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Friday, June 07, 2024

Israel has no place in region's future; cancerous tumour must be eradicated

Israel has no place in region's future; cancerous tumour must be eradicated - Nasrallah

Hezbollah’s Secretary-General
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah makes
a speech on May 31, 2024.
The leader of Hezbollah’s resistance movement has called for global efforts to eradicate the Zionist regime, saying it’s a “cancerous gland” that must be removed.

In televised remarks, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said it’s their doctrinal, ethical, and religious responsibility to make every effort to get rid of Israel, which has committed countless atrocities against Palestinians.

Nasrallah stated that the ongoing fight for Gaza is a battle of existence, and the defeat of the Israeli regime in this battle will have significant effects across various fields in the entire region.

He emphasized that whoever can be part of the Gaza battle must join it. The Lebanese leader said Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's insistence on continuing the war has worsened matters for the Zionist entity.

He added that although some governments have remained silent in the face of the atrocities, the bloodshed in Gaza has been awakening global public opinion and isolating the regime.

Nasrallah also cited warnings from the head of Israel’s central bank and army commanders about the disasters occurring inside the Israeli-occupied territories and the Israeli army's failure to defeat Hamas in Gaza.

The leader of Hezbollah’s resistance movement has called for global efforts to eradicate the Zionist regime, saying it’s a “cancerous gland” that must be removed.

‘Gaza battle will shape future of Lebanon’

He also discussed the ongoing exchange of fire between Hezbollah and the Israeli regime, saying the battle of Gaza shapes the future of Lebanon and the whole region at the strategic, security, and national levels.

Nasrallah mentioned that the people of Lebanon support resistance against Israel and that the front is vigorously fighting the Israeli regime. He boasted that their attacks have made Israeli officials and settlers desperate.

Regarding Lebanon’s presidential crisis, he stated that the battle with Israel has no relation to the issue of Lebanon’s presidency.

He blamed foreign interventions and internal disagreements for the country's failure to hold presidential elections for months.

He said the movement is ready to support efforts to overcome the deadlock and called for dialogue to bring internal issues to a satisfactory conclusion.

Yemen anti-Israel operations hailed

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Hezbollah leader hailed Yemen’s anti-Israel operations, expressing solidarity with the Yemeni people and army in the face of American-British aggression against them.

He praised the steadfastness of Yemenis in their efforts to support Gaza and their pledge that no amount of pressure can stop their anti-Israel operations.

Nasrallah also commented on the pro-Palestine student protests in the US, saying they’ve expanded the resistance front to Western society.

“For the first time, we feel that the resistance front is expanding to this extent through the movement of students in American and Western universities as part of the honourable, humanitarian, and moral stance against the Israeli crimes in Gaza,” he said⍐.

SOURCE:Press TV

'இந்திய அமைதிப் படுகொலை'- நினைவேந்தல்

 இந்திய அமைதிப்படையினரால் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டவர்களின் நினைவேந்தல்




இந்திய அமைதிப்படையால் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டவர்களின் நினைவேந்தல் நிகழ்வு நேற்றைய தினம் வியாழக்கிழமை புத்தூர் வாதரவத்தையில், இடம்பெற்றது. 

உயிரிழந்தவர்களின் உறவுகளால் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்ட இடத்தில் தீபங்கள் ஏற்றப்பட்டு மலர் தூவி அஞ்சலி செலுத்தப்பட்டு நினைவேந்தல்  நிகழ்வு முன்னெடுக்கப்பட்டிருந்து. 


1989ஆம் ஆண்டு  வாதரவத்தையில் இந்திய அமைதிப்படையினரால் ஒன்பது பொதுமக்கள் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டிருந்தனர் அவர்களின் நினைவாகவே நினைவேந்தல் நிகழ்வு நடைபெற்றது.


நிகழ்வில் கலந்து கொண்டு அஞ்சலி செலுத்திய வடமாகாண சபையின் முன்னாள் உறுப்பினர் அனந்தி சசிதரன் அஞ்சலியின் பின் கருத்து தெரிவிக்கையில், 

இந்திய அமைதிப்படை என்ற பெயரில் இலங்கைக்கு வந்த இந்திய இராணுவம் பல்வேறு இடங்களில் பொதுமக்களை படுகொலை செய்திருந்தது.


ஆனால் இவ்வாறான படுகொலைக்கு இன்றுவரையும் இந்திய அரசு எவ்வித மன்னிப்பும் கோரவில்லை.

இது தொடர்பில் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மக்களுக்கு இதுவரை நீதியும் வழங்கப்படவில்லை. தமிழ் மக்களாகிய நாம் இன்றும் ஏதிலிகளாகவே இருந்து வருகிறோம். 

படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்டவர்களுக்காக அமைக்கப்பட்ட நினைவுத் தூபி போரின் பின் கடந்த 2012ம் ஆண்டளவில் இராணுவத்தினரால் உடைக்கப்பட்டது. அந்த நினைவுத் தூபியை விரைவில் அமைத்து அவர்களை நினைவுகூருவதற்கு வழி செய்ய வேண்டும் என தெரிவித்தார்⍐. 

Source:pathivu.com

India’s assassination plot

 How India silences critics in the US and Canada | Fault Lines Documentary


India’s assassination plot

Fault Lines investigates India’s alleged campaign to assassinate critics in the United States and Canada.

Last June 2023, a Vancouver-area plumber named Hardeep Singh Nijjar stood before his congregation of Sikhs to deliver a dark prediction: agents of the Indian government were plotting to kill him. He asked his followers to continue to pursue his life’s work – an independent state for Sikhs in India – after he was gone.

When Hardeep left the temple that evening, a white sedan hemmed him in, two armed men jumped out of the car, and shot him dozens of times. It was clearly a planned hit – witnesses saw the gunmen jump into a separate getaway car – but there was no concrete evidence that India was behind the killing⍐.

Sri Lanka: Out of the frying pan into the fire - Victor Ivan

 

Sri Lanka is now going through the last stage of the disastrous, multi-phased journey into the rock bottom of a great abyss, which had begun 72 years ago and gradually progressed in several phases. The time cohorts from 1948 to 1956, 1956 to 1978, 1978 to 2009 and 2009 to 2020 can be considered its main phases. In each phase the volume of the crisis remained much greater than it was in the immediately preceding phase and it can be considered a salient feature of this journey.

Another significant highlight of this journey has been that the navigators who steered the craft of Sri Lanka at each stage and the passengers on-board were not aware that it was heading towards a great abyss. In the last Presidential Election, which can be considered the stage at which it had reached the end of the abyss, both the candidates who contested the election and the public who voted for them were not aware that they had reached the penultimate halt before the final destination. They all aspired to go to heaven whereas at the end they had reached hell.            

Out of the frying pan into the fire 

What is left of the country now is a huge pile of irreparable debris. The fabric of the socio-political system and the economy which constitute the body of the country is rendered loose completely. The socio-political system is in a state of complete collapse. The State, which is corrupt, degenerated and rotten, is in a state of bankruptcy, being unable to pay even the salaries of State employees. 

The magnitude of the crisis is amply evident from the request made by the Government to the public servants asking them to contribute one month or half a month salary to the Government, ignoring the situation in which the people were locked down in their homes in the face of the pandemic. 

The pursuance of a policy of plundering public wealth by successive governments that came to power since 1978 has led to bankrupt the State and corrupt State institutions in full scale. In the face of the plundering of wealth becoming the main objective of the ruling elite, the country lost the ability to manage all other things effectively. Consequently everything else had run into a great chaos. 

Excessive recruitment of people for public service for narrow political gains has led to unnecessary expansion of the cadre of public service rendering the latter ineffective and inefficient whilst at the same time making the salary bill an unbearable cost burden. 

The failure to build a modern nation and the riots and insurrections that occurred from time to time due to ethnic, caste and religious differences while disrupting social harmony, killing people and causing massive damage to property have served as a key factor that weakened the economy of the country. With foreign-funded development projects becoming the main source of illicit wealth for the rulers, initiation and operation of quasi development projects which did not contribute to the development of the country became a commonplace practice.

Procurement of short-term loans on a commercial basis at high interest rates has become a fashion. Consequently, the volume of foreign debts, the annual instalment payable and the interest rates had increased rapidly making it an unbearable burden on the country. By 2018, the annual instalment and the interest payable on foreign loans alone over the next four years had amounted to $ 14.9 billion.

By the last Presidential Election, the instalment and interest payable on foreign loans compared with the instalment and interest payable on foreign loans obtained through State banks had grown to 101% of the annual income of the Government.

Economic reality

Now, the Government of Sri Lanka, in full sense of the term, is in a complete state of bankruptcy. All important sources of Government revenue are either blocked or have been blocked. The tax relief program launched by the President has deprived the Government of Rs. 650 billion. Remittances by overseas workers which constituted an important source of precious foreign exchange have been shattered completely. Income from the tourism industry is also in a state of collapse. Earnings from export trade also have experienced a sharp fall.

Even if the Parliament is reconvened and approval obtained to withdraw money from the Government’s Consolidated Fund, it will not be of much use as the latter remains almost empty and devoid of adequate funds. Burrowing money can be considered the easiest way to fill the Consolidated Fund to a certain measure. Yet, the borrowing of money will not be easy as Sri Lanka is in a state of confusion. 

The credit rating of Sri Lanka has been downgraded from Grade b to Grade b- , thus having a big impact on the country’s borrowing costs. Under the circumstances Sri Lanka might have to pay a higher rate of interest of 6-8% if it resorts to borrowing from the international financial market. 

This situation will only exacerbate the short-term debt crisis of Sri Lanka. Even the likelihood of borrowing from sovereign bonds has also diminished to a great extent and several efforts made so far have been in vain. The ability of the Central Bank to borrow from the issuance of Treasury bills has been rendered less effective, creating a situation in which the Central Bank itself is compelled to buy the Treasury bonds issued by it. 

Conquest of darkness

This situation could lead to a major decline in businesses and loss of hundreds and thousands of jobs. The policy of printing money to pay salaries and pensions to public servants and meet the other expenses will invariably result in a severe inflation followed by an exorbitant increase in the price of goods which will prove to be unbearable. A situation may arise in which the value of savings of those living on interest earnings of their savings will evaporate. These developments can cause confusion and turmoil in the socio political sphere. 

This can be considered the biggest crisis Sri Lanka has faced since independence. It might even result in the decline of the entire political system, plunging the country into a complete anarchy. Neither the Government nor any other Opposition party seems to be having the capacity or a farsighted vision to resolve the crisis. 

It was only the Punaruda Movement which was able to foresee the impending disaster Sri Lanka was heading for and announce it in advance. It was also the Punaruda Movement that came up with an alternative solution to this problem in advance. In an appeal made on 18 July 2018 to hundreds of public organisations affiliated to the Punaruda Movement explaining to them the need for founding a People’s Movement to win structural reforms, the impending crisis was briefly explained as follows. 

“The large-scale crisis Sri Lanka is heading for can be considered a phenomenon which had commenced since independence and gradually developed in proportion assuming different shapes over a time. The country is being pushed into anarchy by this massive crisis. The failure of all political parties and political leaders in the country can be considered as an outcome of this crisis. It manifests the heralding of the end of one historic era of the system of representative democratic governance in our country.”⍐

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Majuwana Kankanamage Victor Ivan (Sinhala language: මාජුවානා කන්කානම්ගේ වික්ටර් අයිවන්) is Sri Lankan journalist. He was a 'Marxist rebel' in his youth and later became the Editor of the controversial Sinhalese newspaper Ravaya. He served as the Editor of the Ravaya for 25 years consecutively since its inception. Victor is an investigative journalist, political critic, a theorist, social activist and also an author of several books.

He was the 7th accused of the main court case on the Youth Insurrection 1971. The panel of judges described him as the most colourful character of all suspects respondents. Judgment of the Criminal Justice Commission. Inquiry No, 1 – Government Printer- page 255. He was sentenced to 5 years imprisonment at the end of the inquiry. During his imprisonment he abandoned the doctrine of the JVP as well as that of Marxism. While rejecting the doctrine of violence he became an ardent follower of Mahatma Gandhi adopting the philosophy of non-violence expounded by him.

In 1977 he was released with others on an un-conditional pardon given by Jayawardena Government. Later he joined LSSP and unsuccessfully contested the Galle by-election. He now recalls that the insurrection was a "foolish dream" 

Source: Wikipedia

Thursday, June 06, 2024

‘Sri Lanka Electricity Bill’ passed with amendments

 ‘Sri Lanka Electricity Bill’ passed with amendments

The Speaker of the Parliament Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena announced to the House this evening (06) that the third reading of the ‘Sri Lanka Electricity Bill’ was passed in the Parliament with amendments.

Meanwhile, the second reading of the draft bill was also passed in the Parliament with a majority of 44 votes.

The ‘Sri Lanka Electricity Bill’, which incorporates the proposed reforms for the electricity sector, was presented to the parliament by Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera on April 25. It was published in the government gazette on 17 April.

The Bill seeks to provide for the establishment of the National Electricity Advisory Council and make the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL) the regulator for the electricity industry in terms of the proposed legislation.

Further, it seeks to provide legislative measures applicable to the incorporation of corporate entities, in which all activities connected to the generation, transmission, distribution, trade, supply and procurement of electricity are vested.

In addition, the Bill also provides for the repealing of the Ceylon Electricity Board Act, No.17 of 1969 and the Sri Lanka Electricity Act, No.20 of 2009.

However, several parties challenged the proposed bill before the Supreme Court, following which the court informed the Parliament that several clauses of the proposed ‘Sri Lanka Electricity Bill’ are inconsistent with the Constitution of Sri Lanka.

The Supreme Court determination stated that these clauses shall only be passed by a special majority of Parliament, and that one clause requires approval through a referendum, the Speaker informed the House. However, the country’s apex court has stated that these clauses could be passed with a simple majority if amended as specified in the Supreme Court’s determination.

On Wednesday (05), the government agreed to accept all the amendments proposed by the Supreme Court to the relevant draft bill.⍐ 

ADA June 6, 2024

Advocata welcomes Economic Transformation Bill

Advocata welcomes Economic Transformation Bill; lists few key concerns


Independent policy think tank the Advocata Institute yesterday welcomed the  Economic Transformation Bill as ambitious and progressive but listed few key concerns. 

“The Advocata Institute welcomes the Government’s stated intention to move from an inward-oriented economy to a more open economy to boost international trade, foreign investment and productivity,” it said in a statement.  

The Sri Lankan Government has gazetted the Economic Transformation Bill to overhaul the country’s economic landscape. This ambitious Bill aims to create a more competitive, export-oriented, and digitally-driven economy while achieving net-zero emissions by 2050 – however, enshrining economic targets in law may prove to be problematic.

Some of the key reforms include the establishment of new institutions that are intended to address some important issues. The Bill proposes establishing an Economic Commission to streamline economic activity and trade, and splitting the role of the Board of Investments (BOI) between Zones SL, Invest Sri Lanka, and the Economic Commission.

 Additionally, the bill also sets up specialised bodies to focus on promoting foreign investment (Invest Sri Lanka), developing industrial zones (Zones SL) and international trade (Office for International Trade), boosting productivity (National Productivity Commission), and providing economic expertise (Sri Lanka Institute of Economics and International Trade).

The policy will address crucial areas like debt management, agricultural modernisation, import-export regulations, and economic governance.

The Economic Transformation Bill sets ambitious debt reduction targets, aiming to bring the public debt-to-GDP ratio below 95% by 2032 and significantly reduce annual Government borrowing needs. This strategy is complemented by a Public Financial Management Bill, which will be introduced alongside the Economic Transformation Act, to ensure responsible management of public finances and prevent future economic crises.

The Bill requires the Cabinet of Ministers to submit a report to Parliament every five years, outlining the policy framework and strategies to achieve the National Economic Transformation goals (Section 5). This may be revised from time to time and presented to Parliament. The first report is to be presented in 2025.

All policies, programs, regulations, circulars, and directives of the Government shall conform to such National Policy on Economic Transformation. The Government will also present a report each year on 31 March detailing progress made towards each target, and any corrective actions taken as and when needed (Section 7).

Limits for levels of debt and public expenditure are within the control of the Government and are widely used in other countries. Targets such as Exports/GDP, FDI/GDP while clearly signalling the Government’s intent, belong more to the realm of policy than law. The bill makes provisions that where these targets have not been met, the Government shall inform Parliament of the measures being taken to remedy the situation and indicate when they will be met. While the remedial measures reflect a commitment to meeting these targets, the practicality of it may be questionable as many factors influencing these targets often extend beyond direct Government control. 

Aththa Cartoon

Key aspects of concern

The composition of the Board of the Economic Commission, which proposes a 10-member board with four ex officio members of the relevant line ministries while there will be six members appointed by the President. The chairperson of the Economic Commission Board will also be a Presidential appointment, while the Director General of the Economic Commission is a Ministerial appointment. The wide powers exercised by the President over these appointments leave room for questions of credibility and politicisation of appointments which needs to be carefully considered. Independent appointments of these key officials is mandatory for effective national policy formulation.

Advocata is concerned that certain provisions of the Bill do not apply to the Colombo Port City Special Economic Zone, established under section 2 of the Colombo Port City Economic Commission Act, No. 11 of 2021. This exclusion could lead to unfair competition. 

Another important point of concern is the incentives and exemptions offered to investors under this bill, which leaves room for ad-hoc short-term measures that can be changed from time to time under the prescription of the Minister. 

Setting targets on debt and primary balance is commonly found in laws, while targets for GDP growth, exports, and unemployment are often addressed as policy targets. By codifying these targets into law, they gain a degree of enforceability that is not typical for policy goals. This raises questions about the mechanisms for enforcement and the consequences for failing to meet these targets. The decision to legislate specific economic targets in Sri Lanka’s Economic Transformation Act is unusual but comes with potential challenges in terms of enforcement and practicality⍐.

Daily FT Thursday, 6 June 2024



Wednesday, June 05, 2024

பிரதமர் மோடியின் பதவியேற்பு விழா ஜூன் 9-க்கு தள்ளிவைப்பு?

பிந்திய செய்தி:

பிரதமர் மோடியின் பதவியேற்பு விழா ஜூன் 9-க்கு தள்ளிவைப்பு?

 புதுடெல்லி: டெல்லியில் ஜூன் 9-ம் தேதி மாலை நரேந்திர மோடி மூன்றாவது முறையாக பிரதமராக பதவியேற்க உள்ளார் எனத் தகவல் வெளியாகியுள்ளது. ஜூன் 8-ல் பிரதமர் மோடி பதவியேற்பார் என சொல்லப்பட்டு வந்த நிலையில், பல்வேறு காரணங்களால் இவ்விழா ஒருநாள் தள்ளிவைக்கப்படுவதாக தெரிகிறது.

இந்து தமிழ் வியாழன், ஜூன் 06 2024

குறிப்பு:பல்வேறு காரணங்களில் ஒரு காரணம் கூட வெளியிடப்படவில்லை ENB.




Narendra Modi Fell to Earth After Making It All About Himself

The Indian leader used his singular personality to lift his party to new heights. Then the opposition found a way to use his cult of personality against him

People in a crowd holding cardboard cutouts of Mr. Modi at a campaign rally in Chandrapur, India, in April.Credit...Atul Loke for The New York Times

When everything became about Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, his party and its century-old Hindu-nationalist network were propelled to unimagined heights.

On the back of his singular charisma and political skill, a onetime-fringe religious ideology was pulled to the center of Indian life. Landslide election victories remade India’s politics, once dominated by diverse coalitions representing a nation that had shaped its independence on secular principles.

But there were always risks in wrapping a party’s fortunes so completely in the image of one man, in inundating a country of many religions, castes and cultures with that leader’s name, face and voice. Voters could start to think that everything was about him, not them. They could even revolt.

On Tuesday, Mr. Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P., fell back to earth. After having promised their biggest election romp yet, they lost more than 60 seats. Mr. Modi will remain in office for a third term, but only with the help of a contentious coalition of parties, some of which are opposed to his core beliefs and want power of their own.

With the result, India’s strained democracy appeared to roar back to life, its beaten-down political opposition reinvigorated. And after a decade in which Mr. Modi’s success in entrenching Hindu supremacy had often felt like the new common sense, India is seeing its leader and itself in a new light, and trying to understand this unexpected turn.

Most fundamentally, the opposition, newly coalesced for what it called a do-or-die moment as Mr. Modi increasingly tilted the playing field, found a way to use the cult of personality around him to its advantage.

Opposition leaders focused on bread-and-butter issues, often at granular levels in particular constituencies. They hammered Mr. Modi over persistent unemployment and stark inequality. But the B.J.P., with Mr. Modi from on high its only spokesman, was often left with just one answer: Trust in “Modi’s guarantee.”

“The ‘Modi’s guarantee’ slogan turned out to be our undoing,” said Ajay Singh Gaur, a B.J.P. worker who had campaigned in the party stronghold of Uttar Pradesh, the northern state where Mr. Modi suffered his biggest blow on Tuesday, losing nearly half of the B.J.P. seats.

The opposition made that sound like this was not about him having delivered, or trying to deliver,” Mr. Gaur said, “but about him being an arrogant politician.”

Mr. Modi gave his adversaries a lot to work with, even declaring that he may not be “biological” and that he had been sent by God.

He has still emerged better so far than other Indian leaders who deeply centralized power. He remains in control of levers of power that could help him and his party restore their dominance. Indira Gandhi, who had also glorified herself and went so far as to suspend India’s democracy after declaring a national emergency, was voted out at the peak of her powers before returning three years later.

But Mr. Modi’s B.J.P., the world’s largest political party, finds itself in a tough spot after years of centralization and reliance on a government machinery put to the service of one man, analysts say. The huge advantage the party has built in numbers and resources is undercut by a lack of internal consultation and delegation of authority.

That was a key reason for its failure in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, with 240 million people, and surrounding states. Local B.J.P. leaders were disenchanted by a top-down approach toward choosing candidates, as well as what they called a misguided belief that Mr. Modi’s popularity could allow the party to sidestep potent local issues and caste factors.

With Mr. Modi sucking up all the oxygen at the top, other senior leaders of the party have been left to fight for relevance and a voice. His relentless self-promotion has also alienated the leaders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or R.S.S., the B.J.P.’s right-wing fountainhead.

A banner for Mr. Modi in Varanasi, India, last month.Credit...Atul Loke for The New York Times

During election seasons, the R.S.S. activates its vast grass-roots network in support of B.J.P. candidates. While Mr. Modi, a former foot soldier in the organization, has advanced many of its goals, his consolidation of power goes against its regimented nature and its focus on ideology over individual personalities.

One R.S.S. insider, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal thinking, said that Mr. Modi’s exalting of himself had created such resentment inside the group that some of its leaders welcomed any sort of reality check for him, short of his ouster.

Sudheendra Kulkarni, a political analyst who served as an aide to the first B.J.P. prime minister in the 1990s, said Mr. Modi had pushed through unpopular legislation — in particular farm laws that prompted a yearlong protest that choked New Delhi — without consulting with party officials in the affected states. They were left to cope with the ramifications.

“The B.J.P. was never a one-leader party,” Mr. Kulkarni said. “All that changed with Narendra Modi in 2014. He sought to promote a new authoritarian idea of one nation, one leader.”

Hypothesizing that Mr. Modi’s popularity had peaked, the opposition saw an opening to go after a decisive section of votes in the Indian political formula.

For decades before his rise in 2014, neither the B.J.P. nor the Indian National Congress, the country’s two largest parties, could muster majorities on its own. Mr. Modi expanded his party’s backing by consolidating right-wing Hindu voters and drawing in new supporters with his personal story of a humble caste and economic background and a promise to change lives through robust development.

A decade later, in this year’s election, the opposition found traction in painting a very different picture of Mr. Modi — as an autocratic friend of billionaires. Since Mr. Modi had achieved everything he had set out to do, the opposition argued, his pursuit of a resounding majority could only mean that he would seek radical change to the Constitution.


That claim stirred anxiety among India’s Dalits and other underprivileged groups, who see the Constitution as their only protection in a deeply unequal society, guaranteeing them a share of government jobs and seats in higher education as well as elected bodies. The opposition was able to push the message harder when some in Mr. Modi’s right-wing support base, long seen as having an upper-caste bias, called for revoking the quotas.


Caste identity was a major driving factor for voters in many states, particularly in Uttar Pradesh, with its 80 parliamentary seats. The decline of a Dalit party in the state meant that about 20 percent of the votes were potentially up for grabs.


In Ayodhya, the constituency where Mr. Modi inaugurated a grand Ram temple earlier this year in an effort to consolidate his Hindu support base, the opposition put up a Dalit candidate. He handily defeated the B.J.P.’s two-term incumbent.In other cases, voters showed their anger over the B.J.P.’s perceived sense of impunity. In Kheri, a constituency where the son of a B.J.P. minister rammed his S.U.V. into a crowd of protesting farmers, killing several, the minister also lost.


Mr. Modi’s election campaign took its most divisive turn in Banswara, in the desert state of Rajasthan, where he called India’s 200 million Muslims “infiltrators” and raised fears that the opposition would give them India’s wealth, including Hindu women’s necklaces.


Banswara’s B.J.P. incumbent was routed in the election. While the loss was most likely attributable to local issues, the national discussion noted that Mr. Modi’s comments had not helped.


In his own constituency of Varanasi, in Uttar Pradesh, Mr. Modi’s winning margin of nearly half a million votes in 2019 shrank to about 150,000 — a disappointing showing after he had dispatched some of the B.J.P.’s most senior leaders to camp out there to help him achieve an even bigger victory.

Jai Prakash, a tea and samosa seller in Varanasi, said some of the prime minister’s work, particularly his improvement of roads, was popular. But Mr. Modi was losing the plot, Mr. Prakash said, by turning to issues disconnected from people’s day-to-day lives.

“Prices are skyrocketing; so is unemployment,” Mr. Prakash said. “He has done some good. But people cannot worship him endlessly.”⍐

  • Mujib Mashal is the South Asia bureau chief for The Times, helping to lead coverage of India and the diverse region around it, including Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan.
  • Suhasini Raj is a reporter based in New Delhi who has covered India for The Times since 2014. 
  • Hari Kumar covers India, based out of New Delhi. He has been a journalist for more than two decades.

New York Times June 5, 2024 

Tuesday, June 04, 2024

Reuters: India election results 2024

India election results 2024


Results of the six-week-long election to the lower house of India’s Parliament started pouring in Tuesday morning

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பயங்கரவாத எதிர்ப்பு சட்டத்தை இரத்துச் செய்வதை ஆராய விசேட குழு

  பயங்கரவாத எதிர்ப்பு சட்டத்தை இரத்துச் செய்வதை ஆராய விசேட குழு மே முற்பகுதியில் பொதுமக்கள், சிவில் அமைப்புகளிடம் கருத்து April 14, 2025 தின...