Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi, Kejriwal, Arundhati Roy among Time's 100 influential people

Arun Kumar, IANS, 24 Apr, 2014 10:18 AM
    Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi and Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal have made it to Time 100 list of the world's most influential people along with Indian novelist Arundhati Roy.
     
    While Modi figures in the category of "leaders", Kejriwal is listed among the "pioneers" and Roy makes the grade among "icons" in the annual list released Thursday after an online poll of readers.
     
    Modi is described as "The divisive politician poised to lead the world's largest democracy" in a profile by Fareed Zakaria, the Indian-American host of CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS.
     
    "Elections are reactions, often negative reactions. That is surely the explanation for the breathtaking rise of Narendra Modi, who 'if the opinion polls are accurate' is poised to become India's next Prime Minister, and thus the world leader chosen by the largest electorate on the planet," he writes.
     
    "Modi has a reputation for quick action, encouraging the private sector, and good governance. He also has a reputation for autocratic rule and a dark Hindu-nationalist streak," he said. "But those concerns are waning in a country desperate for change."
     
    Kejriwal, listed among pioneers, is described as a "powerful outsider in Indian politics" by Rajdeep Sardesai, editor-in-chief of the IBN18 Network.
     
    "Kejriwal is the antithesis of the modern-day Indian politician. He's no Hindu nationalist, he doesn't have a famous surname, and no, there is no evidence that he has made money from politics," Sardesai wrote.
     
    "Though his administration (in Delhi) lasted a mere 49 days, with Kejriwal proving less adept at turning the wheels of government than campaigning against it, his image as the quintessential outsider taking on powerful interests - 'a David versus many mighty Goliaths' - has earned him a unique place in Indian politics," he added.
     
    Among the icons, Roy, the author of "The God of Small Things" makes it as "the novelist who is the conscience of India".
     
    In a profile, author Pankaj Mishra says: "More remarkably, Roy's subsequent nonfictional engagement with the conflicts and traumas of a heedlessly globalised world has manifested the virtues of an unflinching emotional as well as political intelligence."
     
    "In an age of intellectual logrolling and mass-manufactured infotainment, she continues to offer bracing ways of seeing, thinking and feeling," he wrote.
     
     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    No fight between Gandhi families, says Maneka

    No fight between Gandhi families, says Maneka
    There is no fight between the Gandhi families, BJP leader Maneka Gandhi said Wednesday, a day after her son Varun was accused of "betraying the family" by Priyanka Gandhi.

    No fight between Gandhi families, says Maneka

    Drugs worth Rs.700 crore seized in Punjab ahead of LS polls

    Drugs worth Rs.700 crore seized in Punjab ahead of LS polls
    The run-up to the parliamentary election in Punjab is taking the state to a new high. Security agencies have seized drugs and other intoxicants worth nearly Rs.700 crore in the last 40 days.

    Drugs worth Rs.700 crore seized in Punjab ahead of LS polls

    45 injured as train derails in Assam

    45 injured as train derails in Assam
    At least 45 people were injured when nine coaches of a passenger train derailed near Guwahati in Assam Wednesday, authorities said.

    45 injured as train derails in Assam

    All set for polling in sixth phase of Lok Sabha battle

    All set for polling in sixth phase of Lok Sabha battle
    Polling begins at 7 a.m. Thursday in 121 Lok Sabha constituencies spread over 12 states in the sixth phase of staggered general election, officials said Wednesday.

    All set for polling in sixth phase of Lok Sabha battle

    Rape heinous crime but against blanket death penalty, Mulayam tells NCW

    Rape heinous crime but against blanket death penalty, Mulayam tells NCW
    Amid a controversy over his remarks opposing death penalty for rape, Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav has told the NCW that he holds rape to be a heinous crime deserving stern punishment but believed that capital punishment should be used only in the rarest of rare cases.

    Rape heinous crime but against blanket death penalty, Mulayam tells NCW

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police
    Indian Mujahideen suspects Tehsin Akhtar alias Monu and Pakistani national Waqas alias Zia-ur-Rehman were planning to carry out blasts in Delhi in 2012 with the help of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), Delhi Police Tuesday told a court here.

    IM suspects planned to bomb Delhi in 2012 with LeT: Police