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Big, fat Indian elections hog international media limelight

With two days to go to the first phase of polling on April 7, the India elections – the biggest ever electoral exercise in history – are making headlines in the international press. A moment like elections allows India to occupy the centre-stage, say experts.

Updated on: Apr 06, 2014 02:07 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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With two days to go to the first phase of polling on April 7, the India elections – the biggest ever electoral exercise in history –are making headlines in the international press.

Jason Burke, South Asia correspondent of The Guardian, points out that there is always huge interest in India. "The complexity of the India story means telling it takes time. So it often gets pushed out by things less important, but more urgent.” A moment like elections, he says, allows India to occupy the centre-stage.

India's strategic importance, the increased interests of foreign investors, and a feeling that the inroads into the English-reading Indian market could generate revenues have all led to a spurt in the western media's coverage of the elections. The concerns about the flagging economy, and the way the battle is pitched as one between the polarising Narendra Modi, a clear front-runner, and a fading prince, Rahul Gandhi, makes the polls more interesting.

In its controversial editorial, South Asia bureau chief Adam Roberts told HT, “We are an international publication. We endorse and reject candidates in many other countries. This is the joy of being in a democracy. All we are doing is putting an opinion out there.”

The online India-specific web platforms of US-based publications such as the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal have detailed stories on the polls. There is additional interest in the US since Modi is seen as a controversial figure.

But the coverage, media sources suggest, must be kept in perspective. Elections in Afghanistan were tracked far more comprehensively than the Indian polls.

But perhaps more than the western media, it is India's neighbours who are watching the polls with greater interest. Limited resources and visa regimes may make extensive reportage difficult, but Pakistani papers have been running regular agency stories, besides commissioning special edit page pieces and carrying stories from their correspondents based in Delhi.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Prashant Jha

Prashant Jha is the Washington DC-based US correspondent of Hindustan Times. He is also the editor of HT Premium. Jha has earlier served as editor-views and national political editor/bureau chief of the paper. He is the author of How the BJP Wins: Inside India's Greatest Election Machine and Battles of the New Republic: A Contemporary History of Nepal.

Follow India news real-time updates and the latest news covered on Hindustan Times, featuring today's critical updates on Sonam Wangchuk LIVE and more across India.
Follow India news real-time updates and the latest news covered on Hindustan Times, featuring today's critical updates on Sonam Wangchuk LIVE and more across India.
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