back to the Cold War. It remains heavily dependent on the Kremlin for its military equipment. This defense cooperation is vital given India’s tensions along the Himalayan border with an increasingly assertive China, said ORF’s Pant.

    But Russia hasn’t been able to deliver critical defense supplies it had committed to India’s military due to the Ukraine war, which could strain the relationship, said analysts.

    In March, the Indian Armed Forces acknowledged to a parliamentary committee that a “major delivery ” from Russia “is not going to take place” in a report. “They have given us in writing that they are not able to deliver it,” the IAF official said. The report did not mention the specifics of the delivery.

    China is 'openly playing in Russia's backyard' with Central Asia summit

    “Russia has already delayed the delivery of S-400 anti-missile delivery systems to India due to the pressures of the Ukraine war,” said the Jindal School’s Chaulia. “So, there is a big question mark on Russia’s reliability.”

    India’s reliance on Moscow, historically, was seen as pivotal “to help moderate China’s aggression,” he added, to maintain a stable balance of power against Beijing.

    Now, the country cannot expect Russia to play “the same strategic role for India as it used to prior to the Ukraine war. That’s because of the technological degradation of its military and weakening position as a result of the war,” he said.

    ‘No limits’ partnership

    Putin-Xi formal talks underway as Russia, China look to strengthen ties

    A “Russian tilt” in favor of Beijing “would clearly be bad for India” if war broke out between both nations, noted Felix K. Chang, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, a Philadelphia-based think tank.

    Even without a war, “China’s warm relationship with Russia could encourage Beijing to pursue its interests more forcefully in South Asia, whether on its disputed Himalayan border or with India’s surrounding neighbors,” he wrote in April. “That too could shift the power balance between China and India and lead to greater regional tensions.” 

    So India needs to “pick up the pace” in its embrace of the West, Chang added, “given how close the Russian-Ukrainian war has brought China and Russia.”

    Move toward the U.S.

    The West recognizes the challenge India faces in the Indo-Pacific region, said Pant from ORF, “that it needs Moscow in managing Beijing in the short to medium term, given its defense relationship with Russia.”

    “That sensitivity is, perhaps, what’s driving the Western outreach to India, despite differences over  Ukraine,” he said, adding national security concerns are driving India closer to the U.S.

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will join U.S. President Joe Biden and his counterparts from Australia and Japan at the third Quad leaders summit in Sydney on May 24. The Quad is an informal security alignment of the four major democracies that was forged in response to China’s rising strength in the Indo-Pacific.

    While America sees “China as the main challenger to U.S. global primacy, it does not see India that way,” said Rajan Menon, director of the grand strategy program at Defense Priorities, a Washington-based think tank.

    “To the contrary it views India, nowadays, as a partner to counterbalance China,” he noted.

    US-China decoupling stems from economic and security issues 'bleeding together,' says Penny Pritzker

    “That overlapping strategic interest explains why Washington has not reacted to India’s alignment with Moscow in the way it has to the ‘no-limits’ friendship China has forged with Russia,” Menon said.

    As for Russia, how it balances this evolving India-China dynamic will be its biggest test, noted Pant.

    “It’ll be interesting to see how this triangle works. In the past, it had worked because there was this uniform sense among the three countries to talk of a multipolar world, where American unipolarity was the target,” he noted.

    “Today, for India, it’s China’s attempt at creating hegemony in the Indo-Pacific is the target. For Russia and China, the priorities are different than for India,” Pant added. “Russia’s ability to manage India and China will be under the scanner,” as far as New Delhi is concerned.

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  • Here are the most polluted cities in the U.S. and world

    Here are the most polluted cities in the U.S. and world

    Commuters make their way along a street amid smoggy and foggy conditions early in the morning in Lahore on January 3, 2023.

    Arif Ali | AFP | Getty Images

    About 90% of the global population in 2022 experienced unhealthy air quality, and only six countries met the World Health Organization’s recommendations of safe air pollutant levels, according to a new report from Swiss air quality technology company IQAir.

    IQAir measured air quality levels based on the concentration of lung-damaging airborne particles known as PM 2.5. Research shows that exposure to such particulate matter can lead to heart attacks, asthma attacks and premature death. Studies have also linked long-term exposure to PM 2.5 with higher rates of death from Covid-19.

    When the WHO first published air quality guidance in 2005, it said the acceptable levels of air pollution were less than 10 micrograms per cubic meter. In 2021, the WHO changed its benchmark guidelines to below 5 micrograms per cubic meter.

    The report found that the top five most polluted countries in 2022 were Chad, Iraq, Pakistan, Bahrain and Bangladesh. The most polluted cities globally were Lahore, Pakistan; Hotan, China; Bhiwadi, India; Delhi, India; and Peshawar, Pakistan.

    Lahore’s air quality worsened to 97.4 micrograms of PM 2.5 particles per cubic meter in 2022 from 86.5 in the year prior, making it the most polluted city in the world.

    The report also said India and Pakistan endured the worst air quality in the Central and South Asian region, where more than half of the population resides in areas where the concentration of PM 2.5 particles is about seven times higher than WHO’s suggested levels.

    In the U.S., the most polluted major cities were Columbus, Ohio, followed by Atlanta, Chicago, Indianapolis and Dallas. Air quality in Columbus hit 13.1 micrograms of PM 2.5 particles per cubic meter in 202, making it the most polluted major city in the U.S.

    The Biden administration this year proposed limiting pollution of industrial fine soot particles from the current annual level of 12 micrograms per cubic meter to a level between 9 and 10 micrograms per cubic meter. Some public health advocates criticized that proposal as not going far enough.

    Only six countries met the WHO’s updated health limits: Australia, Estonia, Finland, Grenada, Iceland and New Zealand, the report said. The 2022 report used air quality data from more than 30,000 regulatory air quality monitoring stations and air quality sensors from 7,323 cities across 131 countries, regions and territories.

    Air pollution takes more than two years off the average global life expectancy, according to the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. Sixty percent of particulate matter air pollution comes from fossil fuel combustion.

    “Too many people around the world don’t know that they are breathing polluted air,” Aidan Farrow, senior air quality scientist at Greenpeace International, said in a statement.

    “Air pollution monitors provide hard data that can inspire communities to demand change and hold polluters to account, but when monitoring is patchy or unequal, vulnerable communities can be left with no data to act on,” Farrow said.

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  • Engineers in India found more startups than MBA grads. What are B-schools doing to nudge students towards entrepreneurship?

    Engineers in India found more startups than MBA grads. What are B-schools doing to nudge students towards entrepreneurship?

    Within the small number of students in India that take up entrepreneurship, engineer-founders dominate the landscape. Graduates from the other islands of educational excellence in the country—B-schools, especially the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs)—have mostly stuck to risk-averse corporate jobs. One would imagine B-school graduates to be at the forefront of setting up new businesses, having soaked up business expertise during their management course. But that’s not the case. Sample this: there are 5,489 start-ups founded by graduates of Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs)—Bombay, Delhi, Guwahati, Kanpur, Kharagpur, Madras, and Roorkee— while graduates of IIMs (Ahmedabad, Bangalore and Calcutta) have produced 1,517 start-ups as of October 10, 2022, per Tracxn data. Of India’s 108 unicorns, 60 have founders from the same set of seven IITs mentioned above while 25 have founders from IIMA, IIMB and IIMC. It would be accurate to say that there are way more engineer-founders in the country today than manager-founders.

    While management graduates taking to entrepreneurship straight out of college may continue to be a small number for the foreseeable future, B-schools are not immune to the charms of the start-up space. “We decided some years ago that every MBA student at IIMB needs to develop an entrepreneurial orientation,” says Rishikesha T. Krishnan, Director of IIMB. Bhagwan Chowdhry, Faculty Director of I-Venture@ISB, the start-up accelerator and incubator of the Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad, says that ISB was started 20 years ago with the idea of preparing managers to work for the Amazons and Googles. “Now, we notice that many of our alumni graduate from those corporate jobs, and start companies of their own. Today, entrepreneurship is a big piece of business education,” he adds. Great Lakes’ mission is to develop future-ready business leaders as well as entrepreneurs. “We want to participate in the start-up ecosystem. Entrepreneurship is a core part of our curriculum,” says Suresh Ramanathan, Dean of Chennai-based Great Lakes Institute of Management.

    Also Read: Most start-ups are founded by engineers. What about MBA graduates? Are they only good for working for others?

    The way they look at it, it’s not necessarily about producing start-up founders and certainly not right after B-school. But it’s about creating a problem-solving mindset among students and showing them that they do not have to limit themselves to working for large corporates. And the institutes are stepping up their efforts to inspire entrepreneurial thinking. For instance, The IIMAvericks Fellowship Program, launched by IIMA in 2012-13, pays final-year students deciding to become entrepreneurs a salary for two years. If their start-up doesn’t work out, they can come back and sit for placements again. ISB has launched a similar one-year scholarship for students interested in entrepreneurship from the class of 2023. IIMB—which is located in India’s start-up capital of Bengaluru—introduced a compulsory course on entrepreneurship a few years ago, has an active entrepreneurship club, gets students to work with the companies incubated on campus, and offers deferred placements. Great Lakes—which has seen healthy enrolments for the entrepreneurship courses introduced last year—is also exploring start-up scholarships. But the professors admit that adoption is very low. “I won’t say that there’s a large number of current students who are interested [in the scholarship programme]. But there are many others in whom we are planting the seeds, because we know they will be back in this game five years from now,” says Chowdhry.

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  • What are green crackers and how to identify them? Check here

    What are green crackers and how to identify them? Check here

    Due to pollution, many states have banned bursting firecrackers on Diwali. However, some cities have allowed the sale and use of green crackers. The green firecrackers do not contain harmful chemicals and cause less air pollution, as per experts.

    The CSIR-National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (CSIR NEERI) has defined green crackers as firecrackers made with a reduced shell size, without ash, and/or with additives such as dust suppressants to reduce emissions with specific reference to particulate matter. These crackers come without barium compounds through which crackers get the green colour. It is a metal oxide that contributes to air and noise pollution.

    In India, green crackers were launched in 2019 and currently, there are three types of green crackers: SWAS (Safe Water Releaser), STAR (Safe Thermite Cracker), and SAFAL (Safe Minimal Aluminium). To identify green crackers, customers can look for the CSIR NEERI logo on the fireworks packaging.

    According to reports, green crackers cause 30 per cent lesser particulate matter pollution as compared to traditional crackers. On bursting green crackers, water vapour is released which helps in settling down the dust emitted. While regular firecrackers emit around 160 decibels of sound, green crackers produce between 110 and 125 decibels of sound.  

    As per the Air Quality Life Index, in northern India, 510 million residents or nearly 40 per cent of the country’s population are expected to lose 7. 6 years of life expectancy on average if current pollution levels persist. People in Delhi would lose 10 years of their lives if they do not adhere to the new WHO standards, an AQLI analysis stated.

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  • Delhi sees 2nd highest 24-hr rainfall in October since 2007; 2nd ‘good’ air quality day of year

    Delhi sees 2nd highest 24-hr rainfall in October since 2007; 2nd ‘good’ air quality day of year

    Delhi received 74 mm of rainfall in 24 hours ending 8:30 am on Sunday, the second highest precipitation on a day in October since 2007, according to the India Meteorological Department data.

    In 2021, the capital had logged 87.9 mm of rainfall on October 18.

    The weather bureau said the ceaseless spell of rain brought down the difference between minimum temperature (20.8 degrees Celsius) on Friday and maximum temperature (23.4 degrees Celsius) on Saturday to 2.6 degrees Celsius — the lowest since 1969.

    Earlier, the lowest such margin was recorded on October 19, 1998 at 3.1 degree Celsius, the IMD added.

    The incessant rain in the capital also yielded the second “good” air quality day of the year, with the 24-hour average air quality index settling at 48.

    Delhi had recorded a 24-hour average AQI of 47 on September 16.

    The neighbouring cities of Ghaziabad (14), Gurugram (32) and Greater Noida (23) also recorded ‘good’ air quality.

    The Safdarjung Observatory, Delhi’s primary weather station, recorded another 7.4 mm of rainfall between 8:30 am and 5:30 pm on Sunday.

    The city recorded a minimum temperature of 19.3 degrees Celsius, a degree below normal, while the maximum temperature dropped 10 notches to settle at 24.1 degrees Celsius.

    The current rains in Delhi are not monsoon showers, which had receded from the city on September 29 after giving 516.9 mm of rainfall against a normal of 653.6 mm, the IMD said.

    According to the Met department, the interaction of a western disturbance, which lies as a trough in mid and upper air, with a deep trough of easterly wind at a lower level led to the post-monsoon rain in the Delhi-NCR region.

    Mahesh Palawat, vice president (meteorology and climate change), Skymet Weather, said easterly winds brought moisture from the Bay of Bengal with a trough running from Andhra Pradesh to northwest Uttar Pradesh.

    Easterly winds carried moisture from the Arabian Sea due to another trough extending from Delhi to east Rajasthan.

    “In October to March, we get 3 to 5 such intense interactions,” an IMD official said.

    Palwat said these weather systems will weaken over the next two-three days.

    Sporadic light to moderate rain is likely on Monday, but not much precipitation is expected the day after, he said.

    The Palam observatory recorded 64.9 mm of rainfall in 24 hours ending 8:30 am. The Lodhi Road, Ridge, and Ayanagar weather stations received 87.2 mm, 60.1 mm, and 85.2 mm rainfall respectively, the IMD said.

    Rainfall below 15 mm is considered “light”, between 15 mm and 64.5 mm “moderate”, between 64.5 mm and 115.5 mm “heavy”, and between 115.6 mm and 204.4 mm “very heavy”. Above 204.4 mm is considered “extremely heavy” rainfall.

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