By: Meghdeep Bhattacharyya
Published in: *The Telegraph* *Online*
Date: May 25, 2026
Source:
https://www.telegraphindia.com/world/interview-with-norwegian-journalist-helle-lyng-svendsen-who-questioned-modi-prnt/cid/2162233#goog_rewarded
Svendsen, who represents the Oslo-based newspaper Dagsavisen, found herself
suddenly catapulted to global fame — and exposed to vilification in India —
last week

Helle Lyng Svendsen would love to visit India. But the twenty-something
Norwegian journalist is unsure if “India would welcome me at this point”.

She laughed as she said this to *The Telegraph over a video call from Oslo
on Sunday morning.*

Svendsen, who represents the Oslo-based newspaper *Dagsavisen*, found
herself suddenly catapulted to global fame — and exposed to vilification in
India — last week after questioning Prime Minister Narendra Modi about his
reluctance to take media queries.

“Prime Minister Modi, why don’t you take some questions from the freest
press in the world?” she had asked him after his joint press statement with
his Norwegian counterpart in Oslo on May 18.

(While Norway tops the World Press Freedom Index, India ranks 157 among 180
countries.)

Modi walked away without responding.

The backlash was swift.

“After Modi left the country... I started getting really kicked out of
Instagram.... Suddenly that same night, I was suspended from Instagram and
from Facebook,” Svendsen said.

“I think it’s so fascinating how fast that went, that the state visit is
over and then suddenly they lock my accounts, and in just a few hours
they’re able to... make such a powerful technology company as Meta just
suspend that account.”

She added: “I’ve never experienced anything like this.”

Svendsen said her accounts had since been off and on; restored now and
suspended again. She doesn’t know exactly why, but one of the ways such
digital retribution can be triggered is a large number of users complaining
against an account for alleged copyright violation or misinformation deemed
likely to cause widespread panic or public disorder, among others.

In India, she has been lambasted in TV studios and on social media with
charges of showboating, lack of area expertise, leveraging the encounter
for personal online fame — even of being an enemy agent.

‘Close’ encounter

Svendsen had directed her query at Modi as he began walking away from the
joint media appearance in a small, tightly packed room. She dismissed
suggestions that the Prime Minister did not hear her.

“I’m sure that he heard me... unless he has some (auditory) health issues,
which I would not be aware of,” she said.

“I was not that far away from him.... I was sitting second row in a very
small room, and he was just walking out when I asked that question. So, we
were so close.”

What would she have asked Modi had he stopped to answer?

“I would want to tap into the human rights situation (in India),” she said.

She would have asked: “What are the areas of improvement in your country?
Will you commit to trying to improve some of the human rights violation
situations that are going on, and how will you do it? Will you roll out
initiatives for change? Take the criticism that is coming from within your
country and also international organisations?”

She would have also asked the Prime Minister, who has not held a single
unscripted domestic media interaction in 12 years: “Will you start to take
critical questions from the press at press conferences in India, also the
independent journalists of India that are committed to doing real work and
truthful reporting? Why don’t you take questions from them?”

Svendsen got to ask at least one of these questions — about India’s human
rights record — to external affairs ministry (West) secretary Sibi George
at a later media interaction.

The query drew a long lecture from George on the past glories of Indian
“civilisation” — its invention of zero and chess included. That 11-minute
clip caused more furore in India.

Not about ‘me’

Svendsen blames that partly on the Indian media.

“It was not me that made this about me,” she said. “It was the Indian
media, some of the people that now are criticising me, that made this story
about me,” she said.

“Instead of... ‘Modi pressed on press freedom in Norway’, they decided to
make it about the journalist.”

Svendsen has since had a brief interaction with Indian leader of the
Opposition Rahul Gandhi on social media.

She laughed when told how the saffron ecosystem had used it to label her a
“Congress proxy”, a “George Soros-funded agent”, even a “foreign spy with
the aim of weakening India”.“I don’t have an opinion on him,” she said of
Rahul. “India is a country now where it seems a one-party situation could
unfold in the future; so there’s a lot of weight on his shoulders as well.
But I would also ask him critical questions.”

Despite the trolling, Svendsen noted that her inbox was also flooded with
messages of solidarity from Indians — both from India and abroad.

“Even today, I’m getting three to four messages every minute on Instagram,
of (Indian) people thanking me,” she said.

So, which world leader, in her experience, is the easiest to ask tough
questions to?

“My initial thought would be (US) President Donald Trump. Because he’ll
just take questions about everything, every day throughout the day,” she
laughed.

“I asked President Trump a few questions, when I was covering our Prime
Minister’s visit to the US. That’s also a difficult situation, because it’s
a heated environment and he takes questions, but you can’t follow up....”

‘Open’ society

How about politicians in her own country, which has consistently topped the
World Press Freedom Index?

“Politicians in Norway, even when there’s a crisis around them, even when
their whole life is blowing up, there’s a big political scandal... even at
those types of times, these politicians will do interviews with the press,
often several in a day,” she said.

She cited how former Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg once navigated a
severe media storm by granting 14 interviews in a single day to both large
and small outlets.

“That’s just the type of stuff that can happen in a country where everyone
prioritises democracy.”

Svendsen — who normally spends her weeks analysing Norwegian labour markets
and local policy shifts — is surprised that other international
correspondents present at the summit did not build on the momentum of her
questions to Modi or George.

“I had hoped that when the Indian Prime Minister left the stage that
someone else — some of those who are a lot more senior, well-known — could
try to challenge him as well,” she said.

“I think that would have been valuable too, to see that there are more
journalists showing solidarity with our colleagues in India that are kept
from asking the tough questions.”Svendsen does not see herself as a hero —
only as a professional journalist doing her job. And she knows that many
others face a lot heavier odds than her.

“I just literally did my job from a privileged corner of the world. You
guys in India are the ones doing the hard work, the really heavy lifting.
You gotta remember that.”

Would she consider coming to India?

“I don’t know if India would welcome me at this point,” she laughed.

“I would definitely want to come and report. But if that isn’t a
possibility, I would love to come to just experience the culture, the
history, the people. There’s a lot of power in that too.”

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