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Confrontations on LAC could spiral into larger conflict: CDS General Bipin Rawat

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Confrontations on LAC could spiral into larger conflict: CDS General Bipin Rawat

NEW DELHI: India won’t permit China to move the Line of Actual Control westwards in eastern Ladakh, and however the possibilities of a full-scale war are low, outskirt pressures and interruptions growing into a bigger clash can’t be precluded, said head of guard staff General Bipin Rawat on Friday.

“Our posing is unambiguous – business as usual must be reestablished,” said Gen Rawat, even as India and China held the eight-round of military converses with defuse the right around seven-month-long tense military encounter in the high-elevation area on Friday.

“In the general security analytics, a full-scale strife with China is low on likelihood. Nonetheless, fringe encounters, offenses and unmerited strategic military activities spiraling into a bigger clash can’t be limited,” said Gen Rawat, talking at an online course here.

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The nation’s top military official likewise focused on India won’t permit “any moving” of the LAC by China, which he said is presently confronting “unforeseen outcomes of its misfortune” because of the firm and solid reaction by the Indian powers in eastern Ladakh.

IAF boss Air Chief Marshal R K S Bhadauria likewise accentuated that India’s “proactive activities and solid stance” were instrumental in discouraging China from making “any further endeavors to change the norm” in Ladakh. The quick arrangement of IAF’s “hostile capacities” mirrored the country’s determination to utilize airpower if the need emerges, he added.

There was no official word on the result of the corps leader level talks, driven by 14 Corps authority Lt-General P G K Menon and South Xinjiang Military District boss Major General Liu Lin, which went on for very nearly 10 hours at the Chushul outskirt meeting point in eastern Ladakh on Friday.

Sources, nonetheless, said India adhered to its remain of “complete de-heightening” at troop go head to head locales just as along the whole outskirts in eastern Ladakh, dismissing the “piecemeal and uneven separation steps” being proposed by China.

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Without any indications of de-acceleration yet, more than 50,000 officers each from the two armed forces, upheld by howitzers, tanks and surface-to-air rocket frameworks, have dove in for the long stretch at statures more than 15,000-feet.

“China figured it would pull off giving India a fait accompli in the ‘Finger’ zone on the north bank of Pangong Tso. The PLA was not ready for India’s solid counter-organization and counter-activity, which is driving it to keep an enormous number of troops there through the unforgiving winter,” said an official.

At the online class, Gen Rawat said India had no alternative except for to be ready for a two-front situation since China and Pakistan are “progressively acting in arrangement”.

The monetary lull because of the Covid-19 pandemic has made China “severe at home” and “forceful abroad”, as is apparent through its posing in the South China Sea, East China Sea and the Taiwan Straits.

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“For India, the difficulties have showed with military flare-ups along the LAC. In the coming years, we are probably going to observe the forceful quest for domineering interests by China,” he said.

“The enduring limit debate, China’s help to Pakistan, its expanding impact in South Asia through BRI extends and unequal financial relationship is probably going to guarantee that soon, the Sino-India relationship will stay an in a general sense serious one,” he added.

Tap To Explore More : Odisha Bytes

Also Read : UGC ISSUES GUIDELINES ON REOPENING UNIVERSITIES, COLLEGES IN PHASES

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Tollywood

HT Rewind 2024: Teja Sajja says HanuMan kicking off the year in style is the moment he’d been ‘waiting for’ | Exclusive

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HT Rewind 2024: Teja Sajja says HanuMan kicking off the year in style is the moment he’d been ‘waiting for’ | Exclusive

In conversation with Hindustan Times, Teja Sajja decodes the success of HanuMan and other Telugu films, talks about his upcoming projects, and more.
When Prasanth Varma’s superhero film HanuMan, starring Teja Sajja, was announced to be released alongside big films like Mahesh Babu’s Guntur Kaaram, Venkatesh’s Saindhav and Nagarjuna’s Naa Saami Ranga in January this year, no one expected the underdog to emerge on top. And yet, the film, made on a budget of under ₹50 crore, managed to collect over ₹300 crore at the box office worldwide in 25 days, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films for the year. (Also Read: Ranveer Singh met HanuMan actor Teja Sajja, complimented him even after his Prasanth Varma film Rakshas got shelved)

Ask Teja about the moment he realised his film had not just fought against the tide but also risen to the top; he tells Hindustan Times in an exclusive conversation, “Since I returned to acting (as a lead actor after being a child artiste since 1998), this is the moment I’ve been waiting for. When everything from the HanuMan teaser to the songs was grabbing attention, we knew we had hit a gold mine. But I don’t think we imagined it would cross the ₹300 crore threshold. We were so satisfied with the opening numbers; everything else was a bonus.”

‘Success has given me fear of disappointing people’

Teja acted in Zombie Reddy, Ishq and Adbhutham before HanuMan, but they are what you would call ‘critical successes’, adding to his repertoire as an actor who can perform. But things have changed for him now, says Teja, who is being picky about the roles he says yes to. “Success either makes you overconfident or gives you the fear of disappointing people; I have the latter,” he explains.

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Teja admits he wants to chart out his career in Hrithik Roshan’s footsteps, but not in the way you think. “I have such a fondness for Hrithik due to Koi Mil Gaya and Krrish. No matter how well he performed after that, these left a lasting impression on me; I’m sure 90s kids will agree,” he says, adding, “Similarly, I’ve realised that I have an audience in children now. I want to be conscious of that when I pick roles. I want to make films families can enjoy together.”

But despite people in places like Mumbai or Delhi recognising him, Teja says he’s clear that he wants to cater to the Telugu audience first. “I am conscious that I am making films for my playground – the Telugu states. This is the sensibility I have grown up with, and I don’t know if I can cater to everyone else. Will I promote my films in other languages? Sure. But I also can’t be part of films that aren’t authentic to what I know or understand,” he explains.

‘Rootedness has put us on the world map’

And authenticity seems to be the need of the hour. Be it Baahubali and RRR or the recently released Pushpa 2: The Rule, Kalki 2898 AD and Devara: Part 1, certain kind of stories seem to be finding success. “Rootedness and going local is proving to be such a boon for us, be it in Devara or Pushpa or HanuMan. Kalki 2898 AD was our version of a Hollywood film (the sci-fi concept) with actors from across languages in predominant roles; it put us on the world map,” reflects Teja.

However, the actor admits Tollywood went through a phase of Bollywood-inspired rom-coms and family dramas that worked in their favour for a while. “That wasn’t easy to replicate either, but it’s just that these local stories are what the audience seems most interested in now. It can’t just be chalked up to religion, too. It’s about the morals these films are hinged on, the fighting for righteousness, and how an underdog can find their strength. Introducing Mahabharata or Ramayana to a new audience in a cool way is just a perk,” he says.

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And it’s this rootedness that Teja says his next films, Mirai and Jai Hanuman (the sequel to HanuMan), will also have ample of. “Mirai is also a superhero film that caters to kids, but it’s not an origin story like HanuMan. It has a pan-Asian and Buddhist touch because the story is based on King Ashoka’s ideologies. I hope that I will get to deliver something new to the audience again. I will only feel like I’ve arrived if Mirai is equally, if not more, successful,” says Teja.

Rishab Shetty will headline Jai Hanuman, but Teja also looks forward to shooting that. “I can’t wait to be on that set; it’ll be exciting. Now that we know India is ready to watch our films, I want to step it up. I want to shift gears and shoot for at least two films in 2025,” he says. As for what he will do next, Teja says he wants to up the ante. “When I got a SIIMA award for Zombie Reddy as a debutant, I remember telling Prasanth this would be the last award I get. But now that I won a Radio City Cine Award for Best Actor, I hope more awards will follow,” he signs off cheekily.

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