Modi slams Gandhi assassin comments ahead of India's key final vote

Analysts predict Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party will lose seats this time and could need a coalition to form a new government. PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI (AFP) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday (May 17) condemned a firebrand Hindu election candidate from his ruling party who called the assassin of independence hero Mahatma Gandhi a "patriot".

The conservative Prime Minister was forced to act as a backlash grew over comments by Pragya Singh Thakur, already dogged by a criminal case over a 2008 bomb attack, ahead of Sunday's final round of India's marathon election.

Thakur later issued an apology for her statement that Gandhi's assassin Nathuram Godse "was, is, and will remain a patriot".

But it failed to douse the controversy, and the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party said it has launched an inquiry into Thakur.

"Any comments and or statements made on Gandhi or Godse are absolutely wrong. Such language and thoughts should be condemned and are unacceptable in a civilised society," Mr Modi said in a television interview.

"People with such beliefs must think one hundred times before saying such things. She apologised publicly for the comments, but I won't forgive her at a personal level," Mr Modi told the News 24 channel.

BOMB ATTACK CHARGE

Gandhi was shot three times in January 1948 by Godse, a Hindu fanatic angered by what he considered Gandhi's pandering to Muslims and by India's partition after independence in 1947.

The BJP astounded many last month when it named Thakur as its parliamentary candidate in the Madhya Pradesh state capital of Bhopal.

Critics accused the party of using Thakur to polarise voters on religious lines.

Thakur was arrested shortly after a bomb blast near a mosque in Malegaon, in Maharashtra state, in 2008 that killed six people and injured 100.

One charge against her has been dropped, but Thakur is still on bail waiting for another charge to be heard.

Thakur said she had only given her "personal opinion" about Gandhi.

"My intention was not to hurt anyone's sentiments. If I've hurt anyone, I do apologise. What Gandhi has done for the country cannot be forgotten," she said.

The opposition Congress party, which Gandhi once led, called on Mr Modi to expel Thakur from the BJP.

"Remove terror-accused Pragya Thakur from your party. Her statements have not only brought disgrace, but also hurt the sentiments of people in India and across the world," said a party statement on Twitter.

The controversy erupted as Mr Modi made a final bid to rally support for his campaign for a second term.

With the BJP facing a stiff challenge from Congress, the seventh and final round of voting is on Sunday across eight states. Final results will be announced May 23.

The authorities sent tens of thousands of security forces to the West Bengal state capital of Kolkata following new clashes between BJP and opposition followers.

A second night of street battles between activists of the BJP and the regional Trinamool Congress (TMC) in three days put the city on edge. Police said at least 26 arrests have been made.

The BJP has campaigned aggressively in West Bengal, hoping to take seats from the TMC to make up for losses expected in other states.

An official election observer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there have been more than 300 incidents of polls violence across West Bengal since April 11.

The official said there would be "an unprecedented deployment of security" before Sunday, with tens of thousands of troops and paramilitaries expected in the city of 4.5 million people.

The final day of voting will also be held in Uttar Pradesh, including Mr Modi's constituency of Varanasi, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chandigarh and Himachal Pradesh states.

The BJP won 282 seats of the 543 at stake in 2014, in one of the biggest triumphs ever in India.

Analysts predict Mr Modi's party will lose seats this time and could need a coalition to form a new government.

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