Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Aussie daily slammed for depicting Indians eating solar panels

- Aditya Iyer

NEW DELHI: A cartoon in Australia’s biggest-selling national newspaper The Australian created controvers­y on Monday with its depiction of starving, turbaned Indians attempting to eat solar panels with mango chutney, only to give up in exasperati­on.

This is the latest controvers­y from veteran cartoonist Bill Leak, who drew it in response to the climate deal reached in Paris on Saturday night, and India’s leading role in ratifying the treaty

The cartoon has drawn widespread condemnati­on across social media, with many slamming the imagery as being outright racist and drawing from antiquated stereotype­s of the Third World. Amanda Wise, an associate professor of Sociology at Sydney’s Macquarie University, in an interview with the Guardian Australia, said the cartoon was “appalling” and would have never been accepted by a publicatio­n in the UK, US or Canada.

The irony in Leak’s cartoon was also evident to some on Twitter, given how it shows Indians as only seeing solar panels as potential food, rather than as sources of energy.

“India is the technology centre of the world right now, and has some of the most high-tech industries on the planet in that part of the world ” Wise added “The underlying message is that people in developing countries don’t need all these technologi­es to do with climate change - they need food,” she said.

This is not the first time that Leak has been accused of being racist; the cartoonist for the News Corp-owned publicatio­n has courted controvers­y for his cartoons on the Gaza Strip and the Syrian Civil War, with even a Twitter handle, named

Bill Leak Explained (@ Bleakekspl­ayned) dedicated to outing the offensive subtext to his work on the social media platform

 ?? THE AUSTRALIAN ?? The cartoon by Bill Leak, featured in The Australian, has been widely criticised across social media.
THE AUSTRALIAN The cartoon by Bill Leak, featured in The Australian, has been widely criticised across social media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India