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Much of India’s Covid anger is directed at Modi, but it’s unlikely to cost him at ballot box

200 000 deaths mate is not a lol no matter if you hate India or Modi those who die are mo
We are not trying to dislodge modi, but getting sorry for you guys your govt not doing any work to stop this worse second wave, poor are dying in streets lack of oxygen you have

AND SHIRI MODI JI ARE SAYING ALL IS WELL IN INDIA

Scientists expecting this second will last 1 month, but if you're right at this rate your cases will rise millions more and your deaths will easily cross 200,000 lol
200 000 deaths is not a lol moment mate those who die probably have nothing. Modi should resign and it criminal how unprepared we were but no death is a lol
 
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And if the chinese state had been more open and reacted quicker to this virus it could have been contained
Chinese government quickly locked down the city of Wuhan and built dozens of dedicated hospitals within weeks from scratch, sent tens of thousands medical workers from overall China to Wuhan city to battle the virus, and totally wiped out the virus in less than 2 months, what did Indian government do?
 
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Yes, the sad truth.



Bhai, should we really trust in the thinking abilities in much of Indians, especially the middle class, who conduct huge weddings, watch cricket matches, participate in huge religious gatherings and political rallies all right in the fury of a pandemic ? Many are dying many are enjoying without guilt.
It still the best way we all should have a say in who governs us. I do think the Indian voter needs to be more aware of policies and not vote for reasons a lot do. What system is perfect they all have flaws but for me, each citizen should have the right to vote for his leaders
 
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Much of India’s Covid anger is directed at Modi, but it’s unlikely to cost him at ballot box

Although there's palpable anger against the leader, commentators attribute the support for Modi as akin to that of a messianic figure whose appeal goes beyond mere politics.
PM Narendra Modi addresses the nation on Covid-19, on 20 April 2021 | PIB

PM Narendra Modi addresses the nation on Covid-19, on 20 April 2021 | PIB
Text Size:
New Delhi: As India recorded more than 234,000 new Covid-19 infections last Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held an election rally in the West Bengal town of Asansol and tweeted: “I’ve never seen such huge crowds.”
The second wave of the coronavirus has since grown into a tsunami. India is now the global coronavirus hotspot, setting records for the world’s highest number of daily cases. Images of hospitals overflowing with the sick and dying are flooding social media, as medical staff and the public alike make desperate appeals for oxygen supplies.
The political and financial capitals of New Delhi and Mumbai are in lockdown, with only the sound of ambulance sirens punctuating the quiet, but there’s a growing chorus of blame directed at Modi over his government’s handling of the pandemic.
Modi canceled another planned appearance in West Bengal on Friday to hold meetings on the pandemic response. Whether it’s enough to prevent the political fallout may become clear on May 2, when election results are due to be announced for the five states voting over the last month: West Bengal, Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry.
“At this crucial time he is fighting for votes and not against Covid,” said Panchanan Maharana, a community activist from the state of Odisha, who previously supported Modi’s policies but will now look for alternative parties to back. “He is failing to deliver — he should stop talking and focus on saving people’s lives and livelihoods.”
Modi is seen by many as a polarizing leader whose brand of nationalism that promotes the dominance of Hindus has appalled and enraptured the nation. Despite policy stumbles in his first term, voters re-elected him in a landslide in 2019 in the absence of any viable opposition. In the last poll taken in January, during a lull in the epidemic, his popularity was 74%, down a touch from 78% last August but still impressively high. Whether the pandemic will dent his appeal remains unclear.
“There is no doubt an outpouring of anger at the mismanagement of the Covid-19 crisis in India,” said Nikita Sud, who teaches international development at the University of Oxford and has published a book on Hindu nationalism. “The question is, will this anger trump the hate that has been systematically sown in our society for years? And will public memory last long enough for the pandemic-related anger to be manifested at election time?”
Those are not easy questions to answer.
Judged by the outpouring of criticism on Twitter, the anger and disappointment in India’s leader is manifest. When Modi addressed the nation on Tuesday, it seemed that he had failed to grasp the growing sense of panic among citizens. As he spoke, without providing any details on how his government would turn the situation around, the Hindi hashtag that translates as “Stop the speech, not the oxygen” was tweeted more than 108,000 times. Other hashtags, including #ModiMadeDisaster and #ModiResign were also popular.
Also read: As Modi govt faces up to Covid disaster, BJP learns a tough truth — the virus doesn’t vote
Footage of Modi, unmasked, addressing huge crowds who were also mostly without masks or social distancing, stood in stark contrast to images of exhausted doctors and nurses desperately trying to create more capacity in the country’s decrepit, underfunded health system.
Noting that at least six high courts are hearing disputes about Covid-19 management including oxygen shortages, the Supreme Court on Thursday asked the federal government to come up with a national plan for the distribution of essential supplies and services.
Yet it is far from guaranteed that the current crisis will cost Modi at the ballot box. For his followers, the government’s support for building a Hindu temple in Uttar Pradesh on the contested site of a former mosque and its move to abolish the special status of Jammu and Kashmir — the only Muslim majority region in India — are far more pressing priorities. Hindus make up 80% of the population.
“The construction of the temple is important for us, why can’t Hindus build a temple in our own land,” said Govind Kumar, a factory worker, as he sat with his meager belongings at a Delhi bus station on Tuesday, waiting to return to his village in Uttar Pradesh after the capital went into lockdown. Of the pandemic, he said: “Nobody can control the situation, why only blame Modi?”
It’s a sentiment expressed widely in India. Some commentators attribute the support for Modi as akin to that of a messianic figure whose appeal goes beyond mere politics. Asim Ali of the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi, writing in The Diplomat on April 1, said that “Brand Modi seems to have escaped into the political stratosphere, untouched by the conventional laws of political competition.”
There are signs elsewhere that the pandemic may be too much for even the most populist of leaders to remain unaffected. President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil confounded his skeptics by maintaining his base despite dismissing the pandemic, only to be forced into concessions when cases soared this year. Donald Trump could arguably have won a second term in November if it wasn’t for the U.S. Covid-19 death toll, still the world’s highest.
Modi’s decision to hold election rallies and green-light large religious gatherings in the face of a growing second wave “will not inspire confidence about India’s leadership and governance record in any objective observer or investor,” said Sud of Oxford.
And India’s economy, which was showing nascent signs of recovery after falling into recession last year for the first time in decades, is now struggling again. As more cities and states have issued stay-at-home order or other movement restrictions, job losses have begun to tick up. Urban unemployment jumped to 10.72% for the week ending April 18 from 7.21% two weeks ago, according to data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy.
Also read: ‘Indians for Indians’ is how Indian-Americans are fighting Biden ban on vaccine raw materials
The prime minister is also under fire for over-promising on India’s vaccination rollout, both domestically and globally, after he dubbed the South Asian nation the “pharmacy to the world” last October. As case numbers soared, India suddenly halted its exports, which were a critical part of Covax, the World Health Organization program to provide inoculations to low income countries. Only last month his administration declared that the pandemic was in its end game.
After administering more than three million doses a day earlier this month, vaccine centers are now running out of doses and have shut down across many states, including the mega-city of Mumbai. On April 19, Modi announced changes to his government’s immunization strategy — opening the program up to everyone over 18 and allowing state governments to tailor their own strategy and procure directly from manufacturers. His critics fear it is intended to leave the states with the blame.
“In the first phase, Modi touted that they were in control and took credit,” said Sanjay Kumar, an election expert and co-director at Lokniti-Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in New Delhi. “Now people won’t buy their argument, they will blame Modi and his government.”
Still, Modi changed gear on Wednesday, tweeting about monitoring India’s depleted oxygen supplies and sending condolences and get well messages to public figures falling sick or dying. On Friday, he planned to “review the prevailing Covid-19 situation.”
He has a track record of successfully deflecting blame for policy failures. That includes demonetization in 2016 where he banned 86% of the country’s currency overnight and left the economy and India’s citizens reeling, according to Katharine Adeney, director of the University of Nottingham Asia Research Institute.
“It will be easy for him to blame other political actors such as state governments and chief ministers if that suits his purpose,” Adeney said.
Also read: Covid-19 pandemic: Israel could share surplus vaccine, Canadian province leader under fire


Don't doubt it. If elections were held today, Modi would still win a landslide....after all...Mullo ko to sabak sikhana hai
 
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Chinese government lifted over 800 million people out of poverty in less than 40 years, the unprecedented feat ever achieved by any governments in the whole human history, how is Indian government faring in this regard?
 
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You complain because he has the political strength to make moves like revoking articles 370 and 35a. The Congress didn't have that.

- PRTP GWD
"Political strength"?

You need a million strong army stationed in Kashmir to assure this "political strength".

That's not political strength (or "streanh") at all now is it?




images.jpeg
 
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The bjp in power for at least a decade 2 more general elections. The opposition and the left are not organized and congress is paying for a Gandhi leader no matter how stupid that Gandhi is. Need a proper middle ground party with a competent leader but who
 
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Chinese government lifted over 800 million people out of poverty in less than 40 years, the unprecedented feat ever achieved by any governments in the whole human history, how is Indian government faring in this regard?

they would achieve poverty reduction by killing 100 million poor Indians through Covid uncontrolled
 
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Much of India’s Covid anger is directed at Modi, but it’s unlikely to cost him at ballot box

Although there's palpable anger against the leader, commentators attribute the support for Modi as akin to that of a messianic figure whose appeal goes beyond mere politics.
PM Narendra Modi addresses the nation on Covid-19, on 20 April 2021 | PIB

PM Narendra Modi addresses the nation on Covid-19, on 20 April 2021 | PIB
Text Size:
New Delhi: As India recorded more than 234,000 new Covid-19 infections last Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held an election rally in the West Bengal town of Asansol and tweeted: “I’ve never seen such huge crowds.”
The second wave of the coronavirus has since grown into a tsunami. India is now the global coronavirus hotspot, setting records for the world’s highest number of daily cases. Images of hospitals overflowing with the sick and dying are flooding social media, as medical staff and the public alike make desperate appeals for oxygen supplies.
The political and financial capitals of New Delhi and Mumbai are in lockdown, with only the sound of ambulance sirens punctuating the quiet, but there’s a growing chorus of blame directed at Modi over his government’s handling of the pandemic.
Modi canceled another planned appearance in West Bengal on Friday to hold meetings on the pandemic response. Whether it’s enough to prevent the political fallout may become clear on May 2, when election results are due to be announced for the five states voting over the last month: West Bengal, Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry.
“At this crucial time he is fighting for votes and not against Covid,” said Panchanan Maharana, a community activist from the state of Odisha, who previously supported Modi’s policies but will now look for alternative parties to back. “He is failing to deliver — he should stop talking and focus on saving people’s lives and livelihoods.”
Modi is seen by many as a polarizing leader whose brand of nationalism that promotes the dominance of Hindus has appalled and enraptured the nation. Despite policy stumbles in his first term, voters re-elected him in a landslide in 2019 in the absence of any viable opposition. In the last poll taken in January, during a lull in the epidemic, his popularity was 74%, down a touch from 78% last August but still impressively high. Whether the pandemic will dent his appeal remains unclear.
“There is no doubt an outpouring of anger at the mismanagement of the Covid-19 crisis in India,” said Nikita Sud, who teaches international development at the University of Oxford and has published a book on Hindu nationalism. “The question is, will this anger trump the hate that has been systematically sown in our society for years? And will public memory last long enough for the pandemic-related anger to be manifested at election time?”
Those are not easy questions to answer.
Judged by the outpouring of criticism on Twitter, the anger and disappointment in India’s leader is manifest. When Modi addressed the nation on Tuesday, it seemed that he had failed to grasp the growing sense of panic among citizens. As he spoke, without providing any details on how his government would turn the situation around, the Hindi hashtag that translates as “Stop the speech, not the oxygen” was tweeted more than 108,000 times. Other hashtags, including #ModiMadeDisaster and #ModiResign were also popular.
Also read: As Modi govt faces up to Covid disaster, BJP learns a tough truth — the virus doesn’t vote
Footage of Modi, unmasked, addressing huge crowds who were also mostly without masks or social distancing, stood in stark contrast to images of exhausted doctors and nurses desperately trying to create more capacity in the country’s decrepit, underfunded health system.
Noting that at least six high courts are hearing disputes about Covid-19 management including oxygen shortages, the Supreme Court on Thursday asked the federal government to come up with a national plan for the distribution of essential supplies and services.
Yet it is far from guaranteed that the current crisis will cost Modi at the ballot box. For his followers, the government’s support for building a Hindu temple in Uttar Pradesh on the contested site of a former mosque and its move to abolish the special status of Jammu and Kashmir — the only Muslim majority region in India — are far more pressing priorities. Hindus make up 80% of the population.
“The construction of the temple is important for us, why can’t Hindus build a temple in our own land,” said Govind Kumar, a factory worker, as he sat with his meager belongings at a Delhi bus station on Tuesday, waiting to return to his village in Uttar Pradesh after the capital went into lockdown. Of the pandemic, he said: “Nobody can control the situation, why only blame Modi?”
It’s a sentiment expressed widely in India. Some commentators attribute the support for Modi as akin to that of a messianic figure whose appeal goes beyond mere politics. Asim Ali of the Centre for Policy Research in New Delhi, writing in The Diplomat on April 1, said that “Brand Modi seems to have escaped into the political stratosphere, untouched by the conventional laws of political competition.”
There are signs elsewhere that the pandemic may be too much for even the most populist of leaders to remain unaffected. President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil confounded his skeptics by maintaining his base despite dismissing the pandemic, only to be forced into concessions when cases soared this year. Donald Trump could arguably have won a second term in November if it wasn’t for the U.S. Covid-19 death toll, still the world’s highest.
Modi’s decision to hold election rallies and green-light large religious gatherings in the face of a growing second wave “will not inspire confidence about India’s leadership and governance record in any objective observer or investor,” said Sud of Oxford.
And India’s economy, which was showing nascent signs of recovery after falling into recession last year for the first time in decades, is now struggling again. As more cities and states have issued stay-at-home order or other movement restrictions, job losses have begun to tick up. Urban unemployment jumped to 10.72% for the week ending April 18 from 7.21% two weeks ago, according to data from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy.
Also read: ‘Indians for Indians’ is how Indian-Americans are fighting Biden ban on vaccine raw materials
The prime minister is also under fire for over-promising on India’s vaccination rollout, both domestically and globally, after he dubbed the South Asian nation the “pharmacy to the world” last October. As case numbers soared, India suddenly halted its exports, which were a critical part of Covax, the World Health Organization program to provide inoculations to low income countries. Only last month his administration declared that the pandemic was in its end game.
After administering more than three million doses a day earlier this month, vaccine centers are now running out of doses and have shut down across many states, including the mega-city of Mumbai. On April 19, Modi announced changes to his government’s immunization strategy — opening the program up to everyone over 18 and allowing state governments to tailor their own strategy and procure directly from manufacturers. His critics fear it is intended to leave the states with the blame.
“In the first phase, Modi touted that they were in control and took credit,” said Sanjay Kumar, an election expert and co-director at Lokniti-Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in New Delhi. “Now people won’t buy their argument, they will blame Modi and his government.”
Still, Modi changed gear on Wednesday, tweeting about monitoring India’s depleted oxygen supplies and sending condolences and get well messages to public figures falling sick or dying. On Friday, he planned to “review the prevailing Covid-19 situation.”
He has a track record of successfully deflecting blame for policy failures. That includes demonetization in 2016 where he banned 86% of the country’s currency overnight and left the economy and India’s citizens reeling, according to Katharine Adeney, director of the University of Nottingham Asia Research Institute.
“It will be easy for him to blame other political actors such as state governments and chief ministers if that suits his purpose,” Adeney said.
Also read: Covid-19 pandemic: Israel could share surplus vaccine, Canadian province leader under fire


just like Trump said if he shot people in the middle of Time square, people would still vote him, same madness
 
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It still the best way we all should have a say in who governs us. I do think the Indian voter needs to be more aware of policies and not vote for reasons a lot do. What system is perfect they all have flaws but for me, each citizen should have the right to vote for his leaders
You're wrong here. Democracy is the single WORST system for a country mainly composed of (not necessarily through their own fault) ignorant, uneducated and prejudicial people. Let's put it another way - can you give votes to a bunch of children on whether they should get candy or cereal for breakfast?
 
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You're wrong here. Democracy is the single WORST system for a country mainly composed of (not necessarily through their own fault) ignorant, uneducated and prejudicial people. Let's put it another way - can you give votes to a bunch of children on whether they should get candy or cereal for breakfast?

democracy simply does not work in India, that's a fact

one of Indians commented: Indians after born are always in the line for anything, now even when he's dead, he was still in the line (waiting 10 hours to get cremated)
 
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100,000 " Chinese "refugees who were born in India and never have set a foot in the land of China? So funny..

The so called "Chinese refugees" by this Jackdaws guy, lolllll

Lobsang Sangay, (born 1968, Darjiling, India), Tibetan leader who became prime minister in the Tibetan Central Administration, the Tibetan government-in-exile.

Personal details
Born5 September 1968 (age 52)
Darjeeling, India
CitizenshipAmerican
Political partyNational Democratic Party of Tibet
Alma materUniversity of Delhi (BA, LLB)
Harvard University (LLM, SJD)
Did you contact the Tibetan Ministry in Exile and get the demographic break up? Were all the 100,000 Chinese refugees in India born in India?
 
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