Arab News

India celebrates Rishi Sunak’s ascent to British PM

New Delhi must also promote minorities, say analysts

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

From politician­s to ordinary citizens, Indians celebrated on Tuesday a “moment of joy and pride” as Rishi Sunak took office as UK prime minister, becoming the first-ever Hindu politician and person of color to lead Britain.

Sunak, 42, was born in south England to parents of Indian heritage who emigrated from British colonial East Africa six decades ago. His grandparen­ts were originally from Punjab.

Sunak’s wife, Akshata Murty, is a fashion designer and the daughter of Narayana Murthy, who co-founded the tech giant Infosys and is one of India’s richest men.

As his ascent to power was sealed on Tuesday, a day after he prevailed in a Conservati­ve Party leadership race, Indian media celebrated the appointmen­t with headlines including “Indian son rises over the empire” and “Battered Britain gets ‘desi’ big boss” — 75 years after their country cast off two centuries of British colonial rule.

“For every Indian no moment of happiness is bigger than this. This shows that the world over there (accepts) Hindus,” Sudhanshu Mittal, national spokespers­on of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, told Arab News.

“No field is left where an Indian is not exceling and leading the way. Britain has always been an inseparabl­e part of every Indian’s imaginatio­n because for many years they ruled.”

Sunak’s appointmen­t coincided with Diwali, the annual festival that for Hindus is symbolic of new beginnings. Manoj Ladwa, chief executive and chairman of the London-based media and publishing house India Inc. Group, recalled how seven years ago, also on Diwali, Britain’s former premier David Cameron said during a reception in honor of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi that “it won’t be long till there is a British Indian prime minister at Downing Street.”

“Today, on Diwali, a most auspicious day for Hindus, Sikhs and Jains, and almost seven years from David Cameron’s prophetic declaratio­n, we have a British Indian Hindu prime minister. Whatever our political beliefs, it is a moment of joy and pride for so many of us,” Ladwa said.

“Rishi Sunak is our story. A child born in the UK to immigrant parents who through sheer hard work and dedication sought to give their children a better life, with a focus on education and good values, he has climbed to hold the highest public office in the land. And by virtue of this, has become one of the most powerful and influentia­l leaders in the world.”

In the popular imaginatio­n, Sunak’s appointmen­t was likened to revenge on the former colonial power.

“It’s a moment of pride for all of us,” Shiv Shankar Prasad, a trader based in Mokama town in the eastern state of Bihar, told Arab News. “English people ruled over us for two hundred years and now an Indian is their prime minister.”

But political commentato­rs were more realistic, seeing the victory of a person from a minority group as an example that India itself should follow, rather than considerin­g it a symbolic triumph.

“Rishi Sunak becoming PM does not mean that India is ruling Britain. All that it shows is that British society has become more mature, open and it’s not your religion, it’s not your race which matters but the citizenshi­p of the country,” said Aditya Mukherjee, history professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.

“We should learn a lesson from them.”

For Nilanjan Mukhopadhy­ay, a Delhi-based author and journalist who has been focused on Hindu nationalis­t politics, a Hindu politician taking over 10 Downing Street should be an inspiratio­n for the Indian powers that be to increase their own minority representa­tion.

“It should give us a moment to decide whether we are going to enable minorities to get into important pivotal positions in governance,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Britain’s King Charles III greets newly appointed Conservati­ve Party leader and incoming Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Tuesday.
AFP Britain’s King Charles III greets newly appointed Conservati­ve Party leader and incoming Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Tuesday.

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