Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Community In Washington Celebrates Independence Day

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Aug, 2015 01:51 PM
    Indian community here celebrated India's 69th Independence Day with ambassador Arun K. Singh unfurling the national flag and a cultural programme of patriotic songs in different Indian languages.
     
    Over 350 community members attended the Independence Day celebrations at Embassy Residence and sang the national anthem.
     
    The ambassador addressed the guests and read out President's Independence Day address to the nation.
     
    In his own message on the occasion, Singh thanked the Indian nationals and the Indian American community for their "dynamic, substantial and continuous contribution to strengthening the relationship between the largest democracy and the oldest democracy."
     
    "Hailed as the defining partnership of the 21st century in the world, India and the US are enhancing their relationship not only at the bilateral level, but also at the regional and global levels," he said.
     
    With the historic visits of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the US in September 2014 and President Barack Obama to India in January 2015, "the leaders of both countries have given a great impetus to the momentum of this relationship," Singh said.
     
    India-US cooperation "has deepened in the established sectors while new fields are continuously added to widen our relationship," he said.
     
    "People-to-people contact is one of the strongest pillars of this growing relationship."
     
    Indian community members also joined flag hoisting ceremonies at the Indian mission at the UN and Indian consulates in New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Houston and Atlanta.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Kamala Harris Seeks To Block 'Kill The Gays' Ballot Move In Us

    Kamala Harris Seeks To Block 'Kill The Gays' Ballot Move In Us
    California' Indian-American Attorney General Kamala Harris has asked a state court to allow her to block a planned controversial move to put before voters a measure authorising the killing of gays and lesbians.

    Kamala Harris Seeks To Block 'Kill The Gays' Ballot Move In Us

    Indian Ordered To Pay $145,000 To A Man Kept As 'Slave' At Sydney Restaurant For 16 Months

    Indian Ordered To Pay $145,000 To A Man Kept As 'Slave' At Sydney Restaurant For 16 Months
    An Australian court on Friday ordered a restaurant owner to pay A$186,000 ($144,387) in unpaid wages to a man who was trafficked from India and held in forced labour for 16 months, a leading Australian law firm involved in the case said in a statement.

    Indian Ordered To Pay $145,000 To A Man Kept As 'Slave' At Sydney Restaurant For 16 Months

    FBI To Track Hate Crimes Against Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs In US

    FBI To Track Hate Crimes Against Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs In US
    Six US lawmakers along with leading advocacy groups have welcomed the inclusion of Sikh, Hindu, and Arab American communities in the Department of Justice's hate crimes tracking effort.

    FBI To Track Hate Crimes Against Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs In US

    Indian Restaurateur Faces Manslaughter Charge In Britain Over Man's Peanut Death

    Indian Restaurateur Faces Manslaughter Charge In Britain Over Man's Peanut Death
    An Indian restaurant owner in Britain has been charged with manslaughter following the death of a customer after eating curry prepared at the restaurant,

    Indian Restaurateur Faces Manslaughter Charge In Britain Over Man's Peanut Death

    'Excruciating' Waiting Game For Mohamed Fahmy As Retrial Put Over For A Month

    'Excruciating' Waiting Game For Mohamed Fahmy As Retrial Put Over For A Month
    A Canadian journalist undergoing his second trial in Egypt on widely derided terror-related charges will have to wait nearly a month for his next court hearing.

    'Excruciating' Waiting Game For Mohamed Fahmy As Retrial Put Over For A Month

    Indian-American Siblings Anuj Sapra And Arti Sapra Awarded $9 Mn Over 2005 Brutal Nightclub Attack

    Indian-American Siblings Anuj Sapra And Arti Sapra Awarded $9 Mn Over 2005 Brutal Nightclub Attack
    Anuj Sapra and Arti Sapra won the judgement on March 11 in Manhattan Supreme Court for the incident at Club 9 1/2, owned by Ten's Cabaret, when two men beat them up with baseball bats, according to their Indian-American attorney Ravi Batra.

    Indian-American Siblings Anuj Sapra And Arti Sapra Awarded $9 Mn Over 2005 Brutal Nightclub Attack