Standing next to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the White House on Thursday, President Biden defended calling Chinese President Xi Jinping a “dictator” at a recent campaign event.
Asked by reporters about what steps, if any, Modi and the Indian government are taking to uphold free speech and improve the rights of Muslims and other religious minorities in India, the prime minister pushed back.
Modi said he was surprised that people were raising these issues, arguing that democracy is a fundamental value in India and insisting that there is “absolutely no space for discrimination” in his government.“And when I say deliver, this is regardless of caste, creed, religion, gender,” he said. “There’s absolutely no space for discrimination. And when you talk of democracy, if there are no human values, and there is no humanity, there are no human rights, then it’s not a democracy.
In an open letter sent ahead of Modi’s visit, more than 70 members of Congress urged Biden to use his meeting with the Indian leader to address political violence, internet shutdowns, restrictions on press freedom and other “troubling signs” in the world’s largest democracy.an autocracy, according to independent groups such as the V-Dem Institute at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, which monitors democracies around the world.
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