logo
Ashok Gajapathi Raju takes oath as Goa Governor

Ashok Gajapathi Raju takes oath as Goa Governor

The Hindu4 days ago
Former Union Minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju was sworn in as the Governor of Goa on Saturday (July 26, 2025), succeeding P.S. Sreedharan Pillai.
Mr. Raju was administered the oath of office at Raj Bhavan by Chief Justice of Bombay High Court Alok Aradhe. Chief Minister Pramod Sawant and other dignitaries attended the event.
Mr. Raju, 74, said he would follow the Constitution of India while serving the people.
'We all work as a team, and I am very delighted that I am associated with Goans,' he said.
'Though I don't understand the local language and this is my first assignment in this (gubernatorial) office, I have had a long innings in the political set-up. I was a seven-time legislator in Andhra Pradesh before it was bifurcated into two states,' he said.
Referring to his political career, Mr. Raju said he had a short tenure in Parliament.
'I have been in and out as a minister in the government and also sat in the opposition. I have wide experience,' the Governor added.
A veteran Telugu Desam Party (TDP) leader from Andhra Pradesh, Raju served as the Civil Aviation Minister between May 27, 2014 and March 10, 2018. He has also held ministerial posts in the Andhra Pradesh government.
Later, addressing reporters, Mr. Raju said he was looking forward to working with the people of Goa.
'I am looking forward to working for you, or rather, I should say 'working with you. 'For' is a mind terminology, but (I prefer to say) 'with you' because if people don't work with the government, democracy suffers. We don't want that situation. We want everyone to work unitedly,' he added.
He appealed to people to take India forward by working together. 'India will be second to none in the world'.
Mr. Pillai had completed four years in the gubernatorial position in Goa. He was accorded a farewell on Thursday (July 24, 2025).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Flooded Escape Tunnels Trapped Pahalgam Killers. Forces Hunted Them Down
Flooded Escape Tunnels Trapped Pahalgam Killers. Forces Hunted Them Down

NDTV

time12 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Flooded Escape Tunnels Trapped Pahalgam Killers. Forces Hunted Them Down

New Delhi: An all-nighter by Union Home Minister Amit Shah, scientists working through the night, a special plane from Srinagar to Chandigarh, and test-firing to match bullet casings -- it took all of this to confirm that the three terrorists killed in Operation Mahadev near Srinagar Monday were the same monsters who murdered 26 innocents in cold blood in Pahalgam's Baisaran Valley on April 22. According to sources in the government, the Home Minister wanted to be sure before informing the Parliament that the three terrorists killed in Operation Mahadev are the ones involved in the Pahalgam attack. He was up through Monday night and constantly monitored the developments at the Chandigarh Forensic Science Laboratory over phone and video calls as scientists matched bullet casings and guns recovered after Operation Mahadev. Sources said the Home Minister was up till 5 am, communicating with scientists for a confirmation, and rested for a few hours before heading to Parliament for the big day. Addressing the Lok Sabha during the Operation Sindoor debate yesterday, Mr Shah said, "There is no room for doubt. I am holding the ballistic report, six scientists have cross-checked it and confirmed to me over video call that the bullets fired at Pahalgam and the bullets fired from these guns are a 100 per cent match." Operation Mahadev: 3 Terrorists Gunned Down As Defence Minister Rajnath Singh began the debate on Operation Sindoor in Parliament on Monday, an encounter was underway at Lidwas near Srinagar. A joint team of the Army, CRPF and Jammu and Kashmir police had zeroed in on a hideout after weeks of constantly intercepting terrorists' communication. In the gunfight that followed, three terrorists were gunned down and sophisticated weapons such as assault rifles and rifle grenades were recovered. The forces suspected that these three terrorists were the Pahalgam killers, but the government wanted to leave no room for doubt before it went public. So, while multiple media reports linked Operation Mahadev to the Pahalgam attack, no official confirmation came through. A Perfect Match Security forces had earlier arrested some local residents on charges of assisting the terrorists. They were brought in for the identification of the bodies of the three killed in Lidwas. They confirmed that the terrorists killed in Mahadev were the killers of Pahalgam. But this was not enough. The government insisted on a foolproof match. The terrorists' weapons recovered after Operation Mahadev were then flown to Chandigarh on a special plane. An Air Force cargo plane flew a machine from Ahmedabad to Chandigarh. At the Chandigarh forensic lab, shots were fired from the weapons recovered. The empty bullet casings, generated after the test firing, were then matched with the casings recovered from Baisaran Valley after the attack. It was a 99 per cent match, according to sources. During this entire process, the Home Minister was constantly in touch with the scientists till the final report was ready and sent to him, the sources added. Guns Never Fired After Pahalgam During the matching experiments, Home Minister Shah was told that the last time the terrorists' guns -- an M9 and two AK-47s -- were fired was during the Pahalgam attack. For three months, the terrorists Suleiman, Afghani and Jibran -- were in hiding. All of them Pakistani nationals, they could not return because of the security forces' strategy to prevent their escape. According to sources, the home minister and security hawks chalked out this strategy when he flew to Kashmir hours after the Pahalgam attack. Mr Shah, sources said, had made it clear to the forces that the terrorists must not succeed in returning to Pakistan. The forces identified an 8-km path that they could use to cross over and security was beefed up in that region. The forces located secret tunnels used by the terrorists for infiltration and dug up to flood them. This blocked the routes and foiled their escape plans. Eventually, the forces tracked them down and eliminated them.

Daily Briefing: A tsunami warning in Japan; inside Operation Mahadev
Daily Briefing: A tsunami warning in Japan; inside Operation Mahadev

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

Daily Briefing: A tsunami warning in Japan; inside Operation Mahadev

Good morning, The day began with an early morning alert. A powerful 8.7 magnitude earthquake struck off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, triggering a Pacific-wide tsunami of up to 4 metres (13 feet). The tsunami has damaged buildings and prompted evacuation warnings across the peninsular region and most of Japan's east coast. The shallow earthquake struck at a depth of 19.3 km, according to the US Geological Survey. Shallow earthquakes tend to cause greater damage since the seismic waves have a shorter distance to travel and hence, don't lose their energy when they reach the surface. The US government has also sounded a tsunami warning for Hawaii, Alaska and along the Pacific coast (west). On that note, let's get to today's edition. 🚨 Big Story Before a gunfight ensued on Monday morning in the Dachigam forests of Jammu and Kashmir's Srinagar, security forces were quietly planning to ambush the three men, who had been on the run since the April 22 Pahalgam attack. On Tuesday, Union Home Minister Amit Shah announced in Parliament that the three terrorists behind the attack had been slain. The breakthrough: Codenamed 'Operation Mahadev', the exercise began with a crucial hint. On Saturday, the Army and the J&K Police detected a satellite phone signal for a second time in the last 17 days, which led them to the foothills of Mahadev Peak, the highest and strategically important peak in Srinagar. Sources told The Indian Express that the men had earlier used the device on July 11 in the Baisaran area, alerting the security forces. The planning: The security forces zeroed in on the terrorists' location through heat signature drones and with the help of local nomads. The perpetrators were eventually gunned down on Monday morning, three months after security forces and intelligence agencies launched a large-scale hunt for the terrorists. Read how Operation Mahadev unfolded in our detailed report. The terrorists: The three men have been identified as Suleiman alias Faisal Jatt, Afghan, and Jibran. All three are from Pakistan, Shah confirmed. Suleiman was also involved in previous attacks at the Z-Morh tunnel. ⚡Only in Express West vs rest? In 1957, Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong had declared that the 'East wind will prevail over the West'. The idea that the West is in decline and will be swamped by the rising tide of 'the rest' has been around for centuries. However, the truth is the West has stood resilient. A risen China once again talks of leading the East, or as it's called now, the Global South, against the West. But is the end of the US-led world order near? Sceptics would say, not so fast. 'The rest' have time and again failed to band together to challenge the world order, and columnist C Raja Mohan tells us why. 📰 From the Front Page The waiting game: As the August 1 deadline looms near, India has yet to finalise its trade deal with the US. If it fails to reach an agreement soon, it may face tariffs as high as 25 per cent, US President Donald Trump warned yesterday. As my colleague Anil Sasi writes, a delay in carving out a trade deal may not be entirely disadvantageous, as it offers more visibility into US tariffs on other countries it has negotiated with. For instance, as the US engages with China, it would serve well for New Delhi to know what comparative advantage it will have over Beijing. However, the ensuing uncertainty has spelt trouble for exporters, with buyers holding out on orders. Read on. China in? Amid the changing geopolitical dynamics, India is rethinking its 'China-out' strategy, which blocked foreign investments from Beijing ever since the 2020 border clashes. While India kept Chinese firms out of critical sectors like telecommunications, crucial imports such as electronic components, for which India has little production base, have continued. Now, the government is slowly but surely easing more of its restrictions. 📌 Must Read Two-eyed beast: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has been working on the world's most powerful Earth observation satellite for over one and a half decades. Its joint efforts with the US-based NASA are set to be paid off today with the launch of NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture) into space. NISAR's two synthetic aperture radars (SARs) make it a one-of-a-kind satellite, which will offer a detailed view of the planet like never before. We explain the significance of NISAR and the NASA-ISRO collaboration. New colours: Tej Pratap Yadav, the estranged elder son of Rasthriya Janata Dal (RJD) supremo Lalu Prasad, has decided to walk his own path. Yadav was expelled from the party in May after a controversial photo was posted on his Facebook profile. Now, he has decided to contest the upcoming Bihar elections as an Independent candidate, shifting his tone towards RJD from reconciliatory to adversarial. ⏳ And Finally… 🏏 India's next match with England is a momentous one. The game, set to begin tomorrow and end on July 4, will either see Team India end the Test series with a well-deserved tie or a crushing 3-1 defeat. So, who will the selectors turn to? Will it finally be Kuldeep Yadav's turn? National sports editor Sandeep Dwivedi writes that a combination of factors is playing against Yadav's selection — not because of his skill, but because of the unreliability of frontline batsmen and even the local conditions. Read. 🎧 Before you go, do tune in to the latest '3 Things' podcast episode. Today's lineup: India's Maldives reset, Divya Deshmukh's victory, and the TCS layoffs. That's all for today, folks! Until tomorrow, Sonal Gupta Sonal Gupta is a senior sub-editor on the news desk. She writes feature stories and explainers on a wide range of topics from art and culture to international affairs. She also curates the Morning Expresso, a daily briefing of top stories of the day, which won gold in the 'best newsletter' category at the WAN-IFRA South Asian Digital Media Awards 2023. She also edits our newly-launched pop culture section, Fresh Take. ... Read More

Parliament Monsoon Session Live: EAM Jaishankar, Nadda to address Rajya Sabha today
Parliament Monsoon Session Live: EAM Jaishankar, Nadda to address Rajya Sabha today

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Parliament Monsoon Session Live: EAM Jaishankar, Nadda to address Rajya Sabha today

Parliament Monsoon Session Live: As the parliamentary debate on Operation Sindoor, India's retaliatory offensive against Pakistan, post the Pahalgam terror attack, continues, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and Leader of the House in the Rajya Sabha JP Nadda are set to take the floor on Wednesday. Additionally, Union home minister Amit Shah is likely to deliver the concluding speech in More The debate on Operation Sindoor began in the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday, while the Lok Sabha took up the discussion on Monday. The operation was launched in response to the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack. Earlier on Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi joined the Operation Sindoor debate in the Lok Sabha, and said that the Indian Armed Forces avenged the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack in 22 minutes by destroying terror launch pads in "different corners of Pakistan." Speaking in the Lok Sabha, the Prime Minister described the ongoing Parliament session as a "Vijay Utsav" (victory celebration), celebrating India's military strength and national unity after the success of the armed forces. After that, union minister of parliamentary affairs Kiren Rijiju on Tuesday urged the Opposition to abandon what he termed as "cheap politics" following PM Modi's speech stating that the Prime Minister had categorically outlined the government's stand. Parliament debate on Operation Sindoor: What we know

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store