Indian PM lampooned for 'manufactured' interview
Source: The Guardian
Indian PM lampooned for 'manufactured' interview
Narendra Modi accused of being afraid of media after rare interview that failed to ask tough questions
Amrit Dhillon in New Delhi
Sat 5 Jan 2019 15.29 GMT
Indias prime minister, Narendra Modi, has been accused of being afraid of the media, after consenting to a rare interview just one of a handful in four years as PM on New Years Day in which he answered a range of questions that critics compared to free-hit deliveries in cricket.
The interview, to news agency Asian News International or ANI, attracted widespread comment and a fair amount of ridicule. Some journalists called it manufactured, scripted and a monologue . The Congress party called it fixed. One MP said the questions put to Modi were more in the nature of feeding rather than grilling the prime minister. A cartoon showed Modi interviewing himself.
The Indian media have been fretting about lack of access to Modi ever since he assumed office in 2014. He has not held a single press conference. The handful of interviews have been mostly set pieces in which the interviewer has failed to put difficult questions or challenged Modi on his answers.
While Modi has never made any secret of his disdain for the press, other members of his Bharatiya Janata party have compounded the testy relationship with the press by variously abusing journalists as presstitutes, dalals (pimps) or bazaru (for sale).
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Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jan/05/indian-pm-narendra-modi-lampooned-for-manufactured-interview