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 August 13, 2013, 5:16 am 8
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A Conversation With Katrina Lantos Swett, on Religious Freedom in
IndiaBy MAROOSHA
MUZAFFAR <http://india.blogs.nytimes.com/author/maroosha-muzaffar/>
[image: Katrina Lantos Swett in 2010.]Cheryl Senter/Associated PressKatrina
Lantos Swett in 2010.

*Few Indian politicians evoke dislike and admiration as intense as that
inspired by Narendra Modi, the chief minister of the western state of
Gujarat. Mr. Modi is the de facto prime ministerial candidate for India’s
leading opposition party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, in the 2014
parliamentary elections. Mr. Modi has been remodeling himself as a
pro-business, pro-development leader who can bring about economic growth
and make difficult decisions. Yet the ghosts of the 2002 sectarian
violence, in which more than  1,000 Muslims were killed and tens of
thousands displaced from their homes under his watch in Gujarat, along with
his continuing use of derogatory language to refer to India’s Muslims, has
raised concerns about his political rise.*

* In 2005, the **United States government denied Mr. Modi a diplomatic visa
and revoked his existing tourist/business visa **under the Immigration and
Nationality Act, which makes a foreign government official who is
responsible for  particularly severe violations of religious freedom
ineligible for an American visa.  The decision placed Mr. Modi in the
company of, among others, associates of Slobodan Milosevic and an
Indonesian Army general who was suspected of torture. Mr. Modi has been
lobbying to have the decision reversed.*

*Maroosha Muzaffar** spoke to Katrina Lantos Swett, vice chairwoman of the
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, a bipartisan
government commission that reviews the facts and circumstances of religious
freedom violations and makes policy recommendations to the president, the
secretary of state and Congress about the commission’s insistence on
keeping Mr. Modi off American soil.*

Q.

On a recent panel, you requested the U.S. State Department to continue the
visa ban on Narendra Modi, the chief minister of the Indian state of
Gujarat. Mr. Modi is the de facto prime ministerial candidate for India’s
Bharatiya Janata Party for the country’s national elections in 2014. How
does the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom see
these developments?
 A.

For the people of India, I think it is important for them to consider very
carefully who it is who they want to be their next prime minister. It is no
outside nation’s or no individual’s role to tell them who should be the
next leader of India. But I think it is a bit of information that will help
them as they go through that electoral process. It is our view and view of
many others that Mr. Modi shall not be granted the privilege of U.S. visa
because of the very serious doubts that remain and that hang over Mr. Modi
relative to his role in the horrific events of 2002 in Gujarat.

The International Religious Freedoms Act, under which we were created,
provides very specifically for the requirement that our government should
not issue visas to officials that are implicated in serious abuses of
religious freedom rights. That provision absolutely applies in this
instance. While it is impossible to project down the road, we feel it is
important to stand up for the principle involved here, which is that really
terrible things happened during his leadership in Gujarat. There are many,
many unanswered questions that remain, there are at are many grave
allegations, there are huge doubts.
[image: Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi addressing a youth convention
in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, on Sunday.]Noah Seelam/Agence France-Presse —
Getty ImagesGujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi addressing a youth
convention in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, on Sunday.
 Q.

Indian courts have not yet found any evidence of Mr. Modi’s involvement in
the 2002 violence in Gujarat. You say that there are still some grave
allegations, some doubts hanging over his role in the 2002 riots.
 A.

As you know, one of his ministers (Maya Kodnani) was recently convicted for
her role in these events. Given the nature of the way the governments
function, it is highly unlikely at the very least that this minister would
have been engaged to the degree that she was without the knowledge, without
the direction from Mr. Modi. There is of course the very damning sworn
notarized affidavit of former deputy commissioner of police Sanjeev Bhatt,
which is really an eyewitness account. He is not simply providing sworn
testimony as to events that happened on the streets. His testimony is also
regarding things that were said by Mr. Modi in his presence. There are very
powerful letters that were signed by 65 members of the lower house and
upper house and they cite a number of grave concerns.

And let’s set aside, just for a moment, whether or not Mr. Modi was
directly complicit in the events of 2002. There is a lot to be troubled
about what has happened since or what has failed to happen. Legal
accountability, you know, when you think of the numbers that were killed,
the incredible number of rapes, the vast displacement, the burning and
trashing of property, there should have been by now significant numbers of
people held legally accountable. We find that that really hasn’t happened.

There have been very few convictions. One of the things that concern us is
that Mr. Modi seems more concerned with rehabilitating his own reputation
than with providing recompense and rehabilitation for the surviving victims
of those terrible events. Where are the reparations that have been paid?
Where are the public apologies, public accounting for what went on? These
to me are all indications that to some degree we are seeing a very
ambitious man more focused on his political rehabilitation than on really
righting the wrongs.

I think there is a difference between whether or not one can be held
legally liable or accountable for something and going so far as to say a
clean bill of health, a clean chit. Certainly in our system of justice you
can be found not guilty, which is not the same thing as found innocent.

Under these circumstances we should follow our laws, which say that we
should not give a visa. Of course Mr. Modi wants us to reverse our position
because that would be part of his rehabilitation process. But perhaps it
would be more instructive for observers and analysts and voters in India to
have that piece of information as they evaluate whether or not he is the
man who should lead India.
 Q.

Your critics say that International Religious Freedom Act is selectively
invoked.
A.

India is a great democracy and we tend to expect more of democracies than
we do of dictatorships. That is not to say that your question is not a
valid one. But I do see it as a compliment to India that we hold India to a
very high standard because India is the world’s largest democracy. I would
say that maybe India is held to that higher standard because you have shown
that you embrace the values that we embrace in terms of democracy.
 Q.

Are the  United States Commission on International Religious Freedom and
the State Department on the same page? A spokesman for the  State
Department said in April that Mr. Modi is welcome to apply for a U.S. visa.
What does that mean?
 A.

I think it was an intentionally ambiguous statement. It is one of the
reasons we went public with a (November 2012) letter to Secretary Clinton
asking for continuation of the decision to deny a visa to Mr. Modi to
influence the State Department. We are independent but we work closely with
the State Department, especially its international religious freedom
office. But there are plenty of policy conclusions where we come down in a
somewhat different place from the State Department.
 Q.

What motivates the State Department to ignore some of your recommendations?
A.

The State Department has a more difficult job than we do because they are
balancing American security interests, American commercial interests,
American cultural interests, American exchange interests, a whole range of
diplomatic interests, and one of the things that they are putting into that
mix is the defense of our fundamental values, human rights and religious
freedom and other such things. Because of its much larger portfolio the
State Department cannot be as single-minded as we are.
[image: A policeman taking aim with his rifle from the roof of a building
during a riot in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, on Apr. 22, 2002.]Agence France-Presse
— Getty ImagesA policeman taking aim with his rifle from the roof of a
building during a riot in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, on Apr. 22, 2002.
 Q.

After the 2002 riots in Gujarat, the United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom  recommended that India be on the
“countries of particular concern” list (a global list of the worst
offenders of religious freedom) but the State Department ignored it. In
your latest report, you have placed India on the Tier 2 list of countries,
which includes Afghanistan, Russia, Cuba, Nigeria, Laos, Azerbaijan and
Kazakhstan.
 A.

India merits being on the Tier 2 list for the state of its religious
freedom.
It is sometimes frustrating to see some of the countries we are critical of
on the grounds of religious freedom. For instance, in Burma, there has been
some real progress and real development in terms of democracy and many
other criteria, but there have been some disconcerting developments when it
comes to religious freedom and sectarian violence.
 Q.

Is it true that the State Department does not view the 2005 visa denial and
revocation as a religious freedom issue?
A.

Well, that’s one dimension of it. Obviously what happened in 2002 in
Gujarat was sectarian violence on a really massive scale. I don’t think you
can say that that wasn’t a religious issue. It was a religious issue and
the 2005 visa denial harks back to that. I am not quite sure why they would
have said that. There is no ignoring of the central role of the violence
and the destruction that took place. And there is no avoiding the sectarian
nature of it. It was by all accounts religiously based.
 Q.

If Mr. Modi were to apply for a visa now, what are the chances of the U.S.
Department of State denying him the visa?
A.

I don’t think I am in a position to answer that question, and I think if
you ask the State Department the same question, you will get a polite “no
comment.” I would say there probably are different camps within the State
Department. This is being debated in a lively way. If you go to the
Congress, you will find members of Congress who are saying we have got to
give this guy a visa, and you will find an equal number of congressmen
saying that it would really be a betrayal of our values.
 Q.

In the U.S. Congress, are the supporters and opponents of Mr. Modi’s visa
divided along party lines?
A.

I don’t think it breaks along partisan lines. I think it breaks down along
which congressmen prioritize human rights versus who don’t. We met recently
Cynthia Lummis and she has asked for more information. Not only did I
testify before her and made a strong case for why the United States
Commission on International Religious Freedom has taken the position it had
on it, but after that she did request additional information from us. She
said something to the effect that somebody is presumed to be innocent until
proven guilty. I pointed out that we were not talking about us passing a
judgment of guilt or innocence, but whether or not we would extend a
privilege. To get a visa to this country is not a right but a privilege. It
is not a matter of standards of proofs in a court of law but whether or not
the privilege should be extended to someone.

*Maroosha Muzaffar, a Fulbright scholar at New York University, is
interning with The New Republic in Washington. Ms. Muzaffar has worked as a
reporter for The Indian Express in New Delhi.*


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