No pain on Modi's face when he talks about 2002 post-Godhra riots: Mahatma Gandhi's granddaughter
No pain on Modi's face when he talks about 2002 post-Godhra riots: Mahatma Gandhi's granddaughter
Tara Gandhi-Bhattacharya, Mahatma Gandhi's granddaughter, on Sunday said she did not find any trace of anguish on Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi's face when he spoke about the 2002 post-Godhra riots in his state.

Tara Gandhi-Bhattacharya, Mahatma Gandhi's granddaughter, on Sunday said she did not find any trace of anguish on Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi's face when he spoke about the 2002 post-Godhra riots in his state.

Talking to reporters in Indore, she said, "I am surprised as to how Modi, being in politics, being a human being, and being from Gujarat, can speak about the riots and that phase of violence without showing any pain."

She, however, added that she was not passing a judgement on Modi as she did not know him well.

Gandhi-Bhattacharya, 78, is vice-chairman of the Gandhi Smriti and Darshan Samiti. Modi was recently named BJP's prime ministerial candidate for the upcoming Lok Sabha polls.

"Once I watched Modi speaking in Gujarat from a distance.I can't judge him. But when he mentions the excesses of the Gujarat riots, I do not see any anguish on his face," she said.

Talking about the conditions at refugees' camps in Gujarat which were set up after the riots, she said, "I was so pained (upon seeing them) that I could not sleep for the next six months."

About Modi's infamous "puppy coming under the wheels of a car" remark, she said it was a case of use of "indecent language".  Asked whether Modi becoming the Prime Minister would pose a danger to the democratic values of the country, Gandhi- Bhattacharya said: "I won't name anyone, because by singling out one person, others cannot be condoned. Whoever comes to power, must have compassion and courage."

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