logo
Bengal guv hails PM Modi's visit, calls it a 'great day for Bengal to celebrate'

Bengal guv hails PM Modi's visit, calls it a 'great day for Bengal to celebrate'

Time of India29-05-2025
West Bengal Governor CV Ananda Bose on Thursday described Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to the state - to lay the foundation stone of a Rs 1,010-crore City Gas Distribution (CGD) project in
Alipurduar and Cooch Behar districts
- as a "great day for Bengal to celebrate."
Speaking to PTI, the Governor lauded the Prime Minister's "relentless efforts for an overall development of the nation, particularly Bengal."
"As far as development is concerned, the PM has been working tirelessly for the progress of the entire country, with a special focus on Bengal," he said.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Moose Approaches Girl At Bus Stop In Negros Oriental - Watch What Happens
Happy in Shape
Undo
Bose also noted the symbolic significance of the PM's visit coming in the backdrop of the success of 'Operation Sindoor', recently undertaken by Indian armed forces.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Spare The Sangh From Political Rhetoric': RSS Hits Back At Congress
‘Spare The Sangh From Political Rhetoric': RSS Hits Back At Congress

News18

time13 minutes ago

  • News18

‘Spare The Sangh From Political Rhetoric': RSS Hits Back At Congress

Last Updated: RSS's Sunil Ambekar reiterated that the Sangh's identity has always been of a social and cultural organisation, and it has always focused on 'nation-building' Reacting to the repeated attacks by the Congress—the latest coming from Karnataka minister Priyank Kharge —the RSS said the political parties should 'spare" the Sangh, as it has no interest in engaging with politically driven narratives. 'Spare the Sangh from such political conversations. We are a social organisation committed to constructive work, not political rhetoric. We do our work organically," said Sunil Ambekar, the RSS's Akhil Bharatiya Prachar Pramukh, asserting that an organisation like the Sangh should not be dragged into political controversies. He further reiterated that the Sangh's identity has always been of a social and cultural organisation, and it has always focused on 'nation-building". 'The RSS does not function like a political party and remains committed to its grassroots social work. People support the Sangh's work, and they get associated. Political parties should stop unnecessarily involving the Sangh in their discourse," he added. Centenary preparations A three-day Akhil Bharatiya Prant Pracharak Baithak of the RSS will be held from July 4-6 at Keshav Kunj in Delhi, with a key focus on preparations for the Shatabdi Varsh (Centenary Year) in 2025-26, Ambekar said, addressing the media. While not a decision-making forum, the meeting will review the progress of organisational work across prants (zones) and discuss the functioning of various karya vibhag (sections and zones). Issues related to Operation Sindoor, atrocities on Hindus in Bangladesh, and other geopolitical, social, and border issues, including religious conversion and Khalistani issues in Punjab, will be discussed in the meeting. Two prant pracharaks (in-charges) from Jammu and Kashmir will also join the meeting. Around 46 prant pracharaks from across states and 233 karyakartas will attend the meeting. Responding to a question on the caste census, Ambekar reiterated the Sangh's old stand that it sees no problem with the government collecting data if it is for public welfare. Regarding the recent concerns over the Kanwar Yatra and potential law-and-order issues, Ambekar said, 'Religious events like the Kanwar Yatra happen smoothly every year. Administrative coordination is routine. We also engage with members of the society to ensure peace and harmony." 'Outreach' as the key He further confirmed that extensive preparations are underway for the 100-year anniversary of the RSS, with all states and zones having submitted proposals. The centenary year will officially begin with a grand programme in Nagpur on Vijay Dashami, October 2. Regional and zonal programmes will follow along with 'Hindu Sammelan" across states. RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat will also undertake a pravas (outreach tour) of four major cities—Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai, and Kolkata—as part of the centenary outreach. Special initiatives include Grih Sampark Abhiyan (door-to-door contact), Samajik Sadbhav Baithaks (social harmony meetings), and Pramukh Nagrik Goshthis (citizen dialogues) on Hindutva and national vision. Youth engagement will be central, as over 28,571 people registered through the 'Join RSS" portal between April and June. Ambekar also outlined the Panch Parivartan vision for societal transformation—spanning social harmony, environmental consciousness, cultural pride, family bonding, and civic responsibility—which RSS volunteers will promote in collaboration with wider society. About the Author Madhuparna Das First Published: July 04, 2025, 05:12 IST

Tooling change
Tooling change

Time of India

time14 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Tooling change

Beijing's weaponisation of engineers must be countered through expansion of Indian engineering beyond IT In yet another example of China's weaponisation of economic interdependencies, Beijing has ordered the pullout of Chinese engineers working at iPhone manufacturer Foxconn's Indian factories. While their strength is less than 1% of Foxconn's employees at Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, they play crucial engineering roles. The move is clearly aimed at disrupting production at these factories and comes on top of Beijing delaying the delivery of critical machinery to Indian operations. This is plain economic bullying. China is using its manufacturing heft to undermine any moves by international players to relocate their production bases to third countries like India. With US & China locked in a strategic-economic tussle – notwithstanding recent attempts at trade war de-escalation – countries like India are getting squeezed. Vietnam just agreed to a trade deal with US that involves accepting 20% tariff on Vietnamese exports to US and an even higher 40% tariff on goods transshipped through the Southeast Asian nation – the latter aimed at stymieing Chinese exports to US via Vietnam. Thus, US is trying to leverage its market size to get concessions from its trading partners, while China is trying to leverage its manufacturing capacity to keep its trading partners locked into Chinese supply chains. But when China was admitted to WTO in 2001, the West and Beijing made an implicit deal: the former will focus on innovation and high-end manufacturing, leaving mid- to low-value manufacturing to the latter. China used this to deliver massive scale and achieve engineering expertise in a wide array of intermediaries and components. As a result, Chinese tooling engineers today are the best in the world. China also refines 90% of global rare earths. And when it comes to India, Chinese supply of APIs, electronic components, chemicals, magnets etc is gargantuan. To reduce this dependency, GOI's PLI schemes have shown promise. But more needs to be done to set up indigenous manufacturing supply chains. A closer look at technical education is imperative. India produces around 1.5mn engineers annually. But only 10% of this number were expected to secure jobs in 2024. Plus, according to some estimates, India produces around 600,000 IT engineers each year. Materials engineers, more relevant for industrial manufacturing, are only in few thousands. Unless this cohort of engineers is boosted through govt investments and policies in relevant sectors, India will continue to be vulnerable to Chinese bullying over supply of critical components and human resource. India must steadily build its technical expertise to expand its manufacturing base and emerge as an alternative to China. Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email This piece appeared as an editorial opinion in the print edition of The Times of India.

Gadkari launches road projects worth 4.6k crore in state
Gadkari launches road projects worth 4.6k crore in state

Time of India

time15 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Gadkari launches road projects worth 4.6k crore in state

1 2 3 Ranchi/Garhwa: Union minister of road transport and highways Nitin Gadkari laid foundation stones of three road projects worth Rs 1,700 crore and inaugurated seven road projects worth Rs 4,650 crore in the state on Thursday at two separate programmes held in Ranchi and Garhwa. Stating that the Centre is already working on projects worth Rs 2 lakh crore in Jharkhand, Gadkari said plans are afoot for additional projects worth Rs 1 lakh crore in the state. In Garhwa, Gadkari laid the foundation stone for Rs 1,330 crore four-lane project measuring 32 km from Chattisgarh-Jharkhand border to Gumla on NH-43. That apart, he inaugurated the Rs 1,130 crore four-lane Garhwa bypass road measuring 22.73 km on NH-75 under the Ranchi-Varanasi economic corridor. With the construction of the by-pass road from to Khajuri village (Garhwa district), the residents heaved a sigh of relief. The by-pass from Shankha village (Palamu district) to Khajuri village (Garhwa district) links about two dozen villages in Palamu and Garhwa. He also sanctioned Garhwa-Ambikapur four-lane road and few other projects worth around Rs 2,460 crore in Garhwa district. In Ranchi, too, he gave his approval to outer ring road project and widening of Ranchi-Muri Road. Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn IC Markets Đăng ký Undo by Taboola by Taboola Gadkari said national highway projects worth Rs 40,000 crore have already been completed in the state while projects worth Rs 70,000 crore are in various stages of implementation. "More projects worth Rs 75,000 crore are in the offing, under various stages," he said. Setting timelines for a few ongoing projects, he said that the Rs 36,000-crore Varanasi-Ranchi-Kolkata corridor will be over by March 2028. A six lane between Delhi-Kolkata estimated around Rs 31,700-crore will be completed by June 2026 and Ranchi-Patna four-lane economic corridor worth Rs 8,900 crore is eyeing December 2029 deadline. State finance minister Radhakrishana Kishore, who was present in Garhwa, cited how Garhwa and Palamu have stopped receiving security related expenditure (SRE) scheme owing to Naxal menace but has now stopped getting it. "Centre says that Naxal menace is now over in Garhwa and Palamu but I personally believe that it is contained only because of 196 police pickets. Remove those pickets, and you will realise how troublesome law and order is here again. Hence, we must continue to get those funds to address the challenges in this region," he said, adding that these regions are rain shadow area and needs special assistance to stop migration and further development projects. Gadkari advised the minister to get an official order passed from the govt and he will help in building over 1,000 ponds through NHAI free of cost like he did in Vidharbha (Maharashtra) to tide over water crisis in farm dominated areas.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store