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“We have engaged many countries, including India, on the importance of equal treatment for members of all religious communities,” State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters at his daily news conference on Monday.
Miller was responding to a question on a New York Times story titled Strangers in Their Own Land: Being Muslim in Modi’s India which alleges that the world’s largest Muslim community in India is raising their families and children with fear and uncertainty.
“Have you engaged with the Indian officials in these issues?” Miller was asked.
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The article published over the weekend alleged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had ‘chipped away at the secular framework and robust democracy’ since taking office.
India in the past has trashed such allegations as based on ‘misinformation and flawed understanding’ of the country.
Prime Minister Modi has also asserted that he has never uttered a word against minorities, and the BJP has “not just today but never” acted against them. He, however, made it clear that he is not ready to accept anyone as ‘special citizens’.
The comments in an interview to PTI Videos on Sunday are Modi’s most unequivocal on minorities amid an outcry from the opposition that his election speeches are communally divisive and polarising.