UK PM Rishi Sunak defends India PM Modi over BBC documentary on 2002 Gujarat riots

Keep aside the whole BBC incident.

Modi had the audacity to actually ban an Indian channel simply because it criticised him for how the Delhi riots were handled. MediaOne, a channel based in Kerala run by muslims was banned for a period of two months for a vague two-word reason of 'national security'. They didn't even bother to elaborate to the media-house why they were banned. Imagine that.

Thankfully the Supreme Court intervened and allowed the channel to broadcast again.
 
Modis turning into a a mini hitler by the look of things

What kind of sane democracy is this where a man is responsible for orchestrating the killing of thousands Gets elected to become pm and now behaves like a authotarian dictator who crushes any voice that speaks up against him by having the courts, police and now tax inspectors in his pocked

All this in a so called democracy
 
I can't help it, if your devotion prevents you from reading the sarcasm present in a statement.

Your rebuttal to a Supreme court judgement based on the investigation of a supreme court appointed SIT and Supreme court monitored probe under Congress regime is

BBC documentary and Bollywood movie. :))
 
Keep aside the whole BBC incident.

Modi had the audacity to actually ban an Indian channel simply because it criticised him for how the Delhi riots were handled. MediaOne, a channel based in Kerala run by muslims was banned for a period of two months for a vague two-word reason of 'national security'. They didn't even bother to elaborate to the media-house why they were banned. Imagine that.

Thankfully the Supreme Court intervened and allowed the channel to broadcast again.

Media one was run by Jamaat-e-Islami.

There was no ban. The licence expired and I and B ministry didn't renew it.

The decision was upheld by the Kerala high court.

Supreme court allowed a temporary relief till final orders come.
 
Modi wouldn't have done this had it not been for the documentary a few days ago.

He and his supporters continue to be so mentally weak and thin skinned.
 
The issue is no one talking about the topic mentioned in OP and bringing their inner hate for Modi. Pls read the thread title, it is about Rishi Sunak being the British PM openly supporting Modi and saying his Govt strongly opposes the character assasination done by BBC.

Usual pretenders are keeping pedestrian distance from topic in hand as that dosen't suit the agenda and treating BBCs documentary as some gospel truth when the PM of the same country where the documentary is produced itself calling it **.

Oh some of my fellow Indians and how far they go :))

But you really cant blame them. From 2014 they are trying desperately for a circus clown to become PM of the country. Its literally funny how they are patiently waiting for him to improve from past 10 years.. Some are marking improvements in the way he delivers speech, some will tell you how he has now got more clarity in speech etc etc. In an era where a person dosen't get second chance, a clown is getting chance after chance for the most powerful post in the country even after his repeated failures just bcoz he belongs to a certain family. Heights of being priviledged. Then they will call others as bhakts. Oh the irony :))

Atleast we are proud bhakts of one of the greatest statesman the country has ever seen...no shame in it. Imagine being a bhakt of a circus clown and wait from him to improve for a decade :))
 
Indian tax officers searched the BBC’s offices in New Delhi and Mumbai for a second day on Wednesday, two sources said, as controversy swirled over a BBC documentary critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s role in deadly riots two decades ago.

The searches resumed Wednesday morning after they went on until late in the night on Tuesday, a government source and a source in the BBC’s New Delhi office told Reuters.

India’s Income Tax Department has declined to comment on the reason for the search. The sources declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.
 
Who is that everyone you keep referring to?

Rishi Sunak in the floor of the parliament said he and his govt rejects character assassination done by BBC.

Trump hosted him in Howdy Modi event and in UN Congress

He was hosted by David Cameroon in UK Parliament and in Wembley Stadium

He was given highest civilian award by UAE

He was given Seoul peace prize in 2018


So who is they you keep on referring who has this common knowledge on Modi?

By they, do you mean people from Bradford or Luton? :91:

Ironically people from Bradford or Luton barely know what goes on outside of their home towns. They live in their own little worlds quite content for the most part, most of them probably only log on to tik tok to see which curry house is doing the specials.

They aren't generally that bothered about what's going on in India, I doubt you'd find many of them on Indian message boards.
 
India embarked on an income tax survey of BBC offices after the British news organisation failed to offer a convincing response to earlier tax notices, a government official said on Wednesday, weeks after India blocked a documentary as propaganda.

Tax officials searched BBC premises in New Delhi and Mumbai for a second day on Wednesday, remaining in the buildings late into the evening. The action drew criticism from prominent media bodies inside India.

Reuters
 
Supreme Court revoked the ban on MediaOne more than 10 months ago. Why is the channel still broadcasting if it is a national security threat ?

No they didn't.

They stayed the order. Final hearing was in November and judgement is reserved.
 
No they didn't.

They stayed the order. Final hearing was in November and judgement is reserved.

The SC reserved judgement .. meaning the channel is still alowed to broadcast. Because the judge said the allegations were vague.

In other words, the government didn't even have solid evidence on which to substantiate the ban. It disliked the channel and so found vague reasons to ban it. Yet another abuse of authority.
 
The SC reserved judgement .. meaning the channel is still alowed to broadcast. Because the judge said the allegations were vague.

In other words, the government didn't even have solid evidence on which to substantiate the ban. It disliked the channel and so found vague reasons to ban it. Yet another abuse of authority.

Again wrong.

The main contention is the IB report. While the government is open to share it with the court. The petitioners want to see the report as well.
 
Again wrong.

The main contention is the IB report. While the government is open to share it with the court. The petitioners want to see the report as well.

The petitioners want to know why they were banned lol. They have that right atleast.

So according to you .. its okay if any elected government bans a media channel without even giving a proper reason to the owner of the channel which is what happened here. Wah .. your logic never ceases to amaze me.
 
The 'survey' of the income tax department at BBC office premises concluded on Thursday after over 58 hours. I-T officials left the Mumbai and the Delhi offices after the marathon survey which drew criticism. During the three-day survey, the officials prepared an inventory of financial data from some staff and collected paper and digital data. The survey came soon after it aired a documentary on Gujarat riots India: The Modi Question, which criticised the role of Narendra Modi, then chief minister of Gujarat. The 'survey' has triggered a major political row with all political parties condemning it and calling it the government's attempt to silence media.

During the three-day survey, the income tax officials stayed put at the offices, sleeping there, Reuters reported. Some employees were questioned about BBC's financial transactions till late at night, the agency claimed. The laptops and the phones were handed back to the owners after officials asked for passcodes and ran checks.

The agency staff were to stay off all social media platforms in an internal memo sent by Liliane Landor, director of BBC World Service. It said the organisation would contact staff again with more details once the survey was finished.

The income tax department has not yet issued any statement regarding the surprise survey, though government advisor (information and broadcasting ministry) said BBC was served tax notices in past but they never provided "convincing response".

The employees were also asked to not delete any data from their devices during the survey. The employees were allowed to go home on Wednesday for rest before they joined the investigation on Thursday again.

The survey, as reported, is in the view of BBC's "deliberate non-compliance" with the Transfer Pricing Rules and "vast diversion of profits".

Hindustan Times
 
India's Income Tax Department has claimed it has uncovered irregularities in the accounting books of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) following a three-day survey widely criticised as retribution for an unflattering documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
In allegations that come weeks after the British public broadcaster aired the two-part series on PM Modi and the 2002 Gujarat riots, the Income Tax Department said that income and profits disclosed by the BBC's various units were "not commensurate with the scale of operations in India".

Without naming the BBC, it said the department had gathered "several evidences (sic)" and was still in the process of going through statements of employees, digital files and documents of a "prominent international media company".

Its findings "indicate that tax has not been paid on certain remittances which have not been disclosed as income in India by the foreign entities of the group", the tax department claimed.

"The survey has also thrown up several discrepancies and inconsistencies with regard to transfer pricing documentation," it alleged, referring to the practises when one arm of a multinational corporation pays another for goods, services or intellectual property.

The department also accused BBC staff of employing "dilatory tactics" or efforts to delay an investigation.

"Despite such stance of the group, the survey operation was conducted in a manner so as to facilitate continued regular media/channel activity," the tax department said in a statement.

The BBC is yet to respond to the charges. Last evening, after the 60-hour survey at its offices in Delhi and Mumbai ended, the company said it will continue to cooperate with the authorities.

It said the priority for it now was to support its staff, many of whom have had to stay overnight in the offices during the enquiries, and that it will continue to report without "fear or favour".
 
This is a taste of what freedom of speech will look like under a Hindutva govt in the future. Imagine if they were allowed to become powerful enough to threaten the western world hegemony. Five Eyes countries aren't stupid, they will already have started making plans on how to stop that happening.
 
Congrats Modi. What would have been a documentary that a few people might have watched is slowly turning out to be an international embarrassment, weeks later, for you.

This is today's front page of news.com.au

bbc.jpg
 
^^
I think Modi and his core support had gotten used to the Godi media licking their feet. This complacency has done them in and now people are slowly seeing them for the thin-skinned cowardly bullies that they are :apology
 
This is a taste of what freedom of speech will look like under a Hindutva govt in the future. Imagine if they were allowed to become powerful enough to threaten the western world hegemony. Five Eyes countries aren't stupid, they will already have started making plans on how to stop that happening.

They always have the plans, pakistan's economy is the prime example.

They have no friends in brown countries.

Btw, many National channels especially left leaning ones and congress openly and always talk about modi and 2002 and they still can do that but BBC has time and time again pushed bogus propoganda on one thing or another and deserves all kind of bulling that it does to others.

Why are you so worked up about Propoganda western company not getting fair game in india? China does it all the time.

Its understandable a little if not for you obvious bias against anything hindu in general.
 
The petitioners want to know why they were banned lol. They have that right atleast.

So according to you .. its okay if any elected government bans a media channel without even giving a proper reason to the owner of the channel which is what happened here. Wah .. your logic never ceases to amaze me.

Yaha pe WAQF board binaya bataye logo ki property ko aur salo purane temples ko apni property bata deta he unhe government answer nhi deti aur apko iska answer chaiye:-p
 
They always have the plans, pakistan's economy is the prime example.

They have no friends in brown countries.

Btw, many National channels especially left leaning ones and congress openly and always talk about modi and 2002 and they still can do that but BBC has time and time again pushed bogus propoganda on one thing or another and deserves all kind of bulling that it does to others.

Why are you so worked up about Propoganda western company not getting fair game in india? China does it all the time.

Its understandable a little if not for you obvious bias against anything hindu in general.

I don't have anything against hindus. Your govt wanted to become part of the Big 3 in cricket, rubbing shoulders with Australia and England. I hope that works out well for you. Football rules by the way.
 
British MPs have described searches of the BBC's offices in India by tax authorities as "intimidation".

Some staff were subjected to overnight questioning when premises in Delhi and Mumbai were targeted last week.

The BBC, which is cooperating with the investigation, recently aired a documentary critical of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the UK.

Foreign Office minister David Rutley said the government was following the matter closely.

Labour shadow minister Fabian Hamilton said "criticism cannot be shut down unnecessarily" in a democracy during a Commons debate on Tuesday.

The Labour MP expressed concern about the motive behind the India searches "regardless of the official narrative as to why they took place".

He continued: "The BBC is a globally respected broadcaster rightly renowned for its high-quality, trustworthy reporting, it should be free to report and operate without intimidation."

The DUP's Jim Shannon described the searches as "a deliberate act of intimidation following the release of an unflattering documentary about the country's leader".

He called on the government to summon the Indian High Commission over the issue.

Conservative Sir Julian Lewis also described the searches as "extremely worrying".

Foreign Office minister David Rutley declined to comment on the matter directly but added: "Respect for the rule of law is an essential element of an effective democracy, so too is an independent media and freedom of speech."

The documentary India: The Modi Question focused on the prime minister's role in anti-Muslim violence in Gujarat in 2002, when he was chief minister of the state.

India's government has called it "hostile propaganda" and attempted to block it being aired domestically, including by detaining Delhi students at a screening.

A BBC spokesperson said: "The income tax authorities have left our offices in Delhi and Mumbai. We will continue to cooperate with the authorities and hope matters are resolved as soon as possible.

"We are supporting staff - some of whom have faced lengthy questioning or been required to stay overnight - and their welfare is our priority. Our output is back to normal and we remain committed to serving our audiences in India and beyond.

"The BBC is a trusted, independent media organisation and we stand by our colleagues and journalists who will continue to report without fear or favour."

India Central Board of Direct Taxes claimed to have gathered "crucial evidence" and found "several discrepancies and inconsistencies" after the raid.

It said in a statement: "The department gathered several evidences pertaining to the operation of the organisation which indicate that tax has not been paid on certain remittances which have not been disclosed as income in India by the foreign entities of the group."

BBC
 
Its obvious the sanghis are running scared because the BBC will uncover the truth that modi is a murdering genocidal maniac with the blood of hundreds if not thousands on his hand.

If he is wholly innocent, why don't they let the independent media go about their work? Scared because the truth always comes out, yeah?
 
Censorship = fear. If it was completely baseless they should've just discarded it and moved on, instead they are publicly and desperately trying to cover this up. That only makes people believe it more. Now they are pathetically intimidating BBC offices in India.
 
British Foreign Minister James Cleverly raised the tax searches on the BBC with Foreign Minister S Jaishankar during a bilateral meeting today. Mr Jaishankar "firmly told" his UK counterpart that all entities operating in India must comply with the law of the land.

"All entities operating in India must comply fully with relevant laws and regulations," the UK Foreign Minister was told, according to sources.

Last month, the Income Tax department searched the BBC offices in Delhi and Mumbai for three days over allegations of irregularities in tax payments. During the survey, senior staff had to stay overnight to respond to questions.

The searches came weeks after the British public service broadcaster aired a documentary that was critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership of Gujarat during the 2002 sectarian riots.

After completing the survey, the tax department claimed to have found "several evidences (sic)" indicating that "tax has not been paid on certain remittances which have not been disclosed as income in India by the foreign entities of the group".

The survey had thrown up discrepancies and inconsistencies on transfer pricing documentation, the tax department alleged.

Days later, the British government strongly defended the BBC and its editorial freedom.

"We stand up for the BBC. We fund the BBC. We think the BBC World Service is vital. We want the BBC to have that editorial freedom," said David Rutley, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

The tax surveys were widely criticized by opposition parties, who accused the government of retaliating against the BBC for the unflattering documentary.

The BBC's two-part series titled "India: The Modi Question", examines allegations that PM Modi, as Chief Minister of Gujarat, didn't do enough to stop the 2002 riots - allegations that were dismissed by the Supreme Court.

Foreign Minister Jaishankar, in an interview last week, said the timing of the BBC documentary is "not accidental" and denounced the narrative in the foreign media.

"There's a phrase - war by other means. Think of it - this is politics by other means. Why is there suddenly a surge of reports, attention, and views? Will some of these things not happen again?" Dr Jaishankar said, responding to a question.

"I mean, do you doubt it? Look who the cheerleaders are. What is happening is, just like I told you -- this drip, drip, drip -- how do you shape a very extremist image of India, of the government, of the BJP, of the Prime Minister. I mean, this has been going on for a decade, " said Dr Jaishankar.

The motive behind such stories abroad was to further the anti-India agenda, he said, challenging those behind the narrative to come to the political arena.
 
At around 11am on February 14, some 20 Indian tax officials and police burst into the BBC’s offices in New Delhi, shouting at staff to step away from their computers and hand over their mobile phones, according to two people present.

At the company’s bureau in India’s financial capital, Mumbai, tax officials launched a second raid. The government said the BBC had failed to respond to repeated requests to clarify its tax affairs related to the profits and remittances from its Indian operations.

The BBC has said it is cooperating fully with tax authorities and hopes to resolve matters quickly, adding its journalists would continue to report “without fear or favour”. It declined to comment for this story.

Three weeks before the raids — which the government called a “survey” — the BBC released a two-part documentary that included an examination of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s role in sectarian riots in his home state of Gujarat in 2002 when he was chief minister there. The documentary, which was only broadcast in Britain, accused Modi of fostering a climate of impunity that fuelled the violence.

Modi’s government has called the documentary “biased” and reflecting a “colonial mindset”. Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar told the ANI news agency last week it was “politics by another means” and suggested its timing was intended to undermine support for Modi. The BBC has said it stands by the reporting.

The 72-year-old prime minister enjoys high approval ratings and is expected to run for reelection next year for the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

In late January, Indian authorities ordered the removal of social media posts sharing the documentary and police detained some Indian students who tried to screen it, saying it would disturb the peace. They were released shortly afterwards.

The tax inspections at the BBC’s offices — during which officials cloned the mobile phones of some senior staff and searched computers, according to the two people present — have highlighted the concerns of some journalists and media rights watchdogs about what they say is a decline in press freedom under Modi.

Reuters spoke to eight Indian journalists, industry executives and media analysts who said that some media which reported critically on the government have been targeted with inspections by government agencies, the suspension of state advertising and the arrest of reporters.

“There’s never been a golden age of Indian journalism,” said Abhinandan Sekhri, chief executive of independent online media group, Newslaundry, whose offices in New Delhi were surveyed twice by tax officials in 2021 after critical coverage of Modi’s administration. “But it has never been like it is now.”

A criminal case filed by the tax department against Sekhri alleging tax evasion and forging a valuation report was thrown out by a judge in Delhi in November. Sekhri has sued the government for attacks on his fundamental rights and freedom of expression; the case is being heard in the Delhi High court.

Modi’s government has vigorously denied the BBC tax inspection — the first against an international news organisation in decades — was a response to the film.

“The BBC operates under two private companies in India: like any other foreign company, they are open to scrutiny and tax laws apply to them,” said Kanchan Gupta, senior adviser to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. The BBC had received more than 10 tax notices before the documentary aired, he said.

Reuters was unable to confirm this independently. The tax agency did not respond to a request for comment for this story.

Since Modi took office in 2014, India has slid from 140th in World Press Freedom Index, an annual ranking by non-profit Reporters Without Borders, to 150th place last year, its lowest ever.

Modi’s government rejects the Index’s findings, questioning its methodology, and says India has a vibrant free press.

The world’s most populous democracy with 1.4 billion people, India has thousands of newspapers and hundreds of TV news channels.

Gupta denied any government agency had targeted the media in response to coverage or suspended any advertising. He said the government had stated repeatedly that harassment of journalists was unacceptable and against the law.

Choking funds
The Editors Guild of India, an industry association, said the BBC raids were part of a trend of “government agencies being used to intimidate and harass news organisations.” It cited four similar tax inspections against media in 2021.

In one of those, the offices of Dainik Bhaskar, one of India’s largest newspapers by circulation, were raided in July 2021 by tax authorities, who alleged it evaded taxes on income worth 7bn Indian rupees ($84.47 million). The paper has contested the charge and the case is ongoing.

The newspaper — part of DB Corp, one of India’s largest newspaper groups — had published a series of articles alleging authorities mishandled the Covid-19 pandemic and underreported deaths. The government has denied mistakes in its response and undercounting.

A senior Dainik Bhaskar executive, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue, said the raids followed an unexplained halt in advertising by the federal government and six BJP-controlled states from February 2021. The suspension lasted until August 2022 and cost the newspaper more than 1bn rupees ($12.25m), he said.

A spokesman for the newspaper declined to comment. The state governments did not respond to requests for comment. Asked about the case, Gupta said the government did not pull advertising because of critical reporting.

In a report last year, Reporters Without Borders said that, despite high readership, many Indian news organisations were vulnerable to economic pressure because of their reliance on government advertising.

The acquisition of some media groups by billionaires seen as close to Modi has also led to the silencing of independent voices in the Indian press, it said.

Between 2014 and early December 2022, the federal government spent 64.9bn Indian rupees ($784.34m) on advertising in print and electronic media, it said in a statement to parliament at the end of last year. However, the figures showed spending has declined in recent years.

Gupta said there had been complaints after the government reduced its advertising spending but that was not an assault on media freedom.

“Government doesn’t exist to fund media. We don’t want a media which is loyal to us or beholden to us because of the money that we give them,” he said.

‘Critics as an enemy’
Reports from international press freedom watchdogs, including the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), say that — in addition to the financial pressures on media organisations — the federal and state governments in India have detained an increasing number of journalists for their reporting.

At least seven journalists remained behind bars in India as of December, the highest number in 30 years, according to the CPJ’s annual global tracker released on Dec 14.

In some instances, reporters have been detained by state governments — which control local police forces — after reporting on minor issues.

On March 29, 2022, Ajeet Ojha, a reporter with the Hindi-language newspaper Amar Ujala in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, wrote a story about high school examination test papers being leaked to students in advance in the town of Balia. Ojha wrote that an investigation into who leaked the papers was ongoing.

The next day, the 42-year-old reporter was arrested by police and accused of leaking the test papers himself, according to the police report, reviewed by Reuters.

“I spent 27 nights in jail,” Ojha said, adding that he is still accused on two counts, though police dropped some criminal charges. Balia police did not respond to requests for comment.

Gyanendra Shukla, a veteran reporter who led the campaign for Ojha’s release, said the BJP-controlled state government viewed “critics as an enemy”.

“They have forgotten that the work of a journalist is to highlight problems and criticise the system,” he said.

The Uttar Pradesh government did not respond to requests for comment. Gupta said the arrest was a matter for the state authorities.

Reuters
 
The Central Bureau of Investigation has been asked to investigate the Indian arm of the global non-profit Oxfam, following allegations that it was violating the Foreign Funds Act. Sources in Ministry of Home Affairs said Oxfam India transferred foreign money to various entities even after the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Act came into force. The Act prohibits such transfers.

Sources said emails found during an Income Tax department survey last year, indicate that Oxfam India was planning to circumvent FCRA by routing funds to other associations or for-profit consultancy route.

One of these is the think tank Centre for Policy Research, whose FCRA licence was suspended by the Union Home Ministry in March last year. A suspension of the FCRA licence means an organisation cannot receive foreign funding.

The government's move was slammed by the opposition Congress and was raised by the UK at a bilateral meeting.

The funds were allegedly routed to the Centre for Policy Research through its associates and employees in the form of commission, sources said. This was also reflected from the TDS data of the non-profit, which logged payment of ₹ 12,71,188/- to the Centre for Policy Research in the 2019-20 financial year under Section 194J.

NDTV
 
The BBC in India has been asked to provide financial details in a new probe linked to alleged foreign exchange violations. Britain's public broadcaster had faced a tax investigation earlier this year.

The BBC's foreign remittances are being scrutinised by the Enforcement Directorate, sources said today.

The Enforcement Directorate has registered a case against BBC India under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

The probe agency has asked the BBC to furnish its books of accounts and financial statements.

This comes months after the Income Tax department surveyed the BBC and sent its teams to the broadcaster's offices in Delhi and Mumbai over allegations of irregularities in taxes, diversion of profits and non-compliance with rules.

During the survey, senior BBC staff had to stay in the office overnight to respond to questions.

The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), the administrative body for the Income Tax department, had said the income and profits shown by various BBC group entities were "not commensurate" with the scale of their operations in India and tax had not been paid on certain remittances by its foreign entities.

The tax searches came weeks after the British broadcaster aired a documentary that was critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership of Gujarat during the 2002 sectarian riots. The BBC's two-part series titled "India: The Modi Question", examined allegations that PM Modi, as Chief Minister of Gujarat, didn't do enough to stop the riots - allegations that were dismissed by the Supreme Court. The government used emergency powers to take down posts sharing the documentary in January.

Foreign Minister S Jaishankar, in an interview, said the timing of the BBC documentary is "not accidental" and denounced the narrative in the foreign media.

NDTV
 
Last edited:
i wasnt gonna watch the documentary, but now i will. thanks india for providing it with such excellent advertisment.

I am actually watching for the first time now. Really quite disturbing that Risihi felt the need to support Modi when the documentary just confirms plenty of independent reports of Modi's complicity in the ethnic cleansing rampage in his home state of Gujarat.

An EU report at the time actually said the violence had been under-reported.

Rishi Sunak as a PM of Britain should have stayed clear of this.
 
A court in India’s capital New Delhi has issued summons to the BBC, Wikimedia Foundation, and the Internet Archive, restraining them from publishing the British broadcaster’s documentary on prime minister Narendra Modi.

The court order came while hearing a petition filed by Binay Kumar Singh, a member of Mr Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), reported legal news portal LiveLaw.

“The plaintiff has worked assiduously over decades to build his career and reputation, and if this matter is left unchecked, it will permanently demolish the plaintiffs hard-earned reputation and career. Therefore, even though the plaintiff is a champion of free speech, he is compelled to seek an immediate injunction to safeguard his reputation and livelihood,” Mr Singh’s suit is quoted as saying.

The court also asked the organisations to not publish any other content related to the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), the ideological parent organisation of the BJP and the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), an umbrella group of Hindu outfits and is an ally of the BJP.

The suit relates to the British broadcaster’s documentary titled “India: The Modi Question”.

The two-part documentary, which only aired in the UK, attempts to examine the prime minister’s relationship with Muslims, the country’s largest minority group.

The first installment aired on 17 January and showed a previously unpublished report from the UK Foreign Office that holds Mr Modi “directly responsible” for the “climate of impunity” that enabled the Gujarat violence in 2002 to take place.

The violence, when Mr Modi was chief minister of the western state, killed nearly 1,000 people-mostly Muslims.

The documentary also holds the VHP responsible for the violence.

Last year India’s Supreme Court cleared Mr Modi of wrongdoing over the riots, with previous investigations finding there was insufficient evidence to prosecute him over allegations that he ordered police to step aside and let the riots play out.

In his suit, Mr Singh stated that the allegations made against the RSS and VHP in the documentary are motivated by malicious intent to defame the groups and its members.

Versions of the film were briefly available on YouTube and clips were widely shared on Twitter.

Mr Singh, who claims himself to be an active volunteer of RSS and VHP, has stated that the already banned documentary is still readily available in public domain on Wikimedia and Internet Archive.

On 22 January the documentary was blocked after the government issued orders to both YouTube and Twitter to block content related to it using emergency powers under the country’s information and technology laws.

BBC, Wikimedia and Internet Archive have been directed by the court to file their reply within 30 days.

The case is scheduled for a hearing again on 11 May.

The Independent has reached out to the BBC, Wikimedia, and Internet Archive for a response.

Independent
 
I am actually watching for the first time now. Really quite disturbing that Risihi felt the need to support Modi when the documentary just confirms plenty of independent reports of Modi's complicity in the ethnic cleansing rampage in his home state of Gujarat.

An EU report at the time actually said the violence had been under-reported.

Rishi Sunak as a PM of Britain should have stayed clear of this.

Rishi Sunak was not voted as a PM by the people, but by his fellow MPs. He was shoe-horned in a totally undemocratic process.

He should have stayed away from this topic, but no doubt he was pressured from his In-Laws, and Modi to make a comment since it was the UK and USA government that had banned Modi from entering the UK/USA based on the evidence which proved Modi was responsible for the Gujrat riots.
 
I am actually watching for the first time now. Really quite disturbing that Risihi felt the need to support Modi when the documentary just confirms plenty of independent reports of Modi's complicity in the ethnic cleansing rampage in his home state of Gujarat.

An EU report at the time actually said the violence had been under-reported.

Rishi Sunak as a PM of Britain should have stayed clear of this.

What does documentary tell about Godhra train burning?
 
‘I pay tribute to Modi's leadership’: Rishi Sunak ahead of G20 Summit

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Wednesday praised his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi’s leadership over the last year and said “India is the right country at the right time to hold the G20 presidency”.

Sunak, the first Indian-origin prime minister of Britain, said the relationship between the UK and India will define the future of the two countries, even more than it is defining the present.


India Today
 
‘I pay tribute to Modi's leadership’: Rishi Sunak ahead of G20 Summit

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Wednesday praised his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi’s leadership over the last year and said “India is the right country at the right time to hold the G20 presidency”.

Sunak, the first Indian-origin prime minister of Britain, said the relationship between the UK and India will define the future of the two countries, even more than it is defining the present.


India Today

Sunak is not much different apart from not being allowed to spout hatred like Modi.

Sunak is the worst prime minister in UK history , 2nd after Truss who was also never elected. Sunak will lose the biggest vote in UK general election history.
 
Sunak is not much different apart from not being allowed to spout hatred like Modi.

Sunak is the worst prime minister in UK history , 2nd after Truss who was also never elected. Sunak will lose the biggest vote in UK general election history.

Let's be honest - you yourself know you are lying. The only reason you are not able to tolerate him is bcoz of his faith and heritage. Sunak has been a massive upgrade over both Liz Truss and Boris Johnson. When Mrs Truss (aka I am a fighter not a quitter), quit the PM post on very next day with a hanging economy, the entire burden fell on Sunak's shoulder to sort out the mess. It was expected he will quit soon as well and country will go into general election. But to his credit, he has dealt with the situation pretty well since then, stabilized the economy from where it was and still standing tall as PM of the country.

Yes, Sunak will lose the next election for sure but that is more to do with the color of his skin rather than actual credibility. And its not only Sunak, let any brown or black man stand for election in UK, he or she will lose irrespective of the work they do. Only reason Sadiq Khan is still the mayor of London bcoz there are more non white population in capital. Let entire Britain vote for Mayor, he will lose by a landslide as well.
 
Let's be honest - you yourself know you are lying. The only reason you are not able to tolerate him is bcoz of his faith and heritage. Sunak has been a massive upgrade over both Liz Truss and Boris Johnson. When Mrs Truss (aka I am a fighter not a quitter), quit the PM post on very next day with a hanging economy, the entire burden fell on Sunak's shoulder to sort out the mess. It was expected he will quit soon as well and country will go into general election. But to his credit, he has dealt with the situation pretty well since then, stabilized the economy from where it was and still standing tall as PM of the country.

Yes, Sunak will lose the next election for sure but that is more to do with the color of his skin rather than actual credibility. And its not only Sunak, let any brown or black man stand for election in UK, he or she will lose irrespective of the work they do. Only reason Sadiq Khan is still the mayor of London bcoz there are more non white population in capital. Let entire Britain vote for Mayor, he will lose by a landslide as well.
Sunak is a clown lol He has disliked by the vast majority, nothing to do with him being Indian.

"YouGov polling on 29-30 August found that 67% of Britons held an unfavourable opinion of Rishi Sunak, "


Only a insecure fellow Indian would suggest this.
 
Back
Top