
India safe from Strait of Hormuz closure due to diversified oil imports, says Hardeep Singh Puri
Live Events
As tensions escalate in the Middle East and Iran progresses towards closing the Strait of Hormuz , Union Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Sunday assured citizens that India's energy supply remains stable, citing significant diversification of oil import routes in recent years.'We have diversified our supplies in the past few years and a large volume of our supplies do not come through the Strait of Hormuz now,' Puri said in a statement posted on social media platform X.The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, is a vital artery for trade as it accounts for nearly 30% of global oil and one third of the world's LNG shipments."Our Oil Marketing Companies have supplies of several weeks and continue to receive energy supplies from several routes. We will take all necessary steps to ensure stability of supplies of fuel to our citizens," the union minister added in his post.Moreover, Puri informed that India has been closely monitoring the evolving situation between Iran and Israel over the past two weeks. "We have been closely monitoring the evolving geopolitical situation in the Middle East since the past two weeks."According to media reports, the Iranian Parliament on Sunday approved the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after the US' Operation Midnight Hammer strikes on three of the country's major nuclear facilities.However, a final decision of the suspension of movement in the critical trade route is awaiting a go-ahead from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.Experts have warned that the decision might strike a severe blow to the global oil supply at a fragile time when the world economy is embroiled in multiple warfronts.
Hashtags

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


NDTV
36 minutes ago
- NDTV
Iran's Attack On Qatar Air Base Hit Geodesic Dome Used For US Communications
Dubai, United Arab Emirates: An Iranian attack on an air base in Qatar that's key to the US military hit a geodesic dome housing equipment used by the Americans for secure communications, satellite images analysed Friday by The Associated Press show. Hours after the publication of this AP report, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell acknowledged that an Iranian ballistic missile had hit the dome. Qatar did not respond to requests for comment about the damage. The Iranian attack on Al Udeid Air Base outside of Doha, Qatar's capital, on June 23 came as a response to the American bombing of three nuclear sites in Iran - and provided the Islamic Republic a way to retaliate that quickly led to a ceasefire brokered by US President Donald Trump ending the 12-day Iran-Israel war. The Iranian attack otherwise did little damage - likely because of the fact that the US evacuated its aircraft from the base, which is home to the forward headquarters of the U.S. military's Central Command, before the attack. Trump also has said that Iran signaled when and how it would retaliate, allowing American and Qatari air defense to be ready for the attack, which briefly disrupted air travel in the Middle East, but otherwise didn't tip over into the regional war long feared by analysts. Images show burn marks, dome gone after attack Satellite images from Planet Labs PBC show the geodesic dome visible at the Al Udeid Air Base on the morning of June 23, just hours before the attack. The US Air Force's 379th Air Expeditionary Wing, which operates out of the base, announced in 2016 the installation of the $15 million piece of equipment, known as a modernized enterprise terminal. Photos show a satellite dish inside of the dome, known as a radome. Images taken June 25 and every day subsequently show the dome is gone, with some damage visible on a nearby building. The rest of the base appears largely untouched in the images. In a statement, Parnell said the missile strike "did minimal damage to equipment and structures on the base." "Al Udeid Air Base remains fully operational and capable of conducting its mission, alongside our Qatari partners, to provide security and stability in the region," he added. The London-based satellite news channel Iran International first reported on the damage, citing satellite photos taken by a different provider. Trump downplayed attack while Iran boasted about it In the US, Trump described the Iranian attack as a "very weak response." He had said that Tehran fired 14 missiles, with 13 intercepted and one being "set free" as it was going in a "nonthreatening" direction. "I want to thank Iran for giving us early notice, which made it possible for no lives to be lost, and nobody to be injured," he wrote on his website Truth Social. The White House had no immediate comment after Parnell's acknowledgment Friday. Trump visited Al Udeid Air Base on May 15 as part of his Mideast tour. After the attack, Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard insisted that the air base had been the "target of a destructive and powerful missile attack." Iran's Supreme National Security Council also said that the base had been "smashed," without offering any specific damage assessments. Potentially signaling that he knew the dome had been hit, an adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei separately said that the base's communications had been disconnected by the attack. "All equipment of the base was completely destroyed and now the US command stream and connection from Al Udeid base to its other military bases have been completely cut," said Ahmad Alamolhoda, a hard-line cleric.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
Andhra to unveil policy to tackle declining fertility, says CM Naidu
CM Naidu recalled his earlier efforts promoting family planning and noted that today's demographic trends call for a shift in focus from control to management of population growth Press Trust of India Amaravati Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu has said that the state government will soon unveil a new policy framework to address declining fertility rates and demographic imbalance. Speaking at the Amaravati Summit on World Population Day on Friday, Naidu emphasised that population should be treated as the state's greatest economic strength, not a burden. "Population is the nation's strongest economic asset. A robust policy on population growth will be introduced soon," said Naidu, addressing the summit. He observed that rising expenses are deterring young couples from having children, while Parliament seats may increase in the future, southern states could see reduced representation. The CM recalled his earlier efforts promoting family planning and noted that today's demographic trends call for a shift in focus from control to management of population growth. "Before 2004, as CM, I incentivised family planning. We even brought a law disqualifying those with more than two children from contesting local body elections," said Naidu. He further said that today, there's a need to amend the law to allow those with more than two children to contest, adding that a nation is not just about its land, regions, towns, or borders, it is about its people. Naidu said that while developed nations struggle with aging populations, India's youth advantage remains intact, though not guaranteed unless corrective policies are adopted quickly. "Our youth population is shrinking while elderly numbers grow. To avoid a human resource crisis, we must encourage larger families," said Naidu, addressing the summit. Naidu launched a survey seeking public input on population policy, declaring, "Your voice is our policy guide," and stressing the importance of aligning welfare with people's preferences. He expressed concern that while the global population is increasing, birth rates are declining, and the youth population is shrinking while the elderly population is increasing. Naidu noted that nations like Japan, Hungary, and Singapore now offer cash, tax exemptions and housing benefits to families with more children. He pointed out that the southern state's fertility rate stands at 1.7, well below the replacement rate of 2.1, underscoring the urgency of reversing this trend. Naidu also cited concerns over the fading of joint family systems, rising cost of living, and the changing outlook of youth, saying such factors must shape future family-centric policies. Mentioning his recent visit to Kuppam, he shared an anecdote of a three-generation household as a model for societal stability and economic resilience. Stressing gender equality, he said TDP governments have historically empowered women by giving from the gas cylinder scheme to property rights and representation in colleges and transport services. Naidu maintained that India's population advantage will hold only until 2047, urging policymakers to treat human capital as a long-term resource and not a short-term liability. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
an hour ago
- First Post
Maldives: Is a reunified MDP a threat to President Muizzu's second-term ambitions?
The main challenge to Mohamed Muizzu's bid for a second term as Maldivian president comes from a re-unified Maldivian Democratic Party, which has set aside internal divisions down to the grassroots level and is actively re-engaging neutral and swing voters read more The fast-tracked reunification of the Opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP), the first pro-democracy electoral entity in the country, has opened both opportunities and challenges. The 'opportunities' flow from the previous presidential poll tally of 2023, when incumbent Ibrahim 'Ibu' Solih of the MDP lost his re-election bid by around eight per cent vote-share. The margin was close to the votes polled by the candidate of the breakaway Democrats party, floated by Solih's estranged friend and the nation's first pro-democracy president, Mohammed 'Anni' Nasheed. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The challenge is in the form of the re-unified party burying past differences down to the cadre level and also re-energising neutral/swing voters. The latter have made a difference to the outcome by choosing a new president every five years since the nation became a multi-party democracy in 2008. Their indifference showed in 2023, in the form of a relatively lower turnout compared to the 90-plus per cent in the past. If critics are to be believed, closer to completing two years in office in November, incumbent President Mohamed Muizzu has used the constitutional process to 'stifle democracy', as his political mentor and former President Abdulla Yameen had allegedly attempted but failed in his re-election bid in 2018. The hurried passage of an anti-defection law even when his ruling People's National Congress (PNC) held a 'super majority' in the 93-member Parliament, or the People's Majlis, coupled with the last-minute suspension of three of the seven Justices of the Supreme Court hearing a constitutional challenge to the law, forcing the resignation of one of them and the subsequent sacking of the other two without a fair hearing, are cited as examples to Muizzu's anti-democracy acts. In part, the name of the game is 'packing' the higher judiciary with 'pliable judges', and no president before incumbent Muizzu can escape the charge. But they did not initiate an anti-defection law, which did face initial reservations, however limited, from within the ruling PNC, too. Incidentally, this is the second such law in the past decade, Parliament having repealed the earlier one passed during the Yameen presidency—after he lost his re-election bid in 2018. Democracy issues, thus, coupled with the economic crisis that is said to be engulfing the nation and the government, are the planks on which the MDP now hopes to hit the track for the next presidential outing that is still three years down the line, in 2028. In different ways, the long wait is also a problem for the re-unified MDP as much as it is for the government and the Muizzu leadership. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Already, former President Solih, who is yet to declare his intent on contesting the party primaries for the next presidential poll, has called for the MDP to prioritise the nationwide island council elections, (due) next March/April, over the presidential poll. Independent of the complex interpretation of the outcomes as in the past, the island council polls will still be seen as a midterm referendum on the Muizzu presidency. It will also test the acceptance level of MDP reunification and also Nasheed's famed charisma that failed him the last time round. Internal issue An internal issue may be brewing for the MDP in the form of party chairman Fayyaz Ismail's announcement that they intended abolishing the post of party president—or merge both—at the party's national congress in August. Solih's foreign minister and veteran diplomat, Abdulla Shahid, the only Maldivian to be elected president of the UN General Assembly (UNGA), is at present the party president nominated by predecessor Solih—without any formal election. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Of greater interest is Fayyaz Ismail's announcement that no party official should hold an elected or nominated position in the government, including the presidency, ministerial office, or Parliament membership. Both prior to the advent of democracy in 2008 and afterwards, every person elected president has held the headship of the ruling party—with no space for dissent and internal democracy, either in the government or in the ruling organisation. The problem became acute when, during the Solih presidency, Nasheed continued as the MDP chief and also became Parliament Speaker until he quit to form the Democrats party. Both Solih and Shahid have reserved their comments on the proposed amendments to the party constitution even though they joined Fayyaz Ismail in welcoming reunification and also Nasheed back to the fold. Definitely, Nasheed's return home from his overseas job, heading an international climate group, has re-energised party politics in the country. By the same token, it has also brought out the simmering differences within the MDP more than since the party lost power in 2023. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD For instance, Solih's first major rally in two years, in northern Kulhudhuffushi recently, was a solo performance. Neither party chairman Fayyaz nor president Shahid was present. Both, incidentally, were Solih's blue-eyed boys when he was president. In fact, after Solih's defeat in 2023, open accusations were hurled at Fayyaz from within the party for messing up both organisational affairs and as minister for economic development. The MDP cadre expectation is that it is for Muizzu to lose owing to perceptions of his becoming unpopular already. Hence, whoever the MDP selects as its presidential candidate will (have to) win, no matter his charisma and capabilities. For now, the hopes are that all four factions would work together once the party elects a presidential candidate through the primaries in early 2028. However, there are apprehensions that the three or four factions, including that of Nasheed, may run a deep divide down the line during primaries for the selection of nominees for the island councils across the country. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The question is if the faction leaders would patch up their differences for the time and postpone it until after the local council primaries and elections and have consensus candidates of some kind for those positions. This alone, it is said, can ensure a decent result for the MDP in the local council elections—where the ruling party, according to precedents, has held an inherent advantage. Incidentally, Solih's first major rally in two years, at northern Kulhudhuffushi, had to be indefinitely postponed following heavy rains. The rains and high winds also disrupted leaders and cadres travelling from the capital, Male. Fayyaz and Shahid were said to be on the list of travellers to the northern island. Advantage Muizzu, but… Unless otherwise proved and unless the divided Opposition is able to make out a very strong, multi-pronged case against the incumbent leadership, it may still be 'Advantage Muizzu', at least in the island council elections. He will then have to reaffirm his desire to seek re-election. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD For the MDP, it is not just about unity within the merged party. It also involves their ability to work with other, smaller/weaker political outfits with a certain electoral reach. It's an occasion also for Nasheed, personally, to try and regain his faded charisma. In focus is the traditional 40-plus per cent 'conservative vote bank' that Muizzu inherited without effort from Yameen after the Supreme Court upheld the Election Commission's decision to reject the latter's presidential nomination in 2023, citing a pending court-ordered conviction and sentence. As the 2018 results showed, despite the perceived anti-incumbency flowing from his five years in office, Yameen still retained almost all of that vote-bank despite losing his reelection bid. Solih, as the common Opposition candidate, has remained the only one thus far to win the presidency in the first round in what essentially is a two-phase poll otherwise. Those 'conservative votes' constituted the 2008 losing figure of half-brother Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, the controversial president for 30 long years, which he could effortlessly transfer to Yameen in Elections-2013, thus contributing to the latter's victory over Nasheed for the MDP. Gayoom lost the vote bank, which comprised socio-economic beneficiaries of his presidency and also religious conservatives as different from fundamentalists, after he shook hands with the MDP in the 2018 elections. That followed Gayoom's irreconcilable estrangement with Yameen, who also ordered his arrest and also those of two Supreme Court Justices, for allegedly plotting to overthrow him. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD There is nothing yet to show that much, if not all of that 'inherited vote-bank' of Muizzu has deserted him or is likely to desert him, be it in the island council polls or later in the presidential election, or both. Going by Gayoom's 2018 experience, any suggestion that Yameen loyalists still on Muizzu's side cross-vote for an MDP candidate, for instance, can be counter-productive. The incumbent, however, may face vote depletion if a powerful candidate from Yameen's new outfit, the People's National Front (PNF), or a strong rival from within Muizzu's PNP, or both, are able to slice away votes from Muizzu without possibly being able to win the presidential poll. That is pending Yameen's two court cases originating in his presidential years, on which final judicial outcomes are not ordinarily expected before nomination time for the next presidential poll, too—as was the case the last time round. In the final analysis, the coming months and years will hopefully witness a revival of Maldivian street interest in politics and elections that is still patently lacking—also owing to the economic downturn that in turn has hit every individual and household. Not very long ago, opposition rallies, as the pre-unification MDP's daily 'pro-democracy protests' in the capital, Male, failed miserably after a good start. In the multi-party democracy that Maldives has been since 2008, the youth constitute the single largest electoral constituency. Unlike the Muizzu presidency, earlier governments at least attempted to match youth aspirations and employability, including willingness to accept jobs on offer in the mainstay tourism sector, which otherwise attracts foreigners, leading to avoidable shortages of scarce forex, too. Indian consistency A section of the media in the two countries has since reported that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be visiting the country this year and will be the chief guest at Maldivian Independence Day, falling on 26 August. Certainly, it will mark a very welcome departure for both countries, and more especially for the Maldivian people and businesses after President Muizzu revised and recalibrated his 'India Out' poll campaign after taking certain unimaginative decisions and indefensible declarations in his early months in the office. India has always reiterated its consistent and considered position that it would work with the government that Maldivians elect and that New Delhi's help, assistance, and cooperation are addressed to the Maldivian people (through the agency of an elected government). Hence, there is less likelihood of Modi's visit, when it comes through, influencing domestic politics one way or the other, as some in Maldives may have concluded, imagined, or felt anxious about. In between, Maldivians, especially incumbent Muizzu, had to decide if they wanted to go ahead with his forgotten proposals for presidential poll reforms, which also included simultaneous elections to the presidency and Parliament, if only to deflect the nation's attention away from economic issues. MDP's Nasheed, for his part, and the party as a whole will have to decide if they still have the stomach for a parliamentary form of government with a figurehead president. It was over this issue that Nasheed had snapped ties with the parent party and Solih. Yet, at the end of the day, the question is if the reunited MDP is a threat to Muizzu's dream run for a second term. The answer is far away, as has always been the case with Maldivian presidential polls since democratisation in 2008—but the question has been thrown in far too early, with speculation running riot between now and the polling day. The writer is a Chennai-based Policy Analyst & Political Commentator. Email: sathiyam54@ Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.