
Historic FTA with UK shows world's trust in India: Modi in Tamil Nadu
As regards Operation Sindoor, he said weapons manufactured under the Make in India initiative played a great role during the cross-border military offensive in destroying enemy targets and made enemies lose sleep. The PM inaugurated, laid foundation stones and dedicated projects worth `4,900 crore and underscored the NDA government's commitment towards Tamil Nadu's growth.
After inaugurating the projects, Modi said he was blessed to directly land in Tamil Nadu after completing his foreign tour. 'The FTA with Britain adds pace to our vision of Viksit Bharat, Viksit TN,' he said.
Promising a developed India and Tamil Nadu, he said, 'infrastructure and energy are the backbone of any state's development; our focus on infrastructure and energy in last 11 years shows our commitment to TN's growth.' The NDA government has constructed Atal Sethu, Sonmarg Tunnel, Bogibeel bridge in different parts of the country and these created thousands of job opportunities.
The inaugurated projects include a new state-of-the-art Tuticorin airport terminal building, developed at an estimated cost of around `450 crore.
On the occasion, he invoked legendary freedom fighters from the region V O Chidambaram Pillai, king Veerapandia Kattabomman and chieftain Veeran Azhagu Muthukon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India.com
an hour ago
- India.com
Why Is Asim Munir Visiting U.S. Again? Inside Pakistan's Top General's Washington Diplomacy
New Delhi: Pakistan Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir is heading to the United States once again this week. His visit comes barely two months after his last trip to Washington. He is expected to attend the U.S. Central Command's change-of-command ceremony. But the real story may not be the ceremony itself. It is the timing and the conversations already in motion. In June, Munir had lunch with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House. The meeting lasted two hours. No civilian leader from Pakistan was present. It was a first. Never before had a Pakistani military chief been hosted in the Oval Office on his own. According to insiders, their discussion touched on trade, economic ties and the future of cryptocurrency. In his signature style, Trump did not hold back praise. He said, 'The reason I had him here was I wanted to thank him for not going into the war and ending it…' The remark referred to the May conflict between India and Pakistan, four days of cross-border drone and missile exchanges that stopped just short of full-scale war. India later said it acted alone. But Trump claimed credit for helping stop it. Munir seemed to agree. In his own words, he said Trump deserved a Nobel Prize for 'averting nuclear war' between the two nations. The backdrop to that crisis was Operation Sindoor. India launched the operation in retaliation for the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack, which killed 26 civilians. According to Indian officials, nine terror camps in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir were targeted and more than 100 militants were killed in the offensive. Trump's role in managing tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad has stirred debate. India has insisted that the eventual ceasefire came after direct talks between the two countries' Director Generals of Military Operations (DGMO). No foreign mediation, New Delhi said, was involved. Still, Trump has not stepped back from the narrative. In fact, he has doubled down. Alongside security talks, he also unveiled a trade agreement with Islamabad. The deal opens access for U.S. companies to Pakistan's oil reserves. But the fine print carries a twist. Trump signed an executive order imposing a 19% tariff on Pakistani exports, lower than the previous 29% rate, but still steep. The trade talks have been branded as a package of both relief and pressure. Munir's return to Washington now comes in that context. A second visit in two months signals something crucial: sustained military diplomacy, with political overtones. Whether the visit brings new deals, more pressure or another round of handshakes remains to be seen. But for now, Pakistan's most powerful man is going back to the United States, and the conversations are far from over.

Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
ON CAM: Putin's ‘Cryptic' Move At Witkoff Meet; Then Trump Calls Talks ‘Highly Productive'
PM Modi To Visit China For The First Time Since Galwan, Timed with Trump's Aggressive Tariff War As global trade trembles under Donald Trump's latest tariff threats, Prime Minister Narendra Modi prepares for a high-stakes visit to China for the SCO Summit in Tianjin (Aug 31–Sep 1). This marks Modi's first visit to China since the 2020 Galwan clash, making it a crucial moment in India-China relations. But the backdrop has changed, Trump's aggressive tariff policies are threatening global supply chains, forcing major Asian powers, including India and China, to recalibrate. With possible meetings with Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin on the sidelines, Modi must balance border tensions, regional security, and now a potential global trade crisis. Will Trump's economic aggression push India and China toward a new understanding? Or deepen the divide? As India walks a tightrope, this visit may redefine regional alliances and global diplomacy.#pmmodi #xijinping #india #china #modinchina #scosummit2025 #galwanvalley #indiavschina #putin #borderdispute #indiandiplomacy #chinavisit #sco2025 #modivisit #geopolitics #regionalsecurity #indiaforeignpolicy #breakingnews #trending #trendingnow #toi #bharat #toibharat #indianews 10.9K views | 7 hours ago


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Shinde meets PM, Shah, says will back NDA V-P nominee
New Delhi/Mumbai: leader and Dy CM on Wednesday announced his party's "unconditional support" to the NDA candidate for vice-president, potentially setting the line for other alliance partners to follow and increase chances of BJP getting one of its own appointed to the constitutional position after the Sept 9 election to the post. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now On a visit to Delhi – his third in less than a month - Shinde made the announcement after meeting home minister at his Parliament office. The election for the vice-presidential post has been necessitated following the resignation of Jagdeep Dhankhar last month. Shinde also met and congratulated him on the success of Operation Sindoor and Operation Mahadev. The twin interactions were seen as significant. Sources said the meeting attested to his equations with the BJP leadership with which it engineered downfall of the Uddhav Thackeray-led MVA govt in 2022. Shinde said the Mahayuti will fight the local body elections in Maharashtra together. The deputy CM was accompanied by his wife Lata, son Shrikant and daughter-in-law Vrushali as the family gifted a photograph of Lord Shiva to the PM. Shinde said Modi praised his son who got the opportunity to lead a multi-party delegation that visited world capitals to convey India's message of zero tolerance to terrorism. Shinde also rejected suggestions that his frequent visits to Delhi are linked to his 'differences' with CM Devendra Fadnavis, saying they are working together for the state's development. Stating that PM Modi noted at a meeting of NDA MPs on Tuesday that Shah has become the longest-serving home minister, Shinde said he and his party MPs congratulated Shah on the milestone. He also hailed Shah for his "decisive" leadership, saying he fulfilled the dream of Shiv Sena founder Bal Thackeray by abrogating Article 370.