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Rehabilitation does not absolve Narendra Modi's govt of 2002 Gujarat riots: UK paper

Press Trust of India | Updated Oct 16, 2012 at 05:35pm IST

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London: A leading British daily on Tuesday suggested that Britain and other countries, who have decided to engage with Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, should "make it clear that rehabilitation is not licence for the type of supremacist inspired nationalism that fuelled the 2002 massacres".

In a strongly-worded editorial, The Financial Times said "The timing (of Britain's decision to engage with Modi) is, however, highly questionable. It comes as Gujarat prepares for elections in December which Mr Modi is expected to win.

"His majority could be enhanced by his new-found international acceptance. Recognition may also boost his chances for India's national elections in 2014, where he is being cited as a possible prime minister.

Rehabilitation does not absolve Modi\'s govt: UK paper

The paper also noted that Narendra Modi has never expressed any remorse or apologised for the 2002 Gujarat riots.

"Mr Modi is now a far more serious contender than he would have been had he still been shunned internationally". In the editorial headlined 'Gujarat's Shame, Rehabilitation does not absolve Modi's government', the newspaper said "Modi, chief minister of Gujarat, is one of India's most dynamic and business-friendly states. But for 10 years he has also been an international outcast as the Hindu nationalist leader of a regional government accused of complicity in riots which killed an estimated 2,000 Muslims". The paper noted that Modi has never expressed any remorse or apologised for the killings.

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Politics

Narendra Modi

Posted on May 24, 2013 at 11:34AM IST
Narendra Modi is the Chief Minister of Gujarat, a state which he has been able to successfully convert into an investment hotpsot. Born on September 17, 1950, in a small town of Vadnagar in Mehsana district in North Gujarat, he completed his s ...

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