Source: US to deny visa to Narendra Modi
Washington: Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi will be denied a visa to attend the World Gujarati Conference being held in New Jersey over the weekend, according to the Coalition Against Genocide (CAG). The US State Department has confirmed this in a letter to Democratic Congresswoman Betty McCollum, who had petitioned it July 8 against issuing a visa for Modi, the body formed in response to the Gujarat 2002 riots to demand justice said on Friday.
"The Department of State is extremely sensitive to your concerns and we are cognisant of the human rights abuses Modi has committed," Mathew Reynolds, the assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs, said in his reply circulated by the CAG.
"We have thoroughly searched department records and located no current non-immigrant visa applications for Modi. However, should we receive an application, we assure you it will be adjudicated in strict accordance with the Immigration and Naturalisation Act," the official said.
Commenting on the letter, Hyder Khan of the CAG said, "the current response from the State Department has virtually made Narendra Modi a persona non grata to the US". A total of 32 lawmakers have so far written letters to the State Department expressing concern over human rights abuses in Gujarat and urging the denial of US visa to Modi, the CAG said in a media release.
A concerted grassroots campaign by member organisations of the CAG generated over 12,000 individual letters to US lawmakers across the United States, the group said. These letters were written by members of the Indian diaspora and other Americans, expressing alarm and concern over Modi's reported US visit and the continuing persecution of minorities in his state.(IANS)
Washington: Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi will be denied a visa to attend the World Gujarati Conference being held in New Jersey over the weekend, according to the Coalition Against Genocide (CAG). The US State Department has confirmed this in a letter to Democratic Congresswoman Betty McCollum, who had petitioned it July 8 against issuing a visa for Modi, the body formed in response to the Gujarat 2002 riots to demand justice said on Friday.
"The Department of State is extremely sensitive to your concerns and we are cognisant of the human rights abuses Modi has committed," Mathew Reynolds, the assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs, said in his reply circulated by the CAG.
"We have thoroughly searched department records and located no current non-immigrant visa applications for Modi. However, should we receive an application, we assure you it will be adjudicated in strict accordance with the Immigration and Naturalisation Act," the official said.
Commenting on the letter, Hyder Khan of the CAG said, "the current response from the State Department has virtually made Narendra Modi a persona non grata to the US". A total of 32 lawmakers have so far written letters to the State Department expressing concern over human rights abuses in Gujarat and urging the denial of US visa to Modi, the CAG said in a media release.
A concerted grassroots campaign by member organisations of the CAG generated over 12,000 individual letters to US lawmakers across the United States, the group said. These letters were written by members of the Indian diaspora and other Americans, expressing alarm and concern over Modi's reported US visit and the continuing persecution of minorities in his state.(IANS)