Maldives inks deal with Turkey for surveillance drones, moving to replace India
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Maldives inks deal with Turkey for surveillance drones, moving to replace India

A selection of the best news reports, analysis and opinions published by ThePrint this week.

   
Jyotir Math shankarcharya Avimukteshwaranand Saraswati | Photo credit: X/@jyotirmathah

Jyotir Math shankarcharya Avimukteshwaranand Saraswati | Photo credit: X/@jyotirmathah

Maldives moves to replace India, inks deal with Turkey for drones to patrol high seas

Maldives is among India’s key maritime neighbours & part of its ‘Neighbourhood First Policy’, but President Muizzu set a 15 March deadline for Indian military personnel to leave the island nation. Reports Snehesh Alex Philip.

Why Ayodhya’s Suryavanshi Thakurs will end 500-yr-old vow, don pagdis with Ram Lalla’s consecration

Their ancestors ‘fought the Mughals’ for Ram Janmabhoomi, vowed not to wear ‘turbans or leather shoes or carry umbrellas’ till successful. The temple fulfils that dream, but they have one grouse. Shikha Salaria reports.

Galwan not the last, China tried capturing Indian posts again & clashes ensued, new details reveal

Fresh information has also divulged particulars of covert operations by Indian soldiers into Chinese territory for reconnaissance missions, reports Snehesh Alex Philip.

Maldives can’t exploit India-China competition for long. Muizzu must learn from Sri Lanka

Muizzu’s confrontational stance towards India are being widely celebrated on Chinese social media. Weibo users see it as a victory for China and unfavourable news for India, writes Sana Hashmi.

Bullying Maldives is India’s latest gladiator sport. It’s not how strong nations behave

The Maldives may be small, but its people are as proud of their country as Indians are of theirs. They don’t deserve to be penalised as a whole for the sins of a handful of wretches, writes Kapil Komireddi.

Iran’s dramatic airstrikes on Pakistan have brought Middle East proxy war too close to home

As Pakistan faces multiple internal crises, from its economy to terrorist violence, it now has to contend with a battle with its volatile western neighbour, writes Praveen Swami.