Quantico star Priyanka Chopra apologises for show’s terrorism plotline
Priyanka Chopra, one of India’s most famous actresses, who found crossover appeal playing an FBI recruit on the ABC drama Quantico, has apologised for a plot line involving terrorism by Indian nationalists before a summit meeting about Kashmir.
“I’m extremely saddened and sorry that some sentiments have been hurt by a recent episode of Quantico,” she wrote on Twitter on Sunday. “That was not and would never be my intention. I sincerely apologise. I’m a proud Indian and that will never change.”
ABC Studios also apologised for wading into a delicate political situation, emphasising in a statement that the episode was fictional and that much of the backlash had been unfairly directed toward Chopra, “who didn’t create the show”.
“The show has featured antagonists of many different ethnicities and backgrounds, but in this case we inadvertently and regrettably stepped into a complex political issue,” the statement read.
For decades, the mountainous region of Jammu and Kashmir has been a flash point for India, which is predominantly Hindu, and Pakistan, which is mostly Muslim. Violence has ebbed and flowed for years. In recent months, fighting has intensified, and in India polarisation has grown between Hindus and Muslims who feel that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party, a Hindu nationalist party, does not speak for them.
Chopra, 35, one of Bollywood’s most popular celebrities, has found recent success in the US entertainment industry, where she starred alongside Dwayne Johnson and Zac Efron in 2017’s year’s film version of Baywatch. In 2015, she scored the starring role in Quantico, now in its third season.
Chopra plays Alex Parrish, a bright FBI recruit who becomes a central suspect in a terrorist attack at Grand Central Terminal in New York City and must race to prove her innocence.
But the episode that aired on June 1 enraged some Indians. In the episode, Indian nationalists plan to frame Pakistanis before an international summit meeting in Kashmir by orchestrating a nuclear attack in New York. Chopra’s character foils the plot after she notices that one of the terrorists is wearing rudraksha, seeds used as prayer beads in Hinduism.
In the past, Chopra has been criticised in India for showing her legs during a meeting with Modi, exposing her armpits in a photo spread for Maxim magazine and visiting Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh.
This year, when Chopra, who is a Unicef goodwill ambassador for child rights, spent time with the Rohingya, a Muslim minority, Vinay Katiyar, a right-wing figure with the Bharatiya Janata Party, lashed out.
“She should not have gone to meet them,” he told Asian News International. “Rohingya Muslims should not be allowed to live on this country’s soil, and those who sympathise with them should also not be allowed to live here.”