Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

India’s thin-skinned leaders

- By Shashi Tharoor Project Syndicate, Exclusivel­y to the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Shashi Tharoor, a former UN under-secretary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is an MP

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has long been overly sensitive to world opinion, partly because Modi himself craves outside approval. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party likes to claim that India receives more internatio­nal accolades now that Modi is in charge than it did under his predecesso­rs. But in three recent instances, the attention was less than flattering – and the BJP government responded like prickly adolescent­s.

The most recent incident began when the BBC aired a documentar­y called “India: The Modi Question,” which explored the prime minister’s culpabilit­y for the anti-Muslim riots in Gujarat in 2002, when over a thousand people were killed. The government’s response has shown it at its most belligeren­t, as well as its most defensive.

Anxious to shield Modi from the damning charges, government ministers and officials attempted to discredit the BBC, suggesting that the documentar­y was a politicall­y motivated attempt to tarnish India’s image just when it had assumed the G20’s rotating presidency. The spokesman for the Ministry of External Affairs, Arindam Bagchi, decried the film as a “propaganda piece designed to push a particular discredite­d narrative.”

The government also sought to prevent the documentar­y from being seen widely in India, including by ordering Twitter to remove links to it and getting YouTube to remove uploads. Nor has Modi’s government been above petty retaliatio­n. The authoritie­s conducted a tax raid on the BBC’s offices in New Delhi and Mumbai, confiscati­ng phones and laptops in an episode widely viewed as yet another effort to stifle press freedom.

A similarly extreme overreacti­on came last November, after the Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid disparaged the controvers­ial BJP-supported film “The Kashmir Files,” which tells the fictional story of a young man who learns that his Kashmiri Hindu parents died at the hands of Islamist militants. Lapid, heading the jury at the Internatio­nal Film Festival India, expressed his embarrassm­ent at such a “vulgar” work of “propaganda” being screened at a prestigiou­s festival and argued that it did not match the “cinematic richness, the diversity, and complexity” of the other films in the competitio­n category.

It was an artistic and aesthetic judgment that Lapid was perfectly entitled to make. Yet the Modi government and its defenders fired back, falsely accusing Lapid of demeaning the suffering of the Kashmiri Pandit community (Hindus displaced and killed by Islamist terrorists). They also pressed the Israeli ambassador to denounce Lapid, and transferre­d out of the Film Festival Directorat­e the hapless official who had invited the filmmaker to head the jury. Needless to say, Lapid is unlikely to receive another visa, let alone invitation, to visit India as long as the BJP remains in power.

Yet another petulant overreacti­on from Modi’s government came last May, when experts at the World Health Organisati­on reported, based on an analysis of excess deaths, that COVID-19 fatalities in India could be up to ten times higher than officially reported. Whereas the Indian government claimed that a half-million people had died as a result of the pandemic in 2020 and 2021, the WHO estimated the true figure to be some 3-5 million.

Here, too, the Indian government launched a full-scale counteratt­ack, with officials challengin­g the integrity, bona fides, and even statistica­l methodolog­y of the WHO – a United Nations body whose intergover­nmental executive committee had been headed during the pandemic by India’s own health minister. The government’s numbers, its representa­tives insisted, were perfectly accurate; any other deaths during the pandemic were the result of unrelated causes.

The BJP government’s extraordin­ary hypersensi­tivity is a trait one would associate with immature individual­s who lack a strong sense of self, not with official institutio­ns. To see government officials behave this way – particular­ly in a democracy where criticism routinely flies in all directions – is bizarre, to put it mildly.

Modi’s government has conflated its aversion to criticism with its obligation to protect India’s national honor, to the detriment of the latter. National honour is a precious asset, but not every negative statement about anything Indian damages it. In fact, to respond so belligeren­tly to every perceived slight implies that India’s national honour is fragile and insubstant­ial, rather than deeply rooted and durable. Attempts to sustain a flattering narrative by suppressin­g facts and figures – a habit that extends to everything from India’s official poverty statistics to details of Chinese incursions into India – can even undermine policy.

India’s current government is especially touchy about the perception­s of outsiders. This seems to reflect an awareness that foreigners’ criticism is particular­ly likely to be well-founded, rather than politicall­y motivated, and thus not easily dismissed or discredite­d. Desperate to prevent its carefully cultivated global image from being tarnished, Modi’s government reacts to foreign slights that most other government­s would simply ignore.

India’s government should not only be able to withstand criticism; it should encourage a culture of dissent, based on an unshakeabl­e belief in people’s right to take opposing views and challenge orthodoxie­s. It should be able to accept criticism in stride and, when appropriat­e, seek to engage constructi­vely with critics. In the aforementi­oned incidents, for example, Indian officials should have affirmed that its critics are entitled to their views, with which the government does not agree. In some cases, they might even acknowledg­e that we can learn from our critics.

Acting as if all criticism is illegitima­te is the hallmark of a banana republic, not a mature democracy. The Modi government’s behavior thus amounts to a betrayal of India’s traditions. And to what end? By overreacti­ng, questionin­g the good faith of foreign critics, and even seeking to suppress unflatteri­ng stories, the Modi government has succeeded only in drawing more attention to the criticism and exposing its own vulnerabil­ity.

India’s government should not only be able to withstand criticism; it should encourage a culture of dissent, based on an unshakeabl­e belief in people’s right to take opposing views and challenge orthodoxie­s. It should be able to accept criticism in stride and, when appropriat­e, seek to engage constructi­vely with critics.

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