India caps week of military pageantry with drone show

1,000 aircraft fly in formation in night skies above New Delhi in Beating Retreat ceremony

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Drones in a formation to commemorate the 75 years of Independence over the north and south blocks, the government seat of power, at Raisina hills during the Beating Retreat ceremony, in New Delhi, on January 29, 2022. The ceremony performed every year on the evening of January 29 by the three wings of the Indian military marks the end of Republic Day festivities.
Drones in a formation to commemorate the 75 years of Independence over the north and south blocks, the government seat of power, at Raisina hills during the Beating Retreat ceremony, in New Delhi, on January 29, 2022. The ceremony performed every year on the evening of January 29 by the three wings of the Indian military marks the end of Republic Day festivities.
AP

New Delhi: India ended a week of military pageantry on Saturday with a synchronised drone display showcasing its homegrown tech industry, in patriotic celebrations marking a milestone in the country’s independence history.

A thousand aircraft flew in formation in the night skies above the capital New Delhi, flashing the saffron, white and green of the national flag, before rearranging themselves into a silhouette of independence hero Mahatma Gandhi.

The light show closed a series of extravagant sunset troop manoeuvres for India’s Beating Retreat, a music-filled drill ceremony for soldiers returning to base that has its origins in 17th-century British military tradition.

Drones form a shape of the Indian flag during the Beating the Retreat ceremony in New Delhi, on January 29, 2022.

It is staged each year three days after the country’s annual celebrations to mark the anniversary of India’s 1950 republican constitution.

The event has special significance this year as the nation of 1.4 billion people prepares to mark 75 years since the end of British colonial rule in August.

Laser projection narrating India's freedom struggle and its journey since Independence during the 'Beating Retreat' ceremony, at Vijay Chowk, in New Delhi on Saturday.

This year’s Beating Retreat sparked a minor local controversy over the decision by the Indian government to drop the Christian hymn “Abide With Me” from the ceremony’s featured songs.

The hymn, said to be a favourite of the London-educated Gandhi, was dropped because it was a sign of the country’s colonial past, media reports said, quoting government sources. The song was replaced by Sare Jahan Se Achcha.

The song had been a permanent fixture of the ceremony since 1950.

It has been replaced by a patriotic song dedicated to Indian soldiers who died in a brief border war with China in 1962.

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