The Borneo Post

Modi allies in hot soup over threats to Indian voters

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NEW DELHI: Two top members of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party including an estranged member of the Gandhi dynasty were in hot water Saturday for appearing to threaten people to vote for them in the ongoing mega- election.

Indian politician­s are often accused of using hate or intimidati­on to win support of the electorate. Soliciting votes on religious lines or threatenin­g voters is prohibited.

A video showed women and child welfare minister Maneka Gandhi, widow of former politician Sanjay Gandhi, warning a gathering of Muslim community members to vote for her or be shunned if she returns to power.

“I am winning with the help of the people. But if my victory comes without the support of Muslims, then I will not feel good,” Gandhi told a gathering during a campaign rally on Friday.

“It will leave a bitter taste. And then when a Muslim comes for any work, then I will think let it be.”

Her comments sparked outrage online and demands for action by the opposition Congress party — headed by her former husband’s nephew Rahul Gandhi — as local election authoritie­s told her to explain her comments.

Bollywood actor Swara Bhaskar on Twitter slammed what she said as an open ‘threat to Muslims and unconstitu­tional’ and demanded criminal action against the minister.

Maneka Gandhi’s former husband Sanjay Gandhi was the son of former premier Indira Gandhi, who was assassinat­ed in 1984. His brother was Rajiv Gandhi, assassinat­ed in 1991.

Sanjay was instrument­al in a compulsory sterilisat­ion programme during the 1975 to 1977 ‘emergency’ when his mother and prime minister Indira Gandhi suspended all civil rights.

More than six million men were sterilised under the programme that aimed to control India’s population and was intense in Muslim areas.

Sanjay was seen as the political heir to his mother but died in a plane crash in 1980.

Following his death, Maneka Gandhi snapped her ties with Congress and Indira and launched her own party before joining the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), now headed by Modi, in 2004. — AFP

 ??  ?? Supporters of Widodo gather for an election rally on the final day of campaignin­g in Jakarta. — AFP photo Widodo, Prabowo and Uno before a debate in Jakarta. — Reuters photo
Supporters of Widodo gather for an election rally on the final day of campaignin­g in Jakarta. — AFP photo Widodo, Prabowo and Uno before a debate in Jakarta. — Reuters photo

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