
India's Modi visits Croatia with EU trade on agenda
Modi will visit the EU member on his way back from the G7 Summit in Canada, following an earlier stop in Cyprus.
Croatian newspaper Vecernji List reported on Tuesday that a key focus of discussions will be a proposed trade route between Europe, the Middle East and India – an investment touted to rival Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative.
'As the first visit by an Indian prime minister to Croatia, it will open new avenues for bilateral cooperation,' Modi said in a statement ahead of the trip.
He will meet Croatian counterpart Andrej Plenkovic and President Zoran Milanovic in Zagreb during a visit that was initially scheduled for mid-May, but got pushed back because of an escalation in tensions between India and Pakistan.
European leaders are increasingly looking to other trading partners in response to US President Donald Trump's imposition of tariffs on the bloc, which are now flagged to increase in July.
India a voice for Global South at G7, says foreign minister
The EU is India's second-largest trading partner, accounting for 120 billion euros (US$138 billion) worth of trade in goods in 2024 – more than 11 percent of total Indian trade, according to the EU.
First proposed in 2023, the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor would be a railway and maritime route linking the regions and is seen as a potential counter to growing Chinese investment.
Although trade between India and Croatia remains relatively small, Croatia, suffering from a chronic workforce shortage, has been attracting more Indian workers.
China has pumped billions of dollars into the Balkans in recent years to expand its economic footprint in central Europe.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
4 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Trump says Mexico, EU to face 30% tariff from Aug 1
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Saturday said major US trading partners Mexico and the European Union would face a 30 percent tariff starting next month, ramping up pressure for deals in his trade wars. Both sets of duties would take effect August 1, Trump said in separate letters posted to his Truth Social platform, citing Mexico's role in illicit drugs flowing into the United States and a trade imbalance with the EU respectively. Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump has unleashed sweeping tariffs on allies and competitors alike, roiling financial markets and raising fears of a global economic downturn. But his administration is coming under pressure to secure deals with trading partners after promising a flurry of agreements. So far, US officials have only unveiled two pacts, with Britain and Vietnam, alongside temporarily lower tit-for-tat duties with China. Trump puts 35% tariff on Canada, eyes 15%-20% tariffs for others The fresh duties for Mexico announced by Trump would be higher than the 25 percent levy he imposed Mexican goods earlier this year, although products entering the United States under the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) are exempted. 'Mexico has been helping me secure the border, BUT, what Mexico has done, is not enough,' Trump said in his letter. 'Starting August 1, 2025, we will charge Mexico a Tariff of 30% on Mexican products sent into the United States.' Canada earlier received a similar letter setting out 35 percent tariffs on its goods. A US official earlier told AFP that the USMCA exemption was similarly expected to remain for Canada. The EU tariff is also markedly steeper than the 20 percent levy Trump unveiled in April, as negotiations with the bloc continue. The EU, alongside dozens of other economies, had been set to see its US tariff level increase from a baseline of 10 percent on Wednesday, but Trump pushed back the deadline to August 1 just days before the elevated rates were due to take effect. Since the start of the week, Trump has sent out letters to more than 20 countries with updated tariffs for each. Brussels said Friday that it was ready to strike a deal with Washington to prevent the return of 20 percent levies, and the latest letter suggests talks will carry on. The EU has prepared retaliatory duties on US goods worth around 21 billion euros after Trump also slapped separate tariffs on steel and aluminum imports earlier this year, and they are suspended until July 14. European officials have not made any move to extend the suspension but could do it quickly if needed.


Express Tribune
5 hours ago
- Express Tribune
India forcibly deported nearly 1,900 Muslims after Pahalgam attack: report
Police officers with men they believe to be undocumented Bangladeshi nationals after they were detained during raids in Ahmedabad, India, on 26 April. Photograph: PHOTO:REUTERS Listen to article Following a deadly militant attack in Kashmir, Indian authorities launched a deportation campaign targeting Muslims, allegedly expelling nearly 1,900 people to Bangladesh, many without legal process, according to a report by The Washington Post. Testimonies and documents indicate that some deportees were even Indian citizens. Victims describe police brutality, destruction of identity papers, and forced deportation by sea or foot. Human rights groups and legal experts have condemned the drive as a clear violation of international law. Hasan Shah, a waste picker from Gujarat, India, woke to a nightmare in April. Dragged from his bed by police, blindfolded and tied, he was forcibly taken to the sea and ordered at gunpoint to leap into the water near the Bangladesh coast. 'Jump into the water,' he recalled officers telling him. 'If you look back, we'll shoot you.' 'Keeping Muslims in line' 'Jump into the water. If you look back, we'll shoot you.' - Indian police officers to Hasan Shah, an Indian Muslim, born in Gujarat 👺The documents proving his Indian citizenship were snatched by police when they detained him in his hometown, Surat. — 𝑪𝒂𝒕𝒂𝒍𝒆𝒚𝒂🛡 (@catale7a) July 12, 2025 Three days later, Shah swam ashore and was picked up by the Bangladeshi coast guard near Satkhira. His documents proving Indian citizenship were confiscated, leaving him stateless and stranded. 'This isn't my home,' Shah said, standing outside a courthouse. 'I need to go back to India. I need to get back to my kids.' Shah is one of nearly 1,900 people—mostly Muslims—who were deported from India to Bangladesh between 7 May and 3 July, according to confidential Bangladeshi government data. These expulsions followed a militant attack in Kashmir in April that left 26 dead. In the days after, Indian authorities launched sweeping raids, demolitions, and deportations in Muslim-majority neighbourhoods, particularly in Gujarat and Assam. Arbitrary arrests and statelessness The Gujarat state home minister, Harsh Sanghavi, declared a crackdown on 'each and every infiltrator.' While some detainees were undocumented, others like Shah appeared to be Indian citizens, some even holding voter IDs and national identity cards. Shah's family provided The Washington Post with evidence of his Indian citizenship, including verified identity documents and voter registration. His mobile phone, needed to authenticate those documents, is reportedly still held by police. Eleven deportees interviewed said they were denied the opportunity to present proof of their legal status. Several reported that their original papers were seized or destroyed, and copies they later provided were dismissed as fake. Human rights concerns Human rights experts are alarmed. 'The deportation drive does not just violate civil rights,' said Mohsin Alam Bhat, a law lecturer at Queen Mary University of London. 'It clearly violates international law.' Video evidence obtained by The Post shows disturbing scenes, including an elderly woman pleading not to be left across the Bangladesh border. She was readmitted to India but has since disappeared. Bangladesh has issued diplomatic protests. India's Ministry of External Affairs and Border Security Force did not respond to requests for comment. Mass raids, demolitions, and abuse In Ahmedabad's Chandola Lake area, 890 people—including over 200 women and children—were detained in a late April raid. Many were forced to march for hours in extreme heat while media filmed the operation. Over 12,500 homes were bulldozed in the aftermath, displacing thousands. Parveen Ismail Rangrez watched her home destroyed. 'Everything is wiped out now,' she said. Yunus Khan Pathan, another resident, was arrested, made to march until the soles of his feet burned, and released—only to return and find his house gone. 'Prove that I'm a terrorist,' he said. 'All I have is a Muslim name.' The People's Union for Civil Liberties estimated only about 50 of those detained may have lacked legal status. Public dissent was limited due to fear of being labelled 'anti-national.' 'The public opinion is: 'They are keeping Muslims in line,'' said Mujahid Nafees, PUCL's Gujarat chapter general secretary Torture and forced confession Abdur Rahman, 20, was arrested without a warrant at 4 a.m. on 26 April. He alleges he was whipped with a leather belt in custody and pressured into falsely claiming Bangladeshi nationality. 'They beat me brutally,' he said, showing deep purple bruises across his torso. Like Shah, he was given a life jacket and forced overboard near the Sundarbans. Rahman's identity card and school certificate—verified by The Post—show he was born in Ahmedabad. 'You want a whole group to disappear,' said Rudabeh Shahid, a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council. 'I have no other ways to describe this.' Night-time deportations across land borders India is also deporting detainees on foot. According to Lt. Col. Mehedee Imam, a Bangladeshi border guard commander, Indian forces switch off floodlights and quietly force people into the no-man's-land at night. 'It is unlawful,' Imam said. 'There is a process in place to verify nationality.' A video shows one woman sobbing in a blue sari, begging not to be abandoned: 'I have only one life.' She was briefly readmitted to India, but has since vanished. Her son Abdul Suban said, 'I don't even know if she is alive. How does this happen?'


Express Tribune
16 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Bodies of nine slain passengers sent home
Mourners in Multan carry the coffin of a victim of the latest terrorist carnage in Balochistan to graveyard. PHOTO: ONLINE Listen to article The bodies of nine passengers martyred in a terrorist attack in the Sardhaka area overnight were sent to their hometowns in Punjab for burial on Friday, as the provincial government expanded the scope of law-enforcement agencies (LEAs) to launch decisive actions against the perpetrators. Those slaughtered in the late-night terrorist attack belonged to the Lahore, Gujrat, Khanewal, Gujranwala, Lodhran, Dera Ghazi Khan, Muzaffargarh, and Attock districts. They included two brothers Jabbar and Usman from Dunyapur. Balochistan government spokesperson Shahid Rind said that Fitna al Hindustan, a term used for Indian-backed terrorist organisations in Balochistan, had carried out attacks at three different places. The terrorist attack occurred near the boundary between the Zhob and Loralai districts. The bodies were brought to Zhob, where they were received by Deputy Commissioner Usman Khalid and Border Military Police Commandant Asad Khan Chandia. The victims, who were travelling from Quetta to Lahore, were identified as Muhammad Irfan, Dera Ghazi Khan; Sabir Hussain, Gujranwala; Muhammad Asif, Chowk Qureshi; Ghulam Saeed, Khanewal; Muhammad Junaid, Lahore; Muhammad Bilal, Attock; Bilawal, Gujrat and Jabbar and Usman, Dunyapur. The funeral prayers for brothers Jabbar Toor and Usman Toor were held at Government Boys High School, Dunyapur in the Lodhran district. Relatives said that the victims were traveling to attend the funeral of their father. Meanwhile, Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti ordered the law-enforcement agencies to launch an immediate and decisive action against those involved in the Sardhaka massacre, authorising them to act beyond the "usual limits of the levies and police jurisdictions, if required". The chief minister chaired a security meeting in the provincial capital to review the law and order situation in the province, and received a briefing from the Balochistan inspector general of police on the Sardhaka incident and the updates on the ongoing investigation and security operations in the area. "The pursuit of these terrorists will continue until they are brought to justice. There will be no compromise on enforcing the law in Balochistan," the chief minister said, adding that security forces have been authorised to act beyond the usual limits of levies and police jurisdictions. 'Barbaric act' President Asif Ali Zardari described the killing of passengers as a "barbaric act" and said that it was part of Fitna al-Hindustan's broader conspiracy to destabilise Pakistan. He reaffirmed the state's commitment to purge the country of Fitna al-Hindustan and their facilitators at all costs. Similarly, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned Sardhaka massacre, terming it "blatant terrorism". He asserted that the perpetrators would be dealt with through full state force. "The blood of innocent people will be avenged," he said, blaming India for supporting such acts against unarmed civilians. Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi denounced the killings as "cowardly barbarism" by "Indian?sponsored terrorists and their local facilitators", vowing nationwide pursuit and punishment of the perpetrators. He reaffirmed the state's commitment to thwart all plots against national peace and integrity. (WITH INPUT FROM APP)