Millennium Post

Banning Chinese apps a ‘digital strike’: Prasad

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

KOLKATA: Calling the ban on Chinese apps a "digital strike", Union Communicat­ion and Informatio­n Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Thursday said India wants peace but if someone casts an evil eye the country is capable of giving a befitting reply. Hailing the "strong" leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he asserted, if India

lost 20 soldiers in the Galwan Valley border clash, the toll is double on the Chinese side. "Now you can hear about only two 'Cs' Coronaviri­s and China. We believe in peace and solve problems through discussion, but if somebody casts an evil eye on India, we will give a befitting reply. When people from China tried to create pressure on LAC, our soldiers gave them a befitting reply...if our 20 jawans have sacrificed their

lives, the toll is double on the Chinese side.

"You all must have noticed that they have not come out with any figure," Prasad, also the Union law and justice minister, told a virtual rally for the people of West Bengal.

He said people will remember the retaliator­y assault mounted by India after terrorist strikes in Uri and Pulwama. "When our PM is saying that the sacrifice of our jawans won't go in vain, it has a meaning in terms of national security. Our government has the will to deliver. All of us are aware of the courage of our PM." Prasad said the India of 2020 will neither "stop nor bow its head" before anyone. "It's not the India of 1962," he said, referring to the India-china war in which the country was defeated because of the superior Chinese war machine. Insisting that India carried out a "digital strike" to protect the data of countrymen, Prasad sought to know why the TMC was opposing the ban on Chinese apps. "For us, the privacy and protection of data of our countrymen are supreme. As IT minister, we decided to ban 59 apps to protect data. We won't compromise on the issue of data security and national integratio­n. India knows how to protect its borders and also knows how to carry out a digital strike," he asserted. Launching a scathing attack on the Congress party for questionin­g the Centre for its handling of the Indo-china military standoff at the Line of Actual Control in eastern Ladakh, the senior BJP leader said, the entire country should be fighting this crisis together instead of targeting the government. Taking a dig at the Congress on the funding of the Gandhi family-run Rajiv Gandhi Foundation, he wondered what prompted the RGF to conduct a study in favour of a free trade agreement with China.

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