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JMM slams Modi's 11-year tenure, says India's global image has weakened
JMM slams Modi's 11-year tenure, says India's global image has weakened

India Gazette

time10-06-2025

  • Business
  • India Gazette

JMM slams Modi's 11-year tenure, says India's global image has weakened

Ranchi (Jharkhand) [India], June 10 (ANI): The Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) on Tuesday launched a scathing attack on the Narendra Modi-led government, alleging that the last 11 years of his leadership have seen '111 failures' that have pushed the country backwards. The party claimed that India's diplomatic standing has deteriorated. Addressing a press conference, JMM General Secretary Supriyo Bhattacharya said, 'Modiji has spent crores of rupees on his abroad trips and even after Pahalgam Attacks only Israel stood with us while everyone else did not take our side. The US President claims to ensure a ceasefire between India and Pakistan while the BJP is taking about nationalism. Where are the four militants who executed the Pahalgam incident?' Bhattacharya also took a jibe at India's global positioning, claiming the country now needs to 'give an application' to be invited to the upcoming G7 summit in Canada. On the domestic front, the JMM leader raised concerns over inflation, unemployment, and what he alleged was the misuse of institutions. 'Before 2014, MSMEs contributed 16 per cent to the GDP. Today, it's barely 7 per cent --the sector is nearly dead. The BJP had promised two crore jobs, but jobs were taken away.' He also rejected Union Minister Smriti Irani's claims that the last 11 years were focused on the welfare of the poor and women empowerment. 'The BJP claims that 25 crore people have been lifted from poverty but they are one who are providing foodgrains to 80 crore prices were Rs 28,000 per 10 grams in 2014 which has now increased to Rs 98,000 while the price of one dollar has increased from Rs 60 to 90,' he said. The JMM also questioned the construction of the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya. 'Even the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya has been constructed on orders of the Supreme Court and that too 12 kilometres away from where Ram Lalla was originally placed... the Ram Mandir has been constructed on orders of the Supreme Court and that too 12 kilometres away from where Ram Lalla was originally placed,' he said. The remarks come as the BJP marks 11 years of Narendra Modi's leadership. PM Modi assumed office on May 26, 2014, and was sworn in for a third consecutive term on June 9, 2024. Earlier, BJP leader Smriti Irani told ANI, '11 years of good governance were dedicated to the welfare of the poor, welfare of agriculture, and women empowerment. BJP workers, with a happy heart, heartily express their gratitude towards PM Narendra Modi... In the democratic history of our country, PM Narendra Modi has worked for the welfare of the country via various schemes... We pray for his strong leadership to continue...' (ANI)

For peace with India — and its own future — Pakistan needs moderate rulers
For peace with India — and its own future — Pakistan needs moderate rulers

Indian Express

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

For peace with India — and its own future — Pakistan needs moderate rulers

As I wrote nearly a decade ago, and as the Subcontinent moves on from another round of bloodshed and brinkmanship, it is time to confront a hard truth: Lasting peace with Pakistan's military establishment was always a mirage. Last week's escalations were not an aberration, but the logical outcome of two ideologies at odds with each other. In the language of international relations, countries are often described as 'status quo' or 'revisionist' powers. A status quo power is content with its borders and seeks stability and growth, not territorial expansion. India fits this description. We have no desire for anyone else's land or resources. Our ambition is simple: To build a prosperous, modern nation and to be a force for good in the world (vishwaguru). If we could trust that peace with Pakistan was genuine, we would gladly embrace it and move forward. But Pakistan, since its inception, has been a revisionist power — one that seeks to alter its region. The military and religious elite in Islamabad have long pursued two goals: First, to 'liberate' parts of India and create an Islamic state for India's Muslims (regardless of whether they want it or not); and second, to block India's rise, clinging to the parity that existed in 1947. For them, a secular, thriving India is a threat that cannot be tolerated as it calls into question the very reason for Pakistan's creation. This was very clear in Army Chief Asif Munir's incendiary speech a week before the Pahalgam Attacks where he parroted the defunct Two-Nation Theory and insisted that Hindus and Muslims cannot coexist (can you imagine the furore if any other world leader said that?). Let's be clear. When I say 'Pakistan', I mean the entrenched military leadership and the highly fundamentalist Deobandi religious establishment. This alliance has ruled Pakistan since independence, keeping it both religiously extreme and militarily aggressive. This suits the military by giving it a reason to stay in power and enrich itself and this suits the clerics as they get to espouse their hateful creed. Many ordinary Pakistanis — business leaders, intellectuals, moderate Muslim denominations — would welcome a lasting peace and the prosperity it could bring. But they do not hold power. The military-mullah axis does, and it has crushed every challenge to its authority with a mix of religious propaganda or brute force. So where does that leave us? If India is to fulfil its destiny, we must either neutralise the threat next door or live in a state of constant vigilance. The dilemma is real: How do we deal with a neighbour that believes its god-ordained duty is to undermine us? The long-term answer is not endless confrontation but transformation. Pakistan must become a status quo power. That will only happen when moderates, not militarists and extremists, hold sway in Islamabad. This shift could come through a popular uprising or, more likely, an internal coup by those who see peace and prosperity as Pakistan's true path forward. But for such a change to occur, the current establishment must suffer a defeat so decisive that the rest of Pakistan recognises the futility of their old ambitions. To do this, India now has the opportunity. The old Pakistani establishment is tottering. The gamble at Pahalgam was the act of an army desperate to keep itself relevant. Imran Khan's ouster has turned popular opinion against the military. Balochistan's insurgency has made almost half the landmass of Pakistan ungovernable, the Pashtuns are in open revolt aided by Afghanistan. Today's India has a technological, military, and economic advantage that is overwhelming, as was clearly displayed last week. And, most importantly, the old apologists for Pakistan in the West, and its patron China are fed up and quiet. We must use this to deliver the blows that show regular Pakistanis the self-harm their leaders cause and end the grip the current regime has on Pakistan's levers of power. The battle for Pakistan's soul is not one we sought, but it is one we cannot ignore. Our government and security establishment know it cannot afford to wait for goodwill gestures, hollow promises, mediation, or such half measures. It knows we have to leverage our strengths and force a reckoning in Islamabad. We must make it clear that there is no reward for revisionism, only isolation and decline. The choice for Pakistan's rulers must be made simple: Change course, or be left behind as India strides confidently into the future. Last week's actions were a strong step in the right direction. But we must be under no illusions that while an important battle was won, the larger war goes on. We must continue to stand united, bear any pain we need to, ignore any 'liberal' Western criticism and be ready for this kind of decisive action again and again until Pakistan changes. We owe this to the innocent victims of terror, from 26/11 till today. We owe it to our brave armed forces, and most of all, we owe it to our children. The writer is an educator, political commentator, philanthropist and businessman with degrees from the Wharton School of Business, INSEAD, and Johns Hopkins University

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