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The great demographic heist: Illegal migration is rewriting India's future

The great demographic heist: Illegal migration is rewriting India's future

If India were a revolving door, it would be spinning so fast that even the ghost of Gandhi might pause for breath. On one side, the country's best and brightest are leaving with passports, visas, and resignation letters in hand. On the other, a steady stream of undocumented immigrants are arriving without papers, without plans.
India has the world's largest diaspora: over 35 million people. Each year, around 2.5 million Indians left the country in search of better air, better jobs, and better governance. Over 3,98,000 received official emigration clearances in 2023. Add students, startup founders, and HNW individuals relocating to Dubai condos and Canadian townhomes, and you begin to grasp the scale of the churn. Nearly 2,26,000 Indians renounced citizenship in 2022. This may seem small compared to India's 146.39 crore population, but their contribution to the economy is way disproportionate: a PRICE study says by 2030-31, the middle class and high-income segments would contribute nearly $2.7 trillion to incremental consumption. Imagine the loss from each citizen leaving town. What's causing this haemorrhage? Bad roads and worse governance. Draconian tax regimes. Courts that take decades to deliver verdicts. Public hospitals that function like holding pens. Police stations that intimidate the complainant. These emigrants aren't unpatriotic. They're just done waiting. Meanwhile illegal migration floods the informal labour market, driving down wages and increasing competition for welfare. Try questioning it, and you'll be branded as heartless, fascist, or worse.
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Indian students flagged difficulty in obtaining US student visa appointments: Govt
Indian students flagged difficulty in obtaining US student visa appointments: Govt

Indian Express

time11 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Indian students flagged difficulty in obtaining US student visa appointments: Govt

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Will Indians Return To Maldives? PM Modi's Visit May Open The Gates
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time39 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Will Indians Return To Maldives? PM Modi's Visit May Open The Gates

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Here's why: Bollywood's Love Affair When celebrities such as Kareena Kapoor Khan, Tiger Shroff, Alia Bhatt, and countless others began sharing glamorous photos from their Maldivian getaways, Indians took notice. Maldives became the backdrop for everything. In June 2025, Actor Katrina Kaif was also appointed as the global brand ambassador for 'Visit Maldives'. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Alia Bhatt 💛 (@aliaabhatt) The craze further rose when movies like Ek Villain, Ram Setu and Maine Pyaar Kyun Kiya, also starring Katrina Kaif, were shot in the Island. Instagram Influencers Followed Let's be honest, the Maldives looks fantastic on the 'gram. With water villas, infinity pools, coral reefs and drone-worthy panoramas, every photo screams wanderlust. Travel influencers and family relatives turned it into the ultimate backdrop for breathtaking photos, and soon it became the place to visit on everyone's bucket list. 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Rahul Gandhi spreading hatred through pre-planned actions, UP govt tells Supreme Court in Savarkar defamation case
Rahul Gandhi spreading hatred through pre-planned actions, UP govt tells Supreme Court in Savarkar defamation case

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

Rahul Gandhi spreading hatred through pre-planned actions, UP govt tells Supreme Court in Savarkar defamation case

NEW DELHI: The Uttar Pradesh government has told the Supreme Court that Congress leader Rahul Gandhi is deliberately spreading hatred through pre-planned actions, referring to his alleged remarks against freedom fighter Veer Savarkar during the Bharat Jodo Yatra in 2022. The government made this claim in an affidavit filed in response to Gandhi's Special Leave Petition (SLP), which seeks to quash a summons issued by a Lucknow lower court based on a criminal complaint by lawyer Nripendra Pandey. A two-judge bench of the top court, comprising Justice Dipankar Datta and Justice Manmohan, is scheduled to hear the matter. In its previous hearing on 25 April, the Supreme Court had stayed the Allahabad High Court's order refusing to quash the summons and had directed the UP government to file a response. The Yogi Adityanath-led government, in its affidavit, defended the summons and urged the court to dismiss Gandhi's appeal, stating, "All the allegations are supported by the investigation, which indicates deliberate spreading of hatred through pre-planned actions." The affidavit claimed that the magistrate had thoroughly reviewed the case file, statements, and investigation report before issuing the summoning order under Sections 153A (promoting enmity between groups) and 505 (statements conducive to public mischief) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

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