Literary fraternity calls on Modi to restore Aatish Taseer's citizenship

Salman Taseer's son, born in Britain but raised in India, lost his Overseas Citizenship of India last week


Afp November 14, 2019
Salman Taseer's son, born in Britain but raised in India, lost his Overseas Citizenship of India last week. PHOTO COURTESY: BBC

NEW DELHI: Top prize winners Margaret Atwood, Orhan Pamuk and J Coetzee led more than 250 literary and journalist luminaries who called on India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday to revoke an order stripping writer Aatish Taseer of his "overseas citizenship".

Indian writer Amitav Ghosh also signed the letter which said Taseer "appears to have been targeted for an extremely personal form of retaliation" for his criticism of the Indian government.

Taseer, 38, born in Britain but raised in India, lost his Overseas Citizenship of India last week. The home ministry announced on Twitter that the journalist had 'concealed' the fact that his father was Pakistani.

Canadian poet/author Margaret Atwood. PHOTO: AFP/FILE Canadian poet and author Margaret Atwood. PHOTO: AFP



Critics have, however, called the move a response to a Taseer cover story on Modi in Time magazine during the Indian election titled India's Divider in Chief.

Salmaan Taseer's son loses Indian citizenship for criticising Modi

 "Denying access to the country to writers of both foreign and Indian origin casts a chill on public discourse," said the letter, published by the free speech platform PEN America.

"It flies in the face of India's traditions of free and open debate and respect for a diversity of views, and weakens its credentials as a strong and thriving democracy."

Taseer was raised in India by his mother, Tavleen Singh, an Indian columnist and journalist. His father, Salman Taseer, was governor of Pakistan's Punjab province until he was assassinated in 2011.

Writer John M.Coetzee, award winner of the Nobel Prize 2003 for Literature. PHOTO: AFP/FILE Writer John M.Coetzee, award winner of the Nobel Prize 2003 for Literature. PHOTO: AFP

The letter said the decision by the Indian government was discrimination against single mothers.

Taseer said he learned about the decision on Twitter. He later wrote: "It was not hard to feel, given the timing, that I was being punished for what I had written."

 Indian author Amitav Ghosh. PHOTO: AFP/FILE Indian author Amitav Ghosh. PHOTO: AFP

Time has also condemned the move. "Journalists like Aatish Taseer should be allowed to do their work without harassment or retribution," a spokesperson said.



The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said Taseer's fate showed that Modi's conservative ruling party is "intolerant of criticism and freedom of the press".

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