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‘India & Maldives…importance of geography'

‘India & Maldives…importance of geography'

Time of India5 days ago
The writer is Director General of the Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses. Views are personal
Modi's state visit to Maldives on Friday, which will reaffirm the traditionally close and friendly relations between the two countries, stands out for several reasons. It's his first visit since Mohamed Muizzu became president in Nov 2023, and he'll be the guest of honour at the country's 60th independence day celebrations. This year also marks 60 years of India's diplomatic ties with Maldives.
Although Muizzu was associated with the socalled 'India Out' campaign before the presidential election, Maldives' official readout after his first meeting with Modi, on the sidelines of COP28 in Dubai in Dec 2023, expressed commitment to strengthening bilateral relations, economic cooperation and people-to-people contact. The two sides also agreed to set up a core group.
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BJP calls upon NDA MPs for show of strength in Operation Sindoor discussion
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In a move to show strength amid the ongoing monsoon session of Parliament, the Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP ) has called upon all the MPs of alliance parties that remain part of the larger National Democratic Alliance (NDA). The BJP requested that all NDA MPs be present at the Makar Dwar of the Parliament today at 10:00 AM. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Degree Technology PGDM Operations Management Leadership Digital Marketing Design Thinking MCA healthcare Artificial Intelligence Finance Data Science Data Science CXO Product Management MBA Data Analytics Public Policy Management Project Management Others Healthcare others Cybersecurity Skills you'll gain: Data-Driven Decision-Making Strategic Leadership and Transformation Global Business Acumen Comprehensive Business Expertise Duration: 2 Years University of Western Australia UWA Global MBA Starts on Jun 28, 2024 Get Details Lok Sabha is set to hold a special discussion on ' Operation Sindoor ', India's military response to the Pahalgam terror attack , on Monday. A fiery debate on the Pahalgam attack and Operation Sindoor is expected to unfold in Parliament, between top leaders from the ruling alliance and the Opposition. Lok Sabha List of Business for Monday states, "Special Discussion on India's strong, successful and decisive 'Operation Sindoor' in response to terrorist attack in Pahalgam". Live Events Twenty-six civilians were killed in the April 22 terror attack in Pahalgam in Jammu and Kashmir, after which India retaliated through precision strikes under Operation Sindoor, targeting terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK). Even since the monsoon session began on July 21, the Parliament has witnessed constant adjourments amid uproar over the demands of the opposition to push for a debate on issues of public importance, including the ghastly Pahalgam terror attack and the ongoing SIR exercise being carried out by the Election Commission in Bihar ahead of the upcoming assembly elections. The opposition has also demanded that PM Modi respond to the repeated claims made by US President Donald Trump of initiating a "ceasefire" between India and Pakistan following Operation Sindoor. The first week of the Monsoon session of Parliament was marked by major disruptions, including the surprise resignation of Jagdeep Dhankhar as Vice President. Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju stated that the debate on Operation Sindoor will be held for 16 hours in the Lok Sabha on July 28 and for 16 hours in the Rajya Sabha on July 29. "All issues cannot be discussed together... The opposition has raised several issues, like the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise in Bihar and others. We have told them that Operation Sindoor will be discussed first. We will decide which issues to discuss after that. Operation Sindoor will be debated for 16 hours in the Lok Sabha on Monday (July 28) and for 16 hours in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday (July 29)," Rijiju told reporters. Apart from this, the floor leaders of the INDIA bloc parties will meet on Monday at 10 am to discuss the strategy for the second week of the monsoon session, with the Lok Sabha slated to take up discussion on Operation Sindoor on Monday and the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday. Economic Times WhatsApp channel )

Operation Sindoor: Narendra Modi's Image Versus National Interest
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The Congress party led by Rahul Gandhi has been been raising tough questions around Operation Sindoor and sought a special session of parliament to discuss everything threadbare. Other opposition parties wanted the same. But then the cynical, coercive and manipulative template of politics is embedded in the regime's DNA. The opening of the parliament session was marked by the unprecedented resignation of vice-president Jagdeep Dhankhar. This was the distraction the BJP needed to create chaos and disrupt what might have been a relatively more orderly parliament session with the citizens eager to learn more about the critical issues of national interest such as Operation Sindoor and the stupendous claims by US president Donald Trump on India-Pakistan ceasefire linked to trade talks. 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The BJP's media ecosystem projected Modi as a warrior who will not spare Pakistan but the moment the ceasefire happened, Modi's picture was withdrawn and replaced with that of government spokesperson Vikram Misri who announced the ceasefire. This was undisguised manipulation. Similarly, people noticed how Modi used the opposition's cooperation to burnish his own image with his domestic constituency. Even before the opposition delegation had returned, external affairs minister S. Jaishankar was boasting at a public forum that Modi had achieved with the opposition parties what even Indira Gandhi couldn't have done in the 1970s. Thus everything is a personal image building exercise for Modi first, and then something else. One only hopes that Shashi Tharoor and Manish Tiwari have internalised this aspect of Modi's narcissism when they lend unqualified support to Operation Sindoor in "national interest." 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