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Ensure freedom of expression does not hurt religious feelings, Madras HC tells State government
Ensure freedom of expression does not hurt religious feelings, Madras HC tells State government

The Hindu

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Hindu

Ensure freedom of expression does not hurt religious feelings, Madras HC tells State government

The Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court has set aside the closure of a case registered by the Thoothukudi police over a social media post disrespecting Lord Krishna. Justice K. Murali Shankar observed, 'Depicting Hindu Gods in a disrespectful manner, intentionally hurting the sentiments of millions, cannot be justified. Such actions have the potential to spark enmity, religious outrage, social disorder, and undermine communal harmony'. The court said: 'Given the deep-rooted respect for religious symbols and deities, disrespect can lead to social unrest and hurt a large section of society. Therefore, it is crucial to approach such depictions with sensitivity. The government must ensure freedom of expression does not translate into hurting religious feelings.' The court was hearing a criminal revision petition filed by P. Paramasivan. The petitioner had lodged a complaint alleging that one Sathish Kumar posted a photo of Lord Krishna along with disrespectful comments on social media. He stated that he was deeply hurt by the misrepresented photo, which caused him significant mental anguish. He alleged that Sathish Kumar had posted the photo and comments with an intention of defaming Hindu Gods, damaging the image of Hindu women, and potentially creating a law and order problem by promoting enmity between different groups on religious grounds. On the basis of the complaint, an FIR was registered. Subsequently, the police filed a final report before Judicial Magistrate IV, Thoothukudi, as 'undetected'. Accepting the final report, the case was closed with liberty to file a private complaint. Challenging the same, the criminal revision petition was filed. Justice Murali Shankar observed that the police's final report and the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate accepting it and closing the FIR could not be sustained legally. While the investigating officer identified the post's potential to create law and order issues and disturb communal harmony, the investigation was not pursued diligently, and the final report appeared to have been filed mechanically, the court observed. Despite the seriousness of the allegations, the police handled the case casually. 'Given these circumstances, the court finds it necessary to direct the police to continue and complete the investigation within a stipulated period,' the judge observed, and directed the police to complete the investigation and file a final report in three months.

VinFast opens new assembly plant in India
VinFast opens new assembly plant in India

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

VinFast opens new assembly plant in India

Vietnamese battery electric vehicle (BEV) manufacturer VinFast Auto officially inaugurated it newly-built assembly plant in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The facility, in the Sipcot Industrial Park in Thoothukudi, is VinFast's third vehicle assembly facility to go into operation globally, marking a key milestone in the company's global expansion. Switch Auto Insurance and Save Today! The Insurance Savings You Expect Affordable Auto Insurance, Customized for You Great Rates and Award-Winning Service Last month the company opened its first showroom in the country and began taking bookings for its VF6 and VF7 models, which were unveiled earlier this year at the Bharat Mobility Global Expo in Delhi. These are the first two models to go into production at the plant. VinFast confirmed the plant 'strengthens the company's long-term commitment to the world's third-largest automobile market, underscoring VinFast's confidence in India's strategic role in the future of the global EV industry.' VinFast has two plants in operation in Vietnam and a facility currently under construction in Indonesia. Completion of a plant in the US has been delayed, after the company recently decided to prioritise expansion in Asia. The company pointed out that the Thoothukudi plant demonstrates its 'capacity to deliver large-scale projects.' The facility, built on a 400-acre plot, has an initial production capacity of 50,000 vehicles per year, using 'state-of-the-art production lines that meet world-class standards, featuring advanced automation and cutting-edge technologies.' The facility comprises multiple workshops, including a body shop, paint shop, final assembly, quality control and a logistics hub. It also includes an auxiliary cluster for local contractors, which is expected to expand in the coming years. The company confirmed that at full capacity, the plant will employ up to 3,500 people directly, with thousands more jobs created indirectly within the supply chain ecosystem. Capacity can be scaled up to 150,000 vehicles annually, when required, to meet rising demand. VinFast said the launch of the Tamil Nadu plant moves it closer to its 2025 sales target of 200,000 vehicles globally, and its goal of producing 1 million vehicles per year by 2030. VinFast Asia's CEO, Pham Sanh Chau, said at the inauguration ceremony: 'The VinFast Tamil Nadu plant marks a strategic milestone in our long-term commitment to the Indian market. It establishes a strong foundation for sustainable growth and positions us to offer high-quality, competitively priced electric vehicles to Indian consumers. Looking ahead, the facility will expand its production capacity to meet rising demand. We aim to develop it into VinFast's largest export hub for South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.' He added that the company 'has already secured initial orders from several countries in these regions. In close collaboration with the Tamil Nadu government, VinFast is working to transform the area into the 'EV capital of South Asia'—supporting both the dynamic domestic market and our broader regional ambitions.' "VinFast opens new assembly plant in India" was originally created and published by Just Auto, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Sign in to access your portfolio

Vietnam automaker VinFast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia
Vietnam automaker VinFast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Vietnam automaker VinFast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia

THOOTHUKUDI, India (AP) — Vietnam's VinFast began production at a $500 million electric vehicle plant in southern India's Tamil Nadu state on Monday, part of a planned $2 billion investment in India and a broader expansion across Asia. The factory in Thoothukudi will initially make 50,000 electric vehicles annually, with room to triple output to 150,000 cars. Given its proximity to a major port in one of India's most industrialized states, VinFast hopes it will be a hub for future exports to the region. It says the factory will create more than 3,000 local jobs. Switch Auto Insurance and Save Today! Affordable Auto Insurance, Customized for You The Insurance Savings You Expect Great Rates and Award-Winning Service The Vietnamese company says it scouted 15 locations across six Indian states before choosing Tamil Nadu. It's the center of India's auto industry, with strong manufacturing, skilled workers, good infrastructure, and a reliable supply chain, according to Tamil Nadu's Industries Minister T.R.B. Raaja. 'This investment will lead to an entirely new industrial cluster in south Tamil Nadu, and more clusters is what India needs to emerge as a global manufacturing hub,' he said. VinFast Asia CEO Pham Sanh Chau said the company has aspirations to export cars across the region and it hopes to turn the new factory into an export hub. The new factory could also mark the start of an effort to bring other parts of the Vingroup empire to India. The sprawling conglomerate, founded by Vietnam's richest man Pham Nhat Vuong, began as an instant noodle company in Ukraine in the 1990s and now spans real estate, hospitals, schools and more. Chau said Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin had invited the company to 'invest in a big way' across sectors like green energy, smart cities and tourism, and said that the chief minister had 'promised he will do all what is necessary for us to move the whole ecosystem here.' A strategic pivot to Asia VinFast's foray into India reflects a broader shift in strategy. The company increasingly is focusing on Asian markets after struggling to gain traction in the U.S. and Europe. It broke ground last year on a $200 million EV assembly plant in Indonesia, where it plans to make 50,000 cars annually. It's also expanding in Thailand and the Philippines. VinFast sold nearly 97,000 vehicles in 2024. That's triple what it sold the year before, but only about 10% of those sales were outside Vietnam. As it eyes markets in Asia, it hopes the factory in India will be a base for exports to South Asian countries like Nepal and Sri Lanka and also to countries in the Middle East and Africa. India is the world's third-largest car market by number of vehicles sold. It presents an enticing mix: A fast growing economy, rising adoption of EVs, supportive government policies and a rare market where players have yet to completely dominate EV sales. 'It is a market that no automaker in the world can ignore,' said Ishan Raghav, managing editor of the Indian car magazine autoX. A growing EV market in India EV growth in India has been led by two- and three-wheelers that accounted for 86% of the over six million EVs sold last year. Sales of four-wheel passenger EVs made up only 2.5% of all car sales in India last year, but they have been surging, jumping to more than 110,000 in 2024 from just 1,841 in 2019. The government aims to have EVs account for a third of all passenger vehicle sales by 2030. 'The electric car story has started (in India) only three or four years ago,' said Charith Konda, an energy specialist who looks at India's transport and clean energy sectors for the think tank Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis or IEEFA. New cars that 'look great on the road,' with better batteries, quick charging and longer driving ranges are driving the sector's rapid growth, he said. The shift to EVs is mostly powered by Indian automakers, but VinFast plans to break into the market later this year with its VF6 and VF7 SUV models, which are designed for India. The company chose the VF7 for its India launch — unlike the models introduced in the U.S., Canada, the EU, or Southeast Asia — to position itself as a premium global brand while keeping the price affordable, added Chau, the VinFast Asia CEO. Can VinFast succeed where Chinese EVs faltered? Chinese EV brands that dominate in countries like Thailand and Brazil have found India more challenging. After border clashes with China in 2020, India blocked companies like BYD from building their own factories. Some then turned to partnerships. China's SAIC, owner of MG Motor, has joined with India's JSW Group. Their MG Windsor, a five-seater, sold 30,000 units in just nine months, nibbling Tata Motors' 70% EV market share down to about 50%. Tata was the first local automaker to court mass-market consumers with EVs. Its 2020 launch of the electric Nexon, a small SUV, became India's first major EV car success. VinFast lacks the geopolitical baggage of its larger Chinese rivals and will also benefit from incentives like lower land prices and tax breaks for building locally in India. That's part of India's policy of discouraging imports with high import duties to help encourage local manufacturing and create more jobs. The push for onshore manufacturing is a concern also for Tesla, which launched its Model Y in India last month at a price of nearly $80,000, compared to about $44,990 in the U.S without a federal tax credit. 'India's stand is very clear. We do not want to import manufactured cars, even Teslas. Whether it's Tesla or Chinese cars, they are taxed heavily,' added Konda. An uphill battle in a tough market The road ahead remains daunting. India's EV market is crowded with well-entrenched players like Tata Motors and Mahindra, which dominate the more affordable segment, while Hyundai, MG Motors and luxury brands like Mercedes-Benz and Audi compete at high price points. Indians tend to purchase EVs as second cars used for driving within the city, since the infrastructure for charging elsewhere can be undependable. VinFast will need to win over India's cost-sensitive and conservative drivers with a reputation for quality batteries and services while keeping prices low, said Vivek Gulia, co-founder of JMK Research. 'Initially, people will be apprehensive,' he said. VinFast says it plans to set up showrooms and service centers across India, working with local companies for charging and repairs, and cutting costs by recycling batteries and making key parts like powertrains and battery packs in the country. Chau added that after a customer clinic in September 2024 and input from top engineers in Vietnam, the company upgraded its feature list to better match Indian customer expectations. Scale will be key. VinFast has signed agreements to establish 32 dealerships across 27 Indian cities. Hyundai has 1,300 places for Indians to buy their cars. Building a brand in India takes time — Hyundai, for instance, pulled it off over decades, helped by an early endorsement from Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan. VinFast can succeed if it can get its pricing right and earn the trust of customers, Gulia said, 'Then they can actually do really good.' ___ An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that VinFast broke ground on the factory on Monday, rather than beginning production. ___ Sibi Arasu contributed from Bengaluru, India and Aniruddha Ghosal contributed from Hanoi, Vietnam. ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

VinFast in talks to boost India sourcing as its first overseas plant swings into gear
VinFast in talks to boost India sourcing as its first overseas plant swings into gear

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

VinFast in talks to boost India sourcing as its first overseas plant swings into gear

By Praveen Paramasivam and Chandini Monnappa THOOTHUKUDI, India (Reuters) -Vietnamese electric vehicle maker VinFast began operations at a new plant in India, its first overseas factory, on Monday, and said it hopes to source more parts locally and that it had received orders from Sri Lanka, Nepal and Mauritius. Switch Auto Insurance and Save Today! Affordable Auto Insurance, Customized for You The Insurance Savings You Expect Great Rates and Award-Winning Service The loss-making carmaker has struggled to break into developed Western markets and its foray into India, the world's third-largest auto market, will be a key test of its vehicles' popularity and its business acumen. The plant in Thoothukudi in the southern state of Tamil Nadu has an initial capacity to build 50,000 EVs annually, scalable to 150,000. Its first vehicles will be two premium electric SUVs, the VF 7 and VF 6. VinFast has talked with several of its component suppliers, and some want to shift part of their production to the industrial park in India, VinFast Asia CEO Pham Sanh Chau told Reuters. The company plans to roll out cars to Indian showrooms later this month, he added. The pricing of the vehicles has not been disclosed. Though the orders from other nations mean the plant could evolve into an export hub, VinFast's immediate focus remains on Indian customers, Chau said. Last year, VinFast agreed with Tamil Nadu state to invest $500 million over five years and to work towards up to $2 billion in investment. Success in India will be key if it is to meet its global delivery target of 200,000 cars for 2025. It sold about 72,100 in the first half of the year, primarily in its home market. Backed by Vietnam's largest conglomerate Vingroup, VinFast plans for a plant in Indonesia to be up and running by the end of the year, Chau said. Production in the U.S. has, however, been delayed until 2028. The company also said it plans to eventually expand its other businesses to India, including its electric ride-hailing service. Sign in to access your portfolio

Vietnam automaker Vinfast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia
Vietnam automaker Vinfast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia

CTV News

time7 days ago

  • Automotive
  • CTV News

Vietnam automaker Vinfast opens factory in India, eyeing growth in Asia

Workers assemble a car at the Vinfast electric vehicle plant in Thoothukudi, in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, Monday, Aug. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/ Rafiq Maqbool) THOOTHUKUDI, India — Vietnam's Vinfast began production at a US$500 million electric vehicle plant in southern India's Tamil Nadu state on Monday, part of a planned $2 billion investment in India and a broader expansion across Asia. The factory in Thoothukudi will initially make 50,000 electric vehicles annually, with room to triple output to 150,000 cars. Given its proximity to a major port in one of India's most industrialized states, Vinfast hopes it will be a hub for future exports to the region. It says the factory will create more than 3,000 local jobs. The Vietnamese company says it scouted 15 locations across six Indian states before choosing Tamil Nadu. It's the center of India's auto industry, with strong manufacturing, skilled workers, good infrastructure, and a reliable supply chain, according to Tamil Nadu's Industries Minister T.R.B. Raaja. 'This investment will lead to an entirely new industrial cluster in south Tamil Nadu, and more clusters is what India needs to emerge as a global manufacturing hub,' he said. VinFast Asia CEO Pham Sanh Chau said the company has aspirations to export cars across the region and it hopes to turn the new factory into an export hub. The new factory could also mark the start of an effort to bring other parts of the Vingroup empire to India. The sprawling conglomerate, founded by Vietnam's richest man Pham Nhat Vuong, began as an instant noodle company in Ukraine in the 1990s and now spans real estate, hospitals, schools and more. Chau said Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin had invited the company to 'invest in a big way' across sectors like green energy, smart cities and tourism, and said that the chief minister had 'promised he will do all what is necessary for us to move the whole ecosystem here.' A strategic pivot to Asia Vinfast's foray into India reflects a broader shift in strategy. The company increasingly is focusing on Asian markets after struggling to gain traction in the U.S. and Europe. It broke ground last year on a $200 million EV assembly plant in Indonesia, where it plans to make 50,000 cars annually. It's also expanding in Thailand and the Philippines. Vinfast sold nearly 97,000 vehicles in 2024. That's triple what it sold the year before, but only about 10% of those sales were outside Vietnam. As it eyes markets in Asia, it hopes the factory in India will be a base for exports to South Asian countries like Nepal and Sri Lanka and also to countries in the Middle East and Africa. India is the world's third-largest car market by number of vehicles sold. It presents an enticing mix: A fast growing economy, rising adoption of EVs, supportive government policies and a rare market where players have yet to completely dominate EV sales. 'It is a market that no automaker in the world can ignore,' said Ishan Raghav, managing editor of the Indian car magazine autoX. . A growing EV market in India EV growth in India has been led by two and three-wheelers that accounted for 86% of the over six million EVs sold last year. Sales of four wheel passenger EVs made up only 2.5% of all car sales in India last year, but they have been surging, jumping to more than 110,000 in 2024 from just 1,841 in 2019. The government aims to have EVs account for a third of all passenger vehicle sales by 2030. 'The electric car story has started (in India) only three or four years ago,' said Charith Konda, an energy specialist who looks at India's transport and clean energy sectors for the think-tank Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis or IEEFA. New cars that 'look great on the road,' with better batteries, quick charging and longer driving ranges are driving the sector's rapid growth, he said. The shift to EVs is mostly powered by Indian automakers, but Vinfast plans to break into the market later this year with its VF6 and VF7 SUV models, which are designed for India. The company chose the VF7 for its India launch—unlike the models introduced in the U.S., Canada, the EU, or Southeast Asia—to position itself as a premium global brand while keeping the price affordable, added Chau, the Vinfast Asia CEO. Can Vinfast Succeed Where Chinese EVs Faltered? Chinese EV brands that dominate in countries like Thailand and Brazil have found India more challenging. After border clashes with China in 2020, India blocked companies like BYD from building their own factories. Some then turned to partnerships. China's SAIC, owner of MG Motor, has joined with India's JSW Group. Their MG Windsor, a five-seater, sold 30,000 units in just nine months, nibbling Tata Motors' 70% EV market share down to about 50%. Tata was the first local automaker to court mass-market consumers with EVs. Its 2020 launch of the electric Nexon, a small SUV, became India's first major EV car success. Vinfast lacks the geopolitical baggage of its larger Chinese rivals and will also benefit from incentives like lower land prices and tax breaks for building locally in India. That's part of India's policy of discouraging imports with high import duties to help encourage local manufacturing and create more jobs. The push for onshore manufacturing is a concern also for Tesla, which launched its Model Y in India last month at a price of nearly $80,000, compared to about $44,990 in the U.S without a federal tax credit. 'India's stand is very clear. We do not want to import manufactured cars, even Teslas. Whether it's Tesla or Chinese cars, they are taxed heavily,' added Konda. An uphill battle in a tough market The road ahead remains daunting. India's EV market is crowded with well-entrenched players like Tata Motors and Mahindra, which dominate the more affordable segment, while Hyundai, MG Motors and luxury brands like Mercedes-Benz and Audi compete at high price points. Indians tend to purchase EVs as second cars used for driving within the city, since the infrastructure for charging elsewhere can be undependable. Vinfast will need to win over India's cost-sensitive and conservative drivers with a reputation for quality batteries and services while keeping prices low, said Vivek Gulia, co-founder of JMK Research. 'Initially, people will be apprehensive,' he said. Vinfast says it plans to set up showrooms and service centers across India, working with local companies for charging and repairs, and cutting costs by recycling batteries and making key parts like powertrains and battery packs in the country. Chau added that after a customer clinic in September 2024 and input from top engineers in Vietnam, the company upgraded its feature list to better match Indian customer expectations. Scale will be key. VinFast has signed agreements to establish 32 dealerships across 27 Indian cities. Hyundai has 1,300 places for Indians to buy their cars. Building a brand in India takes time — Hyundai, for instance, pulled it off over decades, helped by an early endorsement from Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan. VinFast can succeed if it can get its pricing right and earn the trust of customers, Gulia said, 'Then they can actually do really good.' ___ Sibi Arasu contributed from Bengaluru, India and Aniruddha Ghosal contributed from Hanoi, Vietnam. The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Sibi Arasu, Aniruddha Ghosal And Rishi Lekhi, The Associated Press

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