Home Blog Page 182

Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw inaugurates India’s first Tempered Glass manufacturing facility, Optiemus to make ‘Engineered by Corning’ glasses in Noida

Union Minister of Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw on Saturday inaugurated India’s first Tempered Glass Manufacturing Facility for Mobile Devices at Noida. The facility has been set up by Optiemus Electronics in collaboration with Corning Incorporated, USA, and will produce high-quality tempered glass under the globally recognised brand “Engineered by Corning”. The products will be supplied to both domestic and international markets.

Corning has formed a joint venture with Optiemus worth ₹1000 crore for the project to make cover glass for smartphones. Optiemus Infra will import glass sheets into India for tempered glass and they will be processed as per Corning’s techniques and mandates. The finished product will be sold in the country under the Rhinotech brand. The screen protectors will carry the ‘Engineered by Corning’ trademark.

With an initial investment of ₹70 crore, the facility in Noida will feature a state-of-the-art infrastructure that will enable a complete transformation of raw material into excellent quality tempered glass. Phase 1 will have an installed capacity of 25 million units per annum, generating direct employment for over 600 people. In phase 2, it will scale up capacity to 200 million units per annum for local and global markets, with an additional investment of ₹ 800 crore, creating over 4,500 direct job opportunities.

The facility boasts comprehensive manufacturing capabilities, including scribing, shaping/chamfering, polishing, dual-stage rinsing, chemical tempering, coating, printing, and lamination. Each stage is conducted under stringent quality inspections, bringing standardized, high-quality tempered glass to Indian consumers for the first time in India.

Speaking on the occasion, Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said that tempered glass is an important accessory for mobile phones and its indigenous manufacturing is a major step forward in the success of Make in India and the vision of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He added that step by step, India will manufacture each and every component used in mobile phones, including chips, cover glasses, laptop and server components, thereby positioning the country as a global player in electronics manufacturing.

The Minister also informed that a Made in India chip is expected to roll out soon, marking another milestone in the country’s journey towards self-reliance.

Vaishnaw underlined that in the past 11 years, electronics manufacturing in India has grown six times to reach a production value of ₹11.5 lakh crore, with exports of over ₹3 lakh crore and direct and indirect employment for 2.5 million people. He said that the overall electronics ecosystem in the country is developing rapidly and value addition is being enhanced step by step.

For Tempered Glass, it is estimated that the domestic market is more than 500 million pieces with a retail value of approximately ₹ 20,000 crore, showcasing a large-scale opportunity in the country. The global market is worth over USD 60 billion.

On the occasion, Ashok Kumar Gupta, Chairman, Optiemus Infracom Limited said, “This is a landmark moment for the Indian electronics manufacturing industry and the Make in India vision. Despite being one of the world’s largest mobile phone markets, India has relied on imports for tempered glass. With this initiative, we are looking at building global-scale capabilities to support the Indian and international markets with the best quality products. Our aspiration is that every Indian mobile phone user must use a Make in India tempered glass with BIS certification and fog marking to protect their screen.”

British Museum agrees to loan Vrindavani Vastra created by Assamese weavers over 450 years ago to India, specialised museum to be built in Guwahati to keep the fabric for 18 months

After relentless efforts by the Assam government, a Museum in London has agreed to send the 16th century Vrindavani Vastra that originated in Assam, to be displayed in Assam. Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma announced in a press conference on 30 August that the Victoria and Albert Museum has written to the state government indicating intention to loan the fabric to India, provided the government can fulfil the conditions for the arrangement.

Vrindavani Vastra is a large piece of Muga silk fabric woven by Assamese weavers led by Mathuradas Burha Aata, the first Satradhikar (chief) of Barpeta Satra in Barpeta. The fabric depicts the life of Lord Krishna during his childhood days in Vrindavan. The designs woven onto the fabric were guided by Srimanta Sankardeva, the saint-scholar who introduced Vaishnavism and the Bhakti movement in Assam in 16th century.

The Vastra was woven between 1567 and 1569 to be gifted to Koch King Nara Narayan, the last ruler of the undivided Koch dynasty. Notably, Nara Narayan had sheltered Sankardeva after the Vaishnav saint was targeted by the Ahom kingdom on the instigation of Brahmin priests in the state.

A large piece of the Vastra is currently owned by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, while another piece is owned by Musee Guimet (the Guimet Museum) in Paris. However, the Vastra was not directly picked by the Europeans from Assam. It was first taken to Bhutan from Cooch Behar, and then to Tibet, from where European merchants took it to Europe.

During that period, several more similar clothes were woven, and many of them are currently preserved at various museums across the world. One such piece is present at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, while another piece was put up for auction by the auction house of Christie’s in New York. However, the pieces kept at London and Paris are considered to be made under the guidance of Sankardeva himself, while others were woven later.

The Vrindavani Vastra at Victoria and Albert Museum was displayed for public viewing, but now it has been removed to a restricted area. This has been done to protect the aging delicate fabric. Now, one needs to take prior appointment to view the fabric by contacting the museum beforehand. The over 450 years old fabric needs to be kept in 24×7 climate-controlled environment to prevent in any damage.

Assam government has been attempting to arrange displays of these two pieces of fabric in Assam, but has not been successful so far. Assam’s hot and humid climate has been a major concern for the museum for its display in the state, as any contact with moisture will cause great damage to the fabric.

But now, after renewed efforts by the Himanta Biswa Sarma government, the museum in London has said that they are willing it to send it to Assam for a period of 18 months, after which it will have to be returned. However, the museum has set certain conditions, and if they are fulfilled to their satisfaction, the fabric will be sent to Assam in the year 2027.

The museum said that transfer will take place through JSW Foundation, an organisation specialising in preservation of arts and crafts. The foundation is run by JSW Group of the Jindal family.

The Victoria and Albert Museum will also arrange for digital live view of the Vastra in Assam from this year itself. The museum said that a new museum will have to be built in Assam to house the Vastra. It will have to be built as per their specifications, so that it is fit to keep the Vastra for 18 months. Representatives of the museum London visited two existing museums in Guwahati, the Sankardev Kalakshetra Museum and the Assam State Museum, and concluded that both are not suitable to protect the delicate fabric.

If a suitable museum is built, they will send the fabric to India to be displayed in Guwahati and Mumbai, the UK museum said in their letter to Assam CM. They said, “we are actively working towards the loan of the textile to both CSMVS (Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya) in Mumbai and to Assam in 2027”.

Another condition is that the Union government of India will have to give a sovereign guarantee that the Vrindavani Vastra will be return to London after the contacted period of 18 months. The President of India will have to sign that guarantee.

Apart from these specific conditions, standards rules for touring exhibitions of museum artifacts will also apply to the arrangement.

To fulfil the condition of new museum, Assam government has allocated a plot of land belonging to Sericulture Department in Khanapara, near the Guwahati Science Museum. The museum will be built by JSW Group their own cost, as part of their CSR activity, and will gift it to Assam government.

The CM added that the state government is collaborating with Indian High Commissioner to UK for smooth transfer of the Vastra.

CM Himanta Biswa Sarma said that if this effort is successful, they will next attempt to bring the Vastra kept in Paris. He said that the Victoria and Albert Museum invited him to visit London in September for further discussions on the issue. However, due to BTAD elections, he will be visiting in October or November.

Donald Trump imposed tariffs on India over Russian oil, but one of the biggest beneficiaries of the Indo-Russian trade is Ukraine: Read how

At a time when the United States has slapped steep tariffs on Indian goods for continuing to import Russian oil, Ukraine has quietly emerged as one of the biggest beneficiaries of India’s energy trade.

In July 2025, India became Ukraine’s top diesel supplier, even surpassing European nations. According to NaftoRynok, a Ukrainian oil market analytics firm, Indian diesel accounted for 15.5% of Ukraine’s total imports that month. Daily shipments averaged about 2,700 tons, making it one of India’s highest monthly export figures of the year.

From January to July 2025, India’s share in Ukraine’s diesel supply rose to 10.2%, a dramatic increase compared to just 1.9% during the same period last year. The fuel reaches Ukraine through multiple routes, including shipments via Romania along the Danube and through Turkey’s OPET terminal.

For Kyiv, this supply line is nothing short of critical. With its war machinery heavily dependent on fuel, India’s refined diesel, some of it sourced from Russian-origin crude, has helped Ukraine keep its economy running and its armed forces moving.

Other suppliers such as Slovakia, Greece, Turkey, and Lithuania also contributed, but India stood out for its rapid growth in exports. Ironically, while Washington punishes India for buying oil from Russia, it is Indian refiners who are quietly powering Ukraine’s wartime economy.

Trump’s aide blames India, calls it “Modi’s war”

Despite these realities, the Trump administration has chosen to come down hard on India. In July, President Donald Trump imposed 50% tariffs on Indian goods, first a 25% levy, later doubled, directly linking the move to New Delhi’s continued purchase of discounted Russian crude.

Senior Trump advisers have made sharp remarks about India’s position. Peter Navarro, the president’s trade adviser, went so far as to say the Ukraine conflict was “Modi’s war.” In an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Balance of Power, Navarro accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi of prolonging the war by refusing to cut ties with Moscow’s energy exports.

When the anchor reminded him that the war was started by Russia, Navarro doubled down: “No, I mean Modi’s war!” He described India’s energy purchases as “arrogant” and demanded that India behave “responsibly” as the world’s largest democracy.

“Everyone in America loses because India buys oil from Russia,” Navarro claimed, even suggesting that U.S. taxpayers were indirectly funding the conflict. His comments reflect the growing frustration within some U.S. political circles about India’s refusal to join Western sanctions.

Kevin Hassett, another top Trump-era economic adviser, echoed Navarro’s warning, saying that India’s position could damage relations with Washington. “If the Indians don’t budge, then President Trump is not going to either,” Hassett remarked, hinting that Trump might harden his stance even further.

This is not the first time Trump’s team has targeted India. His press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, earlier admitted that the tariffs on Indian exports were intended to squeeze Moscow, with the hope that it would, in turn, pressure Russia to stop the war.

The rhetoric has grown more intense, but New Delhi has always stood firm over its oil imports, emphasising that India’s first need is to find cheap energy for its 1.4 billion people.

India’s role in keeping global prices stable

Beyond the politics, there is another side to the story that rarely makes headlines. Analysts and industry insiders argue that India’s decision to keep buying Russian oil has actually prevented a global energy crisis.

According to estimates cited by Reuters, India has saved over $17 billion since 2022 by purchasing cheaper Russian crude. More importantly, its imports have played a stabilising role in the global market. Sources familiar with the situation cautioned that if India had entirely discontinued imports of Russian oil, global crude prices would have soared to $200 per barrel, almost three times the present rate.

That level of spike would have caused a global energy shock, driving up prices for consumers all over the world from Europe to Asia to America. Instead, India’s presence as a reliable buyer of Russian oil has helped balance supply and demand, keeping markets calmer than they might otherwise have been.

Even U.S. officials have acknowledged this reality. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen previously praised India’s role, suggesting that its approach had actually been beneficial in keeping global fuel prices manageable.

India is caught in a delicate situation. On the one hand, it is increasingly being put under pressure by the U.S. and its Western allies to abandon energy relations with Russia. On the other hand, it has stabilised international markets through its actions, as well as making supplies cheaper for its own people.

The irony remains hard to ignore. While the Trump administration accuses India of prolonging the Ukraine war by buying Russian crude, it is Indian-refined diesel that is keeping Ukraine’s tanks, trucks, and tractors moving. Without India’s role in the energy chain, both Kyiv’s war effort and global oil markets would be under far greater strain.

Counsellor to US President Donald Trump peddles lies about India to justify 50% tariff imposition: Read a point-by-point rebuttal of his propaganda

Peter Navarro, the senior counsellor for trade and manufacturing to US President Donald Trump, has yet again stirred the hornet’s nest.

After calling the Russia-Ukraine conflict ‘Modi’s war‘, he has written a 9-tweet thread on Thursday (28th August) justifying a whopping 50% tariffs on most US imports from India.

Navarro claimed, “This isn’t just about India’s unfair trade—it’s about cutting off the financial lifeline India has extended to Putin’s war machine.”

It must be mentioned that Russia is both the second-largest crude oil producer and exporter in the world. After the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, crude oil prices rocketed to $137 per barrel.

India, which has about 1.4 billion people, had to secure its energy needs. There are no sanctions on Russian oil by the United States, G7 countries and the European Union (EU), unlike Iranian oil and Venezuelan oil.

Only a price cap was imposed on Russian oil and petroleum prices to prevent ‘war profiteering’ while not disrupting global supplies.

India thus did not violate any international norms through its purchase of Russian oil, as it adhered to the price cap.

In the absence of India’s purchase of Russian oil, global crude oil prices could become $200 per barrel. This steep hike in fuel prices would affect all nations, not just India.

The Modi government’s decision helped keep global crude oil prices stable and balanced. And this fact has been acknowledged by at least 3 US officials, including US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Ambassador Eric Garcetti and diplomat Geoffrey Pyatt.

In another tweet, Peter Navarro alleged, “India uses our dollars to buy discounted Russian crude.

In reality, India purchases Russian crude oil from third countries, where transactions are carried out not in US dollars but other currencies like the United Arab Emirates Dirham (AED).

At the same time, the United States has never previously objected to the purchase of Russian oil by India, as it prevented crude oil prices from shooting up to $200 per barrel.

If the US wanted countries to stop purchasing Russian oil, it could have imposed sanctions on Russian crude oil like it did in cases of Venezuela and Iran.

But this did not stop Peter Navarro from claiming, “Indian refiners, with their silent Russian partners, refine and flip the black-market oil for big profits on the international market – while Russia pockets hard currency to fund its war on Ukraine.”

The categorisation of Russian crude oil as ‘black market oil’ is false because its purchase is not restricted by sanctions (besides a price cap). India adheres to all international frameworks and does not purchase LNG and LPG from sanctioned projects in Russia.

The senior counsellor for trade and manufacturing to US President Donald Trump claimed that India’s import of Russian oil is not driven by ‘domestic demand’ but illicit profiteering.

There is no evidence for this claim. India has to fend for its 1.4 billion people and mitigate domestic demand. After the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war, there was a massive jump in crude oil prices.

Oil Public Service Undertakings (PSUs) in India purchased Russian oil and suffered cumulative losses of $2.5 billion between April 2022 and January 2023 to ensure that domestic fuel prices remain stable.

The Modi government framed rules that mandated private refineries to sell at least 50% of their exported volume of petrol back into the domestic market. A similar 30% cap was levied on the export of diesel.

At the same time, an export tax was imposed to prevent massive profiteering. These strategic decisions helped in stabilising fuel prices not just in India but in the world.

It must be mentioned that around that time, OPEC+ countries had cut down on crude oil production by 5.86 million barrels per day. Without India’s timely intervention and key decisions, fuel prices could have spiralled out of control.

In one of his tweets, Peter Navarro claimed, “India’s Big Oil lobby has turned the largest democracy in the world into a massive refining hub and oil money laundromat for the Kremlin.”

The fact of the matter is that India has been the 4th largest refiner and exporter of petroleum products not since 2022 but for several decades. India exports petroleum products to 150 nations.

Importantly, most of the crude oil purchased from Russia at ‘discounted prices’ was consumed domestically after being processed in one of the country’s 23 refineries.

While it is true that Europe, Africa, and Asia purchased refined crude oil and fuels from India, they did so of their own accord as part of being in a global supply chain. The transactions between nations thus cannot be classified as ‘laundering.’

In another tweet, Peter Navarro claimed, “India now exports over 1 million barrels a day in refined petroleum—more than half the volume of Russian crude it imports.

Russian oil comprises about 30-35% of the total oil import of India. And 70% of all refined petroleum products are utilised to meet domestic demand. Hence, claims by the senior counsellor for trade and manufacturing to US President Donald Trump are highly exaggerated.

Having said that, resale or export of refined Russian crude oil and petroleum products was never under the ‘price cap’ imposition. It was recently in July 2025 that a few restrictions were introduced on products refined from Russian crude oil.

European Union’s total import of petroleum products from India has increased to 221 Million Metric Tonnes (MMT) in the Financial year 2024-2025. The EU could have suspended the import of fuel refined from Russian crude, but it did not. France, Netherlands and Belgium remain the top importers of petroleum products from India.

Peter Navarro raked up the issue of ‘trade deficit’ in the hopes of winning brownie points on social media through anti-India rhetoric.

He brazened out, “We run a $50-billion trade deficit with India—and they’re using our dollars to buy Russian oil. They make a killing and Ukrainians die.

The fact is US runs larger trade deficit with European Union, Mexico and even ‘arch rival’ China. As stated earlier, India does not use USD to purchase Russian oil (as it is procured by refineries from third countries).

Ironically, the United States purchases enriched uranium from Russia and by the dubious argument of Peter Navarro, the country is funding Putin’s war chest.

Coincidentally, the current US imports from Russia stand at a whopping $3 billion in 2024. In August this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed that the country’s bilateral trade with the US has increased by 20%.

In one tweet, Peter Navarro accused India of ‘strategic freeloading.’ He claimed, “India continues to buy Russian weapons—while demanding that U.S. firms transfer sensitive military tech and build plants in India.”

India, being a sovereign country, can choose to purchase weapons from any partner nation. Russia has been a reliable ally of India and thus remains the top supplier of arms and ammunition.

India also procures weapons from nations like France, Israel and the United States. India is the only major power in Asia that can counter the threat of China militarily.

India and the US are part of QUAD and Indo-Pacific defence cooperation. Given that nothing is free in diplomacy and trade, there is no concept of ‘strategic freeloading’ in India-US bilateral ties.

The senior counsellor for trade and manufacturing to US President Donald Trump has justifed the steep 50% tariffs imposed on US imports from India.

He alleged, “The road to peace in Ukraine runs through New Delhi.” The truth is that India has consistently called for peace between Ukraine and Russia.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has himself said in an interview, “I have a close relationship with Russia and Ukraine alike,” he said. “I can sit with President Putin and say that this is not the time for war. And I can also tell President Zelensky, in a friendly way, that brother, regardless of how many people stand with you in the world, there will never be a resolution on the battlefield.”

India and the government at its helm have always advocated for peace and diplomacy. The irony is that US which purchases urnaium from Russia is levying 50% tariffs on India for procuring crude oil from the same country and keeping global markets stable.

This is nothing but a concerted attempt by the Trump administration to scapegoat India under false pretence.

Adani International School student wins Crest Gold Award for breakthrough colour-blindness innovation

0

What began as a personal struggle has blossomed into a global movement for inclusivity in education. Guided by the vision of Ms Namrata Adani, Promoter of Adani International School, 17-year-old student Aahan Ritesh Prajapati has transformed his battle with red-green colour blindness into a pioneering mission that is changing classrooms for thousands of children.

For Aahan, colours in textbooks and classrooms were never just tools of learning—they were barriers. Struggling to interpret maps, periodic tables, and diagrams, he could have resigned to a life defined by limitation. Instead, he chose resilience. Harnessing his passion for technology, Aahan developed a machine-learning model with 99.7 per cent accuracy, capable of modifying educational diagrams and maps for colour-blind students.

This groundbreaking innovation earned him the Crest Gold Award (UK) and recognition at international academic forums, including the Indo-French Conference on AI and Healthcare at IIT-Delhi. His research is also set to be published in the International Journal of High School Research, New York.

Yet, beyond awards lies Aahan’s deeper mission: empathy-driven impact. Supported by the Dr Shivani Bhatt Charitable Foundation, he spearheaded colour blindness screening camps across four districts of Gujarat. More than 10,000 students were tested, with 131 discovering, often for the first time, that they too were colour blind. For many, including an aspiring Army cadet, this revelation was transformative, helping them understand lifelong academic struggles.

Aahan’s efforts extend beyond technology. He has designed bilingual awareness leaflets, inclusive stationery, and teacher-friendly guides—tools that empower educators to make classrooms more accessible.

Reflecting on his journey, Aahan says with humility: “If even one child can understand better because of my work, I consider it a success.”

Ms Namrata Adani credits the school’s nurturing ecosystem for fostering such breakthroughs. “At our school, children are not defined by limitations, but empowered by possibilities. Education must go beyond textbooks—it must shape compassionate leaders who can touch lives,” she affirms.

From one student’s challenge has grown a movement of courage and inclusivity. At Adani International School, this transformation is not an isolated story but a testament to its ethos—where obstacles are turned into opportunities, empathy fuels innovation, and students are encouraged to dream not just for themselves, but for the world.

‘I love you, I want to marry you’: Principal Shakeel Ahmed sexually abused an 11-year-old Hindu girl in Aligarh, used to touch her private parts, arrested

0

Shakeel Ahmed, the principal of a government school in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, has been arrested for his despicable sexual exploitation of an 11-year-old Hindu girl. Shakeel started pressuring this girl, who was studying in the 7th grade of his school, to marry him. He used to molest her and touch her private parts and whenever the girl protested, he threatened to fail her.

This case is from the Primary Junior High School located in Talibnagar of Jawan Block of Aligarh. Shakeel Ahmed, the principal of this school, always kept an evil eye on his girl students.

What is the entire matter

On the evening of August 23, the girl returned home from school sad and upset. When the mother went to the scared girl and asked her about her well-being, she broke down and shared her ordeal while crying. The mother was shocked to hear what her daughter shared with her.

According to the copy of the FIR available with OpIndia, the girl told her mother, “The school principal Shakeel Ahmed has bad intentions and touches my private parts. He also puts his finger in my private parts. When I oppose him, he threatens me and says that if I tell anything to anyone, he will fail me in the exam.”

The girl further said that middle-aged Shakeel Ahmed used to talk sweetly to her to trap her in his net. It is mentioned in the FIR that the girl told her mother, “The principal says that he loves me very much and wants to marry me.” The girl’s mother went to the local police station and lodged an FIR against Shakeel Ahmed.

The victim’s mother has also lodged a complaint with the District Magistrate and SSP in this matter. Further, the villagers, angry with this incident, have also protested at the local police station.

Police arrested the accused Shakeel

Apart from the police, the girl’s mother had also complained about this matter to the Basic Shiksha Adhikari (BSA). After which, the Block Education Officer investigated the matter.

BSA Dr. Rakesh Kumar Singh has suspended Shakeel after finding him guilty in the investigation. Rakesh Kumar said that after suspension, a detailed investigation is being conducted against the accused and action to dismiss the accused will also be initiated.

This thinking of middle-aged lustful beasts like Shakeel is the biggest stigma in front of the society. A wolf like Shakeel hiding in human form needs to be given the most cruel punishment. It is also necessary to see where such thinking of such people comes from and it needs to be destroyed from the root.

The original Hindi report can be read here.

Rising criticism from within US, dropping approval ratings: How Donald Trump has helped increase his unpopularity within his country and upset friends like India with bizarre tariffs

0

US President Donald Trump’s tariff policy, which was recently declared illegal by a US federal appeals court, has been receiving backlash not only from other countries but also from within the US. While Trump’s reciprocal tariffs have been facing criticism from trade experts since the beginning, his act of selectively targeting India with double tariffs has further downgraded his international as well as domestic standing. Several former US officials and economic experts have criticised Trump’s decision to levy stringent tariffs on India and alienate it.

Trump’s tariffs a result of his bitterness for not being allowed to mediate between India and Pakistan

A recently released report by the US multinational investment bank and financial services company, Jeffries, said that Trump’s punitive tariffs on India resulted from the loudmouth US President’s “personal pique” at not being allowed to mediate the India-Pakistan conflict in May this year. The report added that Trump “hoped to intervene” in the military conflict between the two countries that went on for four days. This revelation is a rebuttal of Trump’s claims of having played a key role in mediating a peace deal between India and Pakistan. Trump blatantly kept repeating his false claims despite India’s outright denial of the US involvement in the ceasefire with Pakistan and affirmation that the ceasefire understanding was reached bilaterally.

“Tariffs (on India) are primarily the consequence of the American president’s ‘personal pique’ that he was not allowed to play a role in seeking to end the long-running acrimony between India and Pakistan,” the report stated. “India has never accepted third-party intervention in its relations with Pakistan, and this remains a ‘red line’ despite the economic costs of depriving the 47th American president of one of his opportunities to win the Nobel Peace Prize,” the report added.

American global brand is in the toilet: former US security advisor

Condemning US tariffs on India, former US National Security Advisor (NSA) Jake Sullivan said that the US tariffs on India have damaged America’s global standing and have pushed India towards China. “The American brand globally is in the toilet. Look at India. Trump has executed a massive trade offensive against them. Now, India is thinking, shit, we have to go sit down with China to hedge against America,” Sullivan said without mincing words on The Bulwark Podcast with Tim Miller. He added that the decision has projected the US as “a big disruptor” rather than a reliable partner, while allowing China to gain influence in the region.

Great nations do not give ultimatums all the time: John Kerry

Similar opinions were echoed by former US diplomat John Kerry, who described Trump’s stance against India “as a little bit too much ordering, pressuring, and pushing around”. Taking a jibe at Trump’s popular slogan “Make America Great Again”, Kerry said that great nations “do not necessarily exhibit greatness by giving people ultimatums all the time”.

Trump’s tariffs show a lack of strategic thinking: John Bolton

Earlier, John Bolton, who was the National Security Advisor to the first Trump administration, slammed Trump for his national security and foreign policies and for pushing India closer to Russia and China, setting back the India-US diplomatic ties. Supporting India’s stand on the tariff and Russian oil issue. Bolton described Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on India as a “lack of strategic thinking and priorities”. He added that the decision goes against the US interests.

Trump unsuccessfully trying to armtwist India: Jeffrey Sachs

American Economist Jeffrey Sachs said that with his tariffs, Trump is trying to “armtwist” India without realising the futility of his move and that he would end up isolating the US from the world economy and would make the US industry less competitive. Apart from that, Sachs warned India against the “US friendship”, reminding it how the country has historically used its friendship to serve its own selfish interests, even if it comes at the cost of its “friends”.

Trump’s approval rating sinks

Apparently, the people of the US, whose interests Trump claims to protect with his policies, have also expressed dissatisfaction over his decisions regarding the economy, tariffs, and immigration. Trump’s approval rating, which is an indicator of how Americans view his performance, hit a record low in his second term. In a 5-day survey conducted by Quinnipiac University Poll, 55% of the US voters disapproved of his handling of the job. His net negative 18-point approval rating is his lowest since January 2021. Trump’s approval rating has been on a downward spiral since the beginning of his second term, showing an increasing dissatisfaction among Americans about his policies.

From imposing reciprocal tariffs on its trade partners to baselessly boasting about having mediated global conflicts, Trump’s second term has been full of many decisions, which have projected him as a ‘global bully’ rather than a ‘global peacemaker’, a title he covets to cement his candidacy for the Nobel Peace Prize.

By selectively taxing India for purchasing Russian oil while China continues to be the world’s biggest importer of Russian oil, Trump has undone the decades of diplomatic collaboration between the two countries. The decision has put the India-US trade relations on hold. Trump, who secured favourable trade deals from several countries by misusing his tariffs, hoped that India, like Japan and the European Union, would also give in to his pressure tactics and would agree to trade concessions. However, to the disappointment of Trump, India stood its ground and resisted the US’s trade colonialism. His tariffs reflect his mounting frustration over India’s clear refusal to credit him for the ceasefire with Pakistan, coupled with India’s continued purchase of Russian oil.

While Trump’s trade policy has resulted in a growing anti-US sentiment in India, he is also facing scrutiny in his own country. Trump’s overemphasis on economic priorities and his coercive tactics against India are being viewed by Americans as having an adverse effect on the country’s interests in the Indo-Pacific region. The US has long used India to counterbalance the Chinese influence in the Indo-Pacific region. But his tariff policy has prompted the rekindling of India-China ties and has further strengthened India-Russia relations. This, in turn, has bolstered the BRICS group, to the displeasure of the US President, who has been openly targeting the multilateral forum. Trump threatened to target BRICS “very, very hard” and impose additional 10% tariffs on nations aligning with the group.

Uttar Pradesh: Judicial report on Sambhal violence reveals network trapping Hindu girls for marriage with Muslim men, hosting grand Walima to humiliate Hindus and trigger migration

The Yogi Adityanath government in Uttar Pradesh has received a 450-page judicial report on the November 2024 violence in Sambhal district. The report, prepared by a special judicial commission, has made some disturbing revelations about the district’s changing demography, past communal riots, and targeted attacks on Hindus.

According to the report, Sambhal is no longer just a communally sensitive district but has also become a base for extremist activities and terror networks. The commission has pointed to the declining Hindu population, systematic targeting of Hindu families through what has been described as “love jihad,” and attempts to intimidate Hindus into migrating out of the area.

Love Jihad and targeted humiliation of Hindu families

One of the most shocking aspects of the judicial commission’s findings relates to the targeting of Hindu girls through love jihad. The report carries testimonies of families who lost their daughters to such incidents.

One such case is of Kishan Lal’s daughter, Bharti, who was once deeply religious and devoted to Hindu customs. She used to fast, voice the Neelkanth on Diwali, did not even eat onion-garlic and sew clothes for the idols of the temple with her hands. But in 2013-14, she came in contact with a Turkish youth named Hammad from Sambhal while studying outside the district.

Eventually, she converted to Islam, married Hammad, and became Sidra. Her family said that after the marriage, they not only lost their daughter but were also humiliated when Hammad’s family organised a grand Walima (wedding feast). According to witnesses, such feasts were often used as a show of power to “humiliate Hindus” and force them to migrate.

Bharti stated in favour of her husband, Hammad

The Bharti-Hammad case was also taken to the Allahabad High Court, but when the girl supported her husband in her statement, the court ruled in his favour. The family lost the case and described it as the ‘biggest blow’ of their lives.

The commission records how the mother of the girl fell into deep depression after the marriage and has been unwell for over a decade. The family told investigators that their daughter had once even called them in tears, pleading for help, but fear of threats and social pressure stopped them from intervening.

Today, Bharti, or Sidra, delivers religious lectures in madrasas, while her husband struggles with odd jobs and runs a boutique from home. The family says the emotional wound from the incident has never healed.

Well-planned conspiracy, says commission

The judicial panel has concluded that incidents like these were not isolated but part of a larger, well-planned conspiracy. It is said that by such marriages, Hindu families were knowingly insulted in public and forced out of their homes, which added to the demographic transformation of Sambhal.

The report also connects these attacks to the larger Ghazwa-e-Hind narrative, advocated by radical groups as a part of their grand scheme. Targeting Hindu girls and families was one means of instilling fear among Hindus and weakening the Hindu community in the district, as per the panel.

Hindu population declining sharply in Sambhal

One of the most important points in the report is about demographic changes in Sambhal. At the time of independence, the Hindu population in the Sambhal Nagar Palika area was around 45%, while Muslims made up about 55%.

All this while, the balance has shifted dramatically. Now, the report adds, Hindus are left with 15% of the population only, with Muslims increasing to nearly 85%. This population change, the commission observes, is not only because of migration but also due to persistent pressure and repeated episodes of violence that prompted Hindus to abandon their homes.

The decline has been consistent. The report informs that Hindus who earlier inhabited in large numbers in several localities are now only present in isolated pockets, and most mohallas, earlier mixed colonies have become fully Muslim-dominated localities. The trend, says the panel, has transformed the social texture of Sambhal and intensified tensions.

15 big riots after independence

The judicial commission also examined the history of riots in Sambhal. The report stated that a total of 15 riots took place in Sambhal since independence.

These riots occurred in 1947, 1948, 1953, 1958, 1962, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1990, 1992, 1995, 2001, and 2019. The report also revealed that the Muslim-dominated Sambhal district has become a base for several terrorist outfits.

Sambhal violence of 2024: Hindus targeted again

The November 2024 violence in Sambhal was no different. The commission has clearly stated that Hindus were the primary target. However, unlike in previous incidents, a large-scale tragedy was prevented because of heavy police presence in Hindu-majority areas.

The report claims that mobs had plans to attack Hindus directly, but the conspiracy failed when security forces were deployed in time. Even so, the violence revealed how deeply radical groups have penetrated Sambhal and how local networks had been mobilised for such attacks.

Rise of terror networks in Sambhal

The judicial report has also highlighted the presence of terrorist modules in the district. It identifies that Sambhal, over time, has emerged as a fertile terrain for the recruitment of young men into terrorist groups active in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and other places.

According to the report, some youths from Sambhal were brainwashed and recruited into notorious terrorist organisations. These include Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, Tehreek-e-Taliban, Al-Qaeda, Hizbul Mujahideen, IS, etc. Apart from this, the Pakistani intelligence agency ISI also succeeded in building its network in Sambhal.

The commission further observed that the Pakistani intelligence agency ISI had been able to set up a chain in Sambhal, capitalising on the unstable communal environment. The network, the report said, not only offered logistic assistance but also endeavoured to disseminate radical ideologies.

Trump’s quest for the Nobel Prize, Pakistan tilt, and tariff bullying: Why PM Modi may no longer be engaging the US President

Few bilateral relationships in the 21st century carried as much promise as that between the United States and India. For a time, leaders in both Washington and New Delhi framed their partnership as indispensable, a “natural alliance” between the world’s oldest and largest democracies. Yet today, the relationship is fraying at the edges, poisoned by mistrust, political vanity, and an American president more interested in chasing accolades than respecting India’s sovereignty.

At the heart of this rupture is President Donald Trump’s unhealthy obsession with the Nobel Peace Prize. His repeated boasts of “solving” the India–Pakistan conflict, and his unsubtle hints that Prime Minister Narendra Modi should nominate him for the award, have collided with the immovable wall of India’s historical experience with American duplicity. Trump’s simultaneous embrace of Pakistan’s military establishment, particularly Field Marshal Asim Munir, a man notorious for his anti-Hindu bigotry, has further deepened the impression that Washington is reverting to its Cold War habit of hyphenating India with Pakistan.

What Trump may have thought was clever deal-making has instead been interpreted in New Delhi as yet another American betrayal. A recent report published in the New York Times sheds light on the deteriorating relationship between New Delhi and Washington as Modi pivots to the east, exploring more vibrant markets and slightly more reliable partners in Russia, China, and Japan. 

US President Donald Trump has “no plans” to travel to India later this year for the Quad Summit, The New York Times reported on Saturday. The article, titled “The Nobel Prize and a Testy Phone Call: How the Trump-Modi Relationship Unraveled,” outlined how ties between Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi soured in recent months

A history India cannot forget

India’s wariness of U.S. mediation is not new. The scars run deep. During the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, when India intervened to end genocide in East Pakistan, the United States under Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger tilted openly toward Islamabad, even dispatching the Seventh Fleet into the Bay of Bengal in a show of intimidation. In the decades that followed, successive administrations armed Pakistan despite its sponsorship of terrorism against India.

The nuclear sanctions of 1998, imposed after India’s Pokhran-II tests while ignoring China’s proliferation to Pakistan, reinforced the perception that Washington’s non-proliferation concerns were selective and politically motivated. Even after the 2008 U.S.–India civil nuclear deal seemed to usher in a new era, American reluctance on technology transfers and its indulgence of Pakistan’s duplicity kept Indian scepticism alive.

Against this historical backdrop, Trump’s repeated claims of having “solved” the India–Pakistan dispute were bound to strike a nerve. For Modi, conceding any role to Washington would not just be politically costly; it would amount to repeating the very mistakes that Indian diplomacy has spent decades resisting.

Operation Sindoor and Trump’s credit theft

The most recent flashpoint came during Operation Sindoor, when Indian forces retaliated firmly after the gruesome Pahalgam terror attack, where Pakistan-sponsored terrorists in Kashmir wreaked havoc, killing tourists with abandon but after checking if they were Hindus. The swift escalation, involving drone strikes and missile exchanges, was eventually halted by a ceasefire painstakingly arranged between New Delhi and Islamabad.

Yet Trump could not resist inserting himself into the drama. On Truth Social, even before India’s foreign secretary had announced the ceasefire terms, Trump declared “FULL AND IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE” as if it were the fruit of his intervention. To make matters worse, his Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggested that India and Pakistan had agreed to “start talks at a neutral site,” blatantly violating India’s consistent position that there will never be third-party mediation on Kashmir.

In New Delhi, officials were livid. The ceasefire had nothing to do with Washington, and Trump’s insistence on claiming credit was seen not only as dishonest but humiliating. Weeks since a ceasefire was achieved between the two sides, the satellite imageries and vivid account of operations headed by Indian military officials revealed the scale of destruction that was inflicted on Pakistan. At one point, the Navy chief even almost admitted that Karachi Port was spared from destruction, implying it was one of the targets of India’s formidable naval force.

It was Pakistan that came begging for a ceasefire. Yet, Trump tried to turn it as an opportunity to steal credit and burnish his credentials as a candidate most deserving of the Nobel Prize. Munir and Pakistan after having robbed off their dignity and honor during Operation Sindoor, have merrily played along like loyal sycophants, echoing statements that are music to Trump’s ears.

Trump’s Pakistan gamble: Flirting with Munir

Compounding the problem was Trump’s visible tilt toward Pakistan. In recent months, he openly courted Field Marshal Asim Munir, Pakistan’s all-powerful army chief, notorious for his anti-Hindu rhetoric and record of stoking religious extremism. By inviting Munir to Washington and allegedly considering orchestrating a staged “peace handshake” with Modi, Trump revealed either a dangerous ignorance of India’s sensitivities or a deliberate attempt to test Modi’s patience.

For New Delhi, this crossed a red line. India has spent decades fighting the Pakistani deep state, which nurtures groups like Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed. For Trump to not only engage Munir but also elevate him as a “partner for peace” was nothing short of an insult to the memory of Indian soldiers and civilians who have died at the hands of Pakistan-backed terror.

This revived the old suspicion that Washington, when push comes to shove, will always fall back on Pakistan as its regional pivot. For India, such hyphenation is intolerable.

Tariffs as punishment, ot policy

If Trump’s Nobel fetish and Pakistan tilt bruised India politically, his economic policies cut deeper. Within weeks of the June phone call with Modi, Trump announced sweeping tariffs on Indian imports: first 25%, then another 25% penalty for buying Russian oil. At a combined 50%, these were the steepest tariffs slapped on any major trading partner.

The targeting was selective. China, the largest buyer of Russian crude, was spared such treatment. Brazil faced penalties, but lower than India’s. Pakistan, astonishingly, emerged with tariffs of just 19%. The message was clear: Trump was punishing India not for economics but for politics, for refusing to fall in line with his narrative.

Indian officials rightly called it “gundagardi” — bullying, plain and simple.

The impact was immediate. Sectors like textiles, pharmaceuticals, and IT exports, vital contributors to India’s economy, were squeezed. Simultaneously, Trump restricted H-1B visas, cracked down on Indian students, and even deported undocumented Indians in shackles, triggering public outrage. For a country that had long viewed the U.S. as a destination for opportunity, this was unfair and discriminatory.

India responded with deepening its defence and economic ties with Russia and China. It showed the US administration that New Delhi is not a country that is going to bend to its will, especially after the “backstabbing” it faced at the hands of the US President who is still deluded into believing that Pakistan has vast reserves of untapped oil and LPG.

U.S. hawks blame India, ignore China

As if tariffs weren’t enough, American hawks turned their ire into rhetoric, sermonising to India almost daily. Every week seemed to bring a new accusation: India was “funding Putin’s war machine,” India was “profiteering” from discounted oil, India was “weakening democracies.” The attacks against India quickly became a routine.

But the most outrageous charge came from Trump’s own trade adviser, Peter Navarro.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Navarro went on a tirade: “Ukraine comes to us and Europe and says give us more money (for its war). Everybody in America loses because of what India is doing. Consumers and businesses lose; workers lose because India’s high tariffs cause jobs, income and higher wages. The taxpayer loses because we have to fund Modi’s war.”

Yes, Navarro actually called the Ukraine conflict “Modi’s war.”

He doubled down, calling India “arrogant” for buying oil from Russia and insisting New Delhi must “side with democracies.” He mocked India’s sovereignty, sneered at its growing ties with Moscow and Beijing, and even dared to lecture Indians about Aksai Chin, as if India needed a reminder of Chinese aggression.

“You’re getting in bed with the authoritarians… These are not your friends, folks. Okay? And the Russians, I mean, come on,” Navarro scolded.

The irony was staggering. While Navarro raged against India, American companies were profiteering from the war. U.S. oil giants like ExxonMobil and Chevron registered record profits in 2022, with LNG exports to Europe sold at four times the domestic U.S. rate. American defence firms reaped windfalls: Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and others surged on billions in weapons sales to Ukraine.

Trump himself was selling arms to Europe, at a 10% markup, destined for Ukraine. Yet somehow, when India bought oil for its own energy security, the war became “Modi’s war.”

Even more farcical: during his August meeting in Alaska with Putin, Trump discussed letting Russia purchase American equipment for LNG projects, despite sanctions. U.S.–Russia bilateral trade even expanded 20% this year. So much for Washington “punishing” Moscow.

The hypocrisy could not be clearer: when America profits from war, it is strategy; when India ensures its own survival, it is villainy. 

India’s strategic patience

Through all of this, Modi has displayed notable restraint. Instead of engaging in public mudslinging, he has quietly declined Trump’s repeated requests for calls, refusing to hand him material for social media bombast. This calculated silence signals both dignity and strategic patience, a refusal to be baited into theatrics.

At the same time, Modi has pivoted pragmatically toward multipolar engagement. He is set to meet Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, not out of naivety but as part of a deliberate strategy to broaden India’s options. With Russia, energy and defence cooperation remain critical. With China, economic engagement, despite border tensions, provides leverage against American unpredictability. And with Japan, India has found a reliable Asian partner committed to long-term infrastructure and supply-chain resilience.

Far from being cornered, India is diversifying its partnerships, ensuring it cannot be bullied by any single power.

America’s loss, India’s gain

The tragedy of the current moment is that Washington has lost far more than New Delhi. By indulging Trump’s ego and erraticism, the U.S. has squandered an opportunity to consolidate India as a cornerstone of its Indo-Pacific strategy. Instead, India is now drifting toward a more independent posture, one that welcomes ties with America’s rivals while hedging against American volatility.

Trump’s foreign policy has always been transactional and personal. But in India, it ran into a wall built by history, sovereignty, and national pride. By overplaying his hand, demanding a Nobel nomination, claiming credit for Operation Sindoor, and cosying up to Pakistan’s generals, Trump turned goodwill into resentment. By weaponising tariffs and visas, he transformed partnership into humiliation, which has now morphed into motivation towards multipolar engagement—something that the US, particularly Trump, deeply hates.

For India, the lesson is clear: self-reliance and multipolarity are the safest guarantees of sovereignty. For the United States, the cost is equally stark: in trying to chase prestige and pressure Modi, Trump has alienated the world’s largest democracy and strengthened the very power, China and Russia, that Washington seeks to counter.

The end of hyphenation

Ultimately, Trump’s legacy in South Asia may be remembered not for peace but for the resurrection of a failed policy, the hyphenation of India and Pakistan. By courting Asim Munir, flattering Islamabad, and humiliating New Delhi, he has revived the worst instincts of American diplomacy in the region. Modi, in refusing to play along, has preserved India’s dignity and reminded Washington that India cannot be reduced to a prop in someone else’s prize campaign.

In his haste to chase a Nobel and manufacture credit, Trump has lost an ally. India, meanwhile, walks away stronger, anchored in history, guided by sovereignty, and increasingly at the centre of a multipolar world order.

Similarly, if and when India chooses to re-engage with the United States, New Delhi must ensure that American loudmouths are held accountable for their impropriety if the relationship is to move forward on meaningful terms. Until officials in Washington, including Trump, understand that America cannot bully others into obedience, such tensions will inevitably persist.

PM Modi visits Tokyo Electron Miyagi Ltd plant in Japan: Read how the company will play a crucial role in making India a global semiconductor hub

0

Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited a semiconductor plant Tokyo Electron Miyagi in Sendai on his second day of Japan visit. He was accompanied by Japanese Prime Minister of Shigeru Ishiba for the visit on a bullet train. Prime Minister Modi was briefed about TEL’s role in the global semiconductor value chain, its advanced manufacturing capabilities and its ongoing and planned collaborations with India.

PM Modi posted on X that he visited the Training Room and Production Innovation Lab of the facility, and interacted with top officials of the company. He added, “the semiconductor sector is a key area for India-Japan cooperation.”

Tokyo Electron Miyagi is a crucial partner in India’s ongoing efforts to become semiconductor manufacturing hub. Because, the company makes the tools needed to make semiconductor chips, and has already signed an MoU with Tata Electronics to supply cutting-edge tools for the two upcoming plants of Tata in India.

Tokyo Electron (TEL) is one of the world’s top suppliers of semiconductor manufacturing equipment, the “capital goods” that actually make chips. The company makes tools for each step involved in semiconductor making, like etching, deposition, cleaning, coating/developing, etc. A close tie with the company is crucial for access to tools, process know-how, and training of operators.

The factory visit gave the leaders a practical understanding of the opportunities that exist between the two countries to forge collaboration in the field of semiconductor supply chain, fabrication and testing.

For India’s strategy, equipment access is pivotal for three reasons. First, India’s flagship wafer-fab and semiconductor packaging projects hinge on timely tool procurement and installation. Second, India must train thousands of tool operators and process engineers to run and maintain complex tools at high yield. Third, long-term resilience depends on embedding global suppliers like TEL into India’s ecosystem, through service hubs, training pipelines, and, over time, even localised capabilities.

The government of India has already approved ten semiconductor units across states in the country, with additional projects cleared in August 2025. These plants will need to procure high end tools used in semiconductor manufacturing, which are made by only few companies in the world. A visible, high-level engagement with TEL is important in this regard.

Tokyo Electron supplies the full suite of tools needed in a semiconductor fab, each serving a distinct purpose in chipmaking. Its coater/developer systems apply and process photoresist layers for lithography, while Etch tools use plasma to carve precise patterns into silicon and other films. Deposition systems such as CVD, PVD and ALD lay down insulating, conducting and barrier layers essential for device structures.

Cleaning equipment made by TEL ensures wafers remain free of particles and residues between steps, and Thermal Processing systems like furnaces and rapid thermal anneal units activate dopants and improve film quality. Complementing these, Metrology and Inspection tools measure critical dimensions, film thickness, and detect defects, enabling process control and yield improvement. Together, these tools form the backbone of any modern fab, making TEL’s engagement crucial for semiconductor manufacturing in India.

Tokyo Electron Miyagi has already signed a MoU with Tata Electronics to supply semiconductor making tools to be used in Tata’s upcoming two semiconductor units in India. The two companies announced a strategic partnership in September 2024. This covers equipment planning and procurement, services, and the ecosystem pieces needed to install toolsets on schedule.

Statements issued by both the companies said that the two companies will collaborate to accelerate semiconductor equipment infrastructure for India’s first Fab being built by Tata Electronics in Dholera, Gujarat, and for its assembly and test facility in Jagiroad, Assam.

Apart from supplying tools, the deal also involves training Tata Electronics’ workforce on TEL equipment, and supporting ongoing improvement and R&D initiatives. 

Tata Electronics in investing ₹1,18,000 lakh crore in its two units, far more than the combined investment in the other upcoming units. Therefore, TEL’s involvement in India’s semiconductor manufacturing is significant. The company has pledged to provide comprehensive support to Tata Electronics to ensure the success of India’s first commercial wafer fab.

CEO Toshiki Kawai said that Robotics will play a growing role, and local staff will be provided with in-person and remote support from Japan.

Moreover, Tokyo Electron plans to expand its presence in India, with recruitment and training of local engineers in India to support the country’s growing semiconductor industry. The company aims to establish a team of engineers by 2026 to provide technical services to Tata Electronics.

Not many companies make semiconductors, and much smaller number of companies in the world make the tools used in making semiconductors. Therefore, close ties with companies like TEL is very important for the industry. Therefore, PM Modi’s Sendai visit was not just a plant photo-op, it was an important part of India’s Semiconductor Mission.