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regular-article-logo Sunday, 06 October 2024

Rahul Gandhi: Narendra Modi's vision of India not inclusive

At Cambridge: Isolating and demonising is against the country

PTI Cambridge Published 25.05.22, 01:23 AM
Students and invitees at the University of Cambridge listen to Rahul Gandhi  on Monday.

Students and invitees at the University of Cambridge listen to Rahul Gandhi on Monday. The Telegraph

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is creating a vision of India that is not inclusive and one that excludes huge chunks of the country’s population, which is unfair and goes against the idea of India, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said on Monday.

Rahul was speaking at an interactive session with students at the University of Cambridge.

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During the event titled “India at 75” at Corpus Christi College, Rahul covered a broad range of subjects from Hindu nationalism, the Gandhi family’s role in the Congress and efforts to mobilise the people of the country as he fielded questions from a largely Indian student base.

“I have a problem if anybody has a vision for India that excludes people, I don’t care who’s being excluded. I have a problem with it because it is completely unfair, it ignores that there is tremendous energy in the people being excluded and I have a problem with it because that’s not what India is,” said Rahul, in response to a question about secularism in India.

Rahul Gandhi interacts with invitees at the University of Cambridge on Monday at an event to mark  75 years of India’s independence.

Rahul Gandhi interacts with invitees at the University of Cambridge on Monday at an event to mark 75 years of India’s independence. The Telegraph

“I think it goes beyond secularism. You have to include every single person with compassion. Modi is constructing a vision of India where he’s leaving out huge chunks of our population. And, that’s not a vision of India, that’s a vision of a part of India,” he said.

Asked how the Congress plans to fight against the forces of “Hindu nationalism”, Rahul declared that he did not agree with the term itself.

“There is nothing Hindu about it and actually there’s nothing nationalist about it. I think you’ll have to think of a new name for them but they’re certainly not Hindu. And, I have studied Hinduism in enough detail to tell you that there’s absolutely nothing Hindu about wanting to murder people and beat people up,” he said.

“My problem with the RSS and the Prime Minister is that they are fiddling with the foundational structure of India. When you play the politics of polarisation, when you isolate and demonise 200 million people, you’re doing something extremely dangerous and you’re doing something that is fundamentally against the idea of India,” he said. “I’m sure there are good things the Prime Minister has done, but for me attacking the idea of India is unacceptable,” he added.

Rahul said his party was working on plans to go to the ground with padyatras, meet people and walk with people as a way to actively mobilise them from October-November after the Congress presidential elections in August.

“That’s for the Congress party to decide. There’s a presidential election, the party has to decide,” he said, when asked if the party needs a leadership outside of the Gandhi family.

Corbyn meet

Rahul’s meeting with British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in London triggered a row back home with the BJP asking him whether he endorsed the UK Opposition leader’s “anti-India” views.

The Congress justified Rahul’s meeting and shared pictures of Corbyn with Modi to ask whether the Prime Minister too endorsed the “anti-India” views of the UK Labour leader.

Rahul met Corbyn on Monday and the Indian Overseas Congress shared the picture of the two along with Sam Pitroda.

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