Skip to main content
INDIA

India’s Modi sworn in for second term after landslide poll win

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched his historic second term at a solemn ceremony in front of cheering supporters Thursday, as he prepared to unveil a drastically revamped Hindu nationalist government.

Adnan Abidi, Reuters | India's President Ram Nath Kovind greets India's PM Narendra Modi during his swearing-in ceremony in New Delhi, May 30, 2019.
Advertising

Modi was the first of more than 50 cabinet ministers and deputy ministers to be sworn in at the presidential palace in front of 8,000 people including South Asian leaders, Bollywood stars and leading political figures.

The prime minister -- whose right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) made history by increasing their majority in a second straight landslide election win -- walked up to take his oath of office to a standing ovation, with supporters in the crowd chanting "Modi, Modi".

Modi is expected to announce his new cabinet in the hours after the ceremony, as well as find a top post for his trusted enforcer, BJP president Amit Shah.

A new finance minister was guaranteed after the influential outgoing minister, Arun Jaitley, 66, announced Wednesday that he would not serve again because of poor health.

Outgoing foreign minister Sushma Swaraj was not among the group to take the oath meaning she would also be replaced.

Modi won the election after portraying himself through the campaign as a nationalist strongman who would protect the country's security.

He was aided by a military showdown on the border of divided Kashmir when Indian and Pakistani fighter jets staged tit-for-tat raids.

Notably, the leader of Pakistan was not invited to the inauguration. The heads of many of India's other neighbours did attend.

"India is proud of all those brave men and women martyred in the line of duty," Modi said after visiting a war memorial near parliament on Thursday.

Signs of a faltering economy

Modi said he needed a new term to further his promise of a "new India" taking its place as a rising economic power in the world.

The BJP controls 303 of the 545 seats in the lower house of parliament, paving the way for the possibility Modi could attempt controversial land and labour reforms amid concern that Asia's third largest economy is faltering.

Modi pushed through reforms such as a goods and services tax and a bankruptcy law in his first five-year term, but faced criticism for failing to create enough jobs for people entering the job market, weak farm prices and tepid growth.

A former top ministry bureaucrat, S. Jaishankar, was among those sworn in as a full cabinet member on Thursday, indicating he could be the new foreign minister.

Smiti Irani, who pulled off one of the biggest victories of the election by beating opposition Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi in his own family bastion, was expected to get a promotion after being demoted in Modi's first term.

Gandhi, whose Congress party suffered a second straight humiliating defeat, was among the crowd with his mother Sonia, the former Congress leader.

Media reports said Gandhi, the son, grandson, and great-grandson of Nehru-Gandhi dynasty prime ministers, has told party leaders he wants to stand down.

But party supporters have staged demonstrations outside his home calling on him to stay.

Nationalist agenda

Modi's government is expected to push a strong Hindu agenda that has worried India's minorities, including the construction of a new Hindu temple on the site of a Muslim mosque that was destroyed by Hindutva supporters in 1992 in the northern city of Ayodhya. The destruction of the Babri mosques sparked deadly communal violence in India's commercial capital, Mumbai.

Many Hindus believe a spot in the city marks the birthplace of Lord Ram and that the medieval Babri mosque that stood there for 460 years was only built after the destruction of an earlier temple.

India's Supreme Court has named a three-man panel including a famous guru to resolve the seemingly intractable and highly emotive dispute. But the temple was promised in the BJP's election manifesto.

"Nationalism is our inspiration ... good governance is our mantra," Modi said at the launch of the manifesto that also vowed to spend more than $1.4 trillion on new infrastructure over five years to create much-needed jobs.

While India's economy grew at about seven percent each year during Modi's first five-year term it did not produce the jobs needed to find work for the estimated 1.2 million job seekers entering the labour market each month.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP and Reuters)

Daily newsletterReceive essential international news every morning

Take international news everywhere with you! Download the France 24 app

Share :
Page not found

The content you requested does not exist or is not available anymore.