Skip to main content

BJP's Sambit Patra calls NDTV "anti-India, anti-Hindu, anti-BJP" in Melbourne, Australia, skips Q&A session

By Our Representative
In a move that is likely to further plunge BJP, especially Sambit Patra, into controversy, the national spokesperson of the party has once again come down heavily on the NDTV, this time on foreign land. He described NDTV as “anti-India, anti-Hindu and anti-BJP” during his visit to Melbourne, Australia, on Saturday.
Patra is currently touring Australian cities to “celebrate” the Narendra Mod government’s three years in power, and he reportedly made the remark in an answer to a Melbourne-based “South Asia Times” (SAT) correspondent, who questioned him about the well-known NDTV episode of June 2, in which he wondered, during a live debate, whether the channel had an “agenda” -- suggesting if it supported the Congress.
No sooner Patra made the remark, Nidhi Razdan, executive editor, and primary anchor of NDTV asked the BJP national spokesperson to go out of the debate show, 'Left Right and Centre'. Razdan called Patra's as a “derogatory statement about her channel”.
Razdan was hosting a debate on the politics of cattle ban and its consequences that saw a prominent BJP leader in Meghalaya, Bernard Marak, quitting the party in protest. ‘Left Right and Centre’ is a live broadcast show which covers current debates.
The show had a panel of five members -- Congress’ Sharmistha Mukherjee, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam spokesperson Saravanan, Director of the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative Sanjoy Hazarika, and BJP's spokesperson Sambit Patra. They were also debating over the issue of the public slaughter of a cow by Youth Congress members in Kerala.
An agitated Razdan, on hearing Patra’s remark, asked Patra to either apologise or leave the debate. However, as Patra refused, the anchor gently asked Patra to quit the show. Patra kept saying that he needed 30 seconds to state facts. Razdan stated that just because Patra was being questioned he had no right to accuse NDTV of having an agenda.
Five days later, on June 7, CBI raided the home of NDTV co-founders Prannoy Roy and Radhika Roy, a step which was widely interpreted as the direct result of the dismissal of Patra by the news channel's anchor Razdan from her show.
While Melbourne, Patra gave a half-hour speech on the “achievements” of the three years of Modi government in a program organized by the Overseas Friends of BJP (OFBJP) Australia at the Thornbury Theatre, where the SAT correspondent met him.
Addressing the gathering on the ‘ABCD of achievements’, Patra described demonetization as a step which, he claimed, “touched every section of Indian society” by seeking to “weed out unaccounted money in the country.” According to SAT, Patra also “detailed other Modi government programmes of rural electrification, girls’ education, ease of doing business, infrastructure development, among others.”
Patra claimed that India has now arrived on the global scene, and taking a hardline Hindutva stance, insisted, “It is the Indian civilization based on the Vedic culture that is engulfing the world.” Patra decided to skip the scheduled question-answer session following his address. 
Apart from Patra, those who addressed the gathering, which consisted mainly of NRIs, were OFBJP leaders, Australian Labour Party’s Gevin Jennings and Liberal Inga Peulich, and Indian Consul in Melbourne Manika Jain.

Comments

Uma said…
Kudos to Nidhi, thumbs up to NDTV and down to Sammit Patra
stargazer said…
typical fascist comment from sambit patra
Unknown said…
rascist ndtv and poisnous communists shud be thrown out
Unknown said…
poisnous ndtv and communists shud be thrown out
yash Dalit said…
ndtv is a anti hindu channel, everybody knows.

TRENDING

Vaccine nationalism? Covaxin isn't safe either, perhaps it's worse: Experts

By Rajiv Shah  I was a little awestruck: The news had already spread that Astrazeneca – whose Indian variant Covishield was delivered to nearly 80% of Indian vaccine recipients during the Covid-19 era – has been withdrawn by the manufacturers following the admission by its UK pharma giant that its Covid-19 vector-based vaccine in “rare” instances cause TTS, or “thrombocytopenia thrombosis syndrome”, which lead to the blood to clump and form clots. The vaccine reportedly led to at least 81 deaths in the UK.

'Misleading' ads: Are our celebrities and public figures acting responsibly?

By Deepika* It is imperative for celebrities and public figures to act responsibly while endorsing a consumer product, the Supreme Court said as it recently clamped down on misleading advertisements.

Magnetic, stunning, Protima Bedi 'exposed' malice of sexual repression in society

By Harsh Thakor*  Protima Bedi was born to a baniya businessman and a Bengali mother as Protima Gupta in Delhi in 1949. Her father was a small-time trader, who was thrown out of his family for marrying a dark Bengali women. The theme of her early life was to rebel against traditional bondage. It was extraordinary how Protima underwent a metamorphosis from a conventional convent-educated girl into a freak. On October 12th was her 75th birthday; earlier this year, on August 18th it was her 25th death anniversary.

A Hindu alternative to Valentine's Day? 'Shiv-Parvati was first love marriage in Universe'

By Rajiv Shah*   The other day, I was searching on Google a quote on Maha Shivratri which I wanted to send to someone, a confirmed Shiv Bhakt, quite close to me -- with an underlying message to act positively instead of being negative. On top of the search, I chanced upon an article in, imagine!, a Nashik Corporation site which offered me something very unusual. 

Mired in controversy, India's polio jab programme 'led to suffering, misery'

By Vratesh Srivastava*  Following the 1988 World Health Assembly declaration to eradicate polio by the year 2000, to which India was a signatory, India ran intensive pulse polio immunization campaigns since 1995. After 19 years, in 2014, polio was declared officially eradicated in India. India was formally acknowledged by WHO as being free of polio.

Costs up, sales down, profits muted: IIM-A surveys 1100 business honchos

By Our Representative  The Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad’s (IIM-A’s) latest Business Inflation Expectations Survey (BIES) has said that about 54% of the firms are “still reporting ‘somewhat less than normal’ or lower sales in March 2024”, up from 52% reported in February 2024, adding, overall the survey of 1,100 business executives suggests that profit margin expectations too have remained “slightly muted.”

In defence of Sam Pitroda: Is calling someone look like African, black racist?

By Rajiv Shah  Sam Pitroda, known as the father of Indian telecom revolution, has been in the midst of a major controversy for a remark on how Indians across the regions look different. While one can understand Prime Minister Narendra Modi taking it up for his electoral gain, suggesting it showed the racist Congress mindset, what was unpalatable to me was Congress leaders – particularly Jairam Ramesh, known for his deep intellectual understand – distancing themselves from what Pitroda had said.

Documents 'reveal' deaths, injuries caused by childhood vaccines in India

By Deepika*   The past three-four years, 2020 onwards, have been a revelation of sorts. With the covid fiasco now running into the unimaginable fifth year, and unpredictability looming large, what has also happened in the process is a lot of knowing the unknown and questioning the otherwise acceptable, and the great realisation that somewhere the element of common sense or intuition was missing in the masses.

Maoist scholar who said, 'annihilation of class enemy' talk was a gross error

By Harsh Thakor*  May 11th is the 10th death anniversary of a well-known Marxist intellectual Suniti Kumar Ghosh, also considered a Maoist by many in the Left. I was privileged to have personally met him in Kolkata in March 2009.  It is very rare to experience any personality with such clear thinking ability or incisive thought or one who would penetrate as extensively in historic endeavors in pursuit of truth.

'Fake encounter': 12 Adivasis killed being dubbed Maoists, says FACAM

Counterview Desk   The civil rights network* Forum Against Corporatization and Militarization (FACAM), even as condemn what it has called "fake encounter" of 12 Adivasi villagers in Gangaloor, has taken strong exception to they being presented by the authorities as Maoists.