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Excessive allegations weaken democracy: PM

Published: 04 Jan 2015 - 12:02 am | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 05:57 pm

Kolhapur: Excessive allegations by the media can weaken democracy, particularly when allegations replace proper criticism, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said here yesterday.
“Criticism can help prevent mistakes and enable reveal the truth. Every decision, every thought must be criticised. If there is no criticism in a democracy, then there is a problem. However, in recent times, there hasn’t been proper criticism, as allegations have replaced criticism,” Modi said during the platinum jubilee celebrations of Marathi newspaper Pudhari here.
He termed “samvad” (dialogue/debate) as very important for a democracy to thrive, along with “vivad” (criticism).
“But these days, there is no healthy criticism. Sadly there are mostly allegations. It is like a ‘tu tu, main main’ (pointing fingers) scenario,” Modi said.
The prime minister called for a thorough analysis and study of criticism as it has become a casualty of speed in the modern era.
“The need of the hour is healthy criticism, not allegations.”
The prime minister said people looked up to the media to provide good, truthful news as a dialogue was imperative for the survival of democracy.
“The credibility that the media enjoys today also gives it immense responsibility. Pudhari is one newspaper that has fulfilled this responsibility. It has overcome obstacles, persevered and won against all odds during India’s freedom struggle,” Modi said, lauding the newspaper’s contributions.
IANS