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After Partition and Babri, India most polarised now under Modi Govt: Chidambaram

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New Delhi, Feb 27: Days after former finance and home minister P Chidambaram stirred up the hornet's nest by saying that 'Afzal Guru case' was perhaps not correctly decided, he has made yet another controversial statement.

Expressing serious concern over the "deep polarisation" currently in the country, he has criticized Modi government.

'India has become a deeply polarised'

While speaking at a book release function, Congress leader said that there were only three occasions when India was deeply polarised -- 1947 partition, 1992 after Babri Masjid demolition and 2015, one of the most polarised years.

Afzal Guru case was perhaps not correctly decided: Chidambaram says in interviewAfzal Guru case was perhaps not correctly decided: Chidambaram says in interview

"2014 was a year of acrimony and I thought 2015 will be a year of acronyms but at the end of 2015 it is a most polarised year. Today the year has turned out to be deeply polarised.

How polarised the Indian society has become.

"Please talk to a Muslim, dalit, or a man of small land holding. There is great insecurity and fear as to where we are heading, towards a deeply divided polarised society. This is what we want we you to think about," he said c.

Chidambaram was speaking after the release of his book "Standing Guard--A year in Opposition", a compilation of his Sunday columns published in the Indian Express in 2015.

The function was attended among others by former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi, former Ministers Kapil Sibal, Jairam Ramesh, Shashi Tharoor, former Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia, CPM leaders Sitaram Yechury and T K Rangarajan and leading lawyers.

The Congress leader said that debate in Dadri was not whether a man had beef or mutton in his home but whether a mob has a right to lynch. It was not whether Rohith Vemula was a dalit or not, but how insensitive a university was in dealing with him.

The debate in JNU is whether a bunch of mis-guided youth allegedly raised anti-national slogans

"What is a university. University is not a monastery. At my age, I have a right to be wrong. In a university I need not be profound, I could be ridiculous also. But how are you framing the debate in this country in a perverse manner," he said in an apparent reference to the BJP and the Sangh Pariwar making it a nationalism versus traitor debate. .

OneIndia news

(With inputs from PTI)

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