US ready to do business with Modi if elected

February 14, 2014

Modi_electedWashington, Feb 14: Amid a mixed reaction to US Ambassador Nancy Powell's meeting with Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, the US reiterated its readiness to do business with whatever government emerges from India's May elections.

"I know that there's a lot of attention being paid to this one, but it really is part of our broader outreach," State Department spokesperson Marie Harf told reporters Thursday in a telephonic briefing in snowbound Washington.

"And we look forward to working closely with whatever government the Indian people choose in the upcoming elections," she said insisting that the Powell-Modi meeting Thursday was just part of a broader outreach to Indian politicians before the elections.

Asked "if that includes Mr. Modi himself," Harf repeated: "Whatever government is chosen."

Analysts see Powell's Thursday meeting with the Gujarat chief minister as a clear indication of the changing US stance towards Modi, whom it was treating as a political pariah since 2005 when it revoked his visa for his alleged complicity in 2002 Gujarat riots.

But Harf insisted that "in advance of the Indian national elections" Powell and the US Consul General "are engaging in comprehensive outreach across India to senior leaders in political parties, business organizations, and NGOs."

Since last November, she said, "Powell has been sharing and listening to views on the US-India relationship" and had "also reached out to the senior leadership in the Congress Party to engage in a similar discussion."

"So these meetings are really all part of the broader US mission's engagement with Indian politicians across the country and across the political spectrum, in keeping with the very comprehensive nature of our relationship," Harf said.

But Anish Goel, a senior South Asia fellow at the New America Foundation, said Powell's "meeting with Modi was a good initial step, but it is not nearly enough."

Noting that Modi may well emerge as the prime minister after the elections, he wrote in a Foreign Policy blog, "the United States now faces the prospect of being estranged from the most powerful person in India."

"As problematic as this situation has become, the United States has bigger troubles in its relations with India than Modi," wrote Goel, who previously served in the White House's National Security Council as senior director for South Asia.

"The political estrangement inexplicably extends to the whole of the BJP," he wrote."Over the past ten years, while the BJP has languished in the opposition, the United States has let its relationship with the party atrophy almost to the point of on-existence."

"The United States should remedy this situation as soon as possible to avoid any unwelcome surprises," Goel said suggesting the US government also "needs to reform its untenable visa position on Modi."

John Hudson, another Foreign Policy contributor, noted Powell's decision to "to meet with a popular but controversial Hindu nationalist politician" is "fuelling a war of words here at home between Muslim and anti-genocide groups on one side and an array of pro-India groups on the other."

"But in recent months, blackballing Modi became untenable given his status as the front-runner to become India's next prime minister," he wrote.

"For the State Department, a number of thorny issues remain," Hudson wrote. "Technically, it would not be difficult for Foggy Bottom to resolve Modi's travel status," he wrote, but "doing so risks inflaming the leader's vocal opponents in the US."

However, "given the importance of the economic ties between the two countries -- $100 billion worth of trade each year-it's unlikely that the State Department will let a decade-old dispute disrupt relations should Modi become the next prime minister," Hudson concluded.

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Agencies
June 4,2020

New Delhi, Jun 4: CSIR Director-General Shekhar Mande said on Thursday that the World Health Organisation's (WHO) decision to halt hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) drug trial was taken in haste and the global body should have actually analysed the data before making the decision.

"I firmly believe that WHO decision was taken in haste it was a kind of knee jerk reaction they should have actually analyse the data on their own before temporarily suspend the trials that is my personal opinion," Mande said.

India's nodal government agency ICMR (Indian Council of Medical Research) overseeing the country's response to the coronavirus pandemic last month wrote to the WHO citing differences in dosage standards between Indian and international trials that could explain the efficacy issues of HCQ in treating COVID-19 patients.

In addition, Dr Sheela Godbole, National Coordinator of the WHO-India Solidarity Trial and Head of the Division of Epidemiology, ICMR-National AIDS Research Institute also wrote a letter via an email to Dr Soumya Swaminathan, Chief Scientist at World Health Organisation.

In a letter, Dr Godbole stated: "There was no reason to suspend the trial for safety concern," attributing it to the current RECOVERY data which differs significantly from the non-randomised assessment by Mehra et al, a scientific paper.

Referring to the letter, the CSIR head said, "We don't know what actually happened behind the scenes but the hypothesis is that because of the paper published in Lancet. It is a very well known journal and if Lancet has done due vigilance in publishing the paper. 

Therefore, the WHO thought the paper's findings are right that's why WHO hold based on what is published on Lancet. The WHO shouldn't have accepted it immediately this should have taken their own due vigilance to find out that study is right or not."

DG CSIR said because there is a global outcry it must have put pressure on both Lancet as well as WHO and both of them now retracted from their original position. "WHO has started a trial again and Lancet has put an expression of concern on their website both of these are very welcome development for science," he said.

"So I am pretty sure that Lancet would have published the reports only after seeing somewhere the drug failed to work," Mande said.

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News Network
July 31,2020

New Delhi, Jul 31: Air India has operated more than 2800 flights and flown over 3 lakh passengers worldwide till now under the Vande Bharat Mission.

"Air India under Vande Bharat Mission Operated more than 2800 flights and flown more than 3 lakh, 80 thousand passengers worldwide till now," Air India said in a tweet on Thursday.

The fifth phase of the Government of India's 'Vande Bharat' mission, aimed at evacuating Indian nationals stranded in various foreign countries owing to restrictions on air travel, will begin early next month, August 1.

"Under Vande Bharat Mission, we have already brought back more than 2.5 lakh stranded Indians from 53 commies," Air India had earlier said in a statement.

Over 7.88 lakh Indians stranded abroad due to coronavirus pandemic have returned under Vande Bharat Mission till July 22, Ministry of External Affairs had said.

The government started Vande Bharat Mission on May 7.

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Agencies
January 11,2020

New Delhi, Jan 11: Senior Congress leader P Chidambaram on Friday said that he has never seen innocents like the Indian people, who believe the claims made by the government on the implementation of its programmes. The former Union Minister, addressing a literary event, said, "I have never seen innocents like the Indian people. If something appears on print (and named two newspapers also), we believe it. We believe anything."

Claims like all villages having been electrified in the country and toilets built for 99 per cent of families in India were being believed, he said.

Similar was the case of the Ayushman Bharat scheme, (Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana or PM-JAY is a flagship health care scheme of the Centre), he alleged.

Stating that his Delhi-based driver's father had to get a surgery done under the scheme, he said, however, it could not be performed.

"I asked him (car driver) if he had the Ayushman card and he showed a card and I told him to take it (to hospital). In hospital after hospital, they said they were not aware of anything like that (Ayushman scheme). But we believe that the Ayushman scheme has come to the whole of India," he said.

Further, he said "we believe that for any disease, treatment will be done (indicating the Ayushman scheme) without shelling out money. We are being innocents."

Many news items and data were contrary to the truth, he added.

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