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‘Rupani's death an immeasurable loss'

‘Rupani's death an immeasurable loss'

Time of India21 hours ago

Deputy CM Brajesh Pathak expressed his condolences at the death of former Gujarat CM
in the
. He said that Rupani's death was an immeasurable loss. "His contribution to Indian politics and in the sphere of public service will always be remembered. I was in Parliament with him when he was a Rajya Sabha MP.
He was a soft spoken, simple person, always ready to help anyone in need. His contribution to society will always be remembered," Pathak said.

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11 years of Seva, Sushasan, and Garib Kalyan: From stress to strength
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11 years of Seva, Sushasan, and Garib Kalyan: From stress to strength

The global economy is undergoing an unprecedented period of uncertainty, grappling with growing geo-economic fragmentation, even as elevated debt levels and emerging technologies raise concerns about financial stability. Amidst this, India continues to be a bright spot — a stark contrast to the previous major episode of volatility in 2013, famously known as the taper tantrum. Then, economic mismanagement — as a result of which India became dubbed a 'Fragile Five' economy — resulted in low growth, high inflation, high external deficit and impaired public finances. The transformation of the Indian economy over last 11 years — from having a twin-deficit problem to a five balance sheet advantage — is an outcome of the concerted policy efforts under PM Modi's leadership. When we came to power in 2014, the foremost priority was growth revival. Structural reforms were introduced, including GST, IBC , RERA, and during the pandemic years, the PLI Scheme, and ECLGS to help credit-worthy MSMEs survive the Covid shock. Equally, infrastructure and asset creation — neglected in the previous decade — was revived. Capital investment rose from 1.7% of GDP in FY2013-14 to 3.2% in FY2024-25 — effective capital expenditure, which includes the capital grants-in-aid, stood higher still (4.1% for 2024-25). In 11 years, 88 airports were operationalised, 31,000 km of rail tracks laid, metro networks expanded over fourfold, port capacity doubled, and National Highway length increased by 60%. Enhanced logistics and eased supply constraints are improving the economy's long-term efficiency and augur well for steady growth and low-and-stable inflation in the years ahead. Through this, we never lost sight of the common man — targeted interventions were launched to bring the historically deprived into the mainstream. 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Time of India

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Sabeer Bhatia even held a poll on X asking people whether he should take an Air India flight. Indian-origin businessman Sabeer Bhatia who recently mocked the Indian economy mocked people mourning over the Air India crash in Ahmedabad and said it was an "outpouring of fake emotions". In a series of X posts all of which have gone viral, Bhatia asked for accountability of the crash and defended his words which social media users calls insensitive at the time of grieving. "Do you really think the 4th largest economy in the world should still be having plane crashes due to systemic failures? Time to question what truly makes a nation great," Bhatia posted. Social media users reminded him that there have been 55 deadly plane crashes in the US in 2025 alone to which Bhatia retorted that US has a greater number of flights as well. Indian-origin businessman Sabeer Bhatia made comments on Air India crash that X users found insensitive. "Sabeer wants the attention he has lost. He wants to remind the world that he still exists," one wrote. "Vulture spotted," another wrote. Interestingly, Bhatia engaged with all comments and even ran a poll on whether he should take an Air India flight or not. "Of course I'm deeply saddened and devastated by the loss of life. But that distracts from the real question: Why did it happen and what can we do as a society to prevent it from ever happening again?" he wrote. "In all the angry replies I'm getting, people are responding as if their own families were on the plane. Telling me to put my phone down. So much hate, so much emotion. Where's the logic? Do you really go through life like it's a Bollywood movie?" Bhatia wrote. "The right words aren't 'devastated' or 'pained by the tragic loss' — those center the speaker. Say instead: 'The families of the victims are in our thoughts and prayers.' It's about them, not you," he added. "In the past few days of vitriolic backlash, I keep hearing the term 'colonial mindset' — as if the West looks down on India. That's simply untrue. What shocks people in the West isn't India — it's the poor decisions of its leaders. If anything, that is the real colonial hangover," he said.

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