Wharton row: Wrong to disinvite Modi, feels Tharoor
Zeenews
       English        
 Follow Me on Pinterest Google Plus Ditto RSS Mail to us Mail to us
Monday, May 20, 2013 
Search
Nation

Wharton row: Wrong to disinvite Modi, feels Tharoor

Last Updated: Wednesday, March 06, 2013, 12:27     A- A A+
Comments 7
Zeenews Bureau

New Delhi: After being snubbed by the Wharton University, support for Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi seems to be growing and this time it has come from unexpected quarters.

Shashi Tharoor, a Minister in the Congress-led UPA government, has disapproved of Wharton Business School dropping Narendra Modi as a keynote speaker at one of its events.

Calling the decision as unfortunate, Tharoor was quoted as saying, "It is wrong to cancel his keynote address after inviting him. The US institution had a duty to hear the Gujarat Chief Minister after inviting him.”

Striking a different note from Congress, Union Minister, however, balanced his response by saying that he was not speaking on behalf of his party or the government but expressing his "personal view" when pointed out that Congress leaders have been saying otherwise about the incident.

The Minister also said that he was invited to deliver the keynote address six-seven weeks ago but declined it due to his Parliamentary commitments and suggested that Wharton approach someone else who does not have Parliamentary priorities.

"Perhaps that is why they went to a Chief Minister, I don't know," Tharoor said recalling that he had addressed Wharton India Economic Forum four years back and since then was being invited for the same every year but could not go thereafter.

"In fact, I disagree profusely with Modi at every level but I think it is far better to debate his record and views rather than to try and suppress his voice by disinviting him....Once they had invited him, they had a duty to hear his point of view," Tharoor told a TV news channel.

He said that the hosts should have instead asked from Modi questions including the uncomfortable ones and should have challenged some issues in arguments. "That is what makes for a stimulating debate. On an university campus, that is what the entire process should be all about," he said.

The Union Minister at the same time said that the conference is organized by students and perhaps they cancelled it as they felt that they cannot cope with the "trouble" and the "controversy" surrounding their invite to Modi.

"I do not think that it was a considered decision and I suspect that they are regretting both their decisions to invite Modi as also their decision to disinvite him," Tharoor, who is also the Minister of State for HRD, said.

Tharoor said that what he is saying does not mean that he would have recommended them to invite Modi but "once they had invited him, they had an obligation to listen rather than to cave in to the objections of people outside".

He felt that the organizers, who are mainly students adopted the "line of least resistance" of disinviting Modi as they apprehended that there would be demonstrations outside the venue or there will be security implications.

Tharoor, at the same time, praised the Forum saying it was a "big conference".

"My own feeling is that they just did not want the bother. They got so much of heat. They said...we cannot cope with this trouble. Let us get ourselves out of it," he said.

The Union Minister said that the line of least resistance is not good as "once you make a decision to invite someone, you should stick to the guns and I think that the kids have learnt the lesson...”

"To invite someone who is known to attract protests...to invite and then to disinvite shows they have not thought through".

Tharoor said he agreed with Wall Street Journal columnist and writer Sadanand Dhume, who also decided not to speak at the Forum as he disapproved of the organisers' decision to disinvite Modi.

Meanwhile, it has now emerged that Modi will now address the Indian diaspora in the states of Edison, New Jersey, Chicago, Illinois in the US through a video conference facility after being dropped by the Wharton Business School as a keynote speaker.

With Agency Inputs

For Zee News’s Updates, follow us on Twitter , Facebook, Google+, Pinterest

First Published: Wednesday, March 06, 2013, 08:41

Post your Comments

Name:
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 

Comments

Meera V - United States
Shashi Tharoor is right partially. Wharton should never rescinded the invitation to Modi but he is wrong then he says that Modi should not have been invited in the first place. Universities are places where diffrerent opinions are aired and debated. Other Ivies have invited Ahmedinejad and even Libyan strong man Ghaddafi , though the U.S. was in direct conflict with these men. That is the democratic way. The fact that Modi was disinvited on the basis of a shadowy group of so called faculty and students who don`t want to reveal their identities is not only disconcerting but sinister. Coming on the heels of Harvard`s decision to disinvite Subramaniam Swamy to the campus even though he was a valued alumnus , shows that there is a concerted effort to stifle free speech. It is a terrible precedent.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
nirav - Surat
The way modi is being opposed by certain section in ilogical way is only going to benifits Modi.Modi was invited by them only and then snubing him unilaterally is incorrect on part of organiser. One can have different opinion or view on any subject but to stop sombdoy from expressing his view because some section of the people opposing him is not democratic and university is not a political forum its a forum where successful people in their respective area can share their thoughts which can be usefull to the people then what is wrong in it.Mr Modi is not charged or convicted by any court of law and infact he is the person who has been ctiricized and scrutinized in very harsh way .We should stop doing politicizing every thing related to modi just because somebody want to oppose him in one way or other
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
viney - jammu
Mr. Tharoor has rightly said. It can happen with any one. These foreigner are not loyal to nay one & also not on a particulr side. Tommorrow if they feel that they should not invite nay one else they will do the same with him may he be a congress men or nay one else. At this point all indians must show solidarity & must not attend Wharton university at all.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
Rameshwar Singh - Bhopal
I hate Congress, But I always find Mr. Tharoor & Mr. Anand Sharma true gentlemen. Right persons in wrong Party.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
Kishen - Gandhinagar
Right persons in right party...you can not have such soft spoken guys in the BJP !!!
Reply

Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
MAK - Delhi
Can we say with sorry, this is stupid headline, here must be Mr Tharoor in highlight not this man as Tharoor beyond politics spoken as a honest man and a real literate personality.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
M. Farooque - Siwan
Yes, you are right. Everything negative or positive is being used in favaour of Modi, this is the effect of Money that Modi pays to media.
Reply

Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
A Soni - Navsari
Is this the Muslim in you speaking or you have even a bit of evidence? anyway, even common sense suffices to postulate that media does not favor modi.
Reply

Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
Meera V - United States
Are you suggesting that the Congress (I) is pristine pure ? Really , is that why we have had one financial scandal after another? When we allow our religious identity blind us to fairness, we create an unjust works!!
Reply

Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
Meera v - United States
Sorry! This issue is not about Tharoor and his honesty but whether it was fair to disinvite Modi ? In a democracy like the United States and India, when we suppress dissent we become a tyrants . Remember Emergency and its legacy!
Reply

Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
Ven DeSai - India
I very much appreciate Shashi Tharoor for his courage in promoting propriety and national interests above politics, in spite of his differences with NArendra Modi. This is a rare gesture in these days of excessive politicisation of almost all the affairs.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 
M. Farooque - Siwan
His statement must be read in entirity, Mr. Tharoor used very diplomatic language.
Reply



Post your Comments

X
Name
Place :
Email :
Comments :
 

View all Comments   

Most liked Comments

viney - jammu
Mr. Tharoor has rightly said. It can happen with any one. These foreigner are not loyal to nay one & also not on a particulr side. Tommorrow if they feel that they should not invite nay one else they will do the same with him may he be a congress men or nay one else. At this point all indians must show solidarity & must not attend Wharton university at all.



Rameshwar Singh - Bhopal
I hate Congress, But I always find Mr. Tharoor & Mr. Anand Sharma true gentlemen. Right persons in wrong Party.



MAK - Delhi
Can we say with sorry, this is stupid headline, here must be Mr Tharoor in highlight not this man as Tharoor beyond politics spoken as a honest man and a real literate personality.



Top News



latest