Lagatar24 Desk
New Delhi, Jan 22: Attacking BBC for its controversial documentary ‘India: The Modi Question’, Union Minister Kiren Rijiju on Sunday took on the ‘malicious campaigns’ inside and outside India over the UK’s British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC’s) documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and said that some people consider the BBC above the Supreme Court of India.
The Union Minister alleged that they are degrading the dignity and image of the country to any extent to please their moral masters.
Taking to Twitter, Rijiju said that minorities in the country are moving ahead positively.
Minorities, or for that matter every community in India is moving ahead positively. India's image cannot be disgraced by malicious campaigns launched inside or outside India. PM @narendramodi Ji's voice is the voice of 1.4 billion Indians.https://t.co/taaF1nvD6F
— Kiren Rijiju (@KirenRijiju) January 21, 2023
“Minorities, or for that matter every community in India is moving ahead positively. India’s image cannot be disgraced by malicious campaigns launched inside or outside India. PM @narendramodi Ji’s voice is the voice of 1.4 billion Indians,” tweeted Kiren Rijiju.
“Some people in India still haven’t gotten over the colonial intoxication. They consider BBC above the Supreme Court of India and lower the country’s dignity and image to any extent to please their moral masters,” the Minister added.
???? ?? ?? ??????-?????? ????? ?? ??????? ?? ??? ????? ?????? ???? ??, ????? ??????? ?????? ???? ?? ???? ?? ????? ???? ???
— Kiren Rijiju (@KirenRijiju) January 22, 2023
He said that there is no hope from these people who only aims to weaken India.
“Anyway, there is no better hope from these tukde-tukde gang members whose only aim is to weaken the might of India,” tweeted Rijiju.
Moreover, the minister has tagged an article written by Aligarh Muslim University Vice-chancellor Tariq Mansoor where he wrote that ‘BBC has assembled 20 years of biased reportage, peppered it with outdated condiments and garnished it with loads of misplaced victimhood. The recipe is that of a distasteful disaster.’
In response to the BBC documentary, over 300 eminent Indians, including retired judges, bureaucrats, and military veterans signed a statement criticising the British national broadcaster for showing unrelenting prejudice towards India and its leader.