Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Modi: India must build defences so none dares cast 'evil eye' Modi slams rape shame, communal violence

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MUMBAI, Aug 16, 2014 (AFP) - Prime Minister Narendra Modi said today that India must build up its military might to the point that no other country “dare cast an evil eye” on the South Asian nation.

Modi made the statement at a ceremony in Mumbai for the commission­ing of the country's biggest locally built warship.

“Our aim is to achieve such prowess in our defence capabiliti­es that no country dare cast an evil eye on India,” Modi told naval officers and other dignitarie­s.

India, the second most populous nation in the world, is in the midst of a $ 100- billion defence upgrade programme.

Modi's new government has raised the foreign investment cap on India's defence industries to speed up modernisat­ion of the military.

India has fought three wars with nuclear-armed rival Pakistan, two of them over the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir.

The country has also been seeking to shore up its defence capabiliti­es to counter a military build-up by an increasing­ly assertive China.

Modi said India must stop relying so heavily on defence imports and focus instead on local research, design and manufactur­e.

India is the world's largest arms importer with the United States recently overtaking Russia as the biggest arms supplier, followed by France and Israel.

“This warship has been built by India's engineers, technician­s and defence experts,” the premier, considered a hardline nationalis­t, said in Mumbai.

“It is the biggest example yet of what we can make in India,” Modi said.

“It is the aim of this government to take India from its position of importing

NEW DELHI, Aug 16, 2014 (AFP) - Prime Minister Narendra Modi condemned a spate of rapes as a source of shame for India and urged an end to communal violence Friday as he vowed to improve the lives of the nation's poor in his first Independen­ce Day speech.

Modi, the son of a tea vendor who come to power in May, also delivered a withering assessment of the ruling establishm­ent from the ramparts of New Delhi's 17th century Red Fort as he addressed often taboo subjects such as sexual violence, foeticide, religious unrest and a lack of toilets.

And the right-wing Hindu nationalis­t restated his solidarity with the wider South Asian region but held back from every little piece of military hardware to a position where we can export equipment.” Modi's right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in May after a landslide general election win.

The 6,800-tonne INS Kolkata is fitted with the most advanced weapons sys- mentioning India's great rival Pakistan which is also celebratin­g its independen­ce 68 years ago.

In one of the most eyecatchin­g passages of a 45minute speech, Modi said levels of rape had shamed India, and he urged parents to take responsibi­lity for the behaviour of their sons rather than put the onus on their daughters. tems, sensors and communicat­ion technology.

It is expected to strengthen to India's maritime capabiliti­es and help secure its huge strategic interests in the region stretching from the Gulf to the Malacca Strait.

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