Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Obama Writes About PM Modi In Time Magazine, Calls Him 'India's Reformer-in-chief'

Darpan News Desk, 16 Apr, 2015 12:51 PM
    Headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whom President Barack Obama calls "India's reformer-in-chief", four people of Indian origin figure in the Time magazine's list of the World's 100 most influential people this year.
     
    Besides Modi, others on the influential magazine's list of 100 Titans, Pioneers, Artists, Leaders and Icons include Chanda Kochhar, managing director and CEO of ICICI Bank, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadela, and Vikram Patel, co-founder of the NGO Sangath.
     
    In his profile of Modi, the commander-in-chief of the world's most powerful country notes, "As a boy, Narendra Modi helped his father sell tea to support their family.
     
     
    "Today, he's the leader of the world's largest democracy, and his life story -- from poverty to Prime Ministera -- reflects the dynamism and potential of India's rise," Obama writes.
     
    Reflecting his close relationship with Modi, Obama referring to him by his first name recalls that when "he came to Washington, Narendra and I visited the memorial to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr".
     
     
    "We reflected on the teachings of King and Gandhi and how the diversity of backgrounds and faiths in our countries is a strength we have to protect," he wrote.
     
    "Prime Minister Modi recognises that more than one billion Indians living and succeeding together can be an inspiring model for the world," Obama wrote.
     
    "Like India, he transcends the ancient and the modern -- a devotee of yoga who connects with Indian citizens on Twitter and imagines a 'digital India'," Obama wrote.
     
    Chanda Kochhar is described by Anshu Jain, co-chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank, as "A banker with vision and reach."
     
    "She has brought India's largest private bank a global vision and impressive returns, while also reaching out to the nation's masses with branches in remote villages where banks simply didn't exist," Jain writes.
     
    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is billed as "The turnaround artist" who is "setting Microsoft up for greatness again".
     
    "Changes that once would have been considered blasphemous -- releasing open-source software, building on iOS and Android and even making Windows free in some cases -- are turning Microsoft around," says Aaron Levie, the CEO of Box.
     
     
    Vikram Patel, co-founder of the NGO Sangath and the Centre for Global Mental Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, is described as a "Well-being warrior".
     
    "He helps spread the simple yet profound idea of mental health for all. He provides hope that mental illness and trauma make us neither weak nor unworthy of love and respect," writes Barbara Van Dahlen, founder of Give an Hour and the Campaign to Change Direction.
     
    The annual TIME 100 issue, the magazine says "tells 100 stories of individual influence. But taken together, these stories are an anthem to interaction, the convergence that occurs when you harmonise a good idea".
     
    For the third straight year, Pakistani education activist Malala Yousafzai, 17, is the youngest person on the list.
     
    The oldest person on the list is Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi, who at 88 finds himself the steward of the Arab world's youngest democracy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tough Times In Oilpatch Mean Busier Civil Enforcement Agencies, Auction Houses

    Tough Times In Oilpatch Mean Busier Civil Enforcement Agencies, Auction Houses
    CALGARY — As Alberta's oilpatch slows down, John Shortridge is bracing for an onslaught of work. Shortridge runs a civil enforcement agency, which works with bailiffs to carry out court orders and seize property, among other things.

    Tough Times In Oilpatch Mean Busier Civil Enforcement Agencies, Auction Houses

    Case Of Pair Accused Of Plotting Attack At Halifax Mall Adjourned To Next Week

    Case Of Pair Accused Of Plotting Attack At Halifax Mall Adjourned To Next Week
    HALIFAX — The case involving two people accused of plotting to open fire at a Halifax shopping mall has been adjourned until next Thursday.

    Case Of Pair Accused Of Plotting Attack At Halifax Mall Adjourned To Next Week

    Public Warned To Avoid Downtown Vancouver Beaches After Toxic Spill

    Public Warned To Avoid Downtown Vancouver Beaches After Toxic Spill
    A black, fuel-like substance was discovered in the water around a bulk carrier ship on Wednesday and has spread over areas in the city's popular English Bay.

    Public Warned To Avoid Downtown Vancouver Beaches After Toxic Spill

    Sentences In Via Terror Plot Not Likely Until July, Court Hears

    Sentences In Via Terror Plot Not Likely Until July, Court Hears
    TORONTO — Two men found guilty of eight terrorism charges after being accused of plotting to derail a train between Canada and the U.S. aren't likely to be sentenced before July, a Toronto court heard Friday.

    Sentences In Via Terror Plot Not Likely Until July, Court Hears

    Toronto Church Says It Won't Allow Ukrainian-born Pianist To Perform

    Toronto Church Says It Won't Allow Ukrainian-born Pianist To Perform
    TORONTO — A Ukrainian-born pianist barred from performing with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra who planned to perform at a church Friday night won't be allowed to play there.

    Toronto Church Says It Won't Allow Ukrainian-born Pianist To Perform

    Senate Rules Expert On Stand For Third Straight Day At Mike Duffy Trial

    Senate Rules Expert On Stand For Third Straight Day At Mike Duffy Trial
    OTTAWA — The man who drafted many of the Senate rules that are under the microscope at Mike Duffy's trial is on the stand for a third straight day as the defence probes the clarity of the regulations.

    Senate Rules Expert On Stand For Third Straight Day At Mike Duffy Trial