India PM Modi faces opposition fury after Trump’s 25 percent tariff threat

US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shake hands, at the White House in Washington DC, US, February 13, 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 31 July 2025
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India PM Modi faces opposition fury after Trump’s 25 percent tariff threat

  • Opposition lawmaker says US tariff threat reflects “broader collapse” of foreign policy under the Modi government
  • Economists warn steep tariff could hurt India’s manufacturing ambitions, trim up to 40 basis points off economic growth

NEW DELHI, INDIA: Indian opposition parties criticized the government on Thursday, describing US President Donald Trump’s threat of a 25 percent tariff as a diplomatic failure for New Delhi, while the rupee currency tumbled and equity indexes slid in response to the news.

The 25 percent rate would single out India more harshly than other major trading partners, and threatens to unravel months of talks, undermining one of Washington’s strategic partners in the region, viewed as a counterbalance to China.

Trump said the tariff on imports from India would start from Friday, in addition to an unspecified penalty for Russian dealings and involvement in the BRICS grouping of nations.

In response, the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi said it was studying the implications of Trump’s remarks and was dedicated to securing a fair trade deal.

“This development reflects a broader collapse of foreign policy under the Modi government,” a lawmaker of the main opposition Congress party said in a notice to the lower house of parliament, asking for a discussion on the matter.

The debate would focus on the “government’s economic and diplomatic failure in preventing the imposition of 25 percent US tariffs plus penalties on Indian exports,” the notice added.

Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal was expected to brief the lower house later on Thursday, his office said.

“I don’t care what India does with Russia,” Trump said in a Truth Social post on Thursday, adding, “They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care.”

Russia remained India’s top oil supplier during the first six months of 2025, accounting for 35 percent of overall supplies.

Economists warned the steep tariff could hurt India’s manufacturing ambitions and trim up to 40 basis points off economic growth in the financial year to March 2026.

India’s benchmark equity indices, the Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex, fell as much as 0.9 percent each in early trade before paring losses and trading flat.

The rupee was trading down 0.2 percent at 87.6175 after touching its lowest in more than five months earlier in the day.

‘RAW DEAL’

India has received a “raw deal,” said Priyanka Kishore, an economist at Asia Decoded.

“While further trade talks may bring the tariff rate down, it appears unlikely that India will secure a significantly better outcome than its eastern neighbors,” she added.

That would raise questions about India’s relative appeal as a China plus one destination, she said, referring to a strategy of diversifying supply chains through manufacturing outside China to reduce geopolitical and operational risks.

Trade talks continued, Trump said on social media, however, as nations face a Friday deadline to strike deals on reciprocal tariffs or have a US tariff slapped on their exports.

The US levy on India exceeds those agreed by some other nations in deals with the Trump administration. For example, the tariff on Vietnam is set at 20 percent and on Indonesia at 19 percent, with levies of 15 percent on Japanese and European Union exports.

On Wednesday, Trump said Washington had reached a trade deal with India’s arch-rival Pakistan that Islamabad said would lead to lower tariffs on its exports, but neither side has yet revealed the agreed rate.

Since India’s short but deadly conflict with Pakistan in May, New Delhi has been unhappy about Trump’s closeness with Islamabad and has protested, casting a shadow over trade talks.

Despite former public displays of bonhomie between Trump and Modi, India has taken a slightly harder stance against the United States in recent weeks.

Trump has repeatedly taken credit for the India-Pakistan ceasefire he announced on social media on May 10, but India disputes his claim that it resulted from his intervention and trade threats.

“The government has destroyed our economic policy, has destroyed our defense policy, has destroyed our foreign policy,” opposition leader Rahul Gandhi told reporters.

The United States, the world’s largest economy, now has a trade deficit of $45.7 billion with India, the fifth largest.

Trump’s announcement and the lack of clarity on the penalty have created “considerable uncertainty,” said Krishan Arora, a partner at consultants Grant Thornton Bharat.

“India is also actively realigning its position in global supply chains through deeper trade and investment linkages with other countries — an effort that must now accelerate to reduce long-term vulnerabilities,” Arora said.


Pakistan PM orders safeguards for legitimate travelers amid airport off-loading complaints

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Pakistan PM orders safeguards for legitimate travelers amid airport off-loading complaints

  • Over 66,000 passengers were off-loaded this year by Pakistani authorities as part of a crackdown on illegal migration
  • Instruction comes a day after Greece rescued about 540 illegal migrants at sea, including several Pakistani nationals

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday acknowledged complaints over passenger off-loading at airports and ordered safeguards for legitimate travelers, as he chaired a meeting on human smuggling a day after Greece rescued hundreds of migrants, including Pakistanis, at sea.

Earlier this week, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) said in a briefing to a parliamentary committee that more than 66,000 passengers had been off-loaded from Pakistani airports this year over suspected irregular travel, while tens of thousands were deported from Gulf states and other countries amid a broader crackdown on illegal migration.

The meeting chaired by Sharif reviewed enforcement measures aimed at curbing human smuggling and illegal immigration, with officials highlighting a 47 percent decline in illegal migration to Europe from the country following intensified screening at departure points.

“In taking action against those traveling illegally or holding suspicious travel documents, special care must be taken to ensure that passengers with valid documents are not affected,” the prime minister said, according to a statement issued by his office.

Sharif also ordered improvements in coordination between the FIA, the Protectorate of Emigrants and other agencies to facilitate Pakistanis traveling abroad legally for employment, while calling for stricter action against corrupt officials.

The meeting was also briefed about a growing reliance on technology by the immigration authorities to address weaknesses in the existing system. Authorities said work was under way to expand the use of electronic gates at airports, allowing automated identity verification to reduce discretionary checks.

Officials also said Pakistan was developing a mobile application to access passenger data and integrating advance passenger information and passenger name record (API-PNR) systems, enabling authorities to flag potentially fraudulent travel documents before departure.

Artificial intelligence tools are being introduced to support risk assessment and targeted screening, the statement added.

Pakistan intensified action against illegal migration in 2023 after hundreds of people, including its own nationals, died while attempting to cross the Mediterranean in an overcrowded fishing vessel that sank off the Greek coast, prompting widespread outrage and scrutiny of smuggling networks.

The meeting followed a Greek coast guard statement on Friday saying it rescued about 540 migrants from a fishing boat south of the island of Gavdos, transferring them to temporary facilities on Crete. Greek authorities said the group included nationals of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Egypt.

The latest rescue highlights how, despite tighter controls and airport screening at home, migrants continue to seek dangerous routes to Europe, largely driven by economic hardship and the promise of work in richer countries.