Tag: S Jaishankar

  • Reports claiming Jaishankar’s meeting with certain Taliban leaders ‘completely false’: Sources

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Reports claiming that External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar met with certain Taliban leaders are “completely false, baseless and mischievous”, sources said on Tuesday.

    The reaction from sources here came after some reports on social media claimed that Jaishankar met certain Taliban leaders, who assured the minister that the outfit’s future relations with India will not be based on Pakistan’s views and wishes. “We have seen social media reports claiming that the External Affairs Minister has met certain Taliban leaders. Such reports are completely false, baseless and mischievous,” said a source.

    The reports emerged as the US looked to complete the withdrawal of its forces from Afghanistan by September 11, ending a nearly two-decade of its military presence in the war-ravaged country.

    In the midst of fast-paced developments relating to the Afghan peace process, a senior Qatari diplomat said at a webinar organised by the Arab Center in Washington DC recently that he believed the Indian side was engaging with the Taliban as the group could be a key component in the future of Afghanistan.

  • CM Manohar Lal Khattar to meet EAM Jaishankar for Haryana man lodged in Australian prison

    By PTI
    CHANDIGARH: Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar on Sunday said he will be meeting External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar to seek his intervention in securing the release of 24-year-old Vishal Jood from a prison in Australia.

    According to local media reports, Jood, who hails from Haryana’s Karnal, is lodged in an Australian prison for his alleged role in a series of hate attacks on suspected pro-Khalistan Sikhs in Sydney this year.

    Khattar said he would also urge the Australian High Commission to intervene in the issue, an official statement said here.

    The chief minister had earlier also spoken to Jaishankar and was assured of full cooperation from the Ministry of External Affairs and the Indian High Commission in Australia regarding Jood’s release, it said.

    Khattar, who is in Manali, said continuous efforts are on to secure the release of the youth.

    Meanwhile, on the second day of his visit to the resort town in Himachal Pradesh, the Haryana chief minister held a virtual meeting with representatives of NGOs and NRIs living in Australia and thanked them for sending oxygen concentrators and other medical equipment to India amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He also urged the Haryanvi diaspora and foreign investors to invest in Haryana.

    Describing Haryana as a preferred destination for investment, Khattar said the state government has constituted a Foreign Cooperation Department to resolve various issues related to foreign investment and to coordinate with foreign investors.

    Along with this, a single-window system has been created through which investors can get all types of approvals online easily in 45 days to set up their industry, he said.

    Apart from this, Khattar said, a relationship manager will be assigned to investors who wish to set up their business in Haryana.

    Khattar added that the Haryana government was committed to create a progressive business environment in the state.

    In Haryana, 10 industrial model townships with all necessary facilities have been set up.

    A separate MSME Department has been created for the purpose of promoting micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in the state, he said.

    Haryana is a preferred destination for auto companies and auto-component manufacturers, the chief minister said.

    Haryana has immense potential for industry in the fields of auto manufacturing, skill development, IT and ITES, agro and agro-based industries such as food processing, health and animal science, tourism, integrated aviation hubs, he added.

  • Haryana CM seeks EAM Jaishankar’s intervention for release of youth from Australian jail

    By PTI
    CHANDIGARH: Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar has spoken to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, seeking his intervention to secure the release of a state youth from a prison in Australia.

    According to media reports, 24-year-old Vishal Jood is lodged in an Australian prison for alleged hand in a series of hate attacks on suspected pro-Khalistan Sikhs in Sydney this year.

    There have been protests for his release in Karnal and Haryana districts from the Ror community, to which he belongs.

    “Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal spoke to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar seeking his intervention to secure release of Haryanvi youth Vishal Jood, who is currently lodged in a prison in Australia,” said a tweet from the state’s Directorate of Information, Public Relations and Languages Department.

    “For the honour of the Tricolour in Sydney, Haryana’s young Vishal Jood fought firmly with anti-national forces and did not allow the Tricolour to be insulted,” the tweet further said.

    “There are also a lot of demonstrations taking place in Australia in support of Vishal. Vishal’s supporters claim that some anti-national forces beat him up and later implicated him in a false case after which he was sent to jail,” it said, adding Jaishankar has assured Khattar of taking steps to secure the youth’s release.

  • India’s position not new: MEA on abstention at UNHRC on Gaza resolution

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: India on Thursday defended its abstention during the voting at the UNHRC on a resolution to probe Gaza violence, saying its position is not new and it has abstained on previous occasions also.

    Asked about the Palestinian foreign minister writing to his Indian counterpart S Jaishankar on India abstaining during the voting in the United Nations Human Rights Council on the issue, MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said a similar letter has been written to all countries who abstained.

    “Palestine wrote similar letters to all countries who abstained. The position that we took is not a new position.

    And we have abstained on previous occasions. I think that explains our position quite clearly and addresses these questions,” the spokesperson said during a media briefing.

    Expressing “concern”, Palestine’s Foreign minister Riad Malki in a letter to Jaishankar said that India “missed an opportunity to join international community at this turning point, both crucial and long overdue, on the path to accountability, justice and peace”.

    Both Israel and Palestinian group Hamas agreed on a ceasefire that came into effect last month after days of intense fighting in which around 230 people were killed in Gaza and 12 in Israel.

    Last week, India along with 13 other countries abstained from voting on the resolution at UNHRC to launch an investigation into alleged violations and crimes during the 11-day conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

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    The resolution was adopted as 24 countries voted in favour of it while nine opposed it at the end of an all-day special session of the 47-member UN body at its headquarters in Geneva.

    The special session of the Council was called to discuss the “grave human rights situation” in the Palestinian territory including East Jerusalem.

    India’s permanent representative to the UN in Geneva Indra Mani Pandey had said at the special session that New Delhi welcomes the diplomatic efforts of the international community and regional countries that have resulted in bringing ceasefire between Israel and armed groups in Gaza.

    “India calls on all parties to show extreme restraint, desist from actions that aggravate tensions and refrain from any further attempts to unilaterally change the existing status-quo, including in East Jerusalem and its neighbourhoods,” he said.

    Pandey said India was firmly convinced that dialogue remains the only viable option that can effectively address the issues confronting the region and its people.

  • Coronavirus challenge created stronger case for greater international cooperation: S Jaishankar

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: The coronavirus pandemic may be the most serious in living memory but it should be seen as a recurring challenge and not as a one-off episode, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Thursday, noting that India is particularly going through a difficult situation.

    Jaishankar also said the nature of the pandemic has also brought to fore concerns of trust and transparency and warned that opacity can no longer be overlooked as it has real implications for the rest of the world.

    In an online address at the ‘Future of Asia’ conference organised by Nikkei, the external affairs minister India, Japan and Australia are working on a supply chain resilience initiative and called for strengthening and de-risking the global economy through effective partnerships.

    He said meeting the health and medical requirements of the world effectively requires a mature recognition of the global nature of the underlying supply chains.

    “Barring a select few, it cannot be addressed purely nationally and in fact needs a collaboration of a very different order,” Jaishankar said.

    He said the answer to the challenges thrown up by the pandemic is to expand and smoothen global flows while creating confidence that its outcomes are for the benefit of the entire world.

    “A year and a half ago, as the enormity of the COVID-19 pandemic dawned on the world, we were truly confronted by a black swan event.

    Since then, even though we may have addressed some facets of a very complex challenge, it continues its devastating course across geographies,” he said.

    “We, in India, are going through a particularly difficult situation right now.

    Understandably, the world’s attention is focused primarily on the public health response,” Jaishankar said.

    He observed that the long-term impact of the pandemic on the global order, including on the future of Asia is yet to be fully comprehended.

    “This pandemic may be the most serious in living memory, but it should be seen as a recurring challenge and not as a one-off.

    It demands international cooperation on a scale that could not have even be conceived of earlier,” he said.

    “No national capacity, however large, can be adequate.

    And just overflows from such capacities are clearly not enough to address global needs.

    Even a collective response, by itself, could fall short if it is just an aggregate of the present capacities,” Jaishankar noted, He said the world will have to focus on re-engineering the way it works to prepare for and mitigate such “cataclysmic events”.

    “COVID-19 has certainly triggered debates on issues like supply chains, global governance, social responsibility and even ethics.

    But for many of us gathered here today, it equally encourages an objective assessment of the contemporary world so that we are better prepared for tomorrow,” he said.

    Referring to cooperation under the Quad framework, Jaishankar said its agenda covers vaccine collaboration, critical and emerging technologies, semi-conductors, supply chains, critical materials and connectivity, amongst others.

    “Recent Indian summits with the European Union and the United Kingdom, that saw advancement on FTAs, are also noteworthy in that regard,” he said.

    The external affairs minister also mentioned key experiences in handling of the pandemic.

    “The nature of the COVID experience has also brought to fore concerns of trust and transparency.

    Opacity can no longer be overlooked; it has real implications for the rest of the world,” he said.

    “It was bad enough to be confronted with shortages and disruptions; worse that they could become pressure points. There are also worries that the financial distress caused by the pandemic could lead to new vulnerabilities,” he added.

    Jaishankar said the coronavirus challenge has created a stronger case for greater international cooperation, be it in vaccine production or to facilitate economic recovery.

  • Delhi CM doesn’t speak for India: Centre after Singapore objects to Kejriwal’s claim of ‘new Covid strain’

    By Online Desk
    A day after Singapore Health Ministry objected Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal’s claim of a Singapore variant of Covid-19 strain, the External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday said ‘Delhi CM does not speak for India.’

    The Union Minister, while condeming Kejriwal’s comments said, “Singapore and India have been solid partners in the fight against Covid-19. However, irresponsible comments from those who should know better can damage long-standing partnerships”

    Singapore and India have been solid partners in the fight against Covid-19.Appreciate Singapore’s role as a logistics hub and oxygen supplier. Their gesture of deploying military aircraft to help us speaks of our exceptional relationship. @VivianBala https://t.co/x7jcmoyQ5a
    — Dr. S. Jaishankar (@DrSJaishankar) May 19, 2021

    Asserting that the Delhi Chief Minister had no competence to pronounce on Covid variants or civil aviation policy, MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said, “Singapore Government called in our High Commissioner today to convey strong objection to Delhi CM’s tweet on “Singapore variant”.

    On May 18 Arvind Kejriwal tweeted that a “new Covid strain found in Singapore is dangerous for children. It could come to India in the form of a third wave.” 

    “My appeal to the Central government: 1. Cancel all air services with Singapore with immediate effect 2. Work on vaccine alternatives for children on a priority basis,” Kejriwal further added.

    In its reaction, the Singapore health ministry said there was is no truth in the claim.

    ALSO WATCH:

    (Inputs from ENS)

  • India voices deep concern over attack on Maldives Speaker Mohamed Nasheed

    By PTI
    LONDON: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Thursday expressed deep concern over the attack on Maldives Parliament Speaker Mohamed Nasheed and said that he knows that the Maldivian leader will never be “intimidated”.

    The Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) — the main ruling party — said that the explosion outside the residence of Nasheed, the country’s former president, was an attempt on his life.

    “Deeply concerned at the attack on Speaker @MohamedNasheed. Wish him a speedy recovery. Know that he will never be intimidated,” Jaishankar, currently in London on an official visit, tweeted.

    MDP chairperson Hussain Latheef said his party believes that it was “a terrorist attack to assassinate Speaker Nasheed”.

    The explosion took place outside Nasheed’s residence in Male, just as he entered his car.

    Nasheed, along with at least one of his bodyguards and a bystander, sustained injuries in the explosion, and were taken to a hospital.

    “The extent of his injuries are unclear at this point,” Sun Online reported.

    Nasheed, 53, became the first democratically elected leader of Maldives.

    He served as president from 2008 until 2012 when he resigned amid public protests.

  • Health Minister, EAM bringing disrepute to country, should be sacked immediately: Congress

    Congress spokesperson Supriya Shrinate said the government has got its priorities wrong as it is interested in managing headlines and image-building.

  • For 75 years, we under-invested in health sector, says External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar

    By Express News Service
    NEW DELHI: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Wednesday said the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic is an all-consuming challenge and welcomed goodwill from various countries.

    “We will get through this. But there is a larger lesson out of all of this. There is a sense of solidarity. I feel it here in London from the G7 because almost all the countries have been through exactly what we are going through. They feel for you. This pandemic is truly not just a game-changer, it’s a thought changer. I see solidarity in diplomacy today, and I would like to see that at home as well,” Jaishankar said during a live event ‘Does India have a plan? From survival to revival’ as part of the Global Dialogue Series organised by UK-based media house India Inc Group and the Indian High Commission in London.

    The EAM is on a four-day trip to the UK to attend the G7 foreign minister’s meeting. Admitting that the country’s healthcare system has been exposed to the virus, Jaishankar said there was a focused plan to boost vaccination drive and tackle the country’s needs even after the pandemic. “Repeated advisories were going out and public health teams sent out. There was a move to ramp up oxygen production. The reality, unfortunately, was, as the numbers came down there was an amount of public confidence. This is not a blame game, but I don’t think anyone in the country can say we kept our guard up all the time. We are a deeply democratic and political country and in a democracy, you can’t have elections. Elections are sacrosanct. It is clear that for 75 years, we have under-invested in health,” he said. 

  • We get a sense the world is with India in COVID travail: EAM S Jaishankar

    By PTI
    LONDON: External Affairs Minister Jaishankar on Wednesday described the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic as an “all consuming” challenge posed by a virulent strain of coronavirus and welcomed the enormous goodwill from countries around the world as a sense of solidarity in diplomacy.

    Jaishankar, who is in the UK on a four-day visit to participate in the G7 Foreign and Development Ministers Meeting as a guest minister, admitted that India’s health system “stands exposed” but that there is a focussed plan to ramp up the vaccination programme and address the country’s needs beyond the immediacy of the pandemic.

    “We feel in India at a moment of great travail a sense that the world is with us,” he said, during a live virtual event entitled “Does India have a plan? From survival to revival’ as part of the Global Dialogue Series organised by UK-based media house India Inc Group and the Indian High Commission in London.

    “We will get through this. But there is a larger lesson out of all of this. There is a sense of solidarity. I feel it here in London from the G7 because almost all the countries have been through exactly what we are going through. They feel for you.

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    “This pandemic is truly not just a game-changer, it’s a thought changer. I see a solidarity in diplomacy today and I would like to see that at home as well,” he said, making references to the US, UK, Gulf countries and others stepping in to support India with much-needed medical supplies.

    During the In Conversation session with India Inc CEO Manoj Ladwa, the minister was asked if the government took its eye off the ball with regards to the second wave of the pandemic, which has resulted in some of the world’s highest infection rates in recent weeks.

    “There were repeated advisories going out and public health teams sent out. There was a move to ramp up oxygen production. The reality unfortunately was, as the numbers came down there was an amount of public confidence.

    “This is genuinely not a blame game, but I don’t think anyone in the country can say we kept our guard up all the time,” the minister said.

    “With the benefit of hindsight, it is easy to say we shouldn’t have allowed gatherings of any kind. But there are times when we need to pull up our socks and put the blame game aside. We are a deeply democratic and political country and in a democracy, you can’t not have elections. Elections are sacrosanct,” he said.

    In reference to the country’s healthcare infrastructure, he added: “The healthcare system stands exposed. It is very clear that for 75 years, we have under-invested in health.

    “In fact, it is that realisation which is why the Prime Minister was pushing for Ayushman Bharat. We had reached a stage where the Prime Minister genuinely believed that we cannot leave our people to the vagaries of the private practitioners, however good they may be.

    “There has to be a strong governmental system, health is a basic right. But in a crisis today, people don’t want policy explanations. They want to see practical answers on the ground,” he said. On the central theme of the discussion, Jaishankar stressed that India has not one but many plans to move the country towards revival mode.

    “This second wave is a test of fire we have to come through, but the economic foundations are strong. We will carry the reforms process forward,” he said.

    “Yes, we have a plan in the sense that we are responding to the immediacy of the second wave, oxygen, medicines, healthcare support systems but the plan beyond that is to expand vaccinations. Vaccination is the way out of COVID. It’s not a silver bullet but it’s as close as anybody can come to it,” he said.

    “India has not just one but many plans and our job is to get them all done,” he added.