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PM Modi cherishes India's dual victory over Covid-19 and Australia; praise young India

Present day cricket is not only an Indian circus but it is also a virus. While Infected with cricket virus , people can become delusional, corrupted and out of touch from reality. We must ban cricket in Pakistan whenever it is possible.
 
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Tamilnadu Finance Minister " I don't listen to Indian PM's jumla"

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:omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

PM Modi cherishes India's dual victory over Covid-19 and Australia; praise young India
GUWAHATI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday said that India's resolute battle to emerge victorious out of the pandemic and in the cricket field in Australia, have yielded momentous victories that will be cherished for long.

Addressing the 18 th convocation of Tezpur University virtually, Modi drew inspiration for a renewed, self-resilient India from the two notable events where he said the country excelled, even amid most adverse situations.
"When the battle against Covid-19 just started, concern was raised that such a vast country like India will get devastated due to the dearth of resources. But, India have shown that if you have resolved to do something and resilience, it takes little time for readying the resources," Modi said.
"India did not compromise with the Covid situation and took proactive decisions to curb the fast spreading virus. With made in India solution, we resisted the virus spread significantly and utilized the opportunity to improve our health infrastructure. Our vaccine research and production capacity has given a protection shield not only to India but to many other countries in the world," he added.

Modi attributed country's success to produce Coronavirus vaccine within India, to the scientists, researchers and industry. "It is our confidence, bestowed upon own scientists, scholars and industry, which has made the ongoing vaccination drive possible today," the PM said.

He said the digital India push for digital inclusion was instrumental in providing direct benefit transfer (DBT) to the poor and needy during the corona crisis. "Without the bold move to build the digital infrastructure, despite illiteracy factor, government could not have reached out to the poor so effectively with financial benefits during the Covid crisis. In digital inclusion, we are among the leading nations," Modi said.

As India is cherishing its momentous victory over Australia in the cricket field, Modi said the historic series win in foreign soil is not only an inspiration for the sports fraternity but for all fields. "Young India is on the charge. After such a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Australian cricket team, we hit back. Won the next match, and registered a remarkable series win finally, rewriting history. Many of the team members were inexperienced but their positive intent was clear," Modi said, lauding team India for exploring the winning possibility, than deciding to escape safe with a series draw.

He said the Indian victory has taught a big lesson that with confidence, positive mindset and resolution to win over adversities, the country can scale new heights in every field in the times to come.


Fascist Modi must be living in some gutter basement and coming up with all this fanciful and poetic words written for him like Hitler used to utter. Indian so called confidence, positive mindset and resolution to win over adversities, the country can scale new heights in every field in the times to come is all there to be seen when bodies are pulled out of Ganges river. After handling of Covid so badly, incompetently, and going through so painful times if that's Modi regime is claiming to be a success story then no wonder India not only shines day time she glows at night too. What a load of rubbish after a abysmal performance all there to be seen on the Indian roads and in hospitals.
 
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Not just Modi, Congressi lead politician Shashi Tharoor also claimed victory over Covid and vaccine diplomacy, citing India status as global power :rofl: He ended up eating his own words.


Commentary: How did India go from exporting vaccines to reeling from COVID-19?

Shashi Tharoor
By Shashi Tharoor

29 Apr 2021 06:16AM(Updated: 29 Apr 2021 06:20AM)

NEW DELHI: It is humbling when a columnist must retract his words soon after penning them.
Just two months ago, after India rushed millions of doses of COVID-19 vaccines to over 60 countries, I praised the country’s “vaccine diplomacy”. India’s aspirations to be recognised as a global power had been given a real boost.

Now, with more than 300,000 new cases a day and the death toll evidently much higher than reported, India is no one’s idea of a global leader. In my own defence, I was worried that India had exported three times as many vaccines as it had administered domestically. The country was clearly lagging behind its own target of immunising 400 million people by August, after vaccinating some three million healthcare workers in a campaign that began only on Jan 16.

Source:
Commentary: How did India go from exporting vaccines to reeling from COVID-19? - CNA (channelnewsasia.com)

Shashi Tharoor, a former UN under-secretary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Development, is an MP for the Indian National Congress.

Indians LOVE to talk.
 
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Yep. As per the KITAP they remain in delusion all through their lives only to get to senses when Hazret-I Azrail (AS) shows up along with entourage to take revenge.....
As per Bhagavatam Kali will come at the end of kaliyuga and kick the asses of all the people who show up to take revenge against hindus..
 
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So you're saying the remarks by your country's PM shouldn't be counted? Because they're 4 months old? So you only trust what he said today? In other words, you only believe his empty promises, right? :cheesy:
Yah so when Modi had a premature ejaculation from his mouth, that doesn't count? It's as recent as 3.5 months ago...... So boastful Indians as usual count the chicks before the eggs hatch, same like during the start of the pandemic. I still remember the Indians saying the tropical heat will kill the virus. Lolol. The truth was you guys undertested and falsified the numbers, alot got infected and didn't know it giving time for the virus to spread and mutate into today's monster.
If you are auditioning as a poster boy for chinese family planning with such above reading comprehension skills

You have my vote :D
 
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If you are auditioning as a poster boy for chinese family planning with such above reading comprehension skills

You have my vote :D
Yah so when Modi had a premature ejaculation from his mouth, that doesn't count? It's as recent as 3.5 months ago...... So boastful Indians as usual count the chicks before the eggs hatch, same like during the start of the pandemic. I still remember the Indians saying the tropical heat will kill the virus. Lolol. The truth was you guys undertested and falsified the numbers, alot got infected and didn't know it giving time for the virus to spread and mutate into today's monster.
 
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Failed Government Messaging Created India’s COVID-19 Apocalypse
The authorities swung from lockdown to deadly overconfidence.

Michael KugelmanApril 27, 2021, 2:05 PM
A patient rests inside a banquet hall temporarily converted into a COVID-19 ward in New Delhi on April 27.

A patient rests inside a banquet hall temporarily converted into a COVID-19 ward in New Delhi on April 27. Money Sharma/AFP via Getty Images

In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, people worldwide were worried. Dispatches out of Italy and New York depicted grim scenarios of flooded hospitals and dying patients. The poor responses of most of the Western world, supposedly more prepared than most for a pandemic, meant predictions of disaster for poorer nations—especially India’s 1.2 billion people.
India seemed like the perfect place for COVID-19 to run wild—health infrastructure is underdeveloped, population density is high in urban areas, and the country already suffers from high rates of other diseases like tuberculosis and malaria. Everyone was preparing for a disaster—but it never arrived.
In part at least, that was because of swift action by the authorities. The central government quickly acted, issuing a lockdown across the country and nearly everyone, from Prime Minister Narendra Modi down, got serious about masking up. Other factors also seemed to be working to the country’s advantage; India has a younger population than most other countries, and there was discussion of preexisting immunity among the population.
For a while, it looked as if things were improving—case counts kept falling, and the government and its allies made sure to point that out. Last September, during the lead-up to assembly elections in Bihar, Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) claimed the state would soon be COVID-free. Likewise in October, the BJP’s national spokesperson went on the BBC and argued that India was almost back to normal.
But a complicating factor was the relatively small size, under $300 billion, of the coronavirus aid package passed by the government. (By comparison, the United States, with a population of less than one-third of India’s, has spent a few trillion dollars so far.) India had to be more fiscally cautious than the United States, though; the country doesn’t have U.S. spending capacity and was worried about a possible downgrade in debt. With less relief, people needed to get back to work sooner, and the lockdown was unsustainable—if people don’t have the money to eat, everything else is pretty much irrelevant.
And beyond the financial aspect, people in India stopped taking the pandemic seriously. This isn’t new when it comes to health issues. For the past few years, for instance, the government has tried to ban firecrackers in New Delhi around the Hindu festival of Diwali because of how they add to air pollution. These bans are usually ignored because the air quality is already incredibly poor without the firecrackers and, in light of that, the requests seem unreasonable.
Early on, both the government and opposition made a show of how important it was to abide by all the rules. However, as time went on and India seemed to have dodged the worse, elites became less concerned about setting a good example. Last November, as Delhi’s COVID-19 cases were increasing by about 30,000 to 40,000 per day, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal celebrated Diwali live at a temple while appealing to his followers to virtually join him. Other opposition parties weren’t much better, turning COVID-19 measures into a political tool, such as when former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav attacked India’s homegrown vaccine as an untrustworthy product of the BJP.
At first, that might be forgivable given that India’s numbers seemed relatively low. But in February and March, as the virus numbers swung upward, the government and its allies got even more irresponsible. In mid-February, while the uptick was in progress, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan appeared at an event supporting an ayurvedic medication (a pseudoscience heavily pushed by the BJP) that the World Health Organization clarified was ineffective in fighting COVID-19. Shortly after this, the BJP’s national committee passed a resolution arguing that India was victorious in the fight against COVID-19, echoing claims made by Modi in his January speech to the World Economic Forum.
While all this was happening, campaigning for the five 2021 assembly elections was in full swing. West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, and Assam were all heading to the polls. Kerala, Puducherry, and Tamil Nadu all had one day of polling, but West Bengal and Assam had multiple phases. This meant that different assembly constituencies were voting at different times rather than the whole state heading to the polls at once.
Read More
Cemetery workers and relatives of patients who died of the COVID-19 wear personal protective equipment before they perform last rites at a pyre at a crematorium in New Delhi on April 20.
How India Became Pandemic Ground Zero

A new virus strain and increasing mobility have caused the world’s worst coronavirus spike, with nearly 315,000 new cases recorded on Thursday.
While phases can be combined by the Election Commission of India, that option wasn’t taken. With elections came rallies, and pretty much every major political leader drew thousands of voters at each one. Modi was initially set to address more than 20 rallies, and Home Minister Amit Shah as well as BJP President J.P. Nadda were to address more than 50 apiece. The rallies were not exclusive to the BJP; in West Bengal, the ruling Trinamool Congress also had a fair amount of them, as did the Indian National Congress-led alliance.
Protest leaders haven’t done much better in setting an example. The farmers’ protests that started last fall against the new agriculture laws have continued. Protest encampments have not emptied out—instead, they have seen their numbers increase. When questioned, the farmers have argued that when the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act shut down due to COVID-19, they lost momentum and this was not a mistake they wanted to make. However, the continuing protests have caused some level of worry—thousands of people congregating anywhere is a threat to public safety.
Throw religion into the mix of failed leadership, too. In March 2020, a Muslim religious congregation took place in Delhi that ended up being a superspreaderevent. The event and attendees were heavily criticized, especially by Hindu nationalists, for spreading the virus—but Hindu festivals have had the same effect.
The Kumbh Mela is an especially sacred Hindu tradition—on a 12-year cycle, four separate regions celebrate this festival. Initially, the Haridwar Kumbh Mela was scheduled to happen next year, but it was moved up due to astrological concerns. Past versions of these events have seen up to 30 million people gather in one day, and despite the rising case counts and concerns about it being a superspreader event, the festival went on as planned, with officials saying that it would not be cut short. Additionally, much of India celebrated Holi in late March, and like the Kumbh Mela celebrations, attendees tended to ignore masking as well as social distancing.
Now, weeks, days, and months after all of these decisions were made, politicians are realizing the seriousness of the disaster. After the Kumbh Mela kicked off, Modi asked for people to celebrate symbolically. Additionally, the political campaigners have finally started shutting down. Rahul Gandhi was the first to announce on April 18 that he would be canceling the remainder of his rallies in West Bengal. This was followed by other contenders changing strategy: The Trinamool Congress initially opted to hold smaller rallies but later decided to go fully virtual, and the BJP announced the cancellation of mega-rallies but said it would continue with smaller ones. Returnees from the Kumbh Mela are driving up case counts in certain states, and these numbers will almost certainly increase.
All of this has produced a compound disaster. States are running out of oxygen (or are reduced to having officials beg for it on Twitter), people are sharing hospital beds, and crematoriums’ furnace grills in some regions have meltedbecause of overuse. There is every indication that it will continue to get worse before it gets better—the U.S.-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s model predicts a peak in mid-May. The people who made the decisions that got the country here may get the virus, but they will have access to the oxygen and medicine they need. The people who will suffer most are those who have traditionally suffered—the poor and working class who followed the examples set by politicians across the country.
Anik Joshi is a public policy professional in Washington D.C.
 
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