India's Second Freedom Struggle Needs Brilliant Patriots, Not Just Briliant Graduates: Gautam Adani

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The country is in the midst of a "second freedom struggle", and this time, its is for technological self-reliance, Gautam Adani stated. (File image. Photo: Adani Group/X)
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Gautam Adani urged IIT Kharagpur engineers to become new freedom fighters for tech self-reliance
  • India imports 90% of chips, 85% of oil, and many critical defence systems, risking growth disruption
  • Adani warned future battles will be fought in server farms with intellectual property control crucial
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Adani Group Chairman Gautam Adani, while addressing the Platinum Jubilee session of IIT Kharagpur on Monday, called on some of India's brightest engineers to think of themselves as "new freedom fighters".

The country is in the midst of a "second freedom struggle", and this time, its is for technological self-reliance, he stated, urging professors and students to align their ambitions with the rise of a $25-trillion Indian economy by 2050. "Your innovation, your software code, and your ideas are today's weapons. You will decide whether India takes command of its destiny or surrenders it to others."

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This is no longer about producing brilliant graduates — it is about producing brilliant patriots.
Gautam Adani

Drawing a parallel between the Hijli jail at Kharagpur where young revolutionaries once fought for Independence and the challenges of the 21st century, Adani said India's vulnerabilities in semiconductors, energy and defence meant true freedom was still incomplete.

"We import 90% of our chips, 85% of our oil, and even many of our critical defence systems. One sanction, one disruption, and our growth could be frozen," he warned.

Adani stressed that the battles ahead would be fought in "server farms, not trenches" and that nations that controlled intellectual property would control the future. "Tomorrow's trillion-dollar disruptors will bend others to their will. Companies will become more powerful than many nations. Several educational institutions that fail to adapt will also disappear," he said.

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