
Hindu temple defaced with racist graffiti in Melbourne's Boronia
Shree Swaminarayan Temple on Wadhurst Drive, Melbourne's eastern suburb of Boronia, was defaced with red-painted racist slurs on Monday morning, the Australia Today web portal reported.
Two restaurants located further on Boronia Road were painted with the same slurs on the same day, it added.
Victoria Police confirmed the incident, saying that 'There is absolutely no place at all in our society for hate-based and racist behaviour', the report said.
Shocked with the incident, President of the Hindu Council of Australia, Victoria chapter, Makrand Bhagwat, said it "feels like an attack on our identity, our right to worship and freedom of religion," the web portal reported.
Victoria's Premier Jacinta Allan, in a private message to temple management, called the attack "hateful" and "racist", the report said.
'What happened this week was hateful, racist and deeply disturbing. It wasn't just vandalism – it was a deliberate act of hate, designed to intimidate, isolate, and spread fear," the report quoted from Jacinta's message.
Meanwhile, the Hindu Community urged support from interfaith groups following the incident.
The attack hints at the worrying rise in targeted hate incidents across Melbourne, the report said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
4 minutes ago
- Business Standard
'Asia must open up': ADB president says world won't return to pre-Trump era
Asian economies must embrace openness and reform like never before, Masato Kanda, president of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in an interview with Nikkei. The former Japanese currency chief took charge of the Manila-headquartered multilateral lender in February, shortly after Donald Trump returned to the White House for a second term—an event Kanda described as having 'completely changed the world'. Since taking office, Kanda has held discussions with leaders including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chinese Premier Li Qiang, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. 'Those leaders all agree that we must use this crisis as an opportunity for reform to build more resilient domestic and regional economies,' he said. 'There will never be a return to a world before Trump,' Kanda said, stressing that Asian economies must diversify away from over-reliance on the US market and global supply chains. 'Strengthening the domestic markets of Asian countries and regions is an important task.' $10 billion investment in Asean grid, Indian metros To support regional resilience and integration, the ADB has pledged up to $10 billion for the Asean Power Grid—an initiative aimed at enhancing cross-border electricity connectivity and energy security in Southeast Asia. Kanda also confirmed the bank's proposal to invest another $10 billion in urban infrastructure projects across India, including metro systems. 'You don't see such a project at that scale in other regions,' he noted, citing India's demographic dividend and its rising role as a regional investment hub. Beyond 'China plus one' While global supply chains have already begun shifting away from China, Kanda cautioned that Southeast Asia, previously buoyed by the 'China Plus One' strategy, is now itself vulnerable, particularly under the weight of fresh US trade barriers. 'The concept still holds, but it must evolve,' he said. 'Diversification must extend beyond final goods markets to include raw material sources and intermediate suppliers.' Asia must not turn inward: ADB president Kanda warned that in the face of growing protectionism in the West, Asia cannot afford to become inward-looking. He urged countries in the region to deepen trade integration not just within Asia but with Europe as well. Speaking on the sidelines of the ADB's annual meeting in Italy earlier this year, Kanda said European leaders had expressed strong interest in strengthening economic ties with Asia, which they view as the world's primary growth engine. 'Reform momentum is building across Asia,' he said, highlighting efforts by regional leaders to dismantle structural barriers such as land-use restrictions and capital controls. 'They understand that survival cannot come from relying on gimmicks.' Kanda also called for prudent macroeconomic policies, warning that without sustainable public finances and a normalised monetary stance, governments may lack the flexibility to respond to future crises. US relations and China lending Despite political changes in Washington, the ADB maintains what Kanda described as a "constructive relationship" with the United States. He pointed to the bank's ability to increase lending by 50 per cent since 2009 without expanding its capital base, calling it an efficient use of donor funds. On US pressure to halt lending to China, Kanda said discussions were ongoing among shareholders. Current ADB loans to China have declined sharply and are now focused on global public goods such as environmental sustainability and biodiversity. ADB trims India forecast amid US tariff pressure The ADB's latest Asian Development Outlook, released last week, revised India's GDP growth forecast for the financial year 2025–26 (FY26) down to 6.5 per cent from the previous 6.7 per cent, citing the impact of US tariff policy and broader global slowdown. Despite this downward revision, the ADB noted that India remains one of the fastest-growing major economies globally. 'This revision is primarily due to the impact of US baseline tariffs and associated policy uncertainty,' the report said. It warned that beyond lower export demand, investment flows may also be affected by heightened uncertainty. Inflation forecasts have also been revised downward to 3.8 per cent for FY26, following a faster-than-expected decline in food prices.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
‘When Ravan crossed…': Op Sindoor debate in Lok Sabha today, parliamentary affairs minister invokes Ramayan
Ahead of the debate on Operation Sindoor in Parliament, minister Kiren Rijiju on Monday invoked the Hindu epic Ramayana to describe the Indian action on Pakistan. Union minister Kiren Rijiju at a function in New Delhi, Saturday, July 26.(PTI) 'When Ravan crossed the Laxman Rekha, Lanka burned. When Pakistan crossed the red lines drawn by India, terrorist camps faced the fire!' Rijiju, the minister for parliamentary affairs, posted on X. The BJP leader's post came just about two hours before India's military response to the Pahalgam terror attack, Operation Sindoor, was set to come up for a debate in the Lok Sabha during the ongoing monsoon session. With it, he posted a song, in Kailash Kher's voice, with lyrics saying the operation was for India's 'aan, baan, swabhimaan' (dignity, pride, self-respect). The one-minute clip begins with a line by PM Narendra Modi in Hindi, dedicating Operation Sindoor to 'every mother, sister and daughter of the country'. Also read | NCERT to unveil two special modules on Operation Sindoor Sixteen hours have been earmarked for the special debate in the Lok Sabha on Monday. The Rajya Sabha will have a debate for a similar duration on Tuesday, July 29. Live | Parliament monsoon session: Debate on Operation Sindoor The Opposition had been seeking this debate — even a special session of Parliament — on the operation, and the diplomacy around it, ever since the military action took place in May. It was a response to a terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam on April 22 that claimed 26 lives, mostly of them. While the opposition has underlined its 'full support to the operation in national interest', pointed questions have been asked about US President Donald Trump's repeated claims that he got the ceasefire done — 'stopped a potential nuclear war' — by using trade as a stick for both India and Pakistan. Indian officials have maintained that the country does not take decisions on foreign cues. The debate was agreed to after the monsoon session, which began on July 21, saw a week of disruptions by the Congress and other opposition parties. Now, key leaders from both the ruling NDA led by the BJP and the Opposition are set to participate. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh is likely to open the debate in the Lok Sabha. Union home minister Amit Shah, external affairs minister S Jaishankar, and BJP MPs Anurag Thakur and Nishikant Dubey are also expected to speak, PTI said. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is likely to intervene in the Lok Sabha debate and may do the same in the Rajya Sabha as well.


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
Forget Ghaziabad's fake embassy, you can even build a country of your own
A fake embassy in a rented Ghaziabad bungalow shocked many. But what's even wilder? People out there have actually built their own countries, and Nithyananda's so-called Kailasa is just one Uttar Pradesh Special Task Force recently busted Harsh Vardhan Jain for operating "embassies" of made-up nations like West Arctica, Saborga, Poulvia, and Ladonia, all from a two-storey house. For years, the 47-year-old operated with impunity, drove around in luxury cars bearing diplomatic plates, and introduced himself as 'Baron of Westarctica'.advertisementHe made 162 trips abroad over a decade and may have links to a Rs 300-crore financial scam, an ongoing probe by the Uttar Pradesh Special Task Force (STF) has revealed. The two-storey Ghaziabad bungalow Jain operated from flew flags of foreign this isn't the first time people have tried playing with the fact, some have taken the idea much further, creating flags, passports, constitutions, and entire national identities, even if no one takes them DO YOU MAKE A COUNTRY, ANYWAY?Declaring yourself independent is the easy part. Actually becoming a country? That's a much trickier one: claim some land. That could mean seceding from an existing country, buying a patch of unclaimed territory, or building your own artificial comes the paperwork, drafting a constitution, forming a government, picking a flag and anthem, and declaring international recognition is the real the Montevideo Convention, a state needs four things: defined territory, a permanent population, a functioning government, and the ability to engage in then, unless real countries recognise you, especially via the UN, you're basically just roleplaying with a national OF DIY NATIONS: NITHYANDA'S KAILASATake the case of Nithyananda, the fugitive rape-accused Godman who fled the country in 2019 after facing multiple criminal charges. Soon after, he resurfaced, claiming he'd founded a new nation: United State of called it the world's only Hindu nation and a haven for persecuted Hindus. His followers claimed the land was purchased near Ecuador, though no one's quite sure where it actually quickly issued a denial, clarifying that no such country exists on or near its didn't stop Nithyananda. Kailasa today has websites, social media handles, "diplomatic missions," and claims to issue its own passports and currency (called the "Kailashian dollar"). It even boasts a central bank and February 2023, Kailasa grabbed attention when an aide of Nithyananda, Vijayapriya Nithyananda attended a meeting in the Geneva office of the United than Vijayapriya, five other women from the "virtual country Kailasa" participated in this UN programme in claims that Kailasa has opened its embassies and NGOs in several countries of the Yes. Recognised? Not at DIY NATIONS WHICH TRIEDNithyananda isn't alone. Around the world, self-declared micronations keep popping up, some bizarre, others oddly Sealand, a WWII-era British military platform in the North Sea that was occupied in 1967 by Paddy Roy Bates. He declared it a country, gave it a flag, a constitution, and even issued passports. But to this day, no one recognises Sealand as a sovereign consider Liberland, launched in 2015 by Czech politician Vt Jedlika on a disputed strip of land between Croatia and called it a libertarian dreamland, claiming it was terra nullius, land belonging to no one. It got media hype and thousands of would-be "citizens" online. But legally? It's still also the Grand Duchy of Flandrensis, born in 2008 when a Belgian man claimed parts of Antarctica, not to conquer, but to protect. With its motto "No humans, only nature," it issues symbolic passports and has hundreds of citizens, all united by climate Hutt River, a wheat farm in Australia that declared independence in 1970 after a quota dispute. Its ruler styled himself "Prince Leonard", ran it like a monarchy, and even declared war on Australia lasted 50 years before shutting down in HEMINGWAY'S BROTHER AND NEW ATLANTISAnd then came New Atlantis, a bamboo raft anchored off Jamaica in the 1960s by Leicester Hemingway, Ernest Hemingway's floated his bamboo-raft republic off the coast of Jamaica on July 4, 1964. He raised a flag, an upside-down yellow triangle on a blue background."To alleviate diplomatic tensions, he insisted that his 6-by-12-foot floating nation would be 'a peaceful power and would pose no threat to Jamaica'," according to The Smithsonian declared it a country to promote marine research. A storm wiped out New Atlantis in 1966, but not before it made add to the problems of micronations, if there is any land conflict, other nations can even declare wars. Nation-making is no easy Line?Having a fake embassy, without swindling others, is an easy task. Starting a country might sound like a wild fantasy but it can be a reality on paper or online. You can claim land, write a constitution, and raise your flag. But unless the world agrees, it is not exactly reality.- EndsTrending Reel