
UK's stranded F-35 fighter to be repaired in India
NEW DELHI: The F-35B Lightning II fighter of the British Royal Navy, stranded in Thiruvananthapuram, will be repaired at its present location, for which a team will be flown in from the UK, the British High Commission (BHC) said.
"We are working to repair the UK F-35B at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport as quickly as possible...We thank the Indian authorities for their continued support," a spokesperson for the BHC said.
The Royal Navy F-35B fighter was recovered following an emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport on the night of June 14, 2025. The aircraft was unable to return to HMS Prince of Wales as it was caught in adverse weather conditions.
Prioritising safety, the aircraft diverted to Thiruvananthapuram International Airport in India, where it landed safely, the BHC said.
The Indian Air Force had extended assistance in the recovery of the aircraft.
Operating from the UK aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales, the fighter was undertaking routine flying outside the Indian ADIZ (Air Defence Identification Zone), with Thiruvananthapuram earmarked as the emergency recovery airfield.
"On having declared a diversion of an emergency, the F-35B was detected and identified by the IAF's IACCS network and cleared for the recovery," the IAF spokesperson had said.
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Indian Express
2 hours ago
- Indian Express
A swami, a historian and the Ganga — why an American family journeyed to Patna to scatter ashes in the river
For the Hauser family, June 26, 2025, will forever be momentous. It's the day their father, the late American historian Walter Hauser, will 'join' his mentor — ascetic, peasant leader and social reformer Swami Sahajanand Saraswati. Hauser devoted almost 60 years of his life to researching Saraswati's life and ideology. Now, six years after his death, the family has travelled over 13,000 kilometres from the United States to Patna to fulfil his one wish — to scatter his ashes in the river Ganga. 'He (Hauser) would often tell us that his last wish was to have his ashes immersed in the Ganges — the river that had been very close to the Swami's socio-agrarian-cultural cause of the ascetic,' his son Michael Hauser, a professor at the Duke University, told The Indian Express as two urns — one containing Hauser's ashes and one containing his wife Rosemary's — stood on a table. While Hauser died in 2019, Rosemary died in 2001. The date of the immersion is significant – June 26 this year marks the 75th death anniversary of Saraswati, a Bihar leader credited with being instrumental in leading a movement that led to the abolition of the zamindari system in India. Patna, meanwhile, holds a special place in the heart of the Hauser family – it's where they spent a significant portion of their early life. To mark the occasion, two generations of the family – Michael, his sister Sheela, wife Elizabeth and niece Rosemary – have come down to India. Accompanying this group are two of Hauser's most prominent students, historians William R Pinch and Wendy Singer. At Patna's Gola Road – the house of Indian scholar and Hauser's close associate Kailash Chandra Jha – the seven Americans discussed Walter Hauser, the Swami and their great Indian connection. 'There's something divine about the month of June,' Michael said. 'My father was born and died in June. My mother was also born in June. Swami Sahajanand Saraswati too died in June.' Jha chimed in, 'Americans usually prefer to travel to India in the winters, but they (the Hausers) came calling in sweltering June to be part of a momentous occasion.' 'One more thing that could have brought them here in June is mangoes,' he added in jest. It was in 1957 that Walter Hauser first came to India. A scholar deeply interested in 'peasant studies', Hauser chose undivided Bihar for his thesis. What fascinated Hauser most was the peasant mobilisation in Bihar in the 1920s and 30s under Saraswati. Born as Naurang Rai in Uttar Pradesh's Ghazipur, Saraswati, who set up Shree Sitaram Ashram in Bihta near Patna, founded the Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha (BPKS) in 1929 and spearheaded a peasant movement that culminated in the setting up of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) in 1936. After that first visit in 1957, Hauser's travels to India became more frequent, including visits to Barhiya Tal in Bihar's Lakhisarai – the epicentre of the Barhiya Tal Bakasht Land Movement for tenancy rights in the 1930s. Despite having written his thesis on the peasant movement, Hauser was reluctant to convert it into a book, his family said. It was Kailash Chandra Jha, now chairman of the Shree Sitaram Ashram that Hauser once frequented and a historian in his own right, who finally convinced him to do so in 2018, thus leading to the publication of The Bihar Provincial Kisan Sabha 1929–1942: A Study of an Indian Peasant Movement. The same year, Hauser and Jha translated Saraswati's autobiography, Mera Jeevan Sangharsh, into English. Co-authored by Hauser and Jha, the book, My Life Struggle, has been cited as a seminal work that helped the American scholar understand and analyse Saraswati's contribution. Hauser's children, Michael and Sheela, recalled their father's stories of Saraswati's 'extraordinary fight for the ordinary men'. 'I remember how we would have meetings with Southeast Asian scholars on many Fridays. My father was so immersed in the Swami's principles that every discussion at these meetings would veer around his (Saraswati's) life and times and the lasting impact he had on the lives of common folks,' Michael, who went to primary school in Patna, said. Sheela added, 'My father's legacy has now been transferred to the third generation with my daughter Rosemary Hauser Jose.' At the mention of her name, Rosemary, who's in her early 20s, smiled and said, 'I have grown up listening to stories of Swami from my grandparents. Swami is a part of our lives now.' Hauser's students William R Pinch and Wendy Sinder, too, have been greatly influenced by Hauser's ideological leanings, with both focusing their work on Indo-centric studies. Pinch, a professor of history and Global South Asian Studies at Wesleyan University, has authored several books on Indian history, including Warrior, Ascetics and Indian Empires and Peasants and Monks in British India. Likewise, Singer is an associate professor of South Asian history and director of international studies at Kenyon College in Ohio's Gambier, whose body of works includes books such as Independent India and Creating Histories: Oral Narratives and Politics of History Making. Talking about Saraswati's legacy, Pinch said, 'Monks have been instruments of social and political changes. Even Mahatma Gandhi visited Allahabad once to attend the Kumbh Mela and understand the social and religious connect of ascetics and sanyasis. Monks would leave behind their family but still talk of and work for society.' Saraswati's impact can be seen in how the farmers' protest in Punjab forced the central government to withdraw the contentious farm laws, Singer, who returned to India after 40 years, said. 'Swami's life and works show the vibrancy of democracy in India. Walter was drawn to Swami because he led a social change in Bihar — the land of movements,' she added. Jha, who has been instrumental in keeping the social reformer's legacy alive, talked about the time Hauser sought an audience in the 1950s with the then President of India, Dr Rajendra Prasad. 'His first request was rejected outright. Then he wrote another letter saying that as a Fulbright scholar, he wanted to pay his respects to the President. This time, he got 15 minutes. Dr Rajendra Prasad came to meet him wearing his signature cap. But the moment he started discussing peasants and the Swami, Prasad removed his cap, squatted on his sofa and talked to Hauser for 75 minutes,' he said. Dr Satyajit Singh, a leading Patna doctor and a trustee of the Bihta ashram, said: 'We are so overwhelmed at the Hauser family coming to Patna to pay an unusual tribute to Swami's memories on his 75th death anniversary. This has motivated us to make the ashram more vibrant and keep Swami's legacy alive'. Santosh Singh is a Senior Assistant Editor with The Indian Express since June 2008. He covers Bihar with main focus on politics, society and governance. Investigative and explanatory stories are also his forte. Singh has 25 years of experience in print journalism covering Bihar, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka. ... Read More


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
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Indian Express
4 hours ago
- Indian Express
Indian workers in Israel pick daily drill of sirens, shelters over evacuation
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'About 350 Indian workers have left and maybe 600 more have enrolled to go back to India. Thousands others are feeling quite safe mainly due to the system of phone alerts and sirens being deployed in Israel,' says Mohan Lal, 33. He described how, in the days following the June 13 attacks by Iran, they would have to rush several times in the day and night to the shelters, but now that was needed only once or twice a day. The 'miklat' he usually uses is one of the small concrete containers built near their workshop, which can accommodate up to a dozen people. He says that he recently visited the Ramat Gan area of Tel Aviv to see the damage caused to buildings by Iranian missile strikes, but added that there were no visible signs of damage in Palmachim where he worked. In contrast to these single-room shelters, other Indian workers describe gigantic fortified public shelters which can accommodate up to 1,500 people and are located at every 500 feet in Tel Aviv. 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Dharma Kachawa from Pushkar, Rajasthan arrived in Israel seven years ago is among the Indian supervisors. He says he has a WhatsApp group of 400 Indian workers, employed with the Israeli construction giant Solel Boneh and currently working in a town called Tzur-Yigal. Kachawa, 35, says he does his best to keep Indian workers informed of any potential danger, in case they are unaware of missile attacks. 'The fact is that some ballistic missiles are going through and they do cause damage. So I keep asking each and every Indian worker about his well being. I ask them not to wait for the sirens and move towards safe shelters once the phone alerts come.' Ritu Sarin is Executive Editor (News and Investigations) at The Indian Express group. Her areas of specialisation include internal security, money laundering and corruption. Sarin is one of India's most renowned reporters and has a career in journalism of over four decades. She is a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) since 1999 and since early 2023, a member of its Board of Directors. She has also been a founder member of the ICIJ Network Committee (INC). She has, to begin with, alone, and later led teams which have worked on ICIJ's Offshore Leaks, Swiss Leaks, the Pulitzer Prize winning Panama Papers, Paradise Papers, Implant Files, Fincen Files, Pandora Papers, the Uber Files and Deforestation Inc. She has conducted investigative journalism workshops and addressed investigative journalism conferences with a specialisation on collaborative journalism in several countries. ... Read More