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India no longer an open society: Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie, acclaimed author of books such as Midnights Children and The Satanic Verses, in a recent interview with CNN, said that India may not be an open society anymore.
Responding to a question on whether the Indian Government was getting increasingly prickly with regard to criticism and freedom of expression, Rushdie said, Whether its movies, literature or scholarship, there is an increasing willingness to prevent things being said, with the state not usually defending the rights of the individuals concerned. So I think we are getting very close to the point where you could say India no longer has an open society.
Rushdie is no stranger to controversy. His 1988 book The Satanic Verses caused widespread uproar and he had to deal with many death threats, most notably, a fatwa issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran.
When asked about his being unable to attend the Jaipur Literary Festival earlier in 2012 due to protests by certain groups, Rushdie said it was clear that the protests were manipulated. There were elections coming up and somebody thought that they would get more Muslim votes if they came out against me. Its very strange, because Id been to the Jaipur festival four years earlier and there was no trouble, so it was a manufactured problem for electoral gain.
He added, It was rather gratifying that the Congress Party that had done this actually saw its share of the Muslim vote go down, so it showed that it was ineffective.
Salman Rushdie, acclaimed author of books such as Midnights Children and The Satanic Verses, in a recent interview with CNN, said that India may not be an open society anymore.
Responding to a question on whether the Indian Government was getting increasingly prickly with regard to criticism and freedom of expression, Rushdie said, Whether its movies, literature or scholarship, there is an increasing willingness to prevent things being said, with the state not usually defending the rights of the individuals concerned. So I think we are getting very close to the point where you could say India no longer has an open society.
Rushdie is no stranger to controversy. His 1988 book The Satanic Verses caused widespread uproar and he had to deal with many death threats, most notably, a fatwa issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran.
When asked about his being unable to attend the Jaipur Literary Festival earlier in 2012 due to protests by certain groups, Rushdie said it was clear that the protests were manipulated. There were elections coming up and somebody thought that they would get more Muslim votes if they came out against me. Its very strange, because Id been to the Jaipur festival four years earlier and there was no trouble, so it was a manufactured problem for electoral gain.
He added, It was rather gratifying that the Congress Party that had done this actually saw its share of the Muslim vote go down, so it showed that it was ineffective.