BRISBANE: Prime Minister Narendra Modi today wowed students of a leading Australian university, freely mingling with them during a visit, and made it a point to tell them that it is Jawaharlal Nehru’s birthday as he sent his best wishes to children.
Within hours after his arrival following an overnight flight from Myanmar, Modi headed for the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) for the first engagement of his five-day Australia visit, the first by an Indian Prime Minister in 28 years after Rajiv Gandhi.
“I wrote on the selfie with my young friends at QUT…
Today is 14th November. Pandit Nehru’s birthday. My good wishes to children,” Modi said in a tweet. Modi wrote in Gujarati.
The Prime Minister, wearing a lab coat over a full sleeved white shirt and a beige colored pant, said he is fortunate to be among children on the occasion of Nehru’s birthday.
Modi has been accused by Congress of ignoring the country’s first Prime Minister and appropriating the legacy of freedom movement leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and Sardar Patel.
The Prime Minister, who is in Australia for the G20 summit starting tomorrow and for bilateral talks with his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott next Tuesday in Canberra, was given a guided tour of the QUT campus and interacted with a group of selected students, some of whom were Indians.
Several students could not hide their enthusiasm and turned into shutterbugs as they relentlessly took photos.
The enthusiastic response to Modi’s visit to QUT prompted a post on the University media’s twitter handle – “Perhaps the most high-powered lecture QUT has hosted.”
Modi was also shown an agriculture robot ‘AgBot’ at the University’s ‘The Cube’ complex – the University’s Science and Engineering Centre – developed under a joint bio-energy program using agriculture waste.
The Agro Robot, developed as part of a program to develop robotics technology in the agriculture sector, is a light weight machine that performs the functions of a large tractor, including weeding work.
“Research is key to development. There is ongoing relationship between development journey of humankind and research. Increasing dominance of science and technology in the field of agriculture will surely prove to be beneficial to farmers and to the field of agriculture as a whole. It is an important endeavor for welfare of mankind. Best wishes for your effort,” Modi wrote on the ‘AgBot’ in Gujarati.
“Narendra Modi is so popular even our AgBot wants an autograph,” said a university tweet.
Modi was also given a guided tour of the “The Cube”, where the Head of the Robotics department Professor Peter Corke explained agriculture robotics research activities being undertaken.
Professor Ian O’Hara also briefed the Prime Minister on bio-energy programs carried out by the young students.
Modi also spoke about the need for enhancing understanding of bio-technological processes to fortify cultivation of bananas to improve nutrition in India.–PTI