
Pakistan's passport is 4th last from the bottom, Indian passport is now..., worst passport is from...
Henley Passport Index: In a significant development for the tourists of India who travel across the world and India's global standing, India has made a big jump in the Henley Passport Index's mid-year update. Improving by of eight spots to reaching rank 77, India has shown a remarkable feat. Notably, India's jump is the biggest climb in ranking by any country in the last six months. However, do you what is the rank of India's arch-nemesis, i.e., Pakistan? Where is Pakistan placed at Henley Passport Index?
As per the report released by Henley Passport Index, Pakistan is placed at number 96 being the fourth worst ranked country in the world. Also, Afghanistan is at the last i.e. 99th number as per the Henley Passport Index. What does Henley Passport Index show?
The UK-based Henley Passport Index is a global ranking of countries according to the travel freedom allowed by those countries' ordinary passports for their citizens. With the addition of two more countries to the visa-on-arrival list for Indians, the country now also has visa-free access to 59 countries.
As per a report by news agency IANS, the ranking reflects the number of destinations that passport holders can enter without a prior visa. Malaysia, Indonesia, the Maldives, and Thailand are some countries that offer visa-free access to Indian passport holders. Countries such as Sri Lanka, Macau, Myanmar, etc., offer visa-on-arrival (VOA).
The rankings, based on data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA), show that Asian countries are on the rise in passport power, with emerging economies like India, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and China closing in on traditional heavyweights like the US and the UK. This trend is reflected in IATA data, as Asia-Pacific airlines led global air travel growth in the first five months of 2025 with a 9.5 per cent increase.
(With inputs from agencies)
Hashtags

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


Indian Express
27 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Unclaimed money with Indian banks rises to Rs 67,000 crore, SBI with 29% of all such deposits
The quantum of unclaimed deposits with Indian banks stood at Rs 67,003 crore as at the end of the June quarter, with State Bank of India (SBI) accounting for 29 per cent of all such deposits, the Finance Ministry told Parliament on Monday. According to data shared by Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary in response to a question in the Lok Sabha, 87 per cent of all unclaimed deposits were with public sector banks. Of the total unclaimed deposits of Rs 58,330.26 crore with state-owned lenders, Rs 19,329.92 crore was with SBI. The other public sector banks with sizeable chunks of unclaimed deposits include Punjab National Bank (Rs 6,910.67 crore), Canara Bank (Rs 6,278.14 crore), Bank of Baroda (Rs 5,277.36 crore), and Union Bank of India (Rs 5,104.50 crore). Private banks, on the other hand, held unclaimed deposits of Rs 8,673.72 crore, with ICICI Bank in possession of the most, at Rs 2,063.45 crore. Money in savings and current accounts that have not been operated for 10 years or term deposits not claimed within 10 years from the date of maturity are called unclaimed deposits. These funds are, after the expiry of the 10-year threshold, moved to the Depositor Education and Awareness Fund maintained by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). In a separate Parliament question in March, data from the Finance Ministry had shown that the amounts of unclaimed deposits rose sharply starting 2022-23. In the previous three years, the annual additions to the Depositor Education and Awareness Fund were slightly more than Rs 4,500 crore on average. However, in 2022-23, this almost tripled to Rs 12,254.29 crore before edging down slightly to Rs 11,794.17 crore in 2023-24. The pace was somewhat maintained in the first nine months of 2024-25, with Rs 7,946.49 crore being transferred to the Depositor Education and Awareness Fund. Seemingly in response to the rise in unclaimed deposits, the RBI had in June 2023 started a '100 Days 100 Pays' campaign for banks to trace and settle the 100 largest unclaimed deposits of every bank in every district of the country within 100 days. Subsequently, in August 2023, the Indian central bank had announced the development of a web portal to allow depositors to search across multiple banks for any unclaimed deposits. The portal, called UDGAM – Unclaimed Deposits- Gateway to Access Information – had more than 8.5 lakh registered users as on July 1, Chaudhary said on Monday. Siddharth Upasani is a Deputy Associate Editor with The Indian Express. He reports primarily on data and the economy, looking for trends and changes in the former which paint a picture of the latter. Before The Indian Express, he worked at Moneycontrol and financial newswire Informist (previously called Cogencis). Outside of work, sports, fantasy football, and graphic novels keep him busy. ... Read More
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
27 minutes ago
- Business Standard
India needs more Apples: Replicating Apple's model to attract top brands
The PLI for smartphones was extremely sophisticated in design, a win-win for all parties Listen to This Article While the jury is still out on many of the production-linked incentive schemes (PLI) introduced by the Indian government, one undeniable success has been the scheme targeting smartphone production. Used largely by Apple, and to a lesser extent by Samsung, this scheme has helped India export over $24 billion worth of smartphones in FY25, up from virtually zero in FY18. Today, India is the world's third-largest smartphone exporter, after China and Vietnam. Apple now assembles about 20 per cent of all iPhones in India, and this percentage is set to keep rising. While local value addition is limited — still


Time of India
27 minutes ago
- Time of India
India tops US smartphone supply in June quarter as Apple shifts from China
India has emerged as the top supplier of smartphones to the US, primarily due to Apple's strategic shift of manufacturing from China amidst trade uncertainties. This transition led to a significant decrease in US smartphone shipments assembled in China, with India capturing a substantial portion of that decline. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads India became the leading supplier of smartphones sold in the United States for the first time, in the June quarter, largely driven by Apple's accelerated shift of its manufacturing activities to India from China amidst tariff uncertainties, research firm Canalys uncertain outcome of negotiations between Washington and Beijing over a trade deal has accelerated the supply chain reorientation, it share of US smartphone shipments assembled in China shrank from 61% in Q2 2024 to 25% in Q2 of this decline was captured by total volume of India-made smartphones to the US grew 240% on-year, accounting for 44% of shipments imported into the US in Q2 2025, up from 13% of the total smartphone shipments a year research firm said US smartphone shipments grew 1% on-year in the June quarter as vendors continued to frontload inventories amid tariff concerns.'India became the leading manufacturing hub for smartphones sold in the US for the very first time in Q2 2025, largely driven by Apple's accelerated supply chain shift to India amid an uncertain trade landscape between the US and China,' said Sanyam Chaurasia, principal analyst at added that while Apple has scaled up its supply from India as part of its China Plus One strategy , and even manufacturing and exporting the more complex Pro models from India, it is still dependent on manufacturing bases in China for scaled supply of its Pro models to the the base models, however, India became the largest supplier to the US in the June quarter. Apple has opted to dedicate most of its export capacity in India to supply to the US market in and Motorola have also scaled up supply from India, although their shifts are significantly slower and smaller in scale than Apple's."Motorola, similar to Apple, has its core manufacturing hub in China, whereas Samsung relies mainly on producing its smartphones in Vietnam,' Chaurasia to data from Canalys, iPhone exports from India to the US peaked in March ahead of the Trump administration's announcement of reciprocal tariffs on its trade partners, which eventually got deferred to Cupertino-based company exported 97.6% of all iPhone exports in March to the US, up from 81.9% in the three months to February, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Exports ramped up 219% in March as the company looked to preempt higher tariffs on imports from (Hon Hai), and Tata Electronics are the leading manufacturers of iPhones in India, while Samsung has its own factory and Motorola exports to the US through its contract manufacturer, Dixon Technologies