India: PM Modi admires Bill Gates for appreciating ‘Mann ki Baat’ 100th episode

New Delhi, India: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his sincere gratitude to Microsoft Co-Founder and philanthropist Bill Gates for his warm sentiments during his radio address "Mann Ki Baat."

New Delhi, India: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his sincere gratitude to Microsoft Co-Founder and philanthropist Bill Gates for his warm sentiments during his radio address
New Delhi, India: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his sincere gratitude to Microsoft Co-Founder and philanthropist Bill Gates for his warm sentiments during his radio address "Mann Ki Baat." (Image Courtesy-Facebook)

New Delhi, India: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his sincere gratitude to Microsoft Co-Founder and philanthropist Bill Gates for his warm sentiments during his radio address “Mann Ki Baat.”

According to the sources, Prime Minister Modi used his official Twitter account to thank Bill Gates for his kind comments and to show his gratitude, tweeting that they deeply moved him.

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He mentioned Bill Gates’ profound commitment to the Mann Ki Baat idea, which unites Indians worldwide and changes the world.

According to a post by Bill Gates, “Mann Ki Baat” is a community-led initiative on sanitation, women’s economic empowerment, and health, among other crucial concerns that must be addressed and connected to the Sustainable Development Goals. Thank you, Prime Minister Modi. Prime Minister Modi tweeted in response.

According to reports, Indian Americans also celebrated the radio show “Mann Ki Baat”, reaching 100 episodes on Sunday. Additionally, S Jaishankar, the Indian minister for external affairs, watched the programme live from New Jersey, which aired at 1:30 p.m.

He emphasised that it is a forum that unites Indians from different countries and displays their love for PM Modi.

Jaishankar continued his speech and spoke to the diaspora, saying that no one would have believed him if he had claimed that PM Modi had been summoned to an assembly at 2:10 in the morning, where the Indian minister of foreign affairs would also be present.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “Mann Ki Baat” programme significantly impacts the populace not because it is based on a 100-year-old medium but because of a deep emotional bond between the masses and the leader.

The Indian Consul General in New York, Randhir Jaiswal, and Taranjit Singh Sandhu, India’s ambassador to the United States, attended the ceremony and listened to Prime Minister Modi’s remarks.

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