REPORT ON PAGE 12
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Former Singapore national football coach Jita Singh (below) and
SEA Games review committee propose gameplan for players’ growth
Jita backs Young Lions
to roar again
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SINGAPORE, WEEKEND OF FRIDAY,
JULY 14, 2
0
2
3
HIGH TOMATO
PRICES SPARK THEFT
AND TURMOIL
PAGE 3
NEVER A BAD
HAIR DAY FOR
SHAH RUKH
PAGE 8
MCI (P) 079/10/2022
A MILLIONAIRE BY
BEGGING ON
MUMBAI STREETS
PAGE 4
Manipur’s torch-bearing women activists
More defence deals on cards as
Modi visits France
Prime Minister Narendra Modi headed
to France on Thursday to deepen ties
with New Delhi’s oldest strategic
partner in the West.
A slew of high-profile defence deals
and a new joint plan to ensure stability
in the Indo-Pacific can be expected
during the visit.
Mr Modi has been invited as the
guest-of-honour at the Bastille Day
celebrations by French President
Emmanuel Macron. Units from India’s
army, navy and air force will also
participate in the parade.
The visit will “provide an
opportunity to chart the course of the
partnership for the future across
diverse sectors such as strategic,
cultural, scientific, academic and
economic cooperation”, the Indian
government said on Wednesday.
Delhi evacuates hundreds over
risk of flooding after record rainfall
New Delhi on Wednesday began
evacuating hundreds of residents over
the risk of flooding as record rainfall
has swelled water levels in a river that
runs through the city.
The Yamuna has already risen above
the “danger mark”and submerged a
few adjoining areas in the capital of 20
million people, according to Chief
Minister Arvind Kejriwal.
He said the water levels had surged
to a 45-year high.
On Wednesday, people living in
huts next to the river put their
belongings on bikes and tractors and
moved to some of the 2,500 relief
camps that had been set up in the city.
Supreme Court looking at legality
of Kashmir direct rule
The Supreme Court on Tuesday began
deliberating a challenge to the 2019
imposition of direct rule in Kashmir –
a snap decision accompanied by mass
arrests and a months-long Internet
blackout.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
government suspended a section of the
constitution that guarantees limited
autonomy to the disputed region,
home to a long-running insurgency
against Indian rule.
The Supreme Court will weigh
whether the move was legal despite
lacking the endorsement from
parliament usually required for
constitutional change.
Death toll in West Bengal poll
violence rises to 15
At least 15 people were killed and
many others injured last weekend
during the rural body elections in West
Bengal, officials said.
Ten of those killed were said to be
workers and supporters of the ruling
Trinamool Congress party.
Large-scale violence marred the
voting at multiple political hot spots.
Gujarat in talks with Foxconn for
semiconductor plant
The Gujarat government is holding
talks with Foxconn over a
semiconductor plant, days after the
Taiwanese giant broke off a US$19.5
billion ($26 billion) joint-venture plan
with India’s Vedanta.
“We are in touch with multiple
prospective investors, including
Foxconn... Gujarat is uniquely
positioned to attract top chipmakers,”
said the state’s secretary for science
and technology Vijay Nehra.
Foxconn this week exited its project
with Vedanta citing issues such as slow
progress.
Drugs regulators took action
against 105 pharma companies
Drugs regulators have taken action
against 105 pharmaceutical companies
after a risk-based inspection and audit
of manufacturing plants, India’s health
minister said on Tuesday.
The action by national and state
regulators comes after Indian-made
cough syrups were linked to the deaths
of dozens of children overseas.
The minister said production has
been stopped at 31 companies while
product licence cancellations or
suspensions have been issued against a
further 50 companies.
Government orders inspection of
Byju’s account books
The Central government has ordered
an inspection into the account books
of education-technology titan Byju’s,
which has been rocked by the
resignation of its auditor and three
board members last month.
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs
has sought a report in six weeks.
The inspection is a new headache
for Byju’s, valued at US$22 billion, as
it restarts negotiations to restructure its
US$1.2 billion term loan after
breaching certain terms of its debt
agreement.
Online gaming industry hit with
28% tax
The Central government on Tuesday
said it would impose a 28 per cent tax
on funds that online gaming companies
collect from their customers, in a
setback to the US$1.5 billion industry,
which could lead to higher ticket
prices.
Gaming apps are often endorsed by
sporting heroes in India, where cricket
is a national passion, but concerns
have mounted over possible addiction
and financial losses.
SpiceJet says top shareholder to
inject $81 million in airline
Budget carrier SpiceJet said on
Wednesday top shareholder Ajay
Singh would infuse Rs5 billion ($81
million) into the troubled airline as it
looks to return to full operations.
SpiceJet has been scrambling to
raise funds and restore operations for
about a fourth of its fleet that has been
grounded amid a string of weak
quarterly results and fierce
competition in the sector.
The fund infusion also comes at a
time when Indian budget carriers are
looking to take advantage of the gap
left by crisis-hit rival Go First.
3 of 5 lion cubs die in Etawah
lion safari
Three of the five cubs born to lioness
Sona within a period of five days have
died at the Etawah Lion Safari in Uttar
Pradesh, a forest official said.
After the first cub was born on July
6, Sona gave birth to three more on
July 9 and one on July 10. Only the
cub born on July 6 and one of the
three born on July 9 have survived.
“Two cubs were stillborn and one
was very weak and could not survive.
Vets are monitoring the condition of
the two surviving cubs,” principal chief
conservator of forests Mamta S. Dubey
said. Officials said it was rare for a
lioness to give birth to cubs over four
to five days.
Allahabad University tense after
student dies after drinking water
Tension prevails at Allahabad
University where a student died after
drinking water from a water cooler
near the Students’ Union building on
July 11.
Additional security forces have
been deployed after hundreds of
students staged a violent protest on
Wednesday.
The students are demanding the
resignation of the vice-chancellor,
registrar and proctor.
Men and women cricket teams will
compete in Asian Games
Cricket powerhouse India will send
both its men’s and women’s teams to
the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China,
in September-October, the country’s
cricket board said.
Cricket featured in the Asian
Games in 2010 and 2014 but India did
not participate.
With India gearing up for the
50-overs home World Cup later this
year, they will field a second-string
men’s team in the Asian Games.
Meira Paibis, the group of women
representing Meitei society,
demonstrating in Imphal to demand
the restoration of peace in Manipur.
Ethnic violence in the state since
May has left at least 142 people dead
and rendered thousands homeless.
Meira Paibis, also known as Imas
or Mothers of Manipur, are Meitei
women who come from all sections
of society in the Imphal valley. They
are widely respected and represent a
powerful moral force.
Formed in 1977, it is is one of the
largest grassroots movements in the
world. Its initial focus on fighting
alcoholism and drug abuse has
expanded to countering human rights
violations and the development of
society at large.
Meira Paibis has led social and
political movements in the state,
including protests against alleged
atrocities by Indian security forces.
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An SPH Media Limited publication
Editor-in-Chief
(English/Malay/Tamil Media group)
Wong Wei Kong
Editor
Jawharilal Rajendran
Contributing Editor
V.K. Santosh Kumar
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July14,2023
tabla
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INDIA
India is facing a tomato crisis as prices
have skyrocketed more than 400 per
cent in recent days due to extreme
weather conditions.
Tomato prices surged 341 per cent
year on year, from Rs24.68 (40 cents)
per kg to Rs108.92 as of July 11, data
from the Department of Consumer
Affairs showed.
Flooding in major tomato-producing
states such as Andhra Pradesh, Maha-
rashtra and Karnataka has been a key
driver to the price surge, according to
the National Institute of Biotic Stresses
Management, a council dedicated to
agricultural research.
“Due to excess rainfall in these
states, a large part of the tomato crop
has been destroyed,” the council
stated.
India is the second-largest producer
of tomatoes in the world, with produc-
tion estimated at 20 million tonnes last
year.
“And alongside onions, tomatoes
are an absolute essential to the daily
lives of Indian consumers, said
Mr Damien Yeo, food and drink ana-
lyst at BMI, a Fitch Solutions research
unit.
Many masala dishes use tomatoes
as a key ingredient in the base sauce.
Tomato prices usually hover around
Rs30-40 per kg but are now an
eye-watering Rs200 in some parts of
the country, reported The Straits
Times.
Amid deeper concerns over
whether this could contribute to food
inflation, a trending topic on social
media is recipes for dishes that do not
require the use of tomatoes, like sam-
bar or dahi aloo (curd potato).
Lower-income groups are most af-
fected and some people have been
forced to cut back.
“I put one tomato instead of three
in fish curry. But in other dishes, I am
not using tomatoes,” said Ms Dilruba,
a cook in Delhi. “I hope prices will
come down soon.”
Vegetable vendors are also increas-
ing vigilance amid growing reports of
tomato theft and robbery.
In a major haul, a truck transport-
ing tomatoes was waylaid by three
men who beat up the farmer and
drove off with 2,000kg of tomatoes.
Farmers reported large-scale thefts
of their tomato crops, with one report
chronicling how thieves took off with
boxes of tomatoes weighing some
150kg.
Several McDonald’s outlets in India
have even decided to drop tomatoes
from their menu.
“This is a seasonal problem that the
restaurant and food industry has to
face every monsoon,” the West and
South franchise of McDonald’s India
said in a statement.
In a bid to generate new ideas on
how to improve India’s tomato value
chain and lower prices, the govern-
ment has invited the public to a
Tomato Grand Challenge Hackathon.
Prices of tomatoes generally soar
during the growing season of June and
July before the August harvest period,
Mr Yeo told CNBC.
“The above-average temperature
over June and July 2023, plus the late
start to the 2023 south-west monsoon
has affected production.”
Compared with July last year,
tomato prices have surged 166 per
cent, according to government data.
Prices of tomatoes, onions and pota-
toes are usually “highly volatile” and
face relatively inelastic demand as they
are staples in India, said DBS Bank’s
Senior Economist Radhika Rao.
“Expectations are that summer crop
supplies might arrive next month, help-
ing to calm prices ahead of which
administrative measures including
higher imports might be resorted to.”
Indo-Asian News Services, AFP
Rain ravages tomato crops, prices rise 400%
A vendor loading tomatoes at a wholesale vegetable market in Mumbai.
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July 14, 2023
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