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Australian Journalist Says She Had No Choice But to Leave India

Avani Dias said that she had been denied a visa renewal for weeks because of her reporting on the Sikh separatist movement. Indian officials disputed her account.

Avani Dias produced a television segment about accusations that India was responsible for the death of a Sikh separatist in Canada last year.

Modi Calls Muslims ‘Infiltrators’ Who Would Take India’s Wealth

The direct language used against the country’s largest minority was a contrast to the image Prime Minister Narendra Modi presents on the world stage.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India at a rally in Bengaluru on Saturday, a day before a speech in which he attacked Muslims.

Modi’s Power Keeps Growing, and India Looks Sure to Give Him More

Few doubt the popular prime minister will win a third term in voting that starts Friday. His strong hand is just what many Indians seem to want.

To Narendra Modi’s legions of supporters, he is a magnetic figure and a powerful orator, with an image as a tireless, incorruptible worker for India.

Why India’s Opposition Can’t Get It Together

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party got less than 40% of the vote in the last election. But his fractured and dysfunctional rivals have struggled to capitalize on that.

An Indian National Congress rally in Mandya, India, on Wednesday. The party governed India for decades, but those days are long gone.

How A.I. Tools Could Change India’s Elections

Avatars are addressing voters by name, in whichever of India’s many languages they speak. Experts see potential for misuse in a country already rife with disinformation.

Why Elections Take So Long in India

The election is a giant undertaking that requires millions of poll workers, voting machines and security forces to cover deserts, mountains, forests and megacities.

A poll official working on electronic voting machines at a distribution center.

China’s ‘Special Place’ in Modi’s Heart Is Now a Thorn in His Side

As Narendra Modi seeks a third term as prime minister, India’s rupture with China looms over a pillar of his campaign: making his country a major power.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, in 2016 at a BRICS meeting in Goa, India.

Modi’s Party Doesn’t Control All of India. But He’s Working on It.

As an election nears, political strife between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and opposition-held states is straining the federal formula that holds India together.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India campaigning in Hyderabad last week.

India’s 2024 Multiphase Election: What to Know

India’s general elections will determine the political direction of the world’s most populous nation for the next five years.

Data Dump Exposes Links Between Money and Politics in India

Lists of donors and beneficiaries cast government contracts and police investigations in an unflattering new light.

A State Bank of India branch in Mumbai, India. India’s Supreme Court ordered the government-owned bank to disclose details of anonymously purchased electoral bonds.

India to Enforce Citizenship Law Criticized as Anti-Muslim

The law sparked lethal riots when it was passed. Now, after a four-year delay, it has come into force on the eve of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s re-election campaign.

Police block students trying start a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act in India’s Assam State on Tuesday.

The Maldives Is a Tiny Paradise. Why Are China and India Fighting Over It?

Asia’s two giants are crowding the island nation with building projects, tossing its newborn democracy to and fro.

Malé, the capital and most populous city of the Maldives.

India’s Supreme Court Strikes Down Contentious Election Fund-Raising Tool

Judges found that government bonds used for anonymous political donations were unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court building in New Delhi. Judges on Thursday delivered a sharp rebuke to the Modi government, declaring an important fund-raising method unconstitutional.

‘It Is Suffocating’: A Top Liberal University Is Under Attack in India

A campaign to make the country an explicitly Hindu nation has had a chilling effect on left-leaning and secular institutions like Jawaharlal Nehru University.

A statue of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, on the campus of the university that bears his name in New Delhi.

Demolition of Muslim Properties Sets Off Deadly Violence in India

When officials arrived to raze a mosque and seminary ruled to be illegally located on public property, they encountered hundreds of protesters.

Police officers near burned vehicles after protests in Haldwani, in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand on Friday.

Lights! Camera! Modi! It’s a One-Man Show on Indian Television.

The grand opening of a temple in Ayodhya was both a religious ritual and a made-for-TV spectacle for a broadcast media co-opted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Reporters inside Ram Temple in Ayodhya, India, after the opening ceremony last month.

Indian Archeologists Find 17th-Century Mosque Was Built over Hindu Temple

The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has reportedly found Hindu relics beneath a Muslim temple, fueling a bitter religious dispute.

Tuesday Briefing: North Korean Missiles in Ukraine

Plus, a “revolutionary” way to feed the world.

The aftermath of a Russian strike in Kyiv, Ukraine, in early January.

In Ayodhya, Modi Opens Ram Temple in Triumph for Hindu Nationalists

The temple inaugurated by the prime minister is on the disputed site of a centuries-old mosque destroyed in a Hindu mob attack that set a precedent of impunity in cases of violence against Muslims.

In front of the Ram temple in Ayodhya, in northern India.

Why India’s New Ram Temple in Ayodhya Is So Important

Its site is sacred to Hindus, and it also represents the much more recent victory of Hinduism as a political identity.

Security was high at the temple before the consecration on Monday.

Netflix Film’s Removal Shows Power of India’s Hindu Right Wing

The movie “Annapoorani” was about a female chef overcoming caste prejudice. Hindu activists said it hurt their feelings.

Netflix pulled a movie that some Hindus considered hurtful.

India Flexes Economic Muscle After Maldives Ministers Call PM Modi a 'Puppet of Israel'

The government of the Maldives on Sunday suspended three deputy ministers for making disparaging remarks about Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

India and Maldives Trade Barbs After Modi’s Beach Visit

Some in the Maldives were critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s trip to nearby Indian islands to promote tourism, seeing it as an attempt to draw visitors away from their nation.

The Maldives in December. The uproar over where Indians take their beach vacations frames a broader contest with China.

India’s Top Court Reverses Early Release of 11 Men Convicted of Gang Rape

The case of Bilkis Bano, who was three months pregnant when she was attacked, became a powerful symbol of communal bloodshed and of the widespread violence against women in the country.

A rally in 2022 in Kolkata, India, in support of Bilkis Bano, who was raped in 2002.

Christians in Northern India Forgo Christmas Celebrations After 'Record' Year of Persecution

The Hindu nationalist government of India presided over the escalation of Christian persecution in the country at a "record pace" in 2023, religious freedom experts told Breitbart News, and faces little to no pressure to protect their Christian populations from the West.

In India’s embattled news media, women are fighting to be heard

Journalists have been targeted for harassment, and some women are only allowed to speak to the press if they have a male chaperone.

Arti Kumari, whose story was at the heart of the India’s Daughters series, training to run a seven-minute mile, one of the tests for a job in the Central Industrial Security Force of India.

With Big State Victories, Modi Expands His Dominance in India

Results of voting for the governments of four Indian states showed gains for Mr. Modi’s ruling party, putting him in a strong position ahead of general elections in the spring.

Shivraj Singh Chouhan, the chief minister of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh and a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party, is greeted by supporters in Bhopal, India, on Sunday.

Alleged Plot to Kill Sikh Separatist Highlights Thorn in India’s Side

The charges are rooted in a decades-old dispute over the demand by some Sikhs for a sovereign state known as Khalistan carved out of northern India.

Members of the Sikh community protesting against Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India in Washington in 2020.

A Timeline of Plots Against Sikh Activists, According to Canada and the U.S.

Officials in the United States and Canada have described two assassination attempts: the killing of a Sikh leader in British Columbia and a plan to murder an activist in New York.

Mourners carrying the coffin of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Sikh activist who was murdered in June in British Columbia.

An Alleged Plot’s Burning Question: Why Would India Take the Risk?

After an indictment accuses an Indian official of ordering an assassination on U.S. soil, diplomats and experts debate how far up the chain the scheme went.

An indictment unsealed this week described a plot to kill a Sikh activist in New York, months after a Sikh leader was killed in Canada. Both called for the creation of a Sikh state.

India Ignored Repeated Warnings Before Tunnel Trapped 41 Men

Environmentalists argued that a road project was destabilizing the fragile Himalayan landscape. The government maneuvered to continue it.

The entrance to the tunnel in Uttarakhand, India, where workers were rescued after being trapped by a collapse for 17 days.

At BRICS Summit, Countries Diverge Slightly on Israel and War in Gaza

They called for the release of all civilians who are being illegally held captive, as well as a humanitarian truce that would lead to a cessation of hostilities.

The leaders of BRICS nations, including President Xi Jinping of China, participated in a virtual summit on the war in Gaza.

Indian Opposition Figures Get Threat Notification From Apple

The notifications suggested that many opposition figures could be under “state-sponsored” surveillance, but even Apple said the warning could have been a false alarm.

Throngs of people fill an Apple store in Mumbai.

Canada’s Harjit Sajjan Describes Anti-Sikh Bias He’s Faced

Par : Ian Austen
Harjit Sajjan, the emergency preparedness minister, has faced threats of violence from other members of India’s large diaspora in Canada.

“There’s always fear and there are different levels of fear” in the Sikh community, Harjit Sajjan said.

New Delhi Police Raid Journalists in India

The sweep caught up the founder and contributors of a left-leaning news website, according to other news outlets and those raided. A Times investigation had linked the site to a pro-China network.

Security officers with confiscated material after a raid at the office of the website NewsClick in New Delhi on Tuesday.

Modi’s Hindu Nationalism Stokes Tension in Indian Diaspora

The killing of a Canadian Sikh leader, carried out by what Canada described as Indian government agents, occurred amid widening divisions in the diaspora.

Hindu-first policies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India and his increasing intolerance of scrutiny have spilled over into Indian communities worldwide, experts say.

Otto Von Bharat

Par : Jude Russo
Foreign Affairs

Otto Von Bharat

Assuming the friendship of “the world’s largest democracy” is a dangerous misconstrual.

The,Prime,Minister,,Shri,Narendra,Modi,At,The,Virtual,Vesak

Onomastic controversy rarely makes headlines. This week saw an exception. India, the host nation for the weekend’s Group of 20 summit, sent out invitations to dine with Indian head of state Droupadi Murmu under the unfamiliar title “President of Bharat”—the Hindi moniker for the subcontinental republic. (A number of outlets have claimed that it is the Sanskrit name for India, which is almost but not quite right—it would be भारतदेश, Bhaaratadesha.)

The tone of coverage has mostly been curious, dominated by the question of whether India will change its English name, as Turkey attempted to do last year. (At The American Conservative, it will always be Turkey—and, for that matter, India and Burma.) There have been the usual ambivalent references to Narendra Modi’s nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, the current party of government.

Ambivalent because Americans rather badly want India to be a friend. There is a certain rose-tinted view of India that obtains in the U.S., in part a credit to the canny P.R. operation run by the founding generation of the modern Republic. (Few remember Gandhi’s desire to sit out Americans’ favorite mythologized crusade, the Second World War, and his equivalence of Hitler’s Germany and Churchill’s Britain. The corrupt oligarchy of the Republic’s first decades and Indira Gandhi’s dictatorship? Forget it.) “The world’s largest democracy” will stand at America’s side, countering China much as it countered “terrorism” in the recent past. 

This naive attitude fundamentally misunderstands India. Any expectation for India to play a supporting role to U.S. foreign policy on ideological grounds is dangerously misguided.

Before the British departure, India had never existed as any kind of nation-state; rather, it had always been imperial. Whatever unity it had came through individual polities’ allegiance to a sovereign crown without reference to each other. The end of this model of sovereignty in preference for a national parliamentary republic—which, despite its federal nature, still posits a single national polity—was a constitutional sea-change. (A sea-change that underlined the embarrassing fiction of the “Commonwealth,” which as an entity has slightly less oomph than the Schengen zone.) The closest comparison in Western history is the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire and the emergence of the modern nation-states of Europe in its former territories. India is having its Bismarckian phase.

Unsurprisingly, India’s dominant concerns are those of a still new nation: strengthening its state, fighting off challenges to state power, and controlling territory. These are internal affairs; external adventures, expansive or “liberal,” are the luxury of mature nations.

Indian state capacity remains on largely pre-modern footing. There are about 2.6 million law enforcement personnel in India total; civil police account for a bit under 2.1 million. This gives India one of the lowest police-to-citizen ratios in the world. It is thus little surprise that corruption, which was already so entrenched as to be proverbial in the native police forces of Kipling’s day, remains a feature of daily life. (When I lived in India in 2016, the backstop solution for dealing with bureaucratic problems was bribing the local chief of police.) The Modi government has made the usual gestures at reforming state officialdom, but, more strikingly, it has ferociously attacked the non-state centers of power that use and enable official corruption—the holders of so-called “black money,” which was the object of 2016’s massive and chaotic currency reform. 

India is still engaged in the most basic level of state consolidation, securing its territory. East-central India continues to be home to a decades-old insurgency carried on by the Naxalites, a confederation of far-left splinters from the Communist Party of India. In 2019, the Indian parliament amended the constitution to bring an end to regional autonomy in Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir, a province claimed by the neighboring Pakistan. The pacification of Kashmir has been accompanied by lockdowns, curfews, and a media blackout—and, because of that final bit, who knows what else—although you would hardly know from the Western press. (An amusing exercise when reading the news: Replace every instance of “Xinjiang” with “Kashmir” and think about India and China’s relative standing with the American public.) 

The on-and-off war with Pakistan, and the sectarian overtones of the conflict, provides a convenient focal point for national ideology. Simply put, the Indian armed forces are hugely popular, and most popular of all when they’re sticking it to their Pakistani counterparts. When I lived in India, billboards advertising milk would celebrate the army’s latest raids against the northern neighbors—a level of jingoism unimaginable in modern America, even during the most perfervid days of the War on Terror. 

This is of a piece with the ongoing persecution of Christians and Muslims within India, and the jockeying between various ethnic and caste groups for government protection—and, for that matter, this week’s experiment with “Bharat.” India is becoming a nation with a particular national identity, at the cost of subsidiary or alternate identifications—including Anglophilia or friendliness to the West. (My colleague Sumantra Maitra has written superbly and at length about these topics.) Bismarck’s specter smiles and nods. 

The simple matter of it is this. India is constrained by internal economic and political dynamics from becoming the Asian sidekick to an American world policeman, even were its ruling class inclined to embark on our crusades. This has borne out at practically every juncture in Indo-American relations, from the Nehru government’s friendly relations with the Soviet Union to Indira Gandhi’s war on foreign capital to the Modi government’s blithe disregard for sanctions on Russia. 

Friendship is an equivocal and impermanent concept in international relations. India is a more equivocal friend than perhaps Americans are used to; unlike most European countries, which must bow and scrape to retain their hiding-places under America’s nuclear skirt, India has an independent nuclear deterrent. It may cooperate when convenient—e.g., using the Global War on Terror as a nice bit of cover for increasing state capacity and doing down Pakistan—but is hardly a reliable ally for a difficult task of uncertain reward. As always, the best dictum in the Indo-Pacific, as in every other theater, is America First, and, perhaps, America Alone.

The post Otto Von Bharat appeared first on The American Conservative.

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