Journal Pioneer

Huge rally for U.S. president’s visit to India

- STEVE HOLLAND ALASDAIR PAL

AHMEDABAD, India - Donald Trump was cheered by more than 100,000 Indians at the opening of the world’s largest cricket stadium on Monday, promising “an incredible trade deal” and “the most feared military equipment on the planet” at his biggest rally abroad.

Indians wore cardboard Trump masks and “Namaste Trump” hats to welcome the U.S. president at the huge new Motera stadium in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s own political homeland, the western city of Ahmedabad.

Modi, a nationalis­t who won re-election last year and has shifted his country firmly to the right with policies that his critics decry as authoritar­ian and ethnically divisive, touts his relationsh­ip with Trump as proof of his own global standing.

U.S. officials have described Trump’s visit as a way to counter China’s rise as a superpower.

“You have done a great honor to our country. We will remember you forever, from this day onwards India will always hold a special place in our hearts,” Trump said to thunderous applause.

India is one of the few big countries in world where Trump’s personal approval rating is above 50%. It has built up ties with the United States in recent years as Washington’s relationsh­ip has become strained with India’s foe Pakistan.

“As we continue to build our defense cooperatio­n, the United States looks forward to providing India with some of the best and most feared military equipment on the planet,” Trump said.

Trump said the two countries will sign deals on Tuesday to sell military helicopter­s worth $3 billion and that the United States must become the premier defense partner of India, which relied on Russian equipment during the Cold War. Reuters reported earlier that India has cleared the purchase of 24 helicopter­s from Lockheed Martin worth $2.6 billion.

But in a sign of the underlying political tensions in India, violent protests broke out in Delhi - where Trump is due on Tuesday - over a new citizenshi­p law that critics say discrimina­tes against Muslims and is a further attempt to undermine the secular foundation­s of India’s democracy.

Vehicles were set on fire in the eastern part of Delhi, metal barricades torn down, and thick smoke billowed through the air as thousands of those who are supporting the new law clashed with those opposing it.

In his speech Trump extolled India’s rise as a stable and prosperous democracy as one of the achievemen­ts of the century.

“You have done it as a tolerant country. And you have done it as a great, free country,” he said.

Trump planned to raise the issue of religious freedoms in India with Modi, an administra­tion official said last week.

 ?? REUTERS/AL DRAGO ?? U.S. President Donald Trump embraces Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the “Namaste Trump” event at Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium, in Ahmedabad, India, on Monday.
REUTERS/AL DRAGO U.S. President Donald Trump embraces Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the “Namaste Trump” event at Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium, in Ahmedabad, India, on Monday.

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