Modi\\\'s push for Hindi irks regional Indian parties
Saturday, 21 June 2014
NEW DELHI, June 20 (agencies): Regional parties Friday criticised moves by India's new nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi to promote Hindi as the government's official language on social media, demanding English be used instead.
The right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party government, which swept to power in May, instructed all ministries and public offices to use Hindi in its official communication on social media last month.
But Jayalalithaa Jayaram, chief minister of southern Tamil Nadu state and whose party is the third largest in parliament, wrote to Modi on Friday asking him to make English the official language.
"(Push for Hindi) is a highly sensitive issue and causes disquiet to the people of Tamil Nadu," wrote Jayalalithaa, a day after her local rival M. Karunanidhi called the directive an "imposition".
Omar Abdullah, chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, also voiced his opposition, saying that he regarded English and Urdu as the main languages in what is India's only Muslim-majority state.
"We will continue to use these two languages and whoever wants to use Hindi can. Our country is so huge that you can't impose one particular language on everyone," he told reporters, speaking in Urdu.
India's constitution lists 22 official languages, with Hindi as the main official language and English-the preferred language for business and academics-given associate status.