Yahoo – AFP,
May 27, 2014
New Delhi (AFP) - India's Narendra Modi was sworn in as prime minister Monday with the strongest mandate of any leader for 30 years, promising to forge a "strong and inclusive" country on a first day that signalled his bold intentions.
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| Modi sworn in as India PM promising 'inclusive' agenda (AFP) |
New Delhi (AFP) - India's Narendra Modi was sworn in as prime minister Monday with the strongest mandate of any leader for 30 years, promising to forge a "strong and inclusive" country on a first day that signalled his bold intentions.
The
63-year-old Hindu nationalist broke with tradition and invited his Pakistani
counterpart Nawaz Sharif to the ceremony. Sharif hailed a "great moment
and a great opportunity" for peace in the region.
The
pro-business leader was also expected to reveal a sharply reduced government of
45 members, a cut of 26 from that of his predecessor Manmohan Singh, to try to
speed up decision-making and slash India's notorious bureaucracy.
"Together
we will script a glorious future for India," Modi said in a statement
posted on the website of the prime minister shortly after he took the oath in
front of President Pranab Mukherjee.
"Let
us together dream of a strong, developed and inclusive India that actively
engages with the global community to strengthen the cause of world peace and
development," the statement said.
Ten days
after his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won the first parliamentary majority
since 1984, Modi entered office riding a wave of public support that has
obscured his past as a controversial politician tainted by religious violence.
The former
teaboy has risen through the ranks of right-wing Hindu organisations and was
boycotted by Western nations for a decade over anti-Muslim riots that occurred
while he was running his home state of Gujarat in western India in 2002.
He said in
his statement that he was elected with "a mandate for development, good
governance and stability" -- avoiding any reference to the Hindu
nationalist plank of his party's election manifesto.
Senior
members in his government are Arun Jaitley, tipped as finance minister, Sushma
Swaraj, likely to be foreign minister, and Rajnath Singh, who is lined up for
the home portfolio.
Figures
such as Uma Bharti, a hardliner once expelled from the BJP after accusing the
party of abandoning core Hindu concerns, indicated that the religious right
would retain some influence.
'Chance to
reach out'
As stocks
markets rose at the prospect of a pro-business leader taking the helm of the
world's largest democracy, the prime minister of India's nuclear-armed rival
gave voice to a widespread sense of optimism.
"This
is a chance to reach out to each other. Both governments have a strong
mandate," Pakistan premier Sharif told India's NDTV network, according to
a transcript provided by the Pakistan High Commission.
"Both
countries should rid the region of instability and security that has plagued us
for decades," he said.
He promised
to pick up the threads of a failed peace process which went on during his
second term in office -- which coincided with the last BJP government in India.
In 1999,
then-Indian prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee rode a bus to the Pakistani
city of Lahore to sign an accord with Sharif, but three months later the
neighbours nearly went to war over the disputed Himalayan territory of Kashmir.
Sharif sat
among other leaders from South Asia invited for the ceremony at the vast
colonial-era presidency building, where thousands of dignitaries sweltered in
the mid-summer heat during the oath-taking.
'Right
turn'
After a
decade of left-leaning Congress party rule, the 63-year-old Modi is expected to
move India firmly to the right in the next five years with a mantra of
"Minimum Government, Maximum Governance".
The BJP
secured the first majority since 1984 at the election, trouncing the
scandal-plagued Congress on a promise of reviving manufacturing and investment
to create millions of jobs.
Modi's
pledge to overhaul the flagging economy won over voters, along with his
rags-to-riches story and reputation as a clean and efficient chief minister of
prosperous Gujarat state.
"The
country needs to be steered in the right direction now and only Modi can do it.
He's got a strict school headmaster quality about him," Kavita Lal, a
32-year-old IT professional, told AFP.
Like many,
she mocked the prime ministership of the 81-year-old Singh who rarely spoke to
the media and was widely seen as lacking authority.
"It
just seemed like for the last 10 years we had no leader in the country,"
she said.
Since
election results on May 16, Modi has been at pains to put his divisive past
behind him, appearing statesmanlike and generous even to political opponents.
In a rare
sign of emotion last week, he choked back tears as he promised to try to live
up to the expectations of all Indians including "our weakest and
poorest" during a speech in parliament.
The
invitation to Sharif was seen as a significant olive branch to India's Muslim
neighbour and marked the first time that a leader from either country had
attended his counterpart's inauguration since independence in 1947.
India and
Pakistan have fought three wars since independence. Bilateral ties broke down
after the 2008 attacks by Pakistani gunmen in Mumbai in which 166 people were
killed.
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Narendra
Modi, standing centre, takes the oath of office in Delhi. (Photograph:
AP)
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Narendra
Modi shakes hands with Pakistan's Nawaz Sharif
after the ceremony. Photograph:
Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images
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In this handout photograph received from the Gujarat Information Bureau on
May 22, 2014, India’s prime minister-elect and BJP leader Narendra Modi speaks
with his mother Hira Ba before leaving for New Delhi at her home. PHOTO / AFP
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