Category: Interview

  • Revolutionary Accessibility in India: Sminu Jindal’s Inclusive Vision

    Revolutionary Accessibility in India: Sminu Jindal’s Inclusive Vision

    When Sminu Jindal’s wheelchair was damaged on an IndiGo flight, it wasn’t just about broken equipment—it was about a year of lost mobility. “A custom wheelchair takes about a year to remake,” she says. “No compensation can replace that.”

    The incident sparked outrage, but for Jindal, founder and chairperson of Svayam, India’s leading accessibility organisation, it highlighted a systemic gap in how the country treats people with reduced mobility. As managing director of Jindal SAW Limited and chair of CII’s India Business Disability Network, Jindal is uniquely positioned to drive change—and she’s not holding back.

    In an exclusive interview to a news agency, Jindal spoke about the urgent need for aviation reforms, how India can leverage accessibility for economic growth, and why the 2036 Olympics bid is a make-or-break moment. Edited excerpts:

    After your wheelchair was damaged, what specific changes do you want to see in aviation industry?

    First, we need to create awareness about what an assistive device actually means to someone with reduced mobility. A wheelchair is almost like a body extension—it’s as integral as your legs or arms. Most devices are custom-made for a person’s particular disability. When you damage it, you’re essentially making someone unable to live a regular life for however long it takes to remake it.

    The aviation industry has very high attrition rates. So once-a-month training should be mandatory. If despite that, assistive devices are still mishandled, there should be bigger penalties and deeper inquiry. Financial impact is the only thing that hurts us all deeply—that’s reality.

    Have you received any assurances from the government?

    Our ministers and educated people around us are quite sensitive. They just don’t realise how important training is because turnover is so high in this industry. I feel monthly training is critical, and private airlines as well as ground staff need to become more conscious.

    This year’s Pandara Road Durga Puja in Delhi was made fully inclusive through Svayam’s collaboration with UN India and UNESCO. Can this model be scaled?

    Absolutely. We always hear that when there’s greater footfall, things can’t be made accessible. I feel if America can do it for 10 people, India can definitely do it for a thousand.

    In Kolkata also, we’ve started conversations about making puja pandals accessible. You start with a role model, and when that becomes successful, people have the courage to follow through. Whatever we’re doing, we hope people see it can be emulated and carried forward at a bigger scale.

    India is bidding for the 2030 Commonwealth Games and 2036 Olympics. How should accessibility be built into these projects?

    We don’t see accessibility as a money-spinner, but we should. We’ve all seen the power para-athletes bring to the nation, the pride they carry when they win medals. When India hosts these games, para-games will follow. Every human being wants to enjoy these games as a family—elderly parents, someone with a temporary setback.

    When people from around the world come to India, they want to see more of the country. When transport is accessible, when tourism sites and hotels are accessible, India has a great opportunity to earn foreign exchange. Hotels, transport, ICT should not miss out on this opportunity.

    But we don’t create awareness about how we’re making things accessible. Communication, information and technology should be used to our advantage—only then will this opportunity bear fruit.

    You’ve argued that accessibility is an economic catalyst, not just a social duty. What’s the business case?

    Look around—we all benefit from accessibility right from when we become independent to go out. We want good education where parents don’t have to give up jobs to drop children to school. As we grow into college, into jobs, even women with stilettos have difficulty on roads because some jobs require that footwear. Pregnant women, parents with small children—all need accessibility for better quality of life.

    As we grow older, we don’t become a burden to our country because we worked 60 years to make the country productive. When we’re older, we have a right to have accessibility in banks so we can withdraw our own money, at archaeological sites we want to visit with grandchildren.

    It’s how you view the world. I want it to be a place where each one of us can live up to our desires, make our dreams come true, and be truly full of freedom and happiness.

    As chair of CII’s India Business Disability Network, where do corporate accessibility standards stand? Should they be part of ESG or CSR reporting?

    People are realising human potential is far greater than we imagine. The problem comes when schools aren’t accessible, children with reduced mobility can’t go there, adults can’t access colleges or skill centres because transport isn’t available, buildings aren’t accessible.

    It should definitely be part of ESG. I’d want it to become part of reportable figures eventually. But there’s a risk—people will just start reporting numbers, make someone a lift operator or tell them to serve water to fulfill quotas. To truly create employment opportunities where they become decision-makers and get important skilled jobs, we need accessible education systems first. That’s foundational.

    With India’s ageing population set to double by mid-century, how must cities redesign infrastructure?

    The question has the answer in it—because life is so vulnerable, taking care of it today will lead to a better tomorrow, not just for us but for generations that follow.

    You prefer the term “reduced mobility” over “disability.” Why does language matter?

    Being disabled myself, sometimes it can be hurtful terminology. As I become older, I may have reduced mobility but it still doesn’t make me disabled. There’s nothing wrong with a body that ages—we should be proud of it because we gather experience. It’s beautiful, and we should embrace it without the sting of disability.

    Disability benefits from accessibility, but so do different people—anyone with reduced mobility. It gives us the dignity of leading a life. By shifting to “reduced mobility,” people can see wider.

    From your audits of airports and monuments, what’s the biggest barrier—attitude, infrastructure or regulation?

    Definitely infrastructure, and with infrastructure comes regulation and mindset. They’re all linked. Last-mile connectivity—the more we stress about it, I don’t think we can stress enough.

    You’ve been recognised in Fortune India’s Most Powerful Women 2025 and received the Mahatma Award. How has visibility helped?

    Every little thing that brings me out in public gives me an opportunity to talk about creating awareness around accessibility. It’s not a disability topic—it’s about creating safety and dignity for anyone to travel to their place of choice without hazard.

    How do you balance being MD of Jindal SAW and running Svayam?

    We all learn to wear many hats. As women, we juggle a lot. I’m also a mother of two—it’s in our genes to take care of multiple things. I’ve had many role models in my family who’ve done it, and they’re not all women.

    You work with UNESCO and the Paralympic Committee. Which international practices could India adapt?

    I want my India to create best practices. There are things we have in India where we can beat the world and become a superpower, a Viksit Bharat by 2047.

    Which emerging technologies—AI, IoT, digital mapping—excite you most for accessibility?

    Nothing can replace physical infrastructure, despite technology adding to it. Physical infrastructure needs to be altered to make a difference in every human being’s life. Right now we’re just talking about cities. We need to look at rural India where 70% of our population lives—physical infrastructure will play an extremely important role there.

    Looking ahead to 2030, what would a truly accessible India look like?

    I don’t talk about my leadership—I really would implore everybody to chip in. This needs to be a revolution. A revolution called accessibility that will make not just India but a better world for each one of us, no matter what circumstances life brings.

    Accessibility is like that hidden substance called salt in our food. If it’s there, it makes it tastier. If it’s not, we all miss it.


    Svayam is one of the CSR implementing agencies of Jindal SAW Ltd.

  • Adani Foundation gets Rs 60,000cr gift on Gautam’s birthday

    Adani Foundation gets Rs 60,000cr gift on Gautam’s birthday

    Billionaire industralist Gautam Adani claims to be connected to the common person with whom he shares his rural roots. His wife Priti and family decided to donate Rs 60,000 crore on his sixtieth birthday in 2022 to the Adani Foundation to boost health, education and skill development. Experts are being consulted to develop schemes to benefit the people at the lowest strata of society.

    In his first-ever interview with the media, Asia’s richest and the world’s third-richest business tycoon in the world, Gautam Adani, admitted to being a very shy person, yet shared his formula for success as being good intentions and hard work. He told India TV that he does not believe in the “Maya Jaal” of monetary growth, his focus is the nation’s development, and he is confident that India is on the path of rapid growth.

    Acknowledging the role of various people in his success, Gautam says whatever he has achieved today is due to the tremendous support he received from his acquaintances, friends and well-wishers. But acknowledges Dhirubhai Ambani as his role model due to his vision and struggle to establish the Reliance empire. Gautam Adani’s wealth increases by Rs 1600 crores daily and Rs 66 crore every hour. Despite this, he says no business is free of risks, but the risk-taking capacity impacts the growth of a business. But when you take a risk, you should be aware of its consequences. However, perseverance remains the key.

    Having seen death closely twice in his life, first when he was kidnapped and again when he found himself stuck in Taj Mumbai during the 26/11 terrorist attack. He says he saw death closely and recounts the first bullet being fired in front of his eyes at 10, shortly after he finished dinner with a friend from Dubai. But these incidents don’t bother him as he is adaptable and quickly moves on.

    Adani Group’s philosophy is to go through competitive bidding before getting into any business. “We will not touch anything without bidding and winning the contract”, he says – no business, whether ports, airports, powerhouses, etc., has been secured without competing. When someone comes first in an exam, you cannot ask the person how they topped. No one has alleged any favouritism the government shows towards the Adani group. Political statements against the Adani Group are merely political jargon.

    He says it is wrong to say that the loans secured by the Adani Group are with the help of political clout. In 2013 the Adani Group secured 80 per cent of loans from Indian Banks; today, that has come down to 35 per cent. The remaining borrowing is from international financial institutions where the Indian politicians do not have much say. The foreign banks want to lend loans to the Adani Group because the rating of the Group is at par with India’s financial rating.

    Reacting to his sharp criticism by Congress Party and its leader Rahul Gandhi, Gautam Adani said it was due to the continuous political attack naming him as a beneficiary of the Modu Government after 2014 that the people of India have come to know his identity and who he was. But at the same time rubbished all allegations saying there was no truth in any allegation, and he did not read anything more in Rahul Gandhi’s statement than political compulsion. People understand that there is a difference between a political statement and a genuine allegation.

    Adani Group, he said, was committed to developing the potential not only in Rajasthan but also to developing the potential in every state of the country. Irrespective of any political narrative, Rahul Gandhi or his party is not anti-development. The Adani Group is working with state governments across India, ranging from Ashok Gehlot in Rajasthan to the left government in Kerala, Mamta Banerjee in West Bengal and Navin Patnaik in Odisha and KCR in Telangana. The Adani Group has businesses in 22 states across India. People try to use Adani to attack Prime Minister Modi for political reasons, but no one finds any problem with the Adani business model.

    Reacting to allegations of receiving land at Rs 1 per acre for the Mundra port, Gautam Adani said that there was no land; the Adani Group reclaimed land underwater and used its resources to develop the port by setting up railways lines and roads at its own cost. The government spent only a few paise on the Mundra port, which has become the largest private port in India in the last ten years. The entire development in Mundra has been based on collaboration with the local farmers and the community.

    Rubbishing the charges that farm laws were introduced to help the Adani Group, Gautam Adani said his Group has minimal exposure to agriculture-related business. His company made some warehouses for the state-run Food Corporation of India (FCI), and all the wheat stored in them belonged to the FCI and not to the Adani Group. FCI procures wheat at MSP and supplies it to people below the poverty line. The Adani Group has nothing to do with what is stored inside these warehouses. Linking us with this is baseless. The farm laws were good and impacted 40 to 50 per cent of people connected with agriculture in some way or another. If the laws had been implemented, Adani could have helped develop agricultural infrastructure.

      As told to IndiaTV