The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘No laughing matter’: Modi mocked for tech gaffes

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NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been roundly mocked for suggesting that radars are affected by clouds and boasting that he sent an email attachment years before the technology to do so was invented.

Modi, who is currently fighting to retain his premiershi­p in a marathon election, claimed in a weekend television interview that he ordered air strikes on Pakistan in February because cloud cover would stop radar detection of Indian fighter jets.

“I said there is so much cloud and rain. There is a benefit,” Modi told News Nation in the interview, recounting the bombardmen­t of what India claims was a militant training camp across the Pakistani border.

“(I thought) the clouds can benefit us too. We can escape the radar... Ultimately I said there are clouds, let’s go,” he added.

Opposition politician­s piled in to taunt the 68-year-old.

“It seems no one clarified (to) the PM how radars work,” tweeted Salman Soz, a senior member of the opposition Congress party.

“If that is the case, it is a very serious national security issue. No laughing matter!”

Twitter users also had a field day over Modi’s claim that he sent digital pictures as an email attachment in the late 1980s.

“I am likely the first person to use digital camera in India in 1987 or 88. Only a few people had emails then,” Modi had said in the same interview.

In reality, the first email attachment wasn’t sent until 1992 by researcher Nathaniel Borenstein.

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