Showing posts sorted by relevance for query modi. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query modi. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, June 08, 2013

BJP Refuses To Spell Out Modi's Role In 2014 Polls

By Kajol Singh / New Delhi

Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi seems to have split the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) down the middle over his proposed role in the 2014 elections with his angry supporters coming out on the streets and protesting outside party stalwart LK Advani's house even as the main opposition's chief Rajnath Singh offered a compromise formula to bridge the divide by suggesting Modi's name as the Lok Sabha elections' poll campaign convenor.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

How Advani Is Hastening His Own Fall By Seeking Bhopal?

By Kajol Singh | INNLIVE

For the last one year, ever since the BJP began inexorable moves to make Narendra Modi its mascot for 2014, we have seen only one side to Lal Krishna Advani: the Big Sulk. The man widely credited with the rise of the BJP in the late 1980s and 1990s has been unable to put personal pique aside in the larger interests of the party. 

He has repeatedly tried to queer the pitch for Modi’s rise instead of being his prime support and cheer-leader. While at a personal level one can understand Advani’s disappointment that he will always remain the BJP’s best man and never its groom, surely, at 86 years of age, he cannot seriously harbour any great visions of what the future holds for him. 

Sunday, December 08, 2013

With Vasundhara Victory, Is Lalit Modi Back In The Game?

By Jagmaal Rana | Jaipur

RAJASTHAN ELECTIONS  "I paid the price of being close to Vasundhara Raje." - Lalit Modi on March 1, 2009 after he lost in the Rajasthan Cricket Association election. Lalit Modi’s rise in the Board of Control for Cricket in India is the stuff of legend. 

His fall is the stuff of legend too. In both cases, the swiftness with which he rose and fell was extraordinary. He first came to power in the RCA in 2005 – overthrowing the powerful Rungta regime which had ruled Rajasthan cricket for 30 years. But soon after Raje lost Rajasthan in 2009, 

Friday, June 14, 2013

View Point: Has Modi Polarised The Media?

By Rajdeep Serdesai (Guest Writer)

If elections were to be held in the social media, Narendra Modi would almost certainly be ‘crowned’ prime minister. Modi has more than 17 lakh followers on Twitter, more than any other politician of national significance (Shashi Tharoor has marginally more, but he is nowhere close to being a national leader yet). The vast tribe of Internet Hindus and a well-oiled PR machine have ensured Modi’s status on any web platforms is unchallenged.

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Vote Bank Politics: Why Modi Is Silent On The Attacks On Dalits In Gujarat?


By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE


No leader angers his core supporters to keep floating voters happy.


Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s silence on the atrocities committed on Dalits in Una, Gujarat, illustrates vividly that he is still caught between a rock and a hard place. As long as he remains rooted there, it will always be his dilemma whether to speak or remain silent on issues of social conflict.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Focus: Do Shrinking Crowds Point To Modi Fatigue In MP?

By Sufia Rafat | Bhopal

The novelty has worn off Narendra Modi’s shows in Madhya Pradesh, but he continues to stay afloat on media hype and pungent anti-Congress rhetoric. There are signs that the returns from sorties to the state are diminishing for the BJP’s top crowd-puller. 

Modi, who drew a crowd of several lakh people in an unprecedented show of the party at the Jamboree ground just six weeks ago, was forced to address a much smaller crowd at a much smaller ground on Monday.

Monday, May 11, 2015

Focus: How 'Modi Sarkar' Let Down India In Just One Year?

Politics is more about perception than performance. As Narendra Modi completes his first year in office this month, the scrutiny of his performance by both critics and admirers has breached the thermal limit. Since he conquered the harried heart of the scam-stung voter, expectations were frighteningly vertiginous. 

Friday, March 07, 2014

The 'Striking Similarities' Of 'NaMo And Indira's' Politics

By Rajdeep Sardesai (Star Guest Writer)

OPINION Narendra Modi today claims to derive inspiration from Sardar Patel and Swami Vivekananda even if his original icon was the long-serving RSS chief, Guru Golwalkar. Patel and Vivekananda are natural choices for the BJP's prime ministerial candidate: with Patel, there is the instant strongman from Gujarat connect while Vivekananda gives him the image of an "inclusive" Hindu nationalist. The truth is, Modi's real role model in the 2014 election is someone very different: the former prime minister, Indira Gandhi.

Thursday, January 01, 2015

Modi Dominated 2014, But Can He Conquer 2015 As Well?

There is little doubt that one man dominated 2014 in India: Narendra Modi. But can he dominate 2015 as well? On recent form, we can’t be sure.

Let us first list his achievements so far. After a spectacular victory in May 2014, the Prime minister has been winning election after election for his party – the most recent one being Jharkhand - and has also restored the primacy of the PMO in policy matters. 

Monday, March 03, 2014

Why Modi Should Not Throw 'Kejriwal Lollipop' In Varanasi?

By Likha Veer | INNLIVE

Newspapers today were salivating over the prospect of a Narendra Modi versus Arvind Kejriwal battle in Varanasi. It ain't gonna happen. A battle of wits between a tantrum-throwing kid and its parents will always attract attention in the mall, but the issue can be settled only at home once the parents have survived the embarrassment at the mall. 

While the media would gain TRPs and readership from this engrossing electoral battle, the idea makes no sense from Modi's point of view, even though Modi strategists have been debating the value of getting their man to fight from Uttar Pradesh to raise the profile of the BJP's efforts in this crucial state.

Monday, December 29, 2014

Why 2015 Will Be A Do-Or-Die For Narendra Modi?

There is little doubt that one man dominated 2014 in India: Narendra Modi. But can he dominate 2015 as well? On recent form, we can’t be sure.

Let us first list his achievements so far. After a spectacular victory in May 2014, the Prime minister has been winning election after election for his party – the most recent one being Jharkhand - and has also restored the primacy of the PMO in policy matters. 

Friday, November 28, 2014

Ab Acche Din Gaye: Spoilsport Modi Cracks Down On Lutyen's Power Party

It's winter and it's time for Lutyen’s Delhi to burst into a rash of parties on the lush, sprawling, sun-lit lawns of ministers and leaders. Here the power elite rub shoulders with friends, supporters and journalists over a delectable and scrumptious spread.

For some it was a way to connect with those who matter. For others it was a way of letting their hair and guard down. But the focus remained on the food -- which became a political weapon to win friends and influence people. Recall the spurt of get-togethers in the 1990s and first decade of the new century during Roza Iftar, Eid, Teej, Diwali or Holi as new socio-political forces emerged on the political horizon and sought to establish their hold on their vote banks.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Health In The Hills - Dr. Modi's Health Resort

The week I spent at Dr Modi’s was one of the best in my mis-spent last decade. It was so satvik, like Yudhishthira I was walking two inches off the ground when I left.

But the satvik-ness apart, there is much else to keep one’s feet off the ground at Dr Modi’s. The resort covers some 55 acres (22 hectares) of which 27 are developed, and is pleasantly tree-laden and landscaped. Karjat in the last couple of years has received 250 inches of rain between late June and late September and there is commensurate greenery in the area. The low hills of the Western Ghats stand around, and altogether it is very pleasant.

The feel and facilities of Dr Modi’s Health Resort are at par with a 4-star hotel. The service is good and the people who work there well trained, despite not being from catering or hotel institutes. This owes perhaps less to Dr Modi — who focuses on his patients — and more to his charming wife Usha, who has managed his affairs for 30 years.

There is precious little to do at the resort except to commune with yourself and concentrate on your health, and that is as it should be. I only switched on the TV once, soon after I arrived, to see what channels were available. Otherwise there is the walking track, a nicely designed oval of 320m surrounded by green; there is a 25m-long swimming pool with a walking jacuzzi; there is table tennis; and there is a fine long road to walk up and down. The road is lined with the cottages for guests. At its end is the Health Club with Dr Modi’s consulting room and the rooms for all the treatments.

It is worth taking the Health package for a week, just to detoxify the system. We Indians eat a lot of oily food, but the feeling of well-being produced by the diet here will make you want to change your lifestyle. Diet, in fact, is a very important component of overall health to the Modis. They are almost finicky about it. Mrs Modi asks, “What can be eaten raw or sautéed, why cook it?” Dr Modi sets out the body’s timetable: “Absorption is from 8 pm-6 am; only water should be taken then. The time for elimination is 6 am-12 noon; during that period, eat only fruit, raw vegetables and sprouts. Assimilation takes place between noon and 8 pm, lunch and dinner come in that time. But no milk products at all, or fried things, or sugar.”

Dr Modi recommended that I eat only fruit for three days. I could have done it, but knew I would be unhappy, so we compromised on one day. Since breakfast on the Health package is always only fruit, that meant I went 40 hours without eating anything else. But it put the roses in my cheeks. I also lost 2 kg in five days.

The special treatments are also well worth it. Of course they are old hat to many city dwellers now, when apartment buildings have gymnasia and saunas and jacuzzis. It is different, however, when someone is taking care of you. (I even enjoy a visit to the dentist, simply because it’s so rare in our crowded lives that a comparative stranger evinces such concern for your health.) So to be oiled and pummelled and massaged into shape by the masseurs at the resort gave me a feeling of supreme contentment.

As it happened, I was suffering from some back pain when I visited the resort, and had a perfectly legitimate reason for consulting Dr Modi. I’ve also had a bad knee of old. Dr Modi made an examination, just as any physician would, and recorded my case history. Then he asked me to lie on a high couch and set to work.

Osteopathy is all about manipulation, not massage, and some of Dr Modi’s holds resembled scenes from the akhara. He seized my leg, thrust his arm behind the knee and threw his weight on it; he worked the joints around; he pressed my spine into place. Though short statured he is quite powerful, and long years of this work have trained him to use his weight. Some of the manipulations approached the threshold of pain but, after half an hour of therapy, when I stood up I felt curiously lighter. (See ‘Osteopaths and their manipulative ways’ on facing page).

Some of the patients I saw visiting Dr Modi were unable to even lie down with ease, and many were unable to walk. Clearly his osteopathic self is consulted by serious ‘patients’. There is usually a two-week gap given between osteopathy treatments.

The Health Club has a women’s and a men’s section with separate attendants, all trained personally by Dr Modi. Tell them of any specific aches you suffer from and take some old clothes along, especially underwear, since massage oil has a way of sticking to you.

The oil massage, lasting most of an hour, is done in the North Indian Naturopathic style (not the Kerala Ayurvedic, now so popular) with copious amounts of oil. The mud bath is not really a bath: it involves sitting in a chair on a sunny terrace while clay is liberally plastered all over you. You stay there till it dries — good for the skin. The full body wrap means you are wrapped in soaking wet sheets and stay immobile — the only treatment I found actively uncomfortable. The jacuzzi here is a sit-down bath for two, while powerful jets of water assail your body. (There is a 'walking jacuzzi' at the swimming pool.) The steam bath is a box in which you sit with only your head outside and have the sicknesses sweated out of you. Very enjoyable, as is the sauna, a small room with fresh-smelling wooden benches on which you sit while you are literally steamed. The temperature goes up to 80o C here.
The health package is flexible. Dr Modi prescribes, but if you feel any particular treatment — such as those for weight loss — is doing you good, you can probably ask for a repeat.

Strangely, there were relatively few guests at the resort on the Health package. Dr Modi’s regular patients for his osteopathic treatment come every weekend, mostly from Mumbai but sometimes from farther afield. But there is always at least one conference going on. These could be workshops, or marketing conventions, or simply company pleasure trips. Everybody lets their hair down and relaxes. But Dr Modi’s Health package definitely deserves a try: staying for a week or so on this package is itself a rare chance to rid oneself of stress and to detoxify the system in idyllic surroundings.

ABOUT DR MODI’S
Dr Modi’s Health Resort was opened in April 1998, but Dr Modi himself continued to practise in Mumbai and visit the resort weekly. In 2003, however, he and his wife shifted here for good. They manage the place themselves. Since the resort as it exists is only four years old, it cannot be said to have taken final shape. The Modis have plans to develop it and offer more therapies, including Yoga.

The chief attraction of the resort is undoubtedly not the resort itself: It is Dr Modi’s reputation as India’s first osteopath, and his record of treating some 50,000 patients over 35 years without using invasive techniques.

The ailments he has successfully combated include slipped disc, sciatica, cervical spondylosis, tennis elbow, migraine, arthritis, knee pain and dysmenorrhoea. He is also consulted about high blood pressure, weight loss programmes, diabetes, chronic stomach problems, and de-stressing and rejuvenation programmes. Some 30 patients, mostly from Mumbai, visit him from Friday to Sunday, and another half-dozen during the week. His dream is to found a college of osteopathy, which would be India’s first.

TREATMENTS AND TARIFFS
Osteopathy, Rs 2,000 per session with Dr Modi personally.
Health Club treatments (included in the Health package): Full body massage Rs 400; Mud bath Rs 400; Full body wrap Rs 250; Aroma facial Rs 350; Jacuzzi Rs 250; Sauna bath Rs 250; Steam bath Rs 250; Head massage Rs 200. The main massages are for 45 mins, facial for 30 mins, and the baths for 15 mins.

THE THERAPISTS
Dr Krishna Murari Modi claims to be the first osteopath to practise in India, and he is certainly one of the very few. His father, Dr Vithal Das Modi, was interested in Naturopathy and travelled all over India collecting and studying therapies. In 1947 he set up Arogya Mandir, now a 100-bedded Naturopathy hospital, in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, and also founded a health magazine, Arogya, which is still being published.

Dr Modi took his MBBS from GSVM Medical College, Kanpur, in 1964. Until 1966 he was at the Central Institute of Orthopaedics, Safdarjung Hospital, New Delhi. Dissatisfied with what he considered an incomplete science, in 1966 he went to the UK and joined the London College of Osteopathy, of which he is a Member. From 1969, he worked at Arogya Mandir for seven years.

In 1976, he and his wife moved to Mumbai where he quickly attracted a large and varied clientele. He practised in Mumbai from 1976 to 2003, and had a number of illustrious patients, including painter MF Hussain and illustrator Mario Miranda who helped him with his book on health farms.

Dr Modi takes a keen interest in sports. A story he proudly recounts is about how he cured Test cricketer Dilip Vengsarkar, now Chairman of Selectors, of a back ailment, and helped his career to flourish without surgery.
Dr Modi has published two books: Health Farming (Health Farm Publications, 1989; now out of print but to be re-issued) and Cure Aches and Pains through Osteopathy (Orient Paperbacks, 1997; Rs 95).

The masseurs and other attendants at the resort have been personally trained by Dr Modi.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Narendra Modi Suit Fetches Rs 1.1 Crore For Ganga Shuddhi: Will Charity Wash Away The Vanity?

The Ganga, it is said, wipes away all sins. Certainly Narendra Modi must be hoping so as his bandhgala goes up for auction to raise funds for a cleaner Ganga. Mr Modi has had fashion faux pas before. 

Not everyone can carry off that hornbill hat from Arunachal Pradesh with an airy sangfroid. Or that traditional outfit from Leh which made him look like a portly Indian businessman in a golden dressing gown with a grand vizier hat. But those were fashion faux pas.

Monday, March 17, 2014

In Focus: How Congress, Samajwadi Party Could Affect Narendra Modi Vs Arvind Kejriwal Battle In Varanasi?

By M H Ahssan | INNLIVE

MY INDIA - MY VOTE Aam Aadmi Party’s Arvind Kejriwal now has the right opportunity to dominate the media space which he has been accusing Narendra Modi of buying out. The opportunity has been provided by Modi himself after he was declared the Bharatiya Janata Party's candidate for Varanasi in the upcoming election. 

On Sunday, Kejriwal confirmed while speaking at a rally in Bangalore’s Freedom Park that he would contest against Modi in Varanasi. “The party has asked me to fight against Modi. I’m not here to win or lose. I will go to Varansi on 23 March and hold a rally. If people ask me to fight, I’ll fight,” he said. 

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Exclusive: Meet 'Single' Narendra Modi's Wife 'Jashodaben'

By Likha Veer | INNLIVE

The world knows BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi as a 'Bachelor'; however, 62-year-old Jashodaben claims to be the wife of the Gujarat Chief Minister.

 BJP’s prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi has finally come out clean on his marital status declaring himself as a married man. 

In an affidavit submitted along with his nomination papers filed on Wednesday for the Vadodara Lok Sabha seat, Modi stated for the first time that he is married and that his wife’s name is Jashodaben.

ALSO READ: “I Am Narendra Modi's Wife - Jashodaben Chimanlal Modi"

Sunday, March 23, 2014

In Focus: The Moral Hysteria Of The Modi-Hitler Analogy

By Sandip Roy | INNLIVE

Every country is confronted with certain choices when it goes to the polls. But India it seems is poised on the brink of something far more cataclysmic. Narendra Modi is not just a politician. 

He is now a “moral line of no return”. “It seems that, in the race towards higher GDP, the majority of India is willing to inject itself with the steroids of bigotry and ruthlessness. Ethics be damned,” writes Thane Richard in an opinion piece for Quartz.com called “India crosses the moral line of no return if Narendra Modi becomes prime minister.” 

Tuesday, June 07, 2016

Is The Highly Photogenic Obama - Modi Friendship Real?

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

It's a friendship between two powerful men that transcends politics, transcends diplomacy.

It certainly looked like genuine affection when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pulled President Barack Obama into a bear hug as he stepped off Air Force One last year. An intimacy seemed to envelope the two as they sat in the garden of an old royal palace, smiling and chatting.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Despite Modi, Why BJP Promoting Nitin Gadkari Status?

By M H Ahssan / INN Bureau

With Narendra Modi pulling an Obama on 95,000 people in Hyderabad and a few thousand others across India, one would imagine that the BJP will slouch back, heave a sigh of relief and watch with amusement as the party rides the Modi wave to success. The casualties in the party itself will possibly be a fair price to pay in the view of a resounding electoral success. The BJP has doggedly been following that route, systematically shoving anyone who comes in Modi’s way out of it.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Similarities Between Naidu And Modi

Once Chandrababu Naidu discovered the mouse in 1995, he would hold forth on how far it would take the world. Give him a mike and he would speak only about how technology transformed life. He blushed self-consciously when corporate honchos called him the CEO of Andhra Pradesh Inc. who he wooed with cheap land around Hyderabad and ‘Hyderabadi hospitality, Hyderabadi biryani and yes, Hyderabadi pearls for your wife’. He often spoke of how Hyderabad will be the bridge between Europe and China, how the only ‘ism’ of relevance in the 21st century was ‘tourism’ and took credit for the telecom revolution, claiming that he had told the then prime minister A B Vajpayee to open up the sector. There was a mini-clamour among the progressive sections in the pre-Twitter era about how he would make a great Prime Minister.

Listening last night to Narendra Modi, my Twitter timeline’s prime minister-in-waiting, there was therefore a sense of deja vu. Like Naidu, Modi was obsessed with the ‘I’ and the NaMo mantra was a 2013 upgraded version of Babuspeak. He also claimed that he secretly advised the PM who, he mockingly revealed, was a enthusiastic listener but a poor doer. His tone throughout was ‘If only India followed what I have done in Gujarat but alas …’ The pregnant pauses were cues for the audience to clap at the India Today conclave.

I have absolutely no quarrel with Modi’s ‘Gujarat Shining’ slogan. After all a chief minister is also like the chief marketing manager and full credit to Modi (and Naidu before him) for having raised the profile of his patch with his aggressive pitch. With a heavy-on-statistics, 12-minute film screened at the gathering, he aimed to stump everyone in the numbers game but as his party colleague, Navyot Singh Sidhu told us many matches ago, ‘Statistics are like miniskirts, what they reveal is tantalizing, but what they hide is crucial’.

To Modi’s credit, he has picked up several of Naidu’s success stories (like the women self-help groups, the use of IT to introduce transparency in government functioning) but more importantly, learnt from Naidu’s mistakes. The Andhra Pradesh chief minister behaved like the Mayor of Hyderabad and paid the price for his urban-centric approach. Modi claims he has focussed on agriculture and irrigation and now his mind is working on developing 50 towns all over Gujarat.

The question then is whether India will buy into the Gujarat story. Last night, one hour into hearing Modi’s spiel, my nine-and-a-half-year-old daughter said, ‘Appa, doesn’t he talk of change just like Obama. Why not we move to Ahmedabad?’ Amused at this neo-convert, I knew who she would have voted for if she was already 18.

That is proving to be Modi’s biggest strength. He is a fantastic communicator and his anecdotal style of speaking (as opposed to Naidu’s oratory) connects. He is like a dream merchant who is asking the non-Gujaratis of India to dream of Utopia, which he claims is already existing in ‘mere Gujarat mein’.

In February, when Modi was addressing the gathering of students at the Shri Ram College of Commerce in Delhi, I was with a couple of acquaintances at a friend’s place. At one point, I exclaimed, ‘the students are cheering for every word he says’ to invite this terse remark from one of the gentlemen present. ‘Don’t they see the blood on his hands?’

Indeed, for all of Modi’s stress on governance, the ‘blood on his hands’ makes many in India see red. Point this out and the Modi fan club goes ballistic. Why I wonder. If a person aspires to lead India, the country has a right to ask questions and seek answers.

At the same time, I find this obsession to extract a ‘sorry’ from Modi meaningless. What purpose would it serve now? If Modi had indeed expressed regret in 2002 or even before the 2004 elections, it would have still made sense. `Sorry’ as a balm has passed its expiry date and wouldn’t heal any wounds. The thing to do is to pursue the judicial process to its logical end and if indeed Modi is found guilty, punish him as per law.

The Congress has no leg to stand on to question Modi on 2002, given its own track record vis-a-vis communal riots. Jagdish Tytler, one of those accused in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots is still a senior Congress functionary in charge of Odisha and the only reason why the likes of Sajjan Kumar are persona non grata in the Congress is because they have become electorally irrelevant and not because of the 1984 taint.

Modi presents India with a difficult choice. Do we continue with the Mai-baap culture’s condescending tone or give this man a chance? Despite his divisive image and the past history and DNA of the party he belongs to, Modi does not project himself as a macho Hindu. Instead, in a very American manner, he harps continuously on inculcating the pride of being an Indian. For the average middle class Indian, obsessed with putting heroes on a pedestal, this is Modi’s sex appeal.