UK PM Rishi Sunak and the India connection

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London: Rishi Sunak, who is set to be Britain's first Indian-origin prime minister, recently said that he wants to change the UK-India relationship to make it a more two-way exchange that opens up easy access to UK students and companies in India.

Addressing a gathering of British Indian Conservative Party members in August, the 42-year-old UK-born Indian-origin Tory MP for Richmond in Yorkshire vowed to get the country through the “difficult times” of inflation and build a better, safer Britain.

A majority in the cheering crowd were categorical that Mr Sunak's Indian heritage and ethnic minority background had no part to play in the contest to become British Prime Minister.

During an event hosted by the Conservative Friends of India (CFIN) diaspora organisation in north London, the former Chancellor greeted the gathering with a mix of traditional greetings such as “namaste, salaam, khem cho and kidda” and even broke into Hindi: “aap sab mere parivar ho (you all are my family)".

"We know the UK-India relationship is important. We represent the living bridge between our two countries,” he said, in response to a question about bilateral ties from CFIN co-chair Reena Ranger.

"We are all very aware of the opportunity for the UK to sell things and do things in India, but actually we need to look at that relationship differently because there is an enormous amount that we here in the UK can learn from India.

"I want to make sure that it's easy for our students to also travel to India and learn, that it's also easy for our companies and Indian companies to work together because it's not just a one-way relationship, it's a two-way relationship, and that's the type of change I want to bring to that relationship,” he had said.

The UK-born son of Indian-origin general practitioner father Yashvir and pharmacist mother Usha had spoken extensively of his migrant roots during the last campaign and also referenced making history by lighting Diwali diyas at 11 Downing Street as the first Indian-origin Chancellor of the Exchequer.

"Sixty years after my Naniji boarded a plane in East Africa, on a warm sunny evening in October, her great-grandaughters, my kids, played in the street outside our home, painted Rangoli on the doorstep, lit sparklers and diyas; had fun like so many other families on Diwali. Except the street was Downing Street, and the door was the door to No. 11,” said Mr Sunak, in his campaign video a few months ago.

That personal story also extended to a visibly emotional reference to his parents-in-law - Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy and Sudha Murthy - as he hit back at attacks on his wife Akshata Murthy's family wealth.

"I'm actually incredibly proud of what my parents-in-law built,” he said, during heated television debates over the past few months.

As a devout Hindu, Rishi Sunak is a regular at the temple where he was born in Southampton and his daughters, Anoushka and Krishna, are also rooted in the Indian culture.

He recently shared how Anoushka performed Kuchipudi with her classmates for the Queen's Platinum Jubilee celebrations at Westminster Abbey in June.

NDTV
 
‘A moment of pride’: Hindus in India hail Rishi Sunak’s victory

Indians react to news UK will have its first Hindu PM and consider how it will affect bilateral ties

As Rishi Sunak prepares to become the UK’s next prime minister at the start of the festival of Diwali – when Hindus pray to the goddess Lakshmi for prosperity and success – in India some Hindus celebrated the fact that someone sharing their religion had reached such high office in the UK.

“To have a Hindu inside 10 Downing Street is something astonishing and of great joy, and that too on Diwali,” said Satish Verma, a supermarket owner in Delhi. “Although he is British, it will make us Hindus proud that one of us made it so big.”

Sunak, who will be the UK’s first prime minister of colour and the first Hindu prime minister, has made his commitment to his faith clear by performing puja, an act of worship, and by taking the oath as an MP on the Hindu religious text, the Bhagavad Gita.

For the architect Shashank Jain, though, Sunak’s faith is irrelevant. It is simply a matter of pride that someone of Indian heritage has reached the highest office in another country.

“It is definitely a moment of national pride and my only hope is that he will bring in good policies for relations between India and Britain, although this may be misplaced as, after all, he belongs to that country, not India,” said Jain.

Although Indians are usually eager to claim the accomplishments of Indians based abroad as their own and take pride in them – whether it’s Indians heading Google and Microsoft or Kamala Harris becoming the US vice-president – the difference with Sunak is that his connections with India are more tenuous, given he was born and raised in England.

There is no village or town in India that journalists can rush to in order to interview aunts, uncles or teachers about what little Rishi was like as a child or describe the environment he grew up in.

Unlike Harris, who has relatives in south India, it’s believed Sunak has no relatives in India. His only relatives in the country are his parents-in-law, who are well known thanks to the company Infosys, which his father-in-law, Narayana Murthy, co-founded and built into a software giant.

Murthy retired in 2011 and he and his wife, Sudha, have been leading a quiet, private and modest life in a small flat in Bangalore, south India, filled with books and music and not commenting on issues of the day. It is unlikely they will talk to the press about Sunak, knowing that every word might trigger a controversy for their son-in-law, particularly after the row over the non-dom tax status of his wife, Akshata Murty.

Sunak’s religion may be seized on by elements of the Hindu right, according to Suhel Seth, a marketing expert and managing partner of Counselage. He said they could “appropriate” his victory on social media as some sort of vindication of India’s Hindu nationalist government.

“The Hindu right will say: ‘Look, an Indian-origin man took over as PM on Diwali and so it means the Hindu gods have blessed him,’” Seth said. “And the extreme Hindu right will say: ‘It means India has arrived globally and it is thanks to Modi raising India’s standing in the world that we have ‘reverse colonialism’, as in the formerly ruled now ruling the former ruler, Britain.”

Rakesh Tripathi, a spokesperson for the ruling Bharatiya Janata party, welcomed Sunak’s victory and, while praising Modi in the same breath for “elevating” India’s image in the world, did not suggest any cause-and-effect.

“I am proud as an Indian to see an Indian-origin prime minister of Britain and my only hope is that he will be good for bilateral relations,” Tripathi said.

For the columnist and author Kancha Iliaih Shepherd, it was a question of fascination over what possible dichotomies lay ahead for Britain with a Hindu prime minister.

“Apart from the obvious question of how it will affect UK-India relations, the deeper questions are what will it do to Britain’s civilisational ethos and more broadly, to the western ethos? Liz Truss read from the Bible for the queen’s funeral service at Westminster Abbey. Will Sunak be able to do the same? It opens up a host of other questions,” Shepherd said.

As Hindus light their diyas, clay lamps, and burst firecrackers on Monday night, some will feel their cup truly runneth over: India defeated Pakistan in a match in the T20 World Cup in Australia on Sunday and now Sunak is to be prime minister.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...s-celebrating-diwali-hail-rishi-sunak-victory
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Warmest congratulations <a href="https://twitter.com/RishiSunak?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RishiSunak</a>! As you become UK PM, I look forward to working closely together on global issues, and implementing Roadmap 2030. Special Diwali wishes to the 'living bridge' of UK Indians, as we transform our historic ties into a modern partnership.</p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1584567173791768580?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 24, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Rishi Sunak will become the UK’s first British Asian prime minister, and the first Hindu to hold the office.

His confirmation to the top job came on the evening of one of the most important days in the Hindu calendar, the festival of Diwali - a national holiday here in India.

The timing wasn’t lost on some of the news channels which had broken into rolling coverage.

“This comes auspiciously on Diwali,” said one news anchor.

“Rishi Sunak has given the entire nation a Diwali gift,” proclaimed another.

Sunak’s parents came to the UK from east Africa; his grandparents were from Punjab. His father-in law Narayana Murthy, is the founder of Infosys and is one of India’s best-known businessmen.

This morning, as speculation mounted over his likely victory in the Conservative leadership race, he shared the front page of one newspaper with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and cricket superstar Virat Kolhi - two of the biggest names in this country.

Now, expect India’s fascination with Sunak to grow.

“This is a matter of great pride,” was how one journalist described events.

Some 75 years since India gained independence from British rule, Rishi Sunak’s rise to the top is being seen as a landmark moment for this nation.

BBC
 
I don't understand what Hindus in India got to do with Rishi Sunak? They follow the same religion as him and that's about it. At least his wife was born in India and super rich.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Warmest congratulations <a href="https://twitter.com/RishiSunak?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RishiSunak</a>! As you become UK PM, I look forward to working closely together on global issues, and implementing Roadmap 2030. Special Diwali wishes to the 'living bridge' of UK Indians, as we transform our historic ties into a modern partnership.</p>— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) <a href="https://twitter.com/narendramodi/status/1584567173791768580?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 24, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

india has "historic ties" with britain? they used to accuse us of bootlicking the goras.
 
Modi getting his tentacles in. Quite remarkable the first UK prime minister from an ethnic minority is conservative
 
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Rishi Sunak will do his best for Britain when he takes over as prime minister on Tuesday, said his father-in-law, Indian billionaire N.R. Narayana Murthy, the founder of software giant Infosys .

The 42-year-old, a practising Hindu who traces his roots to India, will be Britain’s first prime minister of colour and its youngest leader in modern times.

Sunak’s rise to the position on Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, has delighted Indians, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he hoped the two countries’ ties would improve further.

“Congratulations to Rishi,” Murthy, valued by Forbes at $4.5 billion, said in a statement. “We are proud of him and we wish him success. We are confident he will do his best for the people of the United Kingdom.”

Many Indian politicians also hailed Sunak’s elevation as a “historic and remarkable feat” and he trended on Twitter in India late on Monday.

Sunak’s wife Akshata Murthy is an Indian citizen, with a stake of 0.93 per cent in Infosys valued at about $721 million, and the couple’s wealth has been a divisive issue for the British public.

Revelations that she had not been paying British tax on her foreign income through her “non-domiciled” status — available to foreign nationals who do not see Britain as their permanent home — had hurt Sunak ahead of his earlier race for the top job.

Later his wife said she would start to pay British tax on her global income.

DAWN
 
Rishi Sunak's Wife, Akshata Murty, Earned ₹ 126.6 Crore Dividend From Infosys In 2022

New Delhi:

Akshata Murty, wife of Britain's incoming Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, earned ₹ 126.61 crore ($15.3 million) in dividend income in 2022, from her shareholding in India's second-largest IT firm Infosys.

Ms Murty, daughter of Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy, held 3.89 crore shares, or 0.93 per cent, of Infosys at the end of September, according to company filings with the stock exchanges.

Her holding is worth ₹ 5,956 crore (about $721 million) at Tuesday's trading price of ₹ 1,527.40 on the BSE.

Infosys paid ₹ 16 per share final dividend for the 2021-22 fiscal on May 31, this year. For the current year, the firm this month announced an interim dividend of ₹ 16.5, according to the company's stock exchange filings.

The two dividends totaled ₹ 32.5 per share or ₹ 126.61 crore for Akshata.

Infosys is among the best dividend-paying companies in India. In 2021, it paid a total of ₹ 30 per share dividend, which would have given Akshata a total of ₹ 119.5 crore in that calendar year.

Sunak, 42, on Sunday won the race to lead the Conservative Party and is now set to become Britain's first prime minister of Indian origin and its youngest leader in modern times.

While Sunak is a British national, his wife Akshata is an Indian citizen. Her non-domiciled status, which allows her to earn money abroad without paying taxes in Britain for a period of up to 15 years, has been a divisive issue in the UK.

Non-domiciled status of Akshata became an issue of discussion in Britain when Sunak first entered the race to become the prime minister in April this year.

At that time, her spokesperson had stated that as a citizen of India, she was unable to hold citizenship of another country and that "she has always and will continue to pay UK taxes on all her UK income." As the controversy snowballed, she at that time announced that she would pay UK tax on all of her worldwide earnings out of a "British sense of fairness".

It is not known how much taxes she paid in the UK on the dividend income that accrued to her after April - ₹ 16 per share final dividend for the 2021-22 fiscal year (April 2021 to March 2022) paid on May 31, 2022, and ₹ 16.5 a share interim dividend for 2022-23 fiscal that is due to be paid on October 27.

Born in her mother Sudha Murthy's hometown of Hubballi in northern Karnataka, Akshata did her schooling in Bengaluru, before moving to Claremont McKenna College in California, where she graduated with a dual major in economics and French.

She did a fashion designing diploma from the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in Los Angeles, which followed a short work stint at Deloitte and Unilever.

She thereafter went on to pursue her MBA at Stanford where she met Rishi Sunak.

The two married in 2009. The couple, who own a vast real estate portfolio, has two children, Krishna and Anoushka.

They live in a £7 million townhouse in Kensington. They also own a flat in Kensington, a mansion in Rishi's Yorkshire constituency and a penthouse in California.

The son of a pharmacist mother and doctor father, Sunak was educated at one of England's most renowned schools, Winchester, and then Oxford. He spent three years at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and later gained an MBA from Stanford in California, where he met his wife Akshata Murty.

According to Infosys filings, the promoters hold 13.11 per cent of the company. Of this, the Murty family owns 3.6 per cent (Narayana Murthy holds 0.40 per cent stake, his wife Sudha 0.82 per cent, son Rohan 1.45 per cent and daughter Akshata 0.93 per cent).

NDTV
 
Rishi Sunak Sports Sacred Hindu Thread As He Enters UK PM Home

London:

Rishi Sunak, the first Indian-origin and Hindu Prime Minister of the UK, was seen wearing the sacred red Hindu 'Kalawa' thread during his first speech at 10 Downing Street.

Mouli or Kalawa is a cotton red thread roll, considered to be very sacred and used for all religious purposes of the Hindus. The thread is used as an offering of cloth to the deity. The Mouli thread is an integral part of any puja.

By tying it on the hand, you win over the enemy and it acts like your defence.

Sunak was seen wearing "Kalawa" when he waved to the public from outside No 10 Downing Street.

Sunak on Tuesday scripted history for a series of firsts - the first Indian-origin person to lead the UK, the first non-white, person of colour to become the UK's PM, at the age of 42, he is also the youngest person to take the office in more than 200 years, as well as the first PM to take oath under the new King Charles III.

In his statement from 10 Downing Street, Sunak said that he has been elected for the mistakes of former PM Liz Truss.

He also lauded former UK PM Liz Truss, paying tribute to her, he said, "I want to pay tribute to my predecessor Liz Truss. She wasn't wrong to want to improve growth in this country. It is a noble aim and I admired her restlessness to create change but some mistakes were made, not born of bad intentions but mistakes nonetheless."

He vowed to earn the trust of Britons, saying, "Trust is earned, and I will earn yours."

Sunak said that his government will have integrity, professionalism and accountability at every level.

"I stand here before you ready to lead our country into the future, to put your needs above politics, to reach out and build a govt that represents the very best traditions of my party. Together we can achieve incredible things," said Sunak.

"We will create a future worthy of the sacrifices so many have made and fill tomorrow and every day thereafter with hope," he added.

Sunak said that he will make the most of the Brexit opportunities.

"That work begins immediately," he said, adding, "My government will build an economy that makes the most of the Brexit opportunities."

He began his speech by highlighting UK's profound economic crisis. Sunak said, "Right now our country is facing a profound economic crisis. The aftermath of Covid still lingers."

He also paid tribute to former PM Boris Johnson. The new UK PM said that he will always be grateful to Johnson for his "incredible achievements" as Prime Minister. He will treasure Johnson's warmth and generosity of spirit.

Responding to Sunak's tribute, Johnson tweeted, "Congratulations to [MENTION=2820]rishi[/MENTION]Sunak on this historic day, this is the moment for every Conservative to give our new PM their full and wholehearted support."

Sunak added that he knows the mandate the Conservative Party earned in 2019 is not the sole property of one person, rather "it is a mandate that belongs to and unites all of us".

He pledged "a stronger NHS, better schools, safer streets, control of our borders, protecting our environment, supporting our armed forces and levelling up."

He became the new UK prime minister after meeting King Charles III at Buckingham Palace.

Sunak will be the UK's third leader in seven weeks after winning a Tory leadership contest triggered by Truss stepping down.

Sunak ruled out an early general election, despite calls from the opposition Labour, the Scottish National Party, the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party.
 
Rishi Sunak: India glee over new British PM

The headlines in India about Rishi Sunak say it all.

The elevation of the 42-year-old Indian-origin Tory leader - his parents migrated from East Africa to the UK - as the third British prime minister this year appears to have gladdened the hearts of many Indians. Even the sceptics cannot help but feel a tad triumphant.

Of course it's the nationalists who are most elated and appear keen on claiming Mr Sunak through his faith.

Rishi Sunak, a "proud Hindu" is the new UK PM, writes India's biggest English daily, Times of India - the story mentions the word Hindu five times. Being Hindu in 10 Downing Street, chimes in India Today, adding that Mr Sunak "got the top job in UK despite being Hindu, not because of it".

Others use colonial references: "Sunak: Ex-India Company set to run Britain,"said The Telegraph, alluding to the firm that controlled large parts of India with its mercenary forces. Dainik Bhaskar, a Hindi-language newspaper, ran the headline: "Another Diwali gift to the nation, Indian-origin Rishi to rule the whites".

In the eyes of many Indians, Mr Sunak's new job is rich in symbolism: they appear to be convinced that the new prime minister will be good for India.

In August, Mr Sunak opened a campaign event comprising a largely British Indian gathering in north London with traditional greetings. He also broke into Hindi, and said he would work to boost ties with India if he became the prime minister.

Mr Sunak swore his oath as an MP on the Bhagvad Gita, a revered Hindu text. He worshipped a cow during a recent ritual, lit Diwali lamps at his Downing Street residence and says he loves cricket, a veritable religion in India.

His father-in-law is a software billionaire and the founder of Infosys, a giant outsourcing firm which is the pride of India. In a letter to his daughter, NR Narayana Murthy found Mr Sunak, then her fiancé, "to be all that you had described him to be - brilliant, handsome and, most importantly, honest".

When Mr Sunak was poised to become the prime minister earlier this year, there was some social media ribbing about it in India, with some finding the celebrations over it a bit risible.

But other Indians like Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd, an academic and writer, saw Sunak's elevation as pointing to a "notable new level of multicultural tolerance among the British electorate and the political class".

Indians have always been fascinated by the career trajectories of the diaspora, says Salil Tripathi, a New York-based Indian author.

"They take a look of pride when a Sundar Pichai runs Google, or Satya Nadella runs Microsoft. These successes overseas are seen as vindication of Indian excellence. The fact that these individuals succeeded in an alien environment is a matter of particular pride," Mr Tripathi says.

What usually goes missing is a conversation about class. Mr Sunak was educated at an elite school and went to Oxford and Stanford. Likewise, Mr Tripathi adds, Indian corporate achievers are mostly products of elite Indian universities.

As most Conservative Party politicians of Indian origin represent seats that are Tory strongholds, Mr Tripathi adds, "to that extent they have limited appeal among Indian or broader Asian communities".

"Mr Sunak's achievement is arguably more important because he has become prime minister of a country with its own messy colonial past, and a society that continues to deal with racism."

At the diaspora campaign event in August Mr Sunak spoke about the need to look at the India-UK relationship "differently because there is an enormous amount that we here in the UK can learn from India".

"Rishi will be a great PM for the nation and to work with India, especially at this time when Britain and India are working on launching the Free Trade Agreement (FTA). He has tremendous experience and demonstrated his skills during the Covid pandemic saving British jobs and businesses as chancellor," says Nayaz Qazi, director of Conservative Friends of India.

When it comes to India, Mr Sunak's main job will be to revive the stalled "high ambition" FTA - the two sides launched negotiations in January. India expects to increase exports of leather, jewellery, textiles and food products and secure more visas for students and businesses.

The ambitious pact - which aims at doubling bilateral trade to $100bn by 2030 - appears to have run into heavy weather after Indian-origin former home secretary Suella Braverman told Spectator magazine that it would increase Indian migration to UK at a time when "the largest group of people who overstay are Indian migrants". Mr Sunak has said he was strongly committed to the deal with India, which has edged out Britain to become the world's fifth-largest economy.

India-UK relations will strengthen under the new prime minister, Happymon Jacob of Jawaharlal University in Delhi believes, "not because Mr Sunak has Indian origins, but because his premiership is likely to deliver on two things": the FTA; and "going by Mr Sunak's campaign rhetoric against China, the UK will be less ambiguous about its view of China as a threat".

"Delhi is looking to close the FTA, and would be delighted to see Western powers, particularly the UK, taking on the Chinese," Mr Jacob says.

Others are not so sure. "India will not be on top of Mr Sunak's agenda," says Sanjaya Baru, a Delhi-based policy analyst. "There are economic challenges to be dealt with at home and restoration of external stability with the European Union and the US. So India will not be his number one priority. We will have to be patient."

Mr Baru notes that more than 200 persons of Indian origin have been elected to positions of political power in 25 countries, with 10 governments being headed by a person of Indian origin. When Leo Varadkar becomes the prime minister of Ireland, both the UK and Ireland will have Indian-origin leaders.

"Many of them have been trouble-free friends of India, but some have made Indian diplomats work hard," he says.

Mr Tripathi is more circumspect. Mr Sunak, he says, "will want a free trade agreement with India but it won't be at the cost of significantly changing Britain's immigration policy."

"Mr Sunak will place British interests first, and hence the mood will sour."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-63370153
 
I don't understand what Hindus in India got to do with Rishi Sunak? They follow the same religion as him and that's about it. At least his wife was born in India and super rich.

Hindu Orgs in UK have been investing in this guy for a long time. This is a phenomenal development for the Hindu orgs. The orgs I'm part of in US are over the moon. India is relying on US, UK for higher education and jobs of qualified youth. It's basically the Chinese strategy hoping for some of them to come back to India and start working in universities and build companies.
 
Hindu Orgs in UK have been investing in this guy for a long time. This is a phenomenal development for the Hindu orgs. The orgs I'm part of in US are over the moon. India is relying on US, UK for higher education and jobs of qualified youth. It's basically the Chinese strategy hoping for some of them to come back to India and start working in universities and build companies.

Does this mean Rishi Sunak is owned by those Hindu orgs?
 


Is this true?

Seems to be true

eJqNstA.png
 
India media treating Rishi as head of their colony :)

glze9Un.png
 
It is funny to see indians and pakistanis fighting over Rishi Sunak on social media. Some say he is from india while others say his grandparents were from Gujranwala. :inti
 
It is funny to see indians and pakistanis fighting over Rishi Sunak on social media. Some say he is from india while others say his grandparents were from Gujranwala. :inti

But most Labour/LD Asians will call him a ‘coconut’ for being a Tory member.
 
The guy reminds me more and more of those wannabe nice Punjabi Indian sons that will play politics to the end to remain good in everyone's books esp his family.
The elite of the elite first bench smug.

#judgmental
 
Does this mean Rishi Sunak is owned by those Hindu orgs?

Nobody is owned by anybody. It's give and take. He will get the support of Hindu orgs and he will support them. Every politician has affiliates.
 
Nobody is owned by anybody. It's give and take. He will get the support of Hindu orgs and he will support them. Every politician has affiliates.

Affiliation is one thing but coloured leaders in the West cannot show favouritism towards their own race or even religion, they must remain unbiased with their policies.

Obama is a great example, he made it a point not to show favouritism towards blacks because it would've been construed as racist (i.e neglecting whites).

Same goes for Rishi, he cannot show favouritism towards Hindus or Asians for the reason above. This is why his HS is in place to ensure there are no favours or bias when it comes to immigration from India to the UK.

At best Hindu orgs will donate more to the Conservative Party because Rishi is PM.
 
Being a devout Hindu is the only thing Indian about him. Thinking he will be incredibly pro Indian may not be true. He is the PM of the UK not India. With every move of his under tremendous scrutiny he is now under immense pressure. The white racists will already be sharpening their knives waiting knives. For once the UK snd the west can not attack a Muslim if things don't go according to their wishes.
 
Being a devout Hindu is the only thing Indian about him. Thinking he will be incredibly pro Indian may not be true. He is the PM of the UK not India. With every move of his under tremendous scrutiny he is now under immense pressure. The white racists will already be sharpening their knives waiting knives. For once the UK snd the west can not attack a Muslim if things don't go according to their wishes.

Very true; racist whites now have a legitimate reason to blame a brown if things go wrong.
 
Sudha Murty On Rishi Sunak: "I Look After My Country's Things While He..."

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's in-laws in India, Infosys founder NR Narayana Murthy and Sudha Murty, rarely talk about him.

In an exclusive interview to NDTV today, Sudha Murty, a writer and philanthropist, said she was "happy that he has become Britain's PM".

"He has become PM. Fine, I am happy, not more than that," she said on her son-in-law, who became the Prime Minister of Britain on October 25.

Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty, who met at Stanford, married in 2009 and have two daughters.

When he became Britain's first Indian-origin Prime Minister, Narayana Murthy said in a statement: "Congratulations to Rishi. We are proud of him and we wish him success. We are confident he will do his best for the people of UK."

Sudha Murty was seen in a viral video praying for her son-in-law at a temple near Mumbai. In another video, she was seen telling students at an event, jokingly, that they should only ask about her, not Rishi Sunak.

On whether she had political discussions with Rishi Sunak, Ms Murty told NDTV: "No, never ever. He was always our son-in-law. I will wish him all the best."

Was she inclined to read about her son-in-law or follow his progress in Britain? "I look after my own country's things, he looks after his," she quipped.

Ms Murty also spoke about Infosys' 40-year journey and her ₹ 10,000 loan to her husband Narayana Murthy, which turned out to be the first investment in what is today one of the world's foremost IT companies.

"I feel extremely happy and nice because I never dreamt that 10,000 would become billions of dollars later," she said.

"And maybe I am the best investor in India at least. Or maybe in the world...I don't know."

NDTV
 
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak joined the meeting between India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval and his British counterpart Tim Barrow in London, the High Commission of India said. Mr Doval's visit to London comes right after he met his US counterpart Jake Sullivan in Washington on Tuesday

"A special gesture by PM Rishi Sunak to join for a while. NSA dialogue between Sir Tim Barrow and M. Doval at the Cabinet Office. Deeply value PM's assurance of his government's full support to deepen strategic partnership in trade, defence, S&T. Look forward to visit of Sir Tim to India soon," Indian High Commission tweeted.

Earlier this week, Ajit Doval met US Secretary of State Antony Blinken during which they exchanged views on a wide range of global and regional issues and discussed deepening the bilateral strategic partnership.

Tim Barrow was chosen to serve as National Security Adviser of the UK in September last year. He was once the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office's (FCDO) Political Director and Second Permanent Under-Secretary, according to the official website of the Government of the UK.

India and the United Kingdom (UK) share a comprehensive strategic partnership with each other. The two nations have also concluded six rounds of negotiations for a trade deal and will begin the next round very soon.

Soon after he became prime minister, Rishi Sunak had indicated he would take a different approach to trade deals to his predecessor Liz Truss, who was prime minister for a few weeks but set the tone for Britain's negotiations as trade minister.

"My approach will be one where we don't sacrifice quality for speed," Rishi Sunak said, adding he remained "committed to" getting a deal with India. "I want to take the time to get trade deals right."

NDTV
 
London: UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's mother-in-law, Sudha Murty said that her daughter, Akshata Murty, "made her husband a Prime Minister."

Rishi Sunak's quick ascension to power has been highlighted before but his mother-in-law claims it was her daughter who made that possible.

His mother-in-law, Sudha Murty, has claimed in a video circulating online that because of her daughter, Rishi Sunak became the youngest prime minister of UK.

In the video, Ms Murty can be heard saying: "I made my husband a businessman. My daughter made her husband Prime Minister of the UK."

"The reason is the glory of the wife. See how a wife can change a husband. But I could not change my husband. I made my husband a businessman, and my daughter made her husband a Prime Minister," said Sudha Murty in an Instagram post.

Rishi Sunak married Akshata Murty in 2009, and the Prime Minister made a quick rise to power in the years that ensued.

The daughter of one of the world's wealthiest billionaires and with an estimated personal fortune of around Pound 730 million, Akshata Murty is a powerful woman. Her parents, who are from India and own a tech company worth billions, similarly kept out of the limelight.

Narayana Murthy, father of Akshata Murty is one of India's richest men and founder of the Infosys tech company.

Mr Sunak is the youngest prime minister of UK in modern history at age 42, as well as the MP who became the Prime Minister in just seven years.

In the video of Ms Murty's mother, she also speaks about how her daughter has influenced the prime minister's life in other ways, particularly his diet.

The Murthy family, she says, have long followed a tradition of fasting every Thursday.

"Yes, what should be started on Thursday, they started Infosys on Thursday, not only that! Not only that, but our son-in-law, who married our daughter, has been in England for 150 years from their ancestor's time, but they are very religious. After getting married, he asked why you start anything on Thursday. They said that we will go to Raghavendra Swami. He fasts every Thursday after just saying good day. Our son-in-law's mother fasts every Monday but our son-in-law fasts on Thursdays," she said.

Rishi Sunak and his wife have been subject to repeated scrutiny over the last four years due to the billionaire status of his wife's father, which has raised questions about whether he has declared the full extent of his family's financial interests.

NDTV
 
"I'm heading to the G20 Summit with a clear focus. Stabilizing the global economy. Building international relationships. Supporting the most vulnerable," tweeted Rishi Sunak as he embarked on the three-day tour.

"It's obviously special. I saw somewhere that I was referred to as India's son-in-law, which I hope was meant affectionately," he told reporters traveling with him.
 
"I'm heading to the G20 Summit with a clear focus. Stabilizing the global economy. Building international relationships. Supporting the most vulnerable," tweeted Rishi Sunak as he embarked on the three-day tour.

"It's obviously special. I saw somewhere that I was referred to as India's son-in-law, which I hope was meant affectionately," he told reporters traveling with him.

If I was you Rishi, I would steer clear of family-based quips considering your wife was trying to hide her assets by failing to declare them by claiming non-dom status. The British people will be watching carefully to see that you put Britain's interests before your Indian "in-laws" as you so quaintly put it.
 
The UK's leader, basking in a warm reception, set his sights on bolstering global ties while keeping Britons at the forefront of his mind.

Eyebrows were raised when Mr Sunak's meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi suddenly relocated from the latter's residence to the G20 summit itself.

A whirlwind 20-minute tête-à-tête followed, covering a myriad of topics, including a burgeoning trade deal.But it was hard to ignore that this rendezvous was notably shorter than the hour-long slot bestowed upon US President Joe Biden, who had the privilege of chatting from the comfort of Mr Modi's home.

But Mr Sunak, fondly referred to as the "son-in-law of India", was embraced by the nation's people, who exude pride in his Indian heritage.

His secret weapon, his wife Akshata Murty, dazzled the city with her presence too. Pharmacist Asim Paul, 46, said: "In India, we pay respect to Rishi Sunak at the highest level.

It is a matter of pride and honour that he has reached such a top position."

MSN
 
Rishi Sunak says there's no target date to stop migrant boat crossings

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has admitted he does not have a "precise" target date for stopping migrant crossings, in a grilling by senior MPs.

The promise to "stop the boats" was one of the five priorities for 2023 that Mr Sunak set out at the start of the year.

While Channel crossings have fallen by a third since 2022, more than 29,437 people have made the journey this year.

The PM insisted "progress" had been made, and he was sure his Rwanda asylum plan would curb illegal migration.

Mr Sunak faced multiple questions on migration and the government's scheme to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda during his routine questioning by MPs at the Liaison Committee in Parliament.

In a major speech in January, Mr Sunak said stopping the boats was one of his five "immediate priorities" in 2023, telling the public "we will either have achieved them or not".

But Mr Sunak has never qualified exactly when he would stop small boat crossings entirely.

In one testy exchange with Dame Diana Johnson, who chairs the Home Affairs Select Committee, Mr Sunak was asked directly when he thought he would meet this target. "There isn't a firm date on this because I've always been clear from the beginning," Mr Sunak said.

He added: "We will keep going until we do [stop the boats]. This isn't one of these things when there's a precise date estimate on it, this is something where before I took this job they had only ever gone up, now they're down by a third."

Dame Diana also asked Mr Sunak about the Rwanda policy, which is part of the government's plan to deter migrants from crossing the Channel in small boats. When the Labour MP suggested no airline was "willing to contract with government to remove people to Rwanda because of reputational damage", Mr Sunak refused to comment on what he called "commercial conversations that are necessarily private".

But Mr Sunak said he was "highly confident" the government would be able to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda. To that end, the government is attempting to pass legislation to declare in UK law that Rwanda is a safe country, with a view to stopping flights being grounded by legal challenges.

Instead, he said he would pass new laws to ensure people who arrive in the UK illegally were "detained and swiftly removed".

Source :BBC
 
Rishi Sir, one of your countryman is not able to play for England in India, maybe time for a phone call to Modi Uncle?
 

British aid to India spent on social media app which spread pro-Hamas hate​

British aid money to India has been spent on a social media app that spread pro-Hamas hate, an investigation has found.

Taxpayer money went to an Indian fund which invested in social media platforms, including one which featured content glorifying Hamas’s attacks on Israel, abuse of women and offers of sexual services.

An independent watchdog also found that taxpayers’ money has been invested in a cosmetics company, despite a promise to spend it on reducing poverty.

The Independent Commission for Aid Impact (ICAI) said there were serious concerns over the suitability of investments made by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s development finance institution, a public limited company known as British International Investment (BII).

Britain promised in 2012 that it was stopping most aid to India, a country that can afford its own space programme, after its finance minister said the amount received was “peanuts”.

Despite this, last year the UK handed over £91 million, mainly from the FCDO. On top of this, around £200 million goes to India each year in money distributed by BII.

Dr Tamsyn Barton, the chief commissioner of ICAI, said: “Given how difficult it is to moderate large social media platforms to remove harmful content, we have to question why BII chose to invest in the India Quotient Fund and did not consider the reputational risk.

“How is this an appropriate investment for UK aid, which must have poverty reduction as its goal? It is just not clear why use of capital from UK taxpayers is justified for investments in social media sites.

“While we have seen some positive progress in response to other recommendations on UK aid to India, including on tackling climate change and engaging with civil society groups, we are clear that to be effective the portfolio must be coherent and take into account the needs of poor and marginalised people so that they get the benefit of India’s economic growth.”

ICAI’s report acknowledged that the UK had taken steps to improve the aid budget’s focus on poverty reduction.

But it criticised BII’s decision to invest in the India Quotient Fund.

The investment was made two months after BII’s chief executive reassured Parliament’s international development committee that, following concerns about an investment in a cosmetic surgery clinic, future investments in India would only be made if there was a “compelling argument” on inclusion and sustainability.

Source: MSN
 
Is there anyone more hated by Brits in the history of politics, I don’t think so.
 
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