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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 8, 2008
Contact: Judith Ingram
Communications Director
(202) 523-3240, ext. 127
WASHINGTON-The United States Commission on International
Religious Freedom urges the U.S. State Department to reaffirm its past decision
to deny a tourist visa to Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who has been
invited to attend a conference in New Jersey this August celebrating Gujarati
culture. Modi was previously denied entrance to the United States due to
his role in riots that overtook the Indian state of Gujarat from February to
May 2002 in which reportedly as many as 2,000 Muslims were killed,
thousands raped, and over 200,000 displaced. Numerous reports, including
reports of official bodies of the Government of India, have documented the role
of Modi's state government in the planning and execution of the violence, and
the failure to hold perpetrators accountable.
Following Modi's invitation to attend conferences in the
U.S. in 2005, the Commission successfully urged the State Department to
revoke Modi's U.S. tourist visa. Despite pressure from the Indian
government, the State Department revoked his visa under the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA), which prohibits foreign government officials who are
"responsible for or directly carried out, at any time, particularly severe
violations of religious freedom" from obtaining U.S. visas. This section
was added to the INA by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998. The Commission once again urges the State
Department to announce Modi's ineligibility for a visa under the terms of the
INA.
"We have not seen changes that would warrant a policy
reversal," said Commission Chair Felice D. Gaer. "As official bodies of
the government of India have found, Narendra Modi is culpable for the egregious
and systematic human rights abuses wrought against thousands of India's
Muslims. Mr. Modi must demonstrate to the State Department and to the
American people why he-as a person found to have aided and abetted gross
violations of human rights, including religious freedom-should now be eligible
for a tourist visa."
Following the riots in 2002, India's National Human Rights
Commission issued a report that pointed to the role of Modi's government in the
systematic murder of Muslims and the calculated destruction of Muslim homes and
businesses. In 2003, the Indian central government found corruption and
anti-Muslim bias to be so pervasive in the Gujarat judiciary that riot cases
were shifted for trial to the neighboring state of Maharashtra. Despite
this action, the lack of justice for victims remains a serious concern, as
there have been very few court convictions in the six years since the
religion-based riots. In 2007, a series of articles in the Indian
publication Tehelka documented police officers and government officials on
audio and videotape confessing that they facilitated the violence, at times at
the direct behest of Modi.
"The inaction of Gujarat's government and police force in
the face of severe violence against religious minorities is an inexcusable
abuse of international human rights obligations," Gaer said.
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