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Where to Where India’s Modi: Have 2019 Polls Any Answer?
Where to Where India’s Modi: Have 2019 Polls Any Answer?
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Where to Where India’s Modi: Have 2019 Polls Any Answer?
https://www.facebook.com/balbir.singh.355/posts/2127865080581917
Highlights By: Balbir Singh Sooch-Sikh Vichar Manch
https://gm1.ggpht.com/PPjswVYDBOaMGuwPHBQwjlywoldKgJxR8_zcMpx8Hl95FpeHRhLLd2p_1rLq_I3hCozuCPmdUGv1KXOoSRTDEpLh5vA5ojpvnVXVCBF3fZeau8WlW7gTuhyIkzx1axotlqTLL2BTLQaN9yHHIxGUb75gf8ZWH7KkoWYnMsEyZ7qH-0wKhJkADV2bWuB8g7ESK3GKDcZ8GuF3I3F7ekA6ppzL5tIJezssM2MLgcYj0MPWF0nWv1P-l7pDSJkJ5tHn4EkkRyPhOzg5RWC0KTDaBiAm9jo4CKxZMrTH-O3-S0c_UT_Khey_uCEAPtf4yRkX1sqRL-dMxFyq7kGO77jnX1sbNyUv6hHw3ZFwjwbjcaagT6pwlz3SmOG0pUrDQSw4cJLu6Be_Fc8HhIH32JxrGvGYi-gynYD4ytZNFBCU7RxSkbyIP8lbq96Ov2ApmcDcNS7Qqqgn_uTuNW4o-IKUHDqK9jl683AvODQulyy2F9UXTjO0wi_6NIBl6k0DazULQO9iYYvyIJlVxuZzc9QhPnOS45vFazr2xUwZDlGqjHdaIRAuDxrTjGg8prbaAxWUCLbqm4MSMWtomiY2vQZ-xQLAT7v6XP2C5xRBrEtBAPk_HILk3r_Fq8xc7RN2p91BrcTMwKN036ogemzhQaJphLM9axMIa22fypFl4b4m93P2G7XjmK-a2-9MoqIrYTndKGAZOjOMbxp2Ki4T6N0SlbaEJtcvEZ0lHJejXGg=s0-l75-ft-l75-ft
Please forgive us. Please let us go’: Muslims beg for their lives as Hindu mobs take revenge for railway slaughter
(i)    Is the real strength of India is peace, harmony and unity accept killing by Hindu mobs etc?
Balbir Singh Sooch-Sikh Vichar Manch observed
(ii)  'Modi has to go!' How former Prime Minister Vajpayee came close to SACKING Narendra Modi as CM after 2000 people died in the Gujarat riots: An extract from new book - The Untold Vajpayee by Ullekh NP reveals how the then Gujarat CM Narendra Modi was nearly sacked after the Gujarat riots: The United States banned Narendra Modi from traveling to the US due to his alleged role in the attacks that led to an estimated 2000 deaths: By ULLEKH NP: PUBLISHED: 00:35 BST, 26 February 2017 | UPDATED: 00:35 BST, 26 February 2017: The Untold Vajpayee by Ullekh NP is published by Pengiun Viking 
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/indianews/article-4259876/How-PM-Vajpayee-nearly-sacked-Modi-Gujarat-riots.html
(iii)    Modi is alleged to have asked the police forces to let the violence continue. At that moment, Modi seemed to be the villain who brought a lot of shame to the central government.

(iv)     Modi had also dared to publicly snub Vajpayee at a press conference where he was seated alongside the prime minister.
(v)      The reporter wanted to know Vajpayee's message for the chief minister in the wake of the riots. In controlled displeasure, Vajpayee stated that Modi should 'follow his Rajdharma'.
(vi)     He explained that Rajdharma was a meaningful term, and for somebody in a position of power, it meant not discriminating among the higher and lower classes of society or people of any religion.
(vii)    In a bid to stop Vajpayee from saying something scathing about him, Modi turned towards Vajpayee, tried to catch his eye and said with a strong note of threatening defiance, 'That is what we are also doing, sir.'
(viii)   An Bajranj Dal activist armed with a iron stick shouting slogans against muslims, burning muslim shops and attacking residences in Sahapur, Ahmedabad February 2002    
1.     “Once banned from the U.S., India’s Modi set for historic address to Congress: By Annie Gowen June 6, 2016: The Washington Post. com
2.     President Obama and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wave ahead of their meeting at Hyderabad House in New Delhi on Jan. 25, 2015. (Adnan Abidi/Reuters)
3.     Modi, a Hindu nationalist, was denied a visa to enter the United States in 2005 on religious-freedom grounds, stemming from allegations that he tacitly supported Hindu extremists during Hindu-Muslim riots in his home state in 2002. A panel appointed by the Indian Supreme Court eventually ruled that there was no evidence to charge Modi with a crime, but the incident has continued to haunt his career, even after he became prime minister in 2014.
4.     2002: Modi was chief minister of the state of Gujarat when 59 Hindu pilgrims returning from a religious site were killed in a fire inside their train blamed on a Muslim mob. This sparked days of rioting in which more than 1,000 were killed, many of them Muslims. Human rights groups accused Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of essentially ignoring killings by its Hindu extremist allies.
5.     Please forgive us. Please let us go’: Muslims beg for their lives as Hindu mobs take revenge for railway slaughter.
6.     2005: Modi applied for and was denied a diplomatic visa to travel to the United States to address a hotel owners association and business leaders in March 2005. U.S. officials said at the time that he was excluded under a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act that "makes any government official who was responsible for or directly carried out at any time particularly severe violations of religious freedom ineligible for a visa.” [U.S. denies visa to Indian Hindu nationalist]
https://www.facebook.com/balbir.singh.355/posts/2127865080581917
7.     Narendra Modi greets supporters during a public meeting in Vadodara, in the western Indian state of Gujarat, on May 16, 2014. (Amit Dave/Reuters): 2007: Modi remained a popular leader of Gujarat and was reelected to that post in 2007. In an interview with The Washington Post, he revealed the seeds of his national ambitions by turning away from sectarian rhetoric and emphasizing development. He launched ambitious plans to electrify his state and brought in millions of dollars in foreign investment. He eventually served as Gujarat's chief minister from 2001 to 2014.
8.   2012: Modi tried to further soften his image with his eye on the national job. He showed little remorse about his past in an interview with The Post, saying, "I have not done anything wrong, and I am committed to the human cause."
9.    He added, "I want to convey to the whole global world: Please try to understand, you appreciate our progress, you appreciate our development, but beyond development and progress, the real strength of Gujarat is peace, harmony and unity."
10.    2013: Modi launched a national campaign for prime minister, incorporating Western-style campaign strategy and tactics for the first time in India, including the canny use of social media and other messaging — even a hologram of himself beamed to large enthusiastic crowds.
11.    May 2014: Modi and the BJP scored an impressive general election victory — taking a majority of seats in the lower house of Parliament for the first time in years. President Obama put the visa issue to rest by calling Modi to congratulate him on his victory and inviting him to the White House. At his swearing-in, Modi made headlines by inviting all the leaders of neighboring South Asian nations, including rival Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif.
12.    Newly sworn-in Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi,left, shakes hands with Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif at the Presidential Palace in New Delhi on May 26, 2014. (Prakash Singh/AFP via Getty Images)
13.    September 2014: Modi made his first triumphant visit to the United States, where he had a private dinner with Obama, toured the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial with the president and headlined a program at Madison Square Garden attended by more than 18,000 cheering members of the Indian diaspora.
14.    Narendra Modi gestures while speaking at Madison Square Garden in New York on Sept. 28, 2014. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters): 2014-2015: Modi launched a wide-ranging foreign-travel schedule, showcasing India as an investment destination for the world. He is often criticized as globe-trotting but defends his travels by saying that he must shore up foreign investment to build infrastructure such as the high-speed railways, bridges and roads that India needs, as well as engage the highly educated and affluent Indian diaspora. An extract courtesy By Annie Gowen June 6, 2016: The Washington Post. com
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