Narendra Modi should be allowed to show ‘contrition’ for the riots and ‘move on’: Narayana Murthy

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December 14, 2013

NEW DELHI: BJP's prime ministerial candidate, Narendra Modi, should not be barred from the job because of deadly anti-Muslim riots under his watch, one of India's most respected business tycoons says.

December 14, 2013

NEW DELHI: BJP's prime ministerial candidate, Narendra Modi, should not be barred from the job because of deadly anti-Muslim riots under his watch, one of India's most respected business tycoons says.

Software czar N R Narayana Murthy is the first business leader to address the issue of the 2002 riots that occurred during Modi's first term as chief minister of Guajarat state since the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in September named the politician as its candidate for premier

Asked whether the riots represented an issue which should stand in the way of the Modi from becoming prime minister in general elections due in May, Murthy told NDTV: "No."

"There is no human being (who is) perfect," Murthy, the co-founder and executive chairman of software exporting giant Infosys, said in the broadcast aired Saturday.

"There have been lots of riots in India so the important thing is for us to say we will correct what happened," said Murthy, regarded as one of the business community's statesmen for his reputation of moral probity.

"We will move forward in a positive way," Murthy said. Other business leaders have voiced support for the 63-year-old BJP leader and a recent Nielsen poll of 100 corporate figures showed 74 percent wanted him to be premier of the world's largest democracy but none has tackled the issue of the riots head-on.

Human rights groups allege up to 2,000 people, mainly Muslims, were beaten, shot and burnt to death in Modi's first term as chief minister of the western state of Gujarat.

Modi has been accused of turning a blind eye to the 2002 violence in which human rights groups say police stood by and took no action.

While Modi has denied any wrongdoing, one of his former ministers was jailed last year for orchestrating some of the unrest and the national human rights commission called his government's response "a comprehensive failure".

In 2005, the United States revoked Modi's visa, asserting "he was responsible for the (lack of) performance of state institutions" in the riots.

Murthy suggested Modi be allowed to show "contrition" for the riots and "move on".

"The courts have not indicted (Modi) or passed any stricture or judgement," he said.

Many business leaders are convinced Modi, 63, can replicate his home state of Gujarat's economic success at the national level and revive India's slumping growth.


Courtesy: AFP