India vows to protect Taslima Nasreen
India said on Wednesday it would continue to host and protect a controversial Bangladeshi Muslim woman writer, Taslima Nasreen, who has fled from city to city since her radical Islamist critics stoked violence last week.
Taslimas fate, who had been in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata since 2003, has become a hot political issue for New Delhi with the Hindu nationalist opposition accusing the government of pleasing the Muslim minority by trying to get her out of the country. But Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee said that historically, India had never refused shelter to those who had sought the countrys protection. While guests are in India, the union and state governments provide them protection, he said. This will also apply in Taslima Nasreens case.
Indian clerics had issued a decree against her in August, urging Muslims to kill her. | Authorities rushed award-winning Taslima from her home in Kolkata last week after protests against her by Muslim groups led to riots, forcing the army to be called in. Indian clerics had issued a decree against her in August, urging Muslims to kill her. After the riots, police moved her to a hotel in the western state of Rajasthan and then she was quickly sent to Delhi at the weekend under police protection.
Sentiments: Wednesdays assurance that India would continue sheltering her came with a warning. It is also expected that [she] will refrain from activities and expressions that may hurt peoples sentiments, he said, an apparent reference to the outspoken Taslima. Nasreen fled Bangladesh for the first time in 1994 when a court said she had deliberately and maliciously hurt Muslims religious feelings with her Bengali-language novel Lajja, or Shame.
Posted by: Fred 2007-11-29 |