
The team of departing premier Manmohan Singh reset the @PMOIndia account and renamed it @PMOIndiaArchive, angering the incoming Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government led by prime minister-designate Narendra Modi.
"The Twitter account @PMOIndia is a national digital asset. It is disgraceful, unethical and illegal the way the outgoing team has handled this account," BJP spokesperson Meenakshi Lekhi told reporters in New Delhi.
Continuity in governance and all government assets is the hallmark of Indian constitution. @PMOIndia is a National digital asset. 1/3
— BJP (@BJP4India) May 20, 2014
It is ungraceful, unethical and illegal in the way outgoing team in @PMOIndia has handled the transition of this National Digital asset. 2/3
— BJP (@BJP4India) May 20, 2014
We hope better sense prevails, tweets of outgoing @PMOIndia are archived according to legal procedures and clean transition takes place. 3/3
— BJP (@BJP4India) May 20, 2014
The BJP said the old PMO account had 1.24 million followers, but they would now have to start from scratch because the account had been archived and followers "transported", instead of being officially handed over.
A new PMOIndia account on Twitter showed 4,411 followers.
This Twitter handle "is not a personal asset, it is a national asset," the BJP's Lekhi said.
Another BJP spokesperson, Nirmala Sitharaman, tweeted that @PMOIndia was an "institutional handle" which should have continued "seamlessly".
Isn't @PMOIndia for communication from the Prime Minister's Office? An institutional handle which should continue seamlessly. Surprised!
— Nirmala Sitharaman (@nsitharaman) May 20, 2014
Stung by criticism, Singh's office released a statement defending its action.
"All our official communications are being archived according to the Right To Information Act. Copyrights and control remain with the office," said the prime minister's communications director Pankaj Pachauri.
Modi, who is extremely active on Twitter, has been sharing all the milestones in his election campaign journey with his 4.2 million followers.
He is set to be sworn in as India's 14th Prime Minister next Monday after the BJP swept to power with the first parliamentary majority in 30 years at the end of a marathon general election.
The Congress party suffered its worst defeat ever, snaring just 44 seats out of 543 up for grabs against BJP's 282.
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