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

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

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

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.


Asia Cup: Unpredictable Pakistan face favorites India in high-octane Dubai clash today

Asia Cup: Unpredictable Pakistan face favorites India in high-octane Dubai clash today
Updated 40 sec ago

Asia Cup: Unpredictable Pakistan face favorites India in high-octane Dubai clash today

Asia Cup: Unpredictable Pakistan face favorites India in high-octane Dubai clash today
  • Opener Saim Ayub says Pakistan eyeing not just beating India but also lifting Asia Cup tournament
  • India’s lethal bowling arsenal comprises likes of Kuldeep Yadav, Varun Chakravarthy and Jasprit Bumrah 

ISLAMABAD: All eyes will be on Dubai as an unpredictable Pakistan cricket team takes on arch-rivals India at the Dubai International Stadium today, Sunday, in arguably the most anticipated clash of the Asia Cup tournament so far. 

This is the first cricket match between the Asian giants after the militaries of both countries engaged in a days-long battle in May. Over 70 people were killed on both sides of the border as India and Pakistan attacked each other with drones, fighter jets, missiles and artillery fire before Washington brokered a truce on May 10. 

India will head into the match as favorites, having won the last couple of encounters between the two sides in the shortest format of the game. A new-look Pakistan squad without former skipper Babar Azam and ODI captain Mohammad Rizwan will look to deliver a decisive blow to India in the Asia Cup tournament under new leader Salman Ali Agha. 

Speaking to the reporters on Saturday night, Pakistan’s left-handed opener Saim Ayub said his team was not just looking forward to beating India, but also lifting the Asia Cup. 

“It’s a big game, and fans from both countries care deeply about it,” Ayub said. “But it’s important for us to follow our processes in the same way, and work on improving our execution.”

Pakistan head into the match with some confidence as well, winning the tri-nation series against the UAE and Afghanistan last week. The Green Shirts opened their account in the Asia Cup courtesy of a dominating 93-run victory over minnows Oman on Friday. 

India also enjoyed an impressive start to the tournament, beating the UAE by nine wickets. Skipper Suryakumar Yadav’s side chased UAE’s paltry 58-run target in just 4.3 overs and with nine wickets to spare earlier this week.

India have a strong bowling attack in the form of Jasprit Bumrah and spinners Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav and Varun Chakravarthy. Pakistan will look to their pace bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi and spinners Sufyan Moqeem, Abrar Ahmed and Mohammad Nawaz to deliver the goods. 

Agha and Ayub can also function as part-time spinners for Pakistan will Faheem Ashraf can be used as a seamer for the Green Shirts. 

India have a strong batting lineup with the explosive Abhishek Sharma, Shubman Gill, Sanju Samson and skipper Yadav in the top order. Pakistan will look for their aggressive batters Ayub, Sahibzada Farhan, Fakhar Zaman, Mohammad Haris and Hasan Nawaz to strike the ball hard against India’s spin attack to post a formidable score on the board. 

India and Pakistan do not play against each other bilaterally due to political tensions. Both countries only face off at multi-nation tournaments and at neutral venues. 

India resisted calls to boycott the Asia Cup T20 group-stage match between the two countries, who have not played in any bilateral series since the deadly attacks in Mumbai in 2008 that Delhi blamed on Pakistan-based militants, a charge Islamabad denied. 

The match between the two sides is expected to begin at 7:30 p.m. as per Pakistan Standard Time. 

SQUADS:

India (probable): 1 Abhishek Sharma, 2 Shubman Gill, 3 Sanju Samson (wk), 4 Suryakumar Yadav, 5 Tilak Varma, 6 Shivam Dube, 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Axar Patel, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Varun Chakravarthy

Pakistan (probable): 1 Sahibzada Farhan, 2 Saim Ayub, 3 Fakhar Zaman, 4 Salman Agha (capt), 5 Hasan Nawaz, 6 Mohammad Haris (wk), 7 Mohammad Nawaz, 8 Faheem Ashraf, 9 Shaheen Shah Afridi, 10 Sufiyan Muqeem, 11 Abrar Ahmed


From kennels to crime scenes: Inside Islamabad’s police dog unit tracking criminals and contraband

From kennels to crime scenes: Inside Islamabad’s police dog unit tracking criminals and contraband
Updated 25 min 5 sec ago

From kennels to crime scenes: Inside Islamabad’s police dog unit tracking criminals and contraband

From kennels to crime scenes: Inside Islamabad’s police dog unit tracking criminals and contraband
  • Established in 2024, unit houses 19 dogs for explosives, narcotics, and suspect tracking
  • Each canine officer is given protein-rich diet and trained twice a day when not on field

ISLAMABAD: As Saqlain Arshad, 25, steps into a colorful kennel, Paal, a tracker dog at the Islamabad police’s Canine Unit, stands ready to join duty. This time, however, it is not an outside assignment but a mock training session that handlers regularly conduct to keep these dogs, whom their handlers proudly call “silent heroes,” in shape to take up field assignments.

Arshad holds out a cap belonging to a colleague who hid a few hundred feet away. As soon as he loosens the leash, Paal leaps and pauses briefly to scent the cap before heading straight to the target crouched behind a car. Upon finding the target, Muhammad Salman, the unit’s 60-year-old supervisor, tosses a tennis ball that Paal catches midair — his reward for a job well done.

Daily rehearsals like these ensure Islamabad police dogs are always prepared and prove their effectiveness in tracking drugs and criminals. Police solved one such case this year, when they received a missing complaint about 28-year-old Hamza Khan, who left his home in Islamabad for Mansehra on March 15, but never returned, with his family naming a retired Islamabad police superintendent, Arif Shah, as the last person Khan had gone to meet over a financial dispute.

Shah claimed Khan had left for the capital after their meeting him, a claim seemingly supported by the last known location of Khan’s phone in Islamabad, though the device was found dumped at a greenbelt in the city days later. On April 15, police took Paal and his two-year-old companion, Mofe, to Shah’s residence and investigators placed Khan’s clothes in front of Paal.

“While sniffing those articles, because of the footprints, he reached his target, and we found the dead body [buried at Shah’s home],” Arshad, Paal’s handler, told Arab News.

Khan’s body had been hidden inside an animal shed and Paal led officers directly to the site. For his role, Arshad was awarded Rs100,000 ($352) and Paal received special recognition certificate.

Paal and Mofe are among 19 canine officers procured from the Army Canine Center in Rawalpindi, when Islamabad police established its Canine Unit in Nov. 2024 under the Bomb Disposal Squad.

“Initially, we got 11 handlers trained for three months at the Army Canine Center, while the rest were trained in-house,” said Umer Saleem Khan, head of the unit.

Currently, the unit maintains 13 dogs, trained in explosives and arms detection, four for narcotics, and two tracker dogs. The explosives team is trained to detect 12 types of devices, while narcotics dogs are trained on more than half a dozen substances.

“The training process is separate for all dogs,” Salman, supervisor of the Canine Unit, told Arab News. “Those who are for explosives [searching], they have separate [training modules], narcotics [dogs] have separate.”

Explosive detection dogs conduct daily clearance searches at sensitive installations in the capital each morning, including the president’s and the prime minister’s offices and the Supreme Court, while narcotics and suspect trackers are deployed upon requests by police stations.

Each dog works in half-hour shifts before being given up to 45-minute rest, after which they can be redeployed.

Veterinary staff at the unit say puppies learn very quickly.

“By the time they are six months old, they can already be put to professional work and remain effective for five to six years,” said Haider Ali, a veterinarian who has been with the unit since joining four months ago.

All dogs in the unit were procured through the Army Canine Center, which introduced breeds through the British Army. Labrador retrievers are often trained for tracking due to their lineage, while Belgian Malinois and German Shepherds are primarily used for search operations.

To keep them healthy, the dogs are treated like athletes.

Their diet consists of protein-rich meals twice a day, including chicken necks, rice and specialized feed. Two veterinary doctors, one for each shift, monitor their health, while each dog undergoes a checkup before and after deployment.

“Our main focus here is timely treatment, vaccination, and deworming,” Ali said. “This is essential not only for their health but also for the safety of the handlers working with them.”

The sense of smell of dogs, far superior to humans’, allows them to detect traces and follow trails that technology can miss, which is why these canine officers continue to play a vital role worldwide.

“These are silent heroes, all our dogs,” said Umer, the unit’s in-charge. “You do not see them in the field, but to secure Islamabad, their role is very crucial.”


Pakistan’s deputy PM, Rubio discuss global developments, strengthening bilateral ties

Pakistan’s deputy PM, Rubio discuss global developments, strengthening bilateral ties
Updated 45 min 21 sec ago

Pakistan’s deputy PM, Rubio discuss global developments, strengthening bilateral ties

Pakistan’s deputy PM, Rubio discuss global developments, strengthening bilateral ties
  • Washington’s ties with Islamabad have improved since May, when Trump brokered ceasefire between India and Pakistan
  • Pakistan, US have enjoyed closer cooperation in critical minerals, trade, cryptocurrency and other areas in recent months

ISLAMABAD: US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar discussed global developments and strengthening bilateral ties between the two nations this week, Pakistan’s foreign office said, as both countries eye closer relations and economic cooperation. 

Washington’s ties with Islamabad have improved in recent months after US President Donald Trump took credit for a ceasefire between India and Pakistan in May. Pakistan praised Trump while India maintained that New Delhi and Islamabad should resolve their issues directly without outside involvement.

Pakistan and the US have also eyed closer economic cooperation, with both countries finalizing a trade deal in July while Washington slapped additional tariffs on India. Islamabad and Washington have also eyed enhanced cooperation in digital currency, critical minerals, real estate and other sectors of the economy. 

Dar, who also serves as Pakistan’s foreign minister, received a telephone call from Rubio on Saturday night, the Pakistani foreign office ministry spokesperson said in a statement. 

“The two leaders expressed satisfaction over the positive trajectory of Pakistan-US ties and discussed recent regional & international developments,” the spokesperson said on Saturday. 

“They reaffirmed their commitment to further strengthening bilateral relations across multifaceted areas of cooperation.”

Islamabad’s increasing engagement with Washington is being seen by analysts as a sign of a diplomatic reset after years of estrangement between the two countries. High-level bilateral exchanges between Pakistan and the US gradually faded as American forces withdrew from Afghanistan.

Pakistan considers the US an important trade partner and its top export destination. Pakistan’s exports to the US totaled $5.44 billion in fiscal year 2023-2024, according to official data. From July 2024 to February 2025, exports rose 10 percent from a year earlier.

Islamabad’s desire for greater economic cooperation with the US takes place as Pakistan seeks to forge closer trade and connectivity with other countries to escape a prolonged economic crisis that brought it to the brink of a sovereign default in June 2023. 


Pakistan invites global crypto firms to seek virtual asset service licenses

Pakistan invites global crypto firms to seek virtual asset service licenses
Updated 14 September 2025

Pakistan invites global crypto firms to seek virtual asset service licenses

Pakistan invites global crypto firms to seek virtual asset service licenses
  • Country says its digital market serves over 40 million users with $300 billion in annual trading
  • Government calls licensing a key move to align Pakistan’s crypto sector with global financial rules

KARACHI: Pakistan on Saturday invited international crypto exchanges and other virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to apply for licenses to operate in the country, in a move aimed at formalizing and regulating a fast-growing digital market that authorities say serves over 40 million users with about $300 billion in annual trading volume.

The call for expressions of interest (EoI) comes from the newly created Pakistan Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (PVARA), set up under the Virtual Assets Ordinance 2025. The agency said the initiative will bring Pakistan’s virtual asset sector in line with global standards on anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing and provide a secure framework for fintech innovation.

“This EoI is our invitation to the world’s leading VASPs to partner in building a transparent and inclusive digital financial future for Pakistan,” said Bilal bin Saqib, PVARA chairman and minister of state for crypto and blockchain.

According to a statement issued by his office, applicants must already be licensed in at least one major jurisdiction and show strong compliance with anti-money laundering, counter-terrorism financing and know-your-customer rules.

Required submissions include company profiles, licensing details, operational overviews, compliance histories and proposed business models for Pakistan.

The authority, governed by a board that includes the heads of the State Bank of Pakistan, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Board of Revenue, will oversee licensing and supervision, and offer regulatory sandboxes to encourage Shariah-compliant innovation.

PVARA said applications will be accepted on a rolling basis via email.

Pakistan views the measure as a “pivotal step” toward integrating its digital-asset economy with global financial norms while protecting consumers and combating illicit finance, the statement added.


Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar
Updated 13 September 2025

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar
  • Israel attempted to kill Hamas negotiators discussing a US-backed Gaza ceasefire proposal
  • Summit preparatory meeting to be attended by Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Sunday

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will participate in an emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha on Monday in the wake of Israeli airstrikes in Qatar that killed at least six people earlier this week, the foreign office announced on Saturday.

Israel attempted to target a group of Hamas leaders discussing a Gaza ceasefire proposal floated by the United States by hitting a residential neighborhood in Doha on Tuesday. Qatar has been a key mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas, hosting the Palestinian group’s political bureau as part of the process.

Pakistan reacted sharply to the strike, calling it a violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Sharif traveled to Doha on Sept. 11 to express solidarity with Qatar’s leadership, while Pakistan’s UN mission requested an emergency Security Council meeting and urged the international community to hold Israel accountable.

“Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif will visit State of Qatar to participate in the Emergency Arab-Islamic Summit being held in Doha on 15 September 2025,” the foreign office said.

“The Summit, co-sponsored by Pakistan, has been convened in the wake of Israel’s airstrikes on Doha and the escalating developments in Palestine — following Israeli attempts to occupy Gaza, expand settlement activities in the occupied West Bank and forcibly displace the Palestinians,” it added.

The summit will be preceded by a preparatory meeting of foreign ministers on Sunday, which Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar will attend.

According to the statement, leaders and senior officials from Organization of Islamic Cooperation member states are also expected at the gathering.

Pakistan’s foreign office said the country “accords high importance to its relations with State of Qatar” and has “strongly condemned Israeli aggression against Qatar and other regional states.”

It added that Sharif’s visit underlines Pakistan’s “unwavering support for the security and sovereignty of Qatar and its commitment to peace and stability in the Middle East.”

Pakistan has also repeatedly condemned Israel’s offensive in Gaza, which has killed nearly 65,000 people, mostly women and children, since October 2023, and called for an immediate ceasefire and war-crimes accountability.