Bishan Singh Bedi: An Artist, A Rebel And Forever Cricket Romantic | Cricket News

He could mess with a batter’s mind with his flighted deliveries, give administrators sleepless nights being a quintessential rebel and then floor a youngster with his magnanimity. Bishan Singh Bedi just knew how to touch people’s lives with various facets of his character — being an artist, a straight-talker and a mentor to many as and when the need be. Arguably the greatest slow left-arm bowler that the world has ever seen, Bedi travelled to the other side after three years of illness but left an indelible impression in minds of many with a character to die for. Honest, upright, someone who played the ‘Gentleman’s Game’ for the right reasons.

Sunil Gavaskar ruled the 1970s but ask any Indian cricket fan of that era, what it meant to their ears when late Suresh Saraiya would describe during his commentary stint with All India Radio how a batter was caught by Gavaskar in the slips or stumped by Farokh Engineer with the original ‘Turbanator’ of Indian cricket jumping in joy.

There are certain words or phrases that become cliches with over-usage and ‘Poetry in Motion’ is one of them.

It is hackneyed but when it comes to Bedi, it remains an apt description.

The legendary Sunil Gavaskar drew Mohammed Ali’s analogy in his book ‘Idols’ which is a memoir on his peers from cricketing world.

“Floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee” is what they said about Ali and if there was any cricketing equivalent in 70s it was Sardar, who become famous for his multi-coloured ‘patkas’ (head gear) that he changed during each session.

What was a perfect Bedi delivery? It would be one which would be tossed up in a parabolic arc above a batter’s eye-line. Just as the batter would come down the track and feel that he had measured that delivery, it would land on the leg-middle line and just kiss the outer edge of the bat or miss it. Either the first slip or the keeper would be in business.

There is a picture from the mid 70s when Bedi played county cricket for Nottinghamshire.

They called it the perfect grip with both hands used: two fingers across the seam and the left thumb below to balance while the right thumb on top of the leather just before he would load up.

When a batter would hit him for a four or a six, he never sledged.

Instead he would just clap and applaud, lure him into a false sense of confidence and when next time, he jumped out, he knew there was something amiss: the wherewithal to deal with Bedi’s greatness. He knew how to buy wickets.

Ask Gavaskar, who fell prey to Bedi’s deception in the Ranji final of the 1976-77. Bombay won that game but Gavaskar was beaten by flight and drift in both innings. Caught and bowled for 5 in the first and stumped by Surinder Khanna after dancing down the track in the second innings for 10.

Rajinder Goel, probably the second greatest left-arm spinner in world cricket in 1970s, never got a chance to play Test cricket. Goel saab, as he was respectfully called in cricket circles was the best in the business but Bedi was better than the best.

As subtle as sledgehammer

He had fierce sense of right and wrong and could be very opinionated to anyone’s dismay. But that was Bishan Singh Bedi.

He could easily terminate the Indian innings at 97 for 5 as a mark of protest that West Indies umpires were allowing Michael Holding and Wayne Daniel to cause physical harm to Indian batters with two or three beamers per over.

He was once banned for Test match by the BCCI in 1975 after he gave an interview to BBC during his stint with Nottinghamshire without listening to board’s no-interview diktat.

“I remember we won the Ranji Trophy back in 1979-80 season and a DDCA clerk came with a letter from the erstwhile top-boss. It was written that Invitation for Hi-Tea for captain and manager with president of DDCA. He flung the invitation card back and told the messenger that he will only meet the president if every player got a separate invitation card,” Kirti Azad recollected the good old days spent with his “skipper”.

Had it not been for Bedi, Delhi would have never become the cricketing powerhouse that it became after he took over as skipper. He instilled self belief in Kirti Azads, Madan Lals, Surinder Khannas, Venkat Sunderams and Sunil Valsons that Bombay (now Mumbai) is a beatable side.

“He could take up cudgels with anyone. In those days, at times DDCA would arrange for accommodations which would be considered as hell-holes. There won’t be enough room to walk to the washroom let alone keep our cricket kits and suitcases. Bishan would just check-out of the hotel and force them to put us up in a minimum three-star facility,” Azad said.

In those days, post practice, Aloo ke pakode (Potato fritters) and Mirchi ke pakode (Green chilli fritters) with tea, worth a few annas, were served post Delhi team’s pre-season practice during the Ranji season and Bedi told the establishment that this unhealthy food won’t be consumed by his boys.

“He said get boiled eggs and fresh fruits for them after practice. Get ‘paneer’ for the vegetarians,” Azad remembered.

“But there was one thing which was a must on the menu and Bishan paaji paid from his own pocket. Chilled beer in extreme Delhi heat. He got it for everyone and no one was allowed to take out their wallets apart from him. Keerat, that’s how he called me, Veerey, have a glassy (glass of beer),” Azad remembered.

He never ever sledged or used a cuss word on the field. No one can remember but if someone played a bad shot or there was poor fielding, Bedi could be pretty verbose in chaste Punjabi inside the dressing room during the break.

But after the end of the day’s play, the first person who would walk up and hand him a glass of beer was none other than Bedi himself.

Man with golden heart

During the 1979-80 final where Delhi beat Bombay for the first time, Azad scored a hundred, hitting Padmakar Shivalkar for three sixes to race from 84 to 102.

So happy was Bedi that he actually opened his kit-bag after he walked into the dressing room.

“He just opened it and said take whatever you want. There were shoes of British company Patrick. There were gloves from Duncan Fearnley and Grey Niccols cricket bat, a dream of every player. It was worth in thousands even in 70s and he said it’s all mine. He was the only one to use imported equipment as he played County cricket for Nottinghamshire,” Azad said.

Gursharan Singh remembers how after scoring 298 against Bengal in a Ranji match, the Punjab skipper got a massage from the coach.

“I was red in embarrassment as paaji would massage my calf muscles, shoulders as we didn’t have the culture of permanent masseurs even in early nineties. He made me captain for the season and even when Sherry (Navjot Sidhu), who was our biggest star back then was back from national duty, he didn’t change the captain. He said: “If Gush has led the side till now, he would continue.”

Ethics and Rules of the Game

In his later years, Bedi wasn’t establishment’s most favourite person but he couldn’t care less. In the pre social media days, he once courted controversy as Indian team’s Manager (not coach) after some media houses misquoted him saying that he wanted to “throw the players in the Pacific Ocean” after they lost an ODI in New Zealand during a tri-series which was more of a debacle.

However years later, the TV interview was available and it was the interviewer who had asked him whether he would mind if his players wanted to jump in ‘Pacific Ocean’ after such a poor performance and all he said was “I won’t mind.” His role as a cricket manager was a short one and it was understandable that a lot of super seniors, who were by then at the back-end of their careers, didn’t like his strenuous regimen.

However being sharp-tongued meant that he would often question the action of Muttiah Muralitharan and Harbhajan Singh, terming them “javelin throwers”.

“You call it 800 wickets, I call it 800 run-outs,” he famously said about Murali and no marks for guessing that the Lankan legend wasn’t one bit amused.

He was a staunch critic of Delhi & Districts Cricket Association, not exactly an institution known for its propriety and probity. He had his massive difference of opinion with late Arun Jaitley and although a stand is named after him, he wrote Jaitley’s son and current president Rohan to remove his name as he didn’t conform the workings of the state body which he felt was mired in corruption.

In one of his last interaction with the PTI, Bedi had said a sentence which fits with his persona.

“I don’t stoop to conquer,” he had said in that 2019 interview, in reference to another former India cricketer. Bishan Singh Bedi, the ‘Sardar of Spin’ only conquered hearts.

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India vs New Zealand Highlights, Cricket World Cup 2023: Virat Kohli, Mohammed Shami Guide India To Crucial Win, Extend Unbeaten Run | Cricket News

IND vs NZ Highlights: India beat New Zealand by 4 wickets.© AFP




India vs New Zealand Highlights, IND vs NZ ODI World Cup 2023: Virat Kohli and Mohammed Shami shone as India beat New Zealand by 4 wickets in Dharamsala on Sunday. It was Mohammed Shami’s five-wicket (5 for 54) haul that helped India restrict New Zealand to 273 despite Daryl Mitchell’s 130 and Rachin Ravindra’s 75. In the chase, Rohit Sharma’s 46 provided India a superb start before Virat Kohli’s well-knit 95 stole the show. India hunted down the total in 48 overs. With it, the Rohit-led side became the only unbeaten team in the Cricket World Cup 2023. (Scorecard | Points Table)

ICC Cricket World Cup 2023, India vs New Zealand Highlights:







  • 22:24 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Shami named Player of the Match!

    Mohammed Shami bags the Player of the Match award for his five-wicket haul (5 for 54). “Got a lot of confidence after taking a wicket on the first ball. If your team mates are doing well, you should support them, it’s important that the team performs well, I understand that. It was important to pick those late wickets, you always want your team to be the top side. Very happy that I got those wickets and India is on top of the table,” said Shami after India’s victory.

  • 22:15 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: India win!!!

    Ravindra Jadeja pulls the ball towards backward square leg for a four and India have won the game by 4 wickets. What a victory this is! They have beaten New Zealand in an ODI World Cup game for first time since 2003.

    IND 274/6 (48)

  • 22:09 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Kohli is OUT!

    Virat Kohli is out at the score of 95. He has hit the ball into the hands of Glenn Phillips towards the deep mid-wicket.

  • 22:03 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    The chase master stuff from Virat Kohli. A four down the ground from the batter and India have this game in their bag now. They just need the finishing touch. You can call it mere formality. 

    IND 265/5 (46.3)

  • 22:01 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: SIX!

    What a shot from Virat Kohli! This man has nerves of steel. It was a short ball from Trent Boult and Kohli pulled it over the mid-wicket fence for a six. Terrific batting from the India star!

    IND 261/5 (46.1)

  • 21:55 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: India need 26 in 30!

    New Zealand have managed to pull things back a bit but India still stay ahead with set batters Virat Kohli and Ravindra Jadeja at the crease. India need 26 runs in 30 balls.

    IND 248/5 (45)

  • 21:50 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: India need 29 in 36!

    This is a really good over from Rachin Ravindra. He conceded only two runs in it and India now need 29 runs in 36 balls.

    IND 245/5 (44)

  • 21:47 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Good bowling!

    Mitchell Santner bowled a four-run over but India won’t mind it as they need just around 4 runs per over from here. India need 31 runs in 42 balls.

    IND 243/5 (43)

  • 21:42 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: SIX!

    Ravindra Jadeja dances the track and smashes the ball over fence to the wide of long-on for a six. India need 38 runs in 52 balls.

    IND 236/5 (41.2)

  • 21:40 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: India need 44 in 54!

    Virat Kohli and Ravindra Jadeja have added 39 runs off 43 balls for the sixth wicket so far. This partnership has once again put India on top of the game. The Rohit Sharma-led side needs 44 runs in 54 balls.

    IND 230/5 (41)

  • 21:32 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: India need 52 in 66!

    Virat Kohli is batting at the score of 70 off 73 balls while Ravindra Jadeja is unbeaten on 15. India need 52 runs in 66 balls.

    IND 222/5 (39)

  • 21:20 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    A gamble from New Zealand but they couldn’t get a favourable result at least on the first ball. Glenn Phillips has been brought into the attack. He started with a short ball and Kohli pulled it away for a four to wide of long-on. 

    IND 205/5 (36.1)

  • 21:15 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Back-to-back FOURs!

    A short ball from Lockie Ferguson and Ravindra Jadeja placed it well towards the backward square leg region for a four. Ferguson bowled short again and on the hips of Jadeja on the next ball and the batter glanced it away for a four towards fine leg fence.

    IND 201/5 (35.4)

  • 21:10 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Run-out!!!

    A communication error in running and SuryakumarYadav has been run out. Surya steered the ball towards cover. He ran towards the other end while Virat Kohli was waiting for the ball to be cleared first. The cover fielder threw the ball to Trent Boult around the middle of the crease before the bowler threw it towards the wicketkeeper Tom Latham, who clipped off the bails.  

    IND 191/5 (33.5)

  • 21:04 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: Fifty for Kohli!

    Virat Kohli raced to his 69th ODI half-century 60 balls. He is rock solid at one end and that has kept India still ahead in this chase of 274 runs. By the time Kohli is there at the crease, India are clear favourites to win this game.

  • 21:01 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: KL Rahul is OUT!

    A good review from New Zealand and they get a reward for it. KL Rahul came a bit out of his crease to face a Mithchell Santner delivery that went straight after pitching around middle stump. Rahul got his pad first on the ball but the umpire was unconvinced. New Zealand went upstairs and earned the wicket. 

    IND 182/4 (32.1)

  • 20:52 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    Really smart short from Virat Kohli! He waited for the ball and then guided it down the third man fence for a four. India need 92 runs more to win off the remaining 18 overs. Virat Kohli is batting at the score of 48.

    IND 182/3 (32)

  • 20:47 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    It could have been a good over but Rachin Ravindra bowled it around the pads of KL Rahul on the last ball. The Indian batter swept the ball away for a four towards the backward square leg fence.

    IND 174/3 (31)

  • 20:41 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    Virat Kohli comes down the track and drives the Matt Henry delivery for a four through the extra cover region. He is now on 40.

    IND 164/3 (29.1)

  • 20:37 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: SIX!

    What a shot from Virat Kohli! How easy does he do that! It was an overpitched delivery outside off stump from Rachin Ravindra and Kohli hit a lofted drive on it for a six. 

    IND 157/3 (28.1)

  • 20:24 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: India going well!

    Both Virat Kohli and KL Rahul are playing sensibly and that sees India still holding an edge in this chase of 274 runs. The asking rate is 5.36 and the duo know it very well, therefore they are focusing more on rotating the strike.

    IND 140/3 (25)

  • 20:20 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    KL Rahul got off the mark with a four on the off side on the bowling of Lockie Ferguson. Rahul has played only 11 balls so far but he is looking rock solid in the crease.

    IND 135/3 (24)

  • 20:12 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: Iyer is OUT!

    Just when it seemed that India have got an edge in the game, Trent Boult has removed Shyreas Iyer to bring New Zealand back in the game. It was a short ball and Iyer pulled it towards the square leg fielder Devon Conway, who took a brilliant catch diving forward.

    IND 128/3 (21.3)

  • 19:58 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: FOUR!

    Lockie Ferguson bowls in on the legs and Virat Kohli glances it away for a four towards the fine leg fence. India are going really well in the chase. The duo of Kohli and Shreyas Iyer have added 41 runs so far for the third wicket in 28 balls.

    IND 117/2 (18)

  • 19:54 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: The match resumes!

    The match resumed after the delay due to dense fog. It is not completely gone but the conditions are at least better now. Shreyas Iyer and Virat Kohli are looking solid in the crease.

  • 19:46 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: When can the DLS method be applied?

    It is worth noting that a winner through the DLS method could only be decided after India play at least 20 overs in this chase. From this point, if the match ends, it will be a draw with both the sides sharing a point each.

  • 19:37 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: 100 up for India!

    A short ball from Lockie Ferguson and Shreyas Iyer pull it for a four towards the backward square leg. It also brings the 100 runs for India.

    IND 100/2 (15.4)

  • 19:28 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: OUT!

    Shubman Gill is gone! That’s smart bowling from Lockie Ferguson as he gets the second wicket. He put in a third man and bowled a bouncer to Gill, who fell in the trap. In a big to get it over the fielder, Gill was caught out near the fence.

    IND 76/2 (13.2)

  • 19:19 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: WICKET!

    Lockie Ferguson strikes on the very first ball of his in this match. It was a length delivery outside off stump but Rohit Sharma edged it onto the stumps to miss his half-century. The Indian skipper fell for 46 runs.

    IND 71/1 (11.1)

  • 19:04 (IST)

    India vs New Zealand Live Score: Gill claims world record

    Shubman Gill smashes two back-to-back boundaries off Trent Boult’s delivery. With this, he completes 2000 ODI runs and becomes the fastest batter (by innings) in the world to achieve the feat. 

    Fastest to 2000 ODI runs (by innings taken)

    38 – Shubman Gill

    40 – Hashim Amla

    45 – Zaheer Abbas

    45 – Kevin Pietersen

    45 – Babar Azam

    45 – Rassie van der Dussen

  • 19:00 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: FOUR

    FOUR!!! Shubman Gill smashes a boundary off Matt Henry’s delivery. Gill hits it towards the right of square leg’s drive and steals four runs. 

    IND 36/0 (5.5 overs)

  • 18:53 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: SIX!

    SIX!!! Rohit Sharma continues his fiery form and hammers a huge six off Trent Boult’s delivery. Rohit smashes it hard as the ball goes over Boult’s head and lands straight into the crowd for a maximum. 

    IND 32/0 (4.4 overs)

  • 18:50 (IST)

    India vs New Zealand Live Score: FOUR

    FOUR!!! Shubman Gill joins the party and smashes a boundary off Matt Henry’s delivery. Gill gently whips it towards the square leg as the ball goes past the boundary line for a four. 

    IND 26/0 (4 overs)

  • 18:46 (IST)

    India vs New Zealand Live Score: FOUR

    FOUR!!! Dropped!! Too much action in one delivery. Trent Boult’s delivery touches the edge of Rohit Sharma’s bat and goes straight towards Daryl Mitchell, who fails to take a catch at the slip. The ball then races across the boundary line for a four. 

    IND 22/0 (3 overs)

  • 18:44 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Score: 11 runs off the over

    India are off to a confident start in the chase of 274 against New Zealand. In the previous over of Matt Henry, Rohit Sharma smashes a six and a four as the pacer leaks 11 runs.

    IND 15/0 (2 overs)

  • 18:42 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Score: Rohit achieves rare feat

    SIX!!! Rohit Sharma hammers a huge six off Matt Henry’s delivery. Rohit whacks the full delivery off lined delivery across the line over cow corner for a huge six. With this, Rohit becomes the first Indian batter to hit 50 ODI sixes in a calendar year. 

    IND 11/0 (1.5 overs)

  • 18:35 (IST)

    IND vs NZ Live Score: FOUR

    FOUR!!! Rohit Sharma off the mark in style as he smashes a boundary off Trent Boult’s delivery. Rohit smartly places a shot towards the right side of the deep square leg as the ball goes past the fielder for a four. Terrific start for India in the chase. 

    IND 4/0 (0.2 overs)

  • 18:33 (IST)

    India vs New Zealand Live Score: We are back

    Hello and welcome to the second innings of the ODI World Cup 2023 match between India and New Zealand. In the chase of 274, Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill have opened for India while Trent Boult will be bowling the first over for New Zealand.

  • 18:04 (IST)

    India vs New Zealand Live Score: New Zealand 273 all out vs India

    New Zealand end their innings at 273 in 50 overs against India in the ODI World Cup 2023 match. For New Zealand, Daryl Mitchell smashed 130 runs while Rachin Ravindra scored 75. For India, Mohammed Shami registered a five-wicket haul while Kuldeep Yadav took two wickets. Apart from them, Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj took one wicket each. 

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It’s time to hang up on the old telecoms rulebook

Joakim Reiter | via Vodafone

Around 120 years ago, Guglielmo Marconi planted the seeds of a communications revolution, sending the first message via a wireless link over open water. “Are you ready? Can you hear me?”, he said. Now, the telecommunications industry in Europe needs policymakers to heed that call, to realize the vision set by its 19th-century pioneers.

Next-generation telecommunications are catalyzing a transformation on par with the industrial revolution. Mobile networks are becoming programmable platforms — supercomputers that will fundamentally underpin European industrial productivity, growth and competitiveness. Combined with cloud, AI and the internet of things, the era of industrial internet will transform our economy and way of life, bringing smarter cities, energy grids and health care, as well as autonomous transport systems, factories and more to the real world.

5G is already connecting smarter, autonomous factory technologies | via Vodafone

Europe should be at the center of this revolution, just as it was in the early days of modern communications.

Next-generation telecommunications are catalyzing a transformation on par with the industrial revolution.

Even without looking at future applications, the benefits of a healthy telecoms industry for society are clear to see. Mobile technologies and services generated 5 percent of global GDP, equivalent to €4.3 trillion, in 2021. More than five billion people around the world are connected to mobile services — more people today have access to mobile communications than they do to safely-managed sanitation services. And with the combination of satellite solutions, the prospect of ensuring every person on the planet is connected may soon be within reach.

Satellite solutions, combined with mobile communications, could eliminate coverage gaps | via Vodafone

In our recent past, when COVID-19 spread across the world and societies went into lockdown, connectivity became critical for people to work from home, and for enabling schools and hospitals to offer services online.  And with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, when millions were forced to flee the safety of their homes, European network operators provided heavily discounted roaming and calling to ensure refugees stayed connected with loved ones.

A perfect storm of rising investment costs, inflationary pressures, interest rate hikes and intensifying competition from adjacent industries is bearing down on telecoms businesses across Europe.

These are all outcomes and opportunities, depending on the continuous investment of telecoms’ private companies.

And yet, a perfect storm of rising investment costs, inflationary pressures, interest rate hikes and intensifying competition from adjacent industries is bearing down on telecoms businesses across Europe. The war on our continent triggered a 15-fold increase in wholesale energy prices and rapid inflation. EU telecoms operators have been under pressure ever since to keep consumer prices low during a cost-of-living crisis, while confronting rapidly growing operational costs as a result. At the same time, operators also face the threat of billions of euros of extra, unforeseen costs as governments change their operating requirements in light of growing geopolitical concerns.

Telecoms operators may be resilient. But they are not invincible.

The odds are dangerously stacked against the long-term sustainability of our industry and, as a result, Europe’s own digital ambitions. Telecoms operators may be resilient. But they are not invincible.

The signs of Europe’s decline are obvious for those willing to take a closer look. European countries are lagging behind in 5G mobile connectivity, while other parts of the world — including Thailand, India and the Philippines — race ahead. Independent research by OpenSignal shows that mobile users in South Korea have an active 5G connection three times more often than those in Germany, and more than 10 times their counterparts in Belgium.

Europe needs a joined-up regulatory, policy and investment approach that restores the failing investment climate and puts the telecoms sector back to stable footing.

Average 5G connectivity in Brazil is more than three times faster than in Czechia or Poland. A recent report from the European Commission — State of the Digital Decade (europa.eu) shows just how far Europe needs to go to reach the EU’s connectivity targets for 2030.

To arrest this decline, and successfully meet EU’s digital ambitions, something has got to give. Europe needs a joined-up regulatory, policy and investment approach that restores the failing investment climate and puts the telecoms sector back to stable footing.

Competition, innovation and efficient investment are the driving forces for the telecoms sector today. It’s time to unleash these powers — not blindly perpetuate old rules. We agree with Commissioner Breton’s recent assessment: Europe needs to redefine the DNA of its telecoms regulation. It needs a new rulebook that encourages innovation and investment, and embraces the logic of a true single market. It must reduce barriers to growth and scale in the sector and ensure spectrum — the lifeblood of our industry — is managed more efficiently. And it must find faster, futureproofed ways to level the playing field for all business operating in the wider digital sector.  

But Europe is already behind, and we are running out of time. It is critical that the EU finds a balance between urgent, short-term measures and longer-term reforms. It cannot wait until 2025 to implement change.

Europeans deserve better communications technology | via Vodafone

When Marconi sent that message back in 1897, the answer to his question was, “loud and clear”. As Europe’s telecoms ministers convene this month in León, Spain, their message must be loud and clear too. European citizens and businesses deserve better communications. They deserve a telecoms rulebook that ensures networks can deliver the next revolution in digital connectivity and services.



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Mankind Pharma’s Founders Map Growth Plan After Pulling Off Major IPO

Juneja brothers eye a spot among India’s top three sales leaders by expanding into bigger cities and selling more expensive medications.


Rajeev Juneja recalls his first day in the pharmaceutical industry in 1984. He was 19 and had dropped out of college to work as a representative for the generic drugmaker that he had cofounded with his family. His older brother Ramesh’s instructions were clear: Leave the house by 8:30 a.m. and don’t come back before 10 p.m. Rajeev was to network with staff at a medical college near the family home in the northern Indian city of Meerut. “For the first two days, I didn’t have the courage to meet any doctor,” he says. His confidence slowly improved and he started shadowing other reps to see how they interacted with doctors and presented promotional materials.

Fast forward to 2023 and Ramesh, 68, is chairman and Rajeev, 58, is vice chairman and managing director of Delhi-based Mankind Pharma. In May, they staged the biggest IPO of the year so far, by value, when Mankind debuted on the BSE (formerly Bombay Stock Exchange) and the National Stock Exchange, fetching 43.3 billion rupees ($715 million) for its existing shareholders, including the Junejas, who sold some of their stock. Mankind’s shares have surged 62% since then to trade at more than 1,700 rupees for a market cap of over 700 billion rupees (as of late September). Ramesh, Rajeev and other family members own the bulk of the company. Their wealth has soared 64% to $6.9 billion over the past year, thanks partly to the listing, putting them at No. 29 on India’s 100 Richest list.



Investor confidence in the company’s prospects is due in no small measure to the brothers’ goal to break into the ranks of the top three pharmaceutical companies (by domestic sales) in India. Today, the three largest are local firm Sun Pharmaceutical Industries, founded by billionaire Dilip Shanghvi, followed by AbbottIndia, a subsidiary of U.S.-based Abbott Laboratories, and then another domestic firm, Cipla, controlled by billionaire Yusuf Hamied. (Torrent Pharmaceuticals, the No. 8 player, owned by billionaire siblings Sudhir and Samir Mehta, is reportedly in talks with private equity firms to make a bid for Cipla; neither firm responded to requests for comment.)

Today, Mankind ranks No. 4 in revenue in the domestic market for branded generic drugs and No. 3 in volume terms, according to U.S. analytics firm Iqvia. Branded generics, or off-patent medications that are sold under a proprietary name, accounted for 96% of the Indian pharma market in value terms in the year to March 31, 2022, Iqvia says. With more than $1 billion in annual revenue and a 15,000-strong sales force, the Juneja brothers are mapping a plan to take on the top three.

“It will be a tall claim to say that we want to be the No. 1 pharma company in India,” says Ramesh in a July interview alongside Rajeev at the company’s headquarters in an industrial area of Delhi. “But we can definitely achieve No. 3 or No. 2 in the next few years,” he predicts, while declining to give a revenue target.

Mankind has 25 factories that make more than 1,000 products across 36 main brands to treat pain and infections as well as cardiac ailments and diabetes. It also offers its own homegrown brands of consumer-healthcare products such as condoms, pregnancy tests and acne treatments. The company has six R&D centers and employs more than 600 scientists.

Mankind’s growth has come from being an outlier, says Purvi Shah, research analyst at Mumbai-based Kotak Securities. While its peers are largely focused on selling to the U.S. and to specialists in India’s big urban centers, Mankind gets 97% of its revenue from the domestic market, where it targets GPs in smaller cities and rural areas, although it’s making rapid inroads into metros (the remaining 3% comes mostly from the U.S., Bangladesh and Sri Lanka). Another major differentiator is price. Mankind’s top 50 brands cost 20% less than those of its three closest competitors, according to a June report by Kunal Dhamesha, a Mumbai-based healthcare research analyst at Macquarie Research. According to Mankind, over 80% of doctors in India prescribe its drugs.

“We have saved medicine costs for thousands of customers over the years,” claims Ramesh. He says the company keeps prices low by maintaining reasonable margins and controlling costs. Mankind also benefits from economies of scale because of its high volume, says Shrikant Akolkar, vice president at Mumbai-based institutional brokerage Asian Markets Securities.

Mankind has shifted strategy over the past few years in order to tackle the top three. This has involved targeting specialists in India’s biggest cities; selling more chronic medications, which are prescribed for long periods, compared with acute medications, which are meant for short-term use; and beefing up its consumer-healthcare division. “Disease patterns are changing and there are more lifestyle diseases now, like diabetes and cardiac, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases,” says Rajeev. “So we have also changed our approach.”

India’s pharma market was valued at 1.9 trillion rupees ($22 billion) in the year to March 31, 2022, and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 10%-11% between then and fiscal 2027, according to Iqvia. More than a third of the total comes from chronic medications. Within that segment, the market for cardio drugs is expected to grow at a CAGR of 12%-13%, and medications for neurological conditions at 11%-12%, over the same period. Mankind had a 4.4% share of the highly fragmented domestic pharma market as of end-August.

Analyst Shah says moving into the top three “is not an impossible goal.” But Mankind faces challenges. If it wants to become bigger, faster, it needs to make a big push on acquisitions, she says, and watch out for any regulatory disruptions. In August the government proposed that doctors prescribe only unbranded generics. These so-called trade generics are cheaper than their branded counterparts and could undermine profits at companies such as Mankind. However, the proposal has since been suspended. Only 2% of Mankind’s fiscal 2023 revenue came from trade generics, according to Shah. Another potential snag is price controls: The government caps the cost of certain medications it deems essential. As of Dec. 31, 2022, some 17% of Mankind’s drugs were on the list, which is periodically revised.

Not that any of that is affecting the company’s performance. Mankind’s net profit surged 66% in the first quarter ended June 30 to 4.9 billion rupees, supported by an 18% gain in revenue to 25.8 billion rupees. The results are a turnaround after net profit fell 10% in the year ended March 31 to 13.1 billion rupees, despite a 12% gain in revenue to 87.5 billion rupees, undermined by higher raw-material costs as well as expenses related to the acquisition of the domestic formulation brands of Panacea Biotec, a unit of Delhi-based Panacea Biotec Pharma, for 18.1 billion rupees.

Shah says Mankind remains vulnerable to high input prices because it is “not fully backward integrated,” meaning it must rely on suppliers for some raw materials. Analyst Dhamesha predicts that Mankind’s net profit will double to 26 billion rupees by fiscal 2026, as the share of revenue from chronic medications, which are more expensive than other drugs, increases to more than 40% from 34%, boosting operating margins.


BY THE NUMBERS

Mankind has one of the largest pharma sales forces in India. It gets most of its revenue from acute medications, but the share from chronic drugs, which are more expensive, is rising.


Mankind spent 8.3 billion rupees in fiscal 2023 to expand manufacturing capacity and upgrade infrastructure. Ramesh says it plans to add three more factories this year. The company has increased its salesforce by about 3,000 over the past three years, which gives it one of the largest networks in the country, according to Macquarie Research. It has also created specialized sales teams to target the country’s top 3,000 hospitals and their critical-care departments.

However, the chronic space is getting crowded, warns​ Akolkar. “Everyone is adding medical reps and everyone is getting into therapy areas like cardiac and cardiovascular,” he says. “Continuing this kind of growth may be difficult.” In response, Rajeev notes that Mankind’s revenue from chronic medications grew 14% between fiscal 2021 and 2023, faster than the chronic segment as a whole, which grew at a CAGR of 12% in the same period, according to Iqvia. He claims 87% of the cardiologists Mankind approaches prescribe its products.

Ramesh says the other big growth driver will be the consumer-healthcare business, which boasts four over-the-counter products that the company says are No. 1 (by sales) in the markets for condoms, pregnancy tests, acne treatments and emergency contraception. “Consumer brands make up only 8% of our business but they give us so much brand recognition,” says Rajeev. “But this is a tough space,” he adds. “Ninety percent of brands fail.” He declined to give a forecast for the division, but Macquarie Research says its revenues are growing at a 10%-11% CAGR.

Over the past two years, Mankind has made acquisitions to support both the chronic-medications and consumer-healthcare businesses. As well as the Panacea Biotec deal, it agreed to license a heart-failure medication from Switzerland-based Novartis. It also acquired a skincare line and an inhaler brand from Hyderabad-based Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, and a majority stake in Delhi-based health and wellness brand Upakarma Ayurveda. Other than the Panacea Biotec purchase, the cost of the acquisitions was not disclosed.

Another boost to the company’s prospects was its public offering, giving it access to equity financing. However, two days after the listing, Mankind notified the stock exchanges that India’s Income Tax Department was “conducting a search at some of the premises/plants related to the company and some of its subsidiaries.” Mankind said in the filings that it was responding to queries raised by tax officials, and that there was no impact on its operational performance. The search concluded in May and the company says results have not been released. The tax agency did not respond to requests for comment.

Analysts say Mankind’s stock benefits from being the only listed large-cap pharma that is a pure domestic play. “There’s a premium for domestic players like Mankind because the Indian market has good visibility and high predictability of revenue,” says Akolkar. “It’s not subject to the pricing pressures and regulatory challenges associated with the U.S.,” he says.

Asked about exports, Rajeev is ada-mant. “Our focus will always be domestic,” he says. “If we create a complex, difficult-to-manufacture and differentiated product, then there is a benefit in exporting.” He adds: “Otherwise it’s just a commodity and we don’t want to compromise on profitability.” There is plenty of room for growth at home, where per-capita spending on pharmaceuticals is $16, compared with $100 in other emerging markets and $650 in developed countries, according to data from Iqvia and Macquarie Research.

The pharma journey for the Juneja family began in 1974, when Ramesh, second of five siblings and the oldest of three brothers, started as a sales rep with a small drug company in Delhi after graduating with a science degree from Deva Nagri College in Meerut. A year later he became a regional sales rep for Mumbai-based Lupin, controlled by the Gupta family, now the No. 7 firm in the market.

He resigned from Lupin in 1983 and with Rajeev, another brother, Greesh, their sister Prabha Arora, and an external partner, set up pharma company BestoChem, at which Rajeev started his career. In 1995, Ramesh, Rajeev and Prabha’s husband, Prem Kumar Arora, left BestoChem and invested a combined 5 million rupees to launch Mankind, a company they had incorporated four years earlier. Greesh remains a director at Delhi-based BestoChem, which is unlisted.

Mankind began with 25 reps selling painkillers and antibiotics, then a decade later moved into diabetes and hypertension pills. In 2007, it launched a line of condoms called Manforce, its first homegrown consumer-healthcare brand. The same year, private equity firm ChrysCapital, based in Mauritius, took an 11% stake for 850 million rupees, valuing Mankind at 7.7 billion rupees. It sold the shares in 2015 to U.S.-based PE firm Capital International Group for a 14-fold return. Three years later ChrysCapital bought a 10% stake at double the 2015 valuation. It sold a 2.5% holding in the May IPO but retained 7.5%. Capital International also sold shares in the IPO but still has 6%.

“When we first invested in 2007 it was more of a call on the entrepreneurial ability of Ramesh Juneja,” says Sanjiv Kaul, partner at ChrysCapital. The second time the focus was on the next generation, led by Rajeev, he adds. “While Ramesh Juneja continues to play a father role, Rajeev is the right man, at the right place, at the right time,” he says. Ramesh comes into the office for five to six hours a day but leaves day-to-day management to Rajeev and the younger generation, which includes Prem’s son Sheetal, 47, CEO; Ramesh’s son Arjun, 37, chief operating officer; and Rajeev’s son Chanakya, 27, director of technology.

Ramesh tries to keep the family’s success in perspective. “Your feet should always be on the ground,” he says. “We started from the bottom of the pyramid, everything we did was for survival.”

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How Indian authorities ‘weaponised’ a New York Times report to target the press

NewsClick, a defiantly critical news site, has been in the Indian government’s sights over the past few years. But there was little to show after extensive financial probes – until the New York Times published a report which enabled Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration to use the press to attack the press. 

Shortly after breakfast time on Tuesday, October 3, Paranjoy Guha Thakurta was outside his home in Gurgaon, a suburb of the Indian capital New Delhi, seeing his son off for the day when the police showed up at his place.

“Nine cops arrived at 6:30 in the morning,” recounted the renowned investigative journalist and writer in a phone interview with FRANCE 24. “I was surprised. I asked them, why have you come? They said, we want to ask you a few questions.”

True to their word, the police did have relatively few questions. But they were repeated over 12 hours at two venues, according to Guha Thakurta.  

After around two hours of questioning at his Gurgaon home, the veteran journalist was taken to the Delhi police’s Special Cell – the Indian capital’s counter-terrorism unit – and questioned again before he emerged around 6:30pm local time to a phalanx of news camera teams.


Guha Thakurta was among 46 people questioned during sweeping media raids that dominated the national news cycle, made international headlines, and sparked a series of condemnations from press freedom groups across the world.

The crackdown targeted NewsClick, an independent news site founded in 2009 known for its hard-hitting coverage of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist policies. The list of those questioned included the NewsClick’s founder-editor, staff, former staffers, and freelance writers, as well as non-journalist contributors such as activists, a historian and a stand-up comedian. The police seized computers, mobile phones and documents during the raids. 

After an entire day of questioning, NewsClick’s founder-editor Prabir Purkayastha and human resources chief Amit Chakravarthy were arrested under the country’s draconian Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), also known as the “anti-terror law” in India. The two men remain in custody while the others were released by Tuesday night. NewsClick’s New Delhi office has been shut down and put under a police seal.

Since Modi came to power in 2014, India has been nosediving in the international press freedom rankings, settling at 161 out of 180 countries on the 2023 Reporters Without Borders index. Some high-profile cases of media clampdowns make the news; many more pass unnoticed outside human rights circles.

Read moreAmid threats, Indian TV anchor battles on, but for how long?

What makes the latest raids noteworthy though is that they are linked to a New York Times report on a global network receiving funds from US tech billionaire Neville Roy Singham, allegedly to publish Chinese propaganda. NewsClick was one of the news organisations named as funding recipient. The report did not suggest the Indian news site had committed any crime.

NewsClick has denied the allegations in the report. The news site maintains that it does not publish any news or information at the behest of any Chinese entity, nor does it take directions from Singham on its content. A police investigation into the site’s alleged Chinese funding is currently underway.

In its report, “A Global Web of Chinese Propaganda Leads to a U.S. Tech Mogul”, the New York Times unravelled a shadowy network allegedly propagating Chinese government talking points by funding left-leaning organisations across the globe via US NGOs. “Years of research have shown how disinformation, both homegrown and foreign-backed, influences mainstream conservative discourse. Mr. Singham’s network shows what that process looks like on the left,” noted the US daily. 

But in India, the process of press clampdowns and intimidation of the left looks very different. 

Years of assaults on liberal democratic values under the Modi administration have been propelled by a government discourse that vilifies dissenters as treasonous “anti-nationals”. 

The labelling of journalists, academics, activists and opposition figures includes vague associations, without evidence, to minor Maoist peasant uprisings in rural India. Disgraced dissenters are then booked under repressive anti-terror laws bereft of basic safeguards, according to international rights groups.

On the international stage, though, many of the violations pass unnoticed – or more precisely, unmentioned – since India is viewed in the West as a counterweight to China.

With the Ukraine war exposing splits between the so-called Global North and South, the focus in many Western capitals is on disinformation networks that lead to Moscow and Beijing. This is particularly marked as the US heads to the polls in 2024 with Donald Trump as the front-runner for the Republican nomination.

But India is also heading to critical general elections next year. As Modi makes a bid for a third term, there are fears that his campaign will once again instrumentalise deteriorating ties with a neighbouring country to whip up a nationalist wave. In an ironic twist, the Modi government’s weaponisation of a report by a leading US daily – functioning under press freedoms enshrined in a mature democracy – is now threatening the very values that the West professes to uphold.

Same questions asked again – and again

The scale and planning of Tuesday’s raids sent an immediate signal across India that the state’s investigation of NewsClick – which has dragged on for more than two years without any charges – had gone up a notch.

“What happened is unprecedented. We’ve seen the police take coordinated action across the national capital region and also outside Delhi. Literally hundreds of police participated, they were summoned very early in the morning or probably late the previous night,” said Guha Thakurta.

The police’s questions appeared to show little understanding of the role of journalists in a democracy. “I was asked if I was an employee of NewsClick. I said no, I’m a consultant,” he explained.

The veteran journalist was then asked if he had covered a series of recent anti-government protests, including a farmers’ strike and demonstrations against a controversial citizenship law. “They were very polite. But the fact is, they kept asking the same set of questions. They were asked by different people, different officials, at various levels,” recounted Guha Thakurta.

Condemnations from press rights groups followed immediately, with the Press Club of India saying it was “deeply concerned” over the raids and the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists calling it “an act of sheer harassment and intimidation”.

Paranjoy Guha Thakurta (L) speaks to writer Arundhati Roy (R) and Aproorvanand, a Delhi University professor (centre) during a protest at Press Club of India in New Delhi on October 4, 2023. © Altaf Qadri, AP

In Washington DC, a State Department spokesperson was asked if the US was aware of concerns about NewsClick’s China ties alleged by the New York Times.

“We are aware of those concerns and have seen that reporting,” Vedant Patel told reporters, adding that he could not comment on the veracity of the claims. “Separately,” he noted, “the US government strongly supports the robust role of the media globally, including social media, in a vibrant and free democracy, and we raise concerns on these matters with the Indian government, with countries around the world.”

There are no known legal proceedings in the US against Singham based on the New York Times report. In India, commentators note that even if the funding allegations against NewsClick turn out to be true, any Chinese funding of an investment by a listed US company in a business venture is legal.

Social media sites meanwhile are awash with links to news reports on Modi’s private fund, the PM CARES Fund, receiving funding from Chinese companies.

Investigating Adani and stories untouched by Indian media

The questioning of NewsClick freelancers, editorial consultants and contributors – who are not responsible for funding or financial decisions – has raised eyebrows, since many have done in-depth reporting on issues that are either ignored or superficially covered by the country’s mainstream media.

Guha Thakurta, for instance, is considered one of India’s leading, and certainly bravest, investigative journalists. A former editor of the once-prestigious policy journal Economic and Political Weekly (EPW), Guha Thakurta resigned from the post in 2017 following differences with the publisher after he co-authored an article on the Adani Group.

The conglomerate, led by Modi-ally Gautam Adani, was the subject of a high-profile investigation by US-based short-seller Hindenburg Research, which accused the group of using opaque funds to invest in its own stocks. The company denies any wrongdoing. Adani denies any improper relationship with the Indian prime minister.

Guha Thakurta was the only Indian journalist whose work was mentioned in the Hindenburg report. The 68-year-old journalist is also the author of the book, “Gas Wars: Crony Capitalism and the Ambanis”, which investigated irregularities by the Ambani business dynasty, which also has close links to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

“Paranjoy [Guha Thakurta] is the only person in the Indian media doing any serious investigation of the Adani Group,” said Kavita Krishnan, a women’s rights activist and former leader of a leftist political party. “He has nothing to do with Chinese propaganda. He was questioned because he’s refusing to be a propagandist for the Indian government.”

Krishnan was under the spotlight last year when she wrote an article chastising the Indian left for supporting Modi’s neutral position on the Ukraine war. In her latest piece, published on Friday, Krishnan slammed the New York Times for failing to provide context in its coverage and ignoring her warnings that the Modi administration would use the Chinese funding allegations to crack down on NewsClick.

In its response to Krishnan’s article, published in independent Indian news site Scroll, the New York Times said it “published a thoroughly reported story showing the [Singham] network’s ties to Chinese interests. We would find it deeply troubling and unacceptable if any government were to use our reporting as an excuse to silence journalists.”

Krishnan is not mollified by the response. “The New York Times story is being weaponised by the Indian government,” explained Krishnan. “Because it’s the New York Times, the government is able to ride on its credibility to create a hysteria, a frenzy that this is evidence of journalists funded by China.”

Funding probes give way to terrorism questioning

The terrorist allegations following Tuesday’s raids are a new, disturbing twist to the Indian state’s ongoing NewsClick probes.

Since 2021, the news site has been investigated by numerous government agencies, including the finance ministry’s Enforcement Directorate (ED), the Delhi police’s Economic Offences Wing and the income tax department. 

After more than two years, none of the enforcement agencies have filed money laundering complaints or legal charges against NewsClick.

By invoking the anti-terror UAPA in its NewsClick investigations, the government has increased its capacity to legally harass and silence a small, underfunded news site, according to experts.

But in a statement released after the raids, NewsClick vowed to keep up the fight to survive. “We have full faith in the courts and the judicial process. We will fight for our journalistic freedom and our lives in accordance with the Constitution of India,” said the organisation.

‘The China connection’

As the NewsClick case looks set to go into the courts, the ruling BJP is already scoring political points off the controversy.

The politicisation started just days after the New York Times report was published, when a BJP parliamentarian claimed, without providing evidence, that China was financing NewsClick as well as the opposition Congress party.

On Tuesday, as the police were rounding up Guha Thakurta and dozens of others, the BJP was already linking NewsClick with Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi.

“Chinese Gandhi” said a BJP post on X (formerly known as Twitter) displaying overlapping circles representing the opposition party, NewsClick and China.

The instrumentalisation of the China allegations comes amid setbacks in India-China ties after Xi Jinping skipped the G20 summit hosted by New Delhi last month.

Anti-China sentiment is rising exponentially in India, according to the Pew Research Center, firing up a Hindu nationalist base that does not take kindly to signs of New Delhi’s weakness on foreign policy. In the lead-up to India’s last general elections in 2019, Indian air strikes on Pakistan just months before the vote swept Modi to a landmark victory.

Krishnan hopes the China funding allegations do not turn into an election issue ahead of the 2024 vote. “I trust that the Modi government will not succeed in using this in its favour as an election issue because everyone in India can see is that this is an unprecedented crackdown on journalism,” she said. “I think the election issue will be the crackdown on journalists, and not allegations of China funding.”



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Cricket World Cup 2023 Captains’ Day: Rohit, Babar Discuss Cricket, Biryani And More | Cricket News

Rohit Sharma at Captain’s Day event




Cricket World Cup 2023 Captains Day Highlights: The likes of Rohit Sharma, Babar Azam, Pat Cummins, Jos Buttler, Kane Williamson, etc. were in the spotlight as Ravi Shastri and Eoin Morgan grilled the 10 captains ahead of the start of the Cricket World Cup 2023. From their respective teams’ preparations, learnings from past events, to some candid Biryani questions, a lot was dicussed at the event.

Here are the Highlights from the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 Captains’ Day







  • 15:13 (IST)

    ICC Cricket World Cup 2023: That’s All Folks!

    Ravi Shastri concludes the event. We onto the Cricket World Cup now!

  • 15:12 (IST)

    World Cup LIVE, Captains’ Day: Kane Williamson On 2019 Heartbreak

    “We are here in another competition. 2019 was amazing but we are looking forward to what this one brings. It will be different from many levels”: Kane Williamson

  • 15:09 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Baffled By Reporter’s Question

    “It’s not my job to decide that”: Rohit Sharma when asked about the 2019 World Cup final where England beat New Zealand on the basis of boundary count after the match was tied in 100 overs and the Super Over.

  • 15:06 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup 2023, LIVE: Babar Azam Really Liked Hyderabadi Biryani

    Babar Azam: Since the time we reached Hyderabad, the hospitality we got, it was amazing. It would’ve been great if fans had come from Pakistan. I hope we get this sort of support in every match. 

    Ravi Shastri: How was the Biryani?

    Babar Azam: It was great. Had always heard Hyderabadi Biryani was good. It was quite good.

  • 15:03 (IST)

    ODI World Cup LIVE: Babar Azam Excited About India Clash

    “We are excited about the India clash. It is always a big match. But, we have two games before that,” said Babar Azam.

  • 15:02 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Pat Cummins On Inspiring The Next Generation

    Pat Cummins: “When I was a child growing up, I idolised sports people and cricketers. I wanted to do what they were. It’s important we play the game in the right spirit. It’s important we help children and the less fortunate. “

  • 14:59 (IST)

    World Cup LIVE, Captains’ Day: Rohit Sharma On World Cup In India

    “People are going to love this tournament. The stadiums will be jam-packed. Indians love their cricket. It is going to be a great tournament.” — Rohit Sharma

  • 14:55 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Sharma On Warm-up Games Being Washed Out

    Rohit Sharma when asked about rain washing out the two warm-up games:

    “Not really. We were happy to get those days off. Looking at heat, and stuff like that. We have been playing a lot of cricket of late. We played 4 games in Asia Cup and 3 against Australia. We know where we are at. I would’ve loved to play those two games. But can’t do too much when the weather is like that apart form one part of India to the other part.

    “Overall, happy about how we are coming into the tournament and the guys are looking pretty good,” Rohit said.

  • 14:52 (IST)

    World Cup 2023, Captains’ Day LIVE: Babar Sees Bowling As Pakistan’s Biggest Strength

    Babar Azam on Pakistan’s biggest strength: “Our strength is bowling but as we know, we have been playing well together for the last three years, so bowling is our strength”.

  • 14:50 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Sharma Will Give ‘Everything’

    Rohit Sharma: “Not thinking too much about on that stuff but yeah in last 3 edition hosting teams won the World Cups and we will give our everything in this World Cup and enjoy the tournament”.

  • 14:48 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup, Captains’ Day LIVE: Cummins Confident Of Australia’s Chances

    “Australia have done very well in ODI World Cups over the years. Hoping to do the same this time around”: Pat Cummins, Australia skipper.

  • 14:43 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Babar Azam Felt Like Home In Hyderabad

    “We weren’t expecting the sort of reception we got at Hyderabad after we reached India. It didn’t feel like we were in India but back home”: Babar Azam

  • 14:40 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup, Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Not Thinking Of Home Factor

    Rohit Sharma not thinking about the ‘home advantage’ and the fact that the last three World Cups were won by the one of the hosts. He is only foucussed on doing his best. 

  • 14:36 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup, Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Sharma and Babar Azam Arrive

    The captains of the two arch-rival teams — India and Pakistan — have arrived. Ravi Shastri welcomes Rohit Sharma and Babar Azam before welcome England and New Zealand skippers who led their teams in the 2019 World Cup final.

  • 14:34 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup LIVE, Captains’ Day: We Are Underway!

    Ravi Shastri is on the stage, welcoming all 10 captains. First up are the captains of Netherlands and Afghanistan who are leading their respective teams in an ODI World Cup for the first time ever.

  • 14:26 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup 2023 LIVE, Captains’ Day: Rohit Sharma Sumarising His Personality

    “There is no point in doing showbaazi, it’s not in my nature. People around me, friends around me whom I have grown up with, have kept reminding me where I have come from. We just live normal lives. Why will I change and why should I change? I’m still not socially comfortable actually because I feel awkward. I am very poor at socialising. I get very uncomfortable at these events, struggling with small talk. I have a bunch of friends who are connected to me because I have connected with them, they have connected to me. Quality matters to me. People who are genuine, who are true, I connect somehow and feel quite comfortable in that atmosphere,” Rohit said in a chat with Indian Express.

  • 14:16 (IST)

    Cricket World Cup, Captains’ Day LIVE: How To Watch Live Streaming?

    Star Sports will broadcast the Captains’ Day live on their YouTube channel. The 10 captains will be speaking to former England captain Eoin Morgan and ex-India head coach Ravi Shastri at the event, answering some crucial questions.

  • 14:09 (IST)

    ICC World Cup 2023 LIVE: No Opening Ceremony?

    Reports of certain performances at the ICC Cricket World Cup opening ceremony did surface a few days ago but it doesn’t look like the organisers have any concrete opening ceremony plans at present. We are likely to head straight into the first match between England and New Zealand, the two finalists of the last edition.

  • 14:05 (IST)

    World Cup 2023, Capains’ Day LIVE: Candid Talk And More

    Captains Rohit Sharma, Babar Azam, Pat Cummins, Jos Buttler, etc. will have some candid talks during the chat. Expect everything but strategies to be discussed at the event, as was the case 4 years ago.

  • 13:56 (IST)

    Captains’ Day LIVE: Rohit Sharma Meets Babar Azam

    India captain Rohit Sharma had an opportunity to meet his Pakistani counterpart Babar Azam before the Captains’ Day began. Here’s the video that the PCB shared on the two stalwarts’ meeting:

  • 13:50 (IST)

    ICC World Cup 2023: Captains’ Await A Special Day

    Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the Captains’ Day, ahead of the start of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023. England are scheduled to take on New Zealand in the curtain-raiser fixture tomorrow. But, before the on-field contest, the 10 captains will discuss what awaits them over the next month and a half.

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The potential economic and trade fallout of strained Indo-Candian diplomatic relations | Explained

File photo:- Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, walks past Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as they take part in a wreath-laying ceremony at Raj Ghat, Mahatma Gandhi’s cremation site, during the G20 Summit in New Delhi, on September 10, 2023.
| Photo Credit: Sean Kilpatrick

The story so far: The current strain in diplomatic relations between Canada and India has raised concerns about the impact spiralling onto commercial and economic spheres of cooperation. Negotiations towards the Early Progress Trade Agreement (EPTA), which was to serve as an early transitional step towards the larger Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) now stand “paused.” This was widely expected to be sealed in a trade mission that was expected to arrive in India this October — now cancelled. Further concerns relate to the longer-term impact on the larger commercial and economic sphere should relations further deteriorate.

How significant is the trade relationship between the two countries?  

As per the Ministry of Commerce’s TradeStat database, in FY 2022-23, Canada was India’s 35th largest trading partner overall.

Further, as put forth in an earlier joint statement following the sixth Ministerial Dialogue on Trade & Investment (MDTI) in Ottawa in May, Canada-India bilateral trade in goods reached C$12 billion in 2022, growing 57% on a year-over-year basis; of this, the bilateral services trade contributed C8.9 billion to the overall figure.

According to Mohit Singla, Chairman at the Trade Promotion Council of India (TPCI) the trade between the countries is “pretty balanced.” He elaborates that Canada is ranked 14th in imports globally (with a share of 2.3%), but is 32nd in India’s export markets, with a share of 0.9%, currently exhibiting “low potential.” Having said that, he adds that the past two years have seen a sudden upsurge in exports from India at a CAGR of 32%. Other than mineral fuels, categories that have shown strong CAGR in this period include iron and steel, electrical machinery, rubber, nuclear reactors, apparel, pearls, and furniture and plastics, Mr. Singla says.

“This shows a strong surge in confidence by Canadian companies when it comes to sourcing from India across a wide range of categories. Clearly, the momentum has been building as compared to the pre-2020 period, when the overall export CAGR (2013-20) from India to Canada was just around 4%,” said Mr Singla.

From the Canadian perspective, India is a “priority market.” It was the North American country’s 10th largest trading partner. Global Canada (the international diplomacy and affairs department) has also said that “India will be a key partner as Canada strengthens its economic links to the Indo-Pacific under a new, comprehensive strategy for the region.”

How will this impact trade relations? 

India imported merchandise worth approximately U.S.$4.05 billion in FY 2022-23 from Canada and exported about U.S.$4.11 billion worth of goods — indicating a largely balanced trade. India’s primary export items include coal, coke and briquettes, fertilisers, iron and steel, and lentils. On the other hand, India’s major items of export are pharmaceutical products, iron and steel products, organic chemicals and marine products, along with apparel and textiles of varied forms and variants.

The CEPA, which now stands “paused,” was to further take care of “trade in goods, trade in services, rules of origin, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade and other areas of economic cooperation”.

Mr Singla notes that, from available data, “Equivalent ad valorem tariff for India is high on dairy products, cereals, meat, fish, cocoa, apparel, textiles etc., which would undoubtedly be areas of interest for exporters,” adding that “to that extent, the FTA negotiations would delay possible easing of trade barriers in these sectors.”

On the other hand, as Mr Singla observes, “most of India’s top exports face minimal tariff barriers, with the exception of cereals and apparels, so a delay may not have a substantiative impact on India’s exports to Canada.”  

What about the investment ecosystem? 

As per the National Investment Promotion and Facilitation Agency’s Invest India, Canada is the 18th largest foreign investor in India..

Several Canadian companies have established their presence in India; this is besides the country’s more important pension funds such as the Canadian Pension Fund (or CPP). As reported by news agency Reuters, CPP increased its investment in the Indian markets to about $15 billion in areas such as real estate, renewables and the financial sector at the end of the previous financial year.

Other big pension funds with sizeable exposure to India include Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) — which has investments of about C$8 billion and the Ontario Teacher’s Pension Plan (OTPP) with $3 billion — both until the end of last year. Observers in Canada believe that in the immediate term, their positions might not be at risk. They argue that the tensions could however cause operational inconveniences, as travel may be an issue.

What about education in Canada?  

As per official statistics, Canada has about 1.08 lakh students from India at present. This accounts for more than 37% of its overall international student pool. Canada- based publication The Global and Mailwrote that the international student tuition (fee) is “several times higher than for Canadian students,” adding that it “has become essential to the finances of many postsecondary schools.” Any strain in the relationship between the two countries would not bode well for them.

In an advisory on September 23, the Ministry of External Affairs in India urged Indian nationals and students in Canada to “exercise utmost caution.”

Jeff Nankivell, President and CEO at the think-tank Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada told BNN Bloomberg that the “single greatest economic relationship between the two countries is the inflow of students from India… and if that is diminished, it would have negative implications not just for educational institutions but also for Canadian communities that are hosts to Indian international students.”

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India expels Canadian diplomat amid fallout over alleged assassination

Hardeep Singh Nijjar, an advocate of Sikh independence from India, was gunned down on 18 June outside a Sikh cultural centre in the Canadian province of British Columbia.

India dismissed allegations that its government was linked to the killing of a Sikh activist in Canada as “absurd” on Tuesday, expelling a senior Canadian diplomat and accusing Canada of interfering in India’s internal affairs.

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It came a day after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau described what he called credible allegations that India was connected to the assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, an advocate of Sikh independence from India who was gunned down on 18 June outside a Sikh cultural centre in Surrey, British Columbia, and Canada expelled a top Indian diplomat.

“Any involvement of a foreign government in the killing of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil is an unacceptable violation of our sovereignty,” Trudeau told Parliament Monday. “In the strongest possible terms, I continue to urge the government of India to cooperate with Canada to get to the bottom of this matter.”

The duelling expulsions come as relations between Canada and India are tense. Trade talks have been derailed and Canada just cancelled a trade mission to India that was planned for the fall.

In its statement announcing the expulsion, India’s Ministry of External Affairs wrote that “the decision reflects Government of India’s growing concern at the interference of Canadian diplomats in our internal matters and their involvement in anti-India activities.”

Nijjar was organising an unofficial referendum in India for an independent Sikh nation at the time of his death. Indian authorities announced a cash reward last year for information leading to Nijjar’s arrest, accusing him of involvement in an alleged attack on a Hindu priest in India.

India has repeatedly accused Canada of supporting the Sikh independence, or Khalistan, movement, which is banned in India but has support in countries like Canada and the UK with sizable Sikh diaspora populations.

In March, the Modi government summoned the Canadian High Commissioner in New Delhi to complain about Sikh independence protests in Canada. In 2020, India’s foreign ministry also summoned the top diplomat over comments made by Trudeau about an agricultural protest movement associated with the state of Punjab, where many Sikhs live.

Canada has a Sikh population of more than 770,000, or about 2% of its total population.

Trudeau told Parliament that he brought up Nijjar’s slaying with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the G20 meeting in New Delhi last week. He said he told Modi that any Indian government involvement would be unacceptable and that he asked for cooperation in the investigation.

India’s foreign ministry dismissed the allegation as “absurd and motivated.”

“Such unsubstantiated allegations seek to shift the focus from Khalistani terrorists and extremists, who have been provided shelter in Canada and continue to threaten India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” it wrote in a statement issued earlier Tuesday.

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At the G20 meeting, Modi expressed “strong concerns” over Canada’s handling of the Punjabi independence movement among the overseas Sikhs during a meeting with Trudeau at the G20, the statement added.

The statement called on Canada to work with India on what New Delhi said is a threat to the Canadian Indian diaspora and described the Sikh movement as “promoting secessionism and inciting violence” against Indian diplomats. Earlier this year, supporters of the Khalistan movement vandalised Indian consulates in London and San Francisco.

Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly said Canada had expelled a top Indian diplomat, whom she identified as the head of Indian intelligence in Canada.

“If proven true this would be a great violation of our sovereignty and of the most basic rule of how countries deal with each other,” Joly said. “As a consequence, we have expelled a top Indian diplomat.”

Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said Canada’s national security adviser and the head of Canada’s spy service have travelled to India to meet their counterparts and to confront the Indian intelligence agencies with the allegations.

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He called it an active homicide investigation led by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Joly said Trudeau also raised the matter with US President Joe Biden and UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

“We are deeply concerned about the allegations referenced by Prime Minister Trudeau,” White House National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson. “We remain in regular contact with our Canadian partners. It is critical that Canada’s investigation proceed and the perpetrators be brought to justice.”

Joly also said she would raise the issue with her peers in the G7 on Monday evening in New York City ahead of the United Nations General Assembly.

Canadian opposition New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh, who is himself Sikh, called it outrageous and shocking. Singh said he grew up hearing stories that challenging India’s record on human rights might prevent you from getting a visa to travel there.

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“But to hear the prime minister of Canada corroborate a potential link between a murder of a Canadian citizen on Canadian soil by a foreign government is something I could never have imagined,” Singh said.

The World Sikh Organization of Canada called Nijjar an outspoken supporter of Khalistan who “often led peaceful protests against the violation of human rights actively taking place in India and in support of Khalistan.”

“Nijjar had publicly spoken of the threat to his life for months and said that he was targeted by Indian intelligence agencies,” the statement said.

Nijjar’s New York-based lawyer, Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, has said Nijjar was warned by Canadian intelligence officials about being targeted for assassination by “mercenaries” before he was gunned down.

India’s main opposition party issued a statement backing Modi’s position. The Congress Party wrote that “the country’s interests and concerns must be kept paramount at all times” and that the fight against terrorism has to be uncompromising, especially when it threatens the nation’s sovereignty.

Indian authorities have targeted Sikh separatism since the 1980s, when an armed insurgency for an independent Sikh state took off in Punjab state.

In 1984, Indian forces stormed the Golden Temple in the state’s Amritsar city to flush out Sikh separatists, who had taken refuge there. The controversial operation killed around 400, according to official figures, although Sikh groups estimate the toll to be higher.

The prime minister who ordered the raid, Indira Gandhi, was killed afterwards by two of her bodyguards, who were Sikh. Her death triggered a series of anti-Sikh riots, in which Hindu mobs went from house to house across northern India, pulling Sikhs from their homes, hacking many to death and burning others alive.

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India vs Bangladesh Highlights, Asia Cup 2023: Shubman Gill, Axar Patel Heroics In Vain As Bangladesh Beat India By 6 Runs | Cricket News

India vs Bangladesh, Asia Cup 2023 Highlights: India lost the game to Bangladesh by 6 runs.© AFP

India vs Bangladesh Highlights: Shubman Gill’s fine-tuned 121 and Axar Patel’s late surge of 42 went in vain as Bangladesh defeated India by 6 runs in the final Super 4 match of Asia Cup 2023 on Friday. Chasing 266-run target, India were bundled out for 259 in 49.5 overs. Mustafizur Rahman starred with three wickets for Bangladesh. Earlier, Shakib Al Hasan (80) and Tohwid Hridoy (54) slammed half-centuries as Bangladesh posted a total of 265 for 8 in 50 overs. For India, Shardul Thakur picked three wickets after captain Rohit won the toss and opted to bowl first. (Scorecard)

Here are the Highlights of India vs Bangladesh Asia Cup 2023 Super 4 match:

  • 23:16 (IST)

    Live Score: What a game!!!

    Bangladesh held their nerve really well tonight to snatch this victory from India. The Shakib Al Hasan-led side kept Rohit Sharma and Co. under the pump ever since the start of the chase and eventually managed to register this vital win to end their Asia Cup 2023 campaign on a high. On the other hand, India will be playing the final match of the tournament against Sri Lanka on Sunday.

  • 23:08 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: India lose!

    A run-out on the penultimate ball and India have lost the game by 6 runs. Mohammed Shami could not return for the double in time and India are all out for 259 runs. This is Bangladesh’s second win over India in the history of Asia Cup.

    IND 259 (49.5)

  • 23:04 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: FOUR!

    Tanzim Hasan Sakib bowled one more dot ball before Shami managed to connect one for a four. India need 8 off 2.

  • 23:02 (IST)

    Live Score: Dot balls!

    Tanzim Hasan Sakib starts with two dot balls. He first hit a bouncer on the helmet of Mohammed Shami before bowling a slower one to deceive Shami.

  • 22:58 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: Axar Patel is out!

    Axar Patel is out for the score of 42 and it’s Bangladesh’s game to lose from here. It was a slower ball from Mustafizur Rahman and Axar hit it into the hands of long-off fielder. from India are nine down needing 12 runs in 8 balls.

  • 22:56 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: A single!

    Shami is off the mark on the first ball only. He steered the ball to mid-off for a single. Axar Patel is back on strike.

  • 22:55 (IST)

    Live Score: OUT!

    A wicket at a crucial time for Bangladesh! Mustafizur Rahman has removed Shardul Thakur on the very first ball of the penultimate over. Mohammed Shami comes in next. India need 17 runs in 11 balls.

  • 22:50 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: FOUR! SIX – Axar on fire!

    A powerful shot down the ground from Axar Patel and the ball runs away for a four. He plays a much even better shot on the next ball and it goes for a six, just over the long-on. India need 17 runs in 12 balls. 

    IND 249/7 (48)

  • 22:46 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: Seven-run over!

    India need 31 runs in 18 balls after Mustafizur Rahman bowled a seven-run over. No boundary came in it and the required run rate for India now is 10.33. Mahedi will bowl the next over. Here we go…

  • 22:41 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live: India need 38 in 24!

    A six-run over from Mahedi Hasan and India need 38 runs in 24 balls. Axar Patel is looking in good touch but he is also struggling with injury. Can he take India home from here?

    IND 228/7 (46)

  • 22:39 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Axar gets injured!

    A throw has hit the hand of Axar Patel who was not alert enough and was looking at a different side. The physio is giving him some pain relieving spray and it seems we are good to go now.  

    IND 226/7 (45.4)

  • 22:35 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Big over!

    12 rusn came off the Nasum Ahmed’s final over. He ended with figures of 0 for 50 in his 10 overs. India now need 44 runs in 30 balls.

    IND 222/7 (45)

  • 22:29 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: SIX!

    A short ball from Nasum and Axar Patel has launced it over the fence for a six. This was much needed the Indian team. They need 49 runs in 34 balls.

  • 22:24 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Gill is OUT!

    Brilliant bowling from Mahedi Hasan! He has got the wicket of Shubman Gill. The Bangladesh spinner kept the ball away from Gill and this saw the Indian batter hitting it right into the hands of long-off fieler. Gill falls for 121. India need 57 runs in 38 balls.  

    IND 209/7 (43.4)

  • 22:21 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: SIX!

    In the slot from Mahedi and Gill and sent it for a big six. India need 57 runs in 39 balls. The game is on!

  • 22:21 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: India need 64 runs in 42 balls!

    A four-run over from Nasum Ahmed and Bangladesh are well in control now. India need 64 runs in 42 balls. This is getting tough for the chasing side now. Can Gill them them through?

    IND 202/6 (43)

  • 22:17 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: India need 68 runs in 48 balls!

    Brilliant bowling from Bangladesh! Only 10 runs in the past two overs and this sees the required run rate increasing to 8.5 now. On wicket here and Bangladesh will be right on top of this game.

    IND 198/6 (42)

  • 22:07 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: India need 78 runs in 60 balls!

    Only five runs came off Mustafizur Rahman’s sixth over. The third powerplay is up now. India need 78 runs off the last 10 overs. This match hangs in balance and Shubman Gill is the key.

    IND 188/6 (40)

  • 22:03 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Big over!

    12 runs came off Tanzim Hasan Sakib’s seventh over. India need 83 runs in 66 balls. The game is on!

    IND 183/6 (39)

  • 22:01 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: CENTURY for GILL!

    A couple of runs and there is the fifth ODI century for Shubman Gill. What a knock this has been from the youngster! It has come under great pressure. This surface in Colombo is not that easy for the batters but Gill has just stood aside. His innings has kept India alive in this chase of 266 vs Bangladesh.

  • 21:56 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: OUT!

    The pressure of dot balls gets better of Ravindra Jadeja. He tried to take on Mustafizur Rahman and paid the price. The ball was bowled at 135kmph and Jadeja missed it completely while trying to hit it powerfully over the mid-on. The ball rattled the stumps to put Bangladesh on top again.

    IND 170/6 (37.4)

  • 21:51 (IST)

    Live Cricket Score: India need 97 in 78!

    Six runs came off Nasum Ahmed’s eighth over. India need 97 more to win off the remaining 78 balls. The required run rate is 7.46. This match hangs in balance. Pace comes from one end now as Muastafizur Rahman is set to bowl the 38th over.

    IND 169/5 (37)

  • 21:47 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: SIX!

    It’s the second six of the over and India get a total of 14 runs in it. This is exactly the kind of momentum India needed in this chase. Mehidy Hasan Miraz tossed it up and Gill slammed it right over the long-on for a big six. India need 103 runs in 84 balls.

  • 21:44 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: SIX!

    Shubman Gill breaks the shackles and India get a six after a long-long time in this chase. Gill danced down the track on the bowling of Mehidy Hasan Miraz and hit the ball just over the long-on fielder for a six.

    IND 155/5 (35.3)

  • 21:43 (IST)

    India vs Bangladesh Live: India need 117 runs in 90!

    This match is a bit inclined towards Bangladesh as India are five down with only one set batter in Shubman Gill. One more wicket and Bangladesh will be through to the tail of Indian batting line-up. The required run rate for India from here is 7.8. 

    IND 149/5 (35)

  • 21:32 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: WICKET!

    Shakib Al Hasan has cleaned up Suryakumar Yadav. India are in deep deep trouble now as the required run rate has increased to 7.33. They need 127 runs more to win. Coming to the wicket, Suryakumar tried to play a sweep shot but missed the ball that made its way to the stumps. 

    IND 139/5 (32.4)

  • 21:27 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Close chance!

    Shubman Gill edged a Nasum Ahmed delivery but he was lucky that the cover fielder could not reach to the ball in time. The ball a bit away from the fielder, who was running behind.

    IND 136/4 (31.3)

  • 21:23 (IST)

    Live Score: FOUR!

    Another four from the bat of Suryakumar Yadav. This is really good improvement from the right-handed batter against Bangladesh spin bowling in this innings. This time he waited for the ball on the backfoot and then executed a superb cut shot past the backward point region for a four.

    IND 131/4 (30.2)

  • 21:18 (IST)

    Live Score: FOUR!

    After several mishits, Suryakumar Yadav finally gets a sweep shot from the middle of his bat. Mahedi Hasan bowled it fuller and SKY hit it to the backward sqaure leg for a four. 

    IND 122/4 (29.2)

  • 21:16 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Suryakumar struggling!

    Suryakumar Yadav has been exposed by Bangladesh spin bowling. He is finding it really hard to even rotate the strike. Meanwhile, the Bangladesh spinners have made sure that Suryakumar stays under the pump.

    IND 117/4 (29)

  • 21:03 (IST)

    Live Score: Bangladesh lose a review!

    On the fifth ball of the over, Suryakumar Yadav tried to play a Shakeeb Al Hasan delivery down the leg side but missed it. He got hit on the pad and Bangladesh appealed for an LBW. Umpire gave it not out but Bangladesh reviewed only to lose their second and remaining review.

    IND 106/4 (25)

  • 20:56 (IST)

    Live Score: SIX! What a shot!

    That’s magnificent from Shubman Gill! He danced down the track and hit the ball over the long-off for a six with utmost ease. It seemed like an effortless shot from Gill but the ball comfortably travelled the distance. That’s some great class for you!

    IND 104/4 (24.1)

  • 20:54 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: OUT!

    Mehidy Hasan Miraz has got the wicket of Ishan Kishan and India are in trouble once again! They need 172 runs more to win. Mehidy Hasan Miraz caught Kishan plumb in front of the stumps after the batter missed his reverse sweep. Meanwhile, Kishan also wasted one review. 

  • 20:42 (IST)

    India vs Bangladesh Live: Fifty for Gill!

    SIX! Shubman Gill gets to his half-century with a six. He scores his fifty in 61 balls and that is the 9th ODI half-century for him. It is worth noting that the right-handed batter averages over 60 in this format.

    IND 89/3 (20)

  • 20:29 (IST)

    Live Score: WICKET!

    KL Rahul is out! Mahedi Hasan has provided Bangladesh a crucial breakthrough. The 57-run partnership between Rahul and Gill for the third wicket is finally broken. Coming to the wicket, Rahul danced down the track and mishit the ball into the hands of Shamim at short mid-wicket.

    IND 74/3 (17.1)

  • 20:13 (IST)

    India vs Bangladesh Live: FOUR!

    Stand-and-deliver stuff from Shubman Gill! He got onto the backfoot and punched the ball on the off side for a four. When Gill gets going, there is no stopping. He is looking in great touch today.

    IND 64/2 (13)

  • 20:07 (IST)

    Live Score: FOUR!

    Shakib Al Hasan overpitched the ball around off and Gill brought his classical wrists into play. He drove the ball through the cover for a four. There was one fielder at deep point but he could not reach to the ball in time.

    IND 54/2 (11.4)

  • 20:05 (IST)

    Live Score: Catching opportunity!

    Shubman Gill hit a back of a length ball from Tanzim Hasan Sakib from the backfoot and nearly found the diving point fielder. The ball missed the fielder by a whisker to see Gill survive the close scare. 

    IND 46/2 (11)

  • 20:00 (IST)

    India vs Bangladesh Live: End of 1st powerplay!

    The first powerplay is over! Tanzim Hasan Sakib struck with two early wickets to put India in trouble but KL Rahul and Shubman Gill have done a decent job so far to add 25 runs off 44 balls for the third wicket.

    IND 42/2 (10)

  • 19:52 (IST)

    IND vs BAN Live Score: Two FOURS in the over!

    This is superb batting from the duo of Shubman Gill and KL Rahul. First Gill hit a shot from the backfoot for a four on the third ball of Nasum Ahmed. He then rotated the strike and Rahul then hit a classy boundary. 11 runs came off the over.

    IND 38/2 (8)

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G20’s inability to tackle territorial disputes will lead to its demise

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent in any way the editorial position of Euronews.

The G20 has no choice. If it wants to stay relevant and play a vital role in providing the solutions humanity needs for our very survival, then it must reconsider its geopolitical squeamishness, Saman Rizwan writes.

On the surface level, this year’s G20 appeared to be a success. But beneath the PR spins and the friendly handshakes, the G20 is more fractious than ever. 

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And its inability to address agenda-wrecking disputes will ultimately lead to the bloc’s irrelevance and demise.

After all, the world is facing a slew of competing emergencies: the escalating climate crisis, various humanitarian disasters, the seemingly endless Ukraine-Russia war, and the continued economic fallout from COVID-19 – all which require the diplomatic clout of the G20 to mitigate.

But unfortunately, this year’s G20 in India’s capital looked more insipid than ever before, drastically lacking a transformative edge and even leaving the bloc on the edge of a diplomatic cold war.

And it’s not only because Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has created a clear fault line throughout the bloc, or because commitments on transformative climate action were found wanting, with no mention of the critical net-zero goal of phasing out oil and gas.

It is because the G20 is failing to address the cataclysmic geopolitical divides, specifically the mounting territorial disputes, that are ripping apart the fabric of international collaboration.

If G20 can’t resolve geopolitical issues, who can?

Already in the run-up to this year’s summit, China threatened to derail President Narendra Modi’s big international moment by releasing its 2023 standard map which showed parts of Russia and India, as well as the entirety of the South China Sea, as Chinese territory.

China’s expansionist tendencies are nothing new but targeting nuclear-armed India on the eve of its big G20 moment, which resulted in the glaring absence of Chinese Premier Xi Jinping, should be a red flag for the international community.

See, Modi may have claimed that “the G20 is not the place to resolve geopolitical issues.” But G20 members account for over 70% of global GDP, half of the world’s population, and comprise the top five biggest CO2 emitters. 

If this group of countries, that come together every year, can’t resolve geopolitical issues and territorial disputes, then who can?

This is no more apparent than in the South China Sea where China’s hostile aggression is threatening regional stability and economic security.

China’s role in rising tensions

The region is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes home to billions of euros’ worth of oil and natural gas. 

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But for decades China has been going to increasing lengths to protect its farcical “nine-dash-line claim” to the entirety of the South China Sea – which it still touts even though it was rejected by an arbitration court in 2016.

Over the years, China’s military presence and belligerence in the region have skyrocketed. 

In recent months, the country has been accused of building military bases on disputed islands and even harassing fishing and coast guard vessels of neighbouring countries. And the rising tensions could easily turn deadly. 

For example, in 1974 and 1988, China and Vietnam engaged in deadly clashes over disputed territory in the South China Sea.

It’s perhaps no coincidence that US President Joe Biden travelled to Vietnam after the G20 summit to announce the signing of the “Comprehensive Strategic Partnership” – a historic deal that boosts relations between the two former bitter enemies. 

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After all, without the support of ASEAN nations, it will be impossible to curtail China’s staunch hold on the region.

The increasingly strange case of the Sultanate of Sulu

But Biden’s move is only the tip of the iceberg, and other G20 members must forge new partnerships to help ASEAN not only emerge from China’s economic shadow but come together in solidarity against China’s divisive strategies. 

This means that world leaders must play a more prominent role in mediating longstanding disputes which are hindering unity in the South China Sea.

For example, relations between Malaysia and The Philippines have been strained following the result of a controversial arbitration case involving the defunct Sultanate of Sulu. 

The Sulu heirs were awarded $15 billion (€14bn) after Malaysia allegedly stopped paying a colonial-era land lease fee to the Sulu after militants tied to the Sultanate clashed with Malaysian security forces in Sabah in 2013.

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The award was eventually annulled – and even the Spanish attorney involved faces criminal charges back home – but the case highlights how territorial disputes, left unresolved for decades, are undermining vital partnerships during times of increased regional tension.

G20 has to stop hesitating if it wants to survive

The G20 has no choice. If it wants to stay relevant and play a vital role in providing the solutions humanity needs for our very survival, then it must reconsider its geopolitical squeamishness and offer a counterweight to China’s imperialist agenda.

This means diplomatic partnerships shouldn’t happen in back rooms after the G20 but on stage in front of the world. 

It also means that G20 countries should translate their words into action by solidifying long-anticipated economic trade agreements and military alliances that have remained uncertain for years.

After all, between the G20 members, there is a wealth of experience to draw upon that would provide a strong platform for constructive diplomacy. 

Just consider Biden’s new trilateral agreement with Japan and South Korea, or how the US mediated talks between bitter neighbours Israel and Lebanon to hash out a lucrative maritime agreement that navigated complex claims to undersea gas fields.

Ultimately, if G20 members can’t find ways to mitigate mounting territorial disputes then not only will they fail to tackle the globe’s biggest challenges, but their hesitancy will also eventually lead to its, and perhaps our world’s, demise.

Saman Rizwan is a UK-based analyst on South Asian affairs. As a journalist and commentator, she frequently writes for publications including South China Morning Post, The Diplomat, The Nation, Forbes, and Newsweek.

At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at [email protected] to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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