The Asian Age

Writers slam decision to revoke Aatish OCI status

■ Govt move ‘outrageous and dangerous’, says author Arundhati Roy

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While writer-activist Roy termed the move “outrageous and dangerous”, poet Thayil called it “a vindictive and unfortunat­e tactic” and politician­author Shashi Tharoor took a dig at the Indian government asking if it was “so weak that it feels threatened by a journalist”.

“The government is using this threat as well as the threat of denying visas to foreign correspond­ents of internatio­nal media outlets as well as independen­t scholars and journalist­s to try and manage the media,” Ms Roy told PTI.

The decision comes seven months after Taseer wrote an article titled “Divider-in-Chief ” in TIME magazine on Prime

Minister Narendra Modi. “This is a vindictive and unfortunat­e tactic that will embarrass the BJP. Aatish is Indian, a Delhiite and a writer. By sending him into exile you are making him a lightning rod, a martyr, and providing material for more books. Exile is a writer’s natural state,” Thayil told PTI. In an article in TIME, Taseer said he had lived in India from the age of two and had not met his father until he was 21. He was born out of wedlock and his mother was his sole guardian while he was growing up, he said. Responding to the MHA spokespers­on, the writer shared screenshot­s of an email interactio­n with the deputy consul general of India, and said he was barely given 24 hours to respond instead of the customary 21 days.

“It is painful to see an official spokespers­on of our government making a false claim that is so easily disproved. It is even more painful that in our democracy such things happen...Is our Govt so weak that it feels threatened by a journalist?” Tharoor tweeted. Expressing his solidarity for the The Temple-Goers author, award-winning US-based writer Amitav Ghosh retweeted a post by Ashok Swain, a professor of internatio­nal studies at Sweden’s Uppasal University that said, “You write against Modi, you cease to be an Indian!”

◗ Authors Arundhati Roy and Jeet Thayil were among the host of writers and academics who came forward on Friday to back their British-born colleague Aatish Ali Taseer

 ??  ?? Aatish Ali Taseer
Aatish Ali Taseer

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