India’s Modi leads yoga day celebration in Muslim-majority Kashmir

In this handout photograph taken and released on June 21, 2024 by the Indian Press Information Bureau (PIB), India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi talks to people on International Day of Yoga in Srinagar. (AFP/Indian Press Information Bureau)
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Updated 21 June 2024
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India’s Modi leads yoga day celebration in Muslim-majority Kashmir

  • Thousands of government employees, schoolteachers and students were brought in for the event from all over Kashmir
  • A local resident describes the event as cultural intrusion, calling it an imposition to change the upcoming generations

SRINAGAR: Stretching, arching his back and kneeling on a mat, India’s Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi led hundreds of people performing yoga in the Muslim-majority region of Kashmir on Friday.

The exercises in Srinagar, capital of the Indian-administered part of the disputed territory, marked the 10th International Yoga Day, Modi’s own brainchild.

But while yoga is not itself a religious practice, it has its origins in Hindu philosophy – the god Shiva is said to have been the first yogi – and many residents of Kashmir are indifferent to the discipline.

Thousands of government employees, schoolteachers and students from all over Kashmir were brought in for the event, although rain forced Modi’s performance indoors.

Afterwards, he urged hundreds of people including many police and armed forces personnel on the shores of Dal Lake to make yoga “a part of their daily lives.”

“Yoga fosters strength, good health and wellness,” he said.




In this handout photograph taken and released on June 21, 2024 by the Indian Press Information Bureau (PIB), India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi performs asana on International Day of Yoga in Srinagar. (AFP/Indian Press Information Bureau)

But one Srinagar resident saw the event as a cultural intrusion.

“This yoga is being imposed on our children to culturally change the next generations and control their minds,” they told AFP, declining to be identified for fear of reprisal.

“It’s an imposition on us.”

Rebel groups in Kashmir have waged an insurgency since 1989, demanding independence or a merger with Pakistan.

Tens of thousands of people have died in the conflict, and violence has been largely suppressed since Modi removed the region’s limited autonomy in 2019 and imposed a security crackdown.

But his visit came after a series of attacks by suspected rebels opposed to Indian rule, including one that left 10 Hindu pilgrims dead.

Islamabad controls a part of the divided territory and, like India, claims all of Kashmir.

June 21 was declared International Yoga Day a decade ago and Modi has since led events at emblematic locations across India, and last year at the UN headquarters in New York.


NATO’s Rutte says Arctic talks with Trump will focus on keeping Russia, China out

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NATO’s Rutte says Arctic talks with Trump will focus on keeping Russia, China out

  • Donald Trump has repeatedly said he wanted to acquire Greenland, citing ‌national security
  • US President’s ambitions have put strain on the NATO ⁠alliance
DAVOS, Switzerland: NATO Secretary Mark Rutte said on Thursday that he and US President Trump had discussed in Davos how the transatlantic alliance should best defend the Arctic against Russia and China.
Trump has repeatedly said he wanted to acquire Greenland, citing ‌national security, though ‌on Wednesday ‌he ⁠ruled out ‌using force and suggested a deal was in sight to end the dispute over the Danish overseas territory following talks with Rutte.
Trump’s ambitions have put strain on the NATO ⁠alliance.
Rutte said he had a “very good discussion” ‌with Trump on how NATO ‍allies can ‍work collectively to ensure Arctic ‍security, including not just Greenland but the seven NATO nations with land in the Arctic.
Further talks would build on the Washington meeting last week between the United States and delegations from ⁠Denmark and Greenland. “One workstream coming out of yesterday ... is to make sure when it comes to Greenland, particularly, that we ensure that the Chinese and the Russians will not gain access to the Greenland economy (or) militarily to Greenland,” Rutte told a panel at the World Economic Forum.