The US, India, Japan and Australia have agreed to jointly surveil maritime operations in the Indo-Pacific to assert domiance over the region. Meanwhile, Indian politicians mark 12 years of Modi as PM.

Quad ministers ‘seriously’ concerned over South China Sea tensions
The US, India, Japan, and Australia, or members of the so-called “Quad” group of nations, voiced concerns over the East and South China Seas without calling out Beijing by its name.
“We remain seriously concerned about the situation in the East China Sea and the South China Sea. We reiterate our strong opposition to any destabilizing or unilateral actions, including by force or coercion, that threaten peace and stability in the region,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his three counterparts said in a joint statement after talks in New Delhi.
In clear but unstated references to China, the foreign ministers criticized “dangerous maneuvers by military aircraft” and “ramming and blocking actions in the South China Sea” and said they were “seriously concerned by the militarization of disputed features” in the waters where Beijing stakes wide claims.
What to know about East and South China Seas
The East and South China Seas are two distinct water bodies, and each of these contains land features claimed by China and at least one ally of the US.
To Beijing, the East and South China Seas are all part of its “near seas,” and China continues to take steps to assert control over this space as one unified maritime periphery.
The disputed land features in these seas are small — islands, reefs, and rocks — but the maritime and security stakes associated with them are large.
The Quad group is also seen as a counterweight to growing Chinese influence and aggression in the Asia-Pacific region.
Elites vs the government: Delhi Gymkhana Club ordered to move, triggering legal battle
One of India’s most exclusive private clubs, situated right next to the Prime Minister’s residence, is gearing up for a legal battle with the Indian Government after it was asked to vacate the land it has occupied for over a century.
The Delhi Gymkhana Club was founded in British India in 1913 and has a waiting list of more than 30 years for new members. Its members include powerful business executives, military officers, and senior civil servants.
The club has previously clashed with the government over its management, but authorities on Friday issued a letter seeking to take back the leased land due to security and infrastructure needs.
At risk are the club’s stately bungalows, manicured lawns, teakwood interiors, and large hallways.
In a lawsuit running to more than 900 pages, according to Reuters, a group of members and employees has asked the Delhi High Court to halt the move until the legal challenge is resolved.
The government wants to “illegally gain possession of a hundred-year-old institution in a period of 15 days,” the lawsuit said.
At a hearing on Tuesday, the club’s lawyer urged the court to prevent authorities from taking action, while the government’s counsel argued that no eviction would take place without due process.
The next court hearing is set for July.
How Iran war is crushing India’s diamond industry
The Indian city of Surat, often called the global diamond capital, is under mounting pressure as geopolitical tensions disrupt one of India’s most critical export industries.
The city — responsible for cutting and polishing the vast majority of the world’s diamonds — is grappling with supply chain disruptions, rising shipping and insurance costs, and reduced demand in key markets.
Industry figures say sanctions on Russian diamonds and escalating Middle East conflicts have intensified an already fragile situation, forcing factory closures, layoffs and pay cuts. Workers report unpaid wages and growing financial stress, highlighting the human toll of a global trade slowdown.
Extreme heat ruins Alphonso crop in Maharashtra
The western Indian state of Maharashtra, a hub for producing renowned Alphonso mangoes, is reporting that hot weather has ruined this year’s crop of the variety commonly known as the “King of Mangoes.”
A sharp difference between daytime and nighttime temperatures in January hurt the flowering and fruit-setting process, while extreme temperatures through April and May spoiled the fruit itself, said Bapusaheb Manikrao Lambade, a government agriculture officer.
Temperatures in 2026 has been especially hot in India, likely due to the El Nino effect, a climate pattern that can trigger extreme conditions. A strong El Nino is expected this year, which will affect crops across Asia, South America and Africa.
A government-backed survey by scientists and field officials earlier this year, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, estimates this year’s crop losses in Devgad at 85% to 90%. Devgad is one of Maharashtra’s top Alphonso-growing areas.
The weather has also caused losses in mango-growing areas elsewhere in the state.
India’s entire mango crop was worth $2.3 billion last year, according to Indian research firm Mordor Intelligence. The country is the world’s largest mango grower.
Mass resignations shake Tamil Nadu’s opposition party
Four opposition lawmakers in Tamil Nadu, a southern state in India, have resigned from their party in a major reshuffling of personal alliances in the aftermath of the recent state elections.
Three have already joined the newly formed ruling party led by actor-turned-politician Vijay, and the fourth is expected to follow.
The new chief minister’s two-year-old party fell just short of a majority in the election, but he entered into a fragile coalition with just enough seats to prove a majority.
The defections effectively give the movie star a more stable grip on power.
Fresh US strikes on Iran? Not a word
At the joint press statements by the four Quad foreign ministers in Delhi, three things stood out: there was no mention of Iran, no mention of China, and no clarity on whether there will be a Quad leaders’ summit this year.
Which raises a bigger question: how relevant is the Quad in a moment of geopolitical upheaval, growing uncertainty and increasingly transactional partnerships, where even close allies are now openly pressured and bullied?
So what actually came out of today’s meeting?
The foreign ministers of Australia, India, Japan and the US announced plans to jointly build a port in Fiji. They also signed agreements on critical minerals and energy security.
The group reaffirmed its commitment to safe and unimpeded maritime traffic in the Indo-Pacific, especially for the flow of energy supplies, fertilizers, semiconductors and critical minerals. The ministers also repeated their support for freedom of navigation in what they called a “free and open Indo-Pacific.”
But are statements like these enough to inject fresh momentum into a grouping that lost steam last year after failing to hold a leaders’ summit?
One major reason for that slowdown was the tension between US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi over Washington’s punitive tariffs and Trump’s repeated claims that he brokered the India-Pakistan ceasefire after the two nuclear-armed neighbors came dangerously close to war in May last year.
And while US Secretary of State Marco Rubio used his four-day India visit for visible diplomatic repair work, repeatedly stressing the utmost importance of the US-India strategic partnership, Indian diplomatic sources continue to say that trust has been damaged. One visit alone is unlikely to undo months of perceived sidelining and pressure from Washington.
As for the Quad itself, today’s announcements also included expanded maritime surveillance cooperation in the Indo-Pacific and a broader rollout of the Indo-Pacific Maritime Domain Awareness Initiative, which seeks to provide near real-time commercial maritime tracking data to regional partners. It’s clear that all four Quad countries share concerns about China’s growing power.
But if today’s meeting was meant to convincingly demonstrate why the Quad still matters in an increasingly unstable world, it may not have fully succeeded.
Source : https://www.dw.com/en/india-news-quad-nations-to-surveil-indo-pacific-waters/live-77291437

