
Modi's Unstoppable India: Global Influence, Tech Dominance, and Spiritual Roots
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Barely a day goes by without Narendra Modi making headlines and the past week has been no exception. On October 17, Narendra Modi lit up the NDTV World Summit 2025 in New Delhi, laying out his vision for what he called an Unstoppable India in front of an audience including global dignitaries like Sri Lankan PM Harini Amarasuriya, former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, and Australia’s Tony Abbott. Modi was in classic campaign mode, contrasting India’s tough decade before 2014—remember the “Fragile Five” nickname?—with the economic resurgence under his tenure. He boasted that India is now among the world’s top five economies, maintaining inflation below two percent and a solid growth rate above seven percent. Headlines across Indian and international media echoed Modi’s refrain: India’s rise is shaping global opportunities.
Modi seemed especially keen on past accomplishments: democratization of banking and welfare, over 25 crore lifted from poverty, more than 50 crore Jan Dhan accounts opened, and a reduction in Maoist violence from over 125 districts down to just 11. He spotlighted digital innovations, noting that half the world’s real-time digital transactions run through Indian platforms—a statistic verifying his government’s emphasis on tech-driven growth. YouTube and social feeds carried snippets of his speech, and Modi himself shared highlights across his Twitter, Instagram, and WhatsApp channels.
Adding a diplomatic flourish, Modi met Sri Lankan PM Harini Amarasuriya on the summit sidelines, reinforcing India’s regional influence. International voices chimed in, with Rishi Sunak posting on social media about India’s “energy and ambition” and the hopeful future of the India-UK partnership. On October 18, Modi marked Dhanteras with a public greeting to citizens, using his usual mix of social platforms to reach both urban audiences and rural constituencies.
Just days earlier, on October 16, Modi paid a spiritual visit to Andhra Pradesh, performing a pooja at the Srisailam temple and commemorating Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s legacy at the local Spoorthi Kendra—a gesture reinforcing national pride and Hindu tradition. His itinerary included unveiling development projects worth 13,430 crore rupees in Kurnool spanning infrastructure, defense manufacturing, and green energy, followed by a mass public rally.
Business watchers should note Modi’s plans to inaugurate the India Mobile Congress at Yashobhoomi, New Delhi. Foreign investment stories abounded, including Google’s fresh $15 billion commitment to India’s AI future and new trade agreements with G7 nations and the European Free Trade Association.
Looking ahead, Modi is gearing up for rallies in Bihar on October 24 and 30, likely to inject more momentum into NDA’s campaign machinery. Social chatter is focusing on his upcoming Mann Ki Baat on October 26, with Modi crowdsourcing ideas from the public. Political gossip also swirls around his recent assertion that Naxalism is nearing its end—a talking point picked up widely by news outlets.
In sum, from summit speeches and high-tech launches to prayers, trade deals, and public diplomacy, this week has been a showcase of Modi’s insistence on India as a rising, resilient, digital powerhouse. No fake news detected so far, but this is Indian politics, so speculation is never far behind.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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