A video purportedly from Al Qaida's South Asia arm named India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a foe for the first time.
"The battle we are waging is the same - be it against drones, Charlie Hebdo's writings, the policies of IMF and World Bank, oppression of Muslims or Narendra Modi's blood-spitting tongue," said a voice allegedly belonging to Asim Umar, head of Al Qaida in the Indian Subcontinent.
Indian authorities are trying to authenticate the video posted online on Saturday, said a government official who asked not to be identified amid the investigation. Jagdish Thakkar, a spokesman in Modi's office, didn't answer two calls to his mobile on Monday, a public holiday in India.
More From This Section
Modi has maintained that his government is working toward "development for all," irrespective of religion or caste. He has also repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in allegations that he failed to stop anti-Muslim riots in 2002 as chief minister of the western state of Gujarat.
In its video, titled "From France to Bangladesh: The Dust will Never Settle Down,"
Al Qaida claimed responsibility for the murder of four Bangladeshi bloggers, including Avijit Roy, the American writer hacked to death in Dhaka in February for blogging about atheism and religious freedom.