South Asian human rights campaigners here joined forces to organise a protest against an invitation for Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi to visit the UK.
The South Asia Solidarity Group led a demonstration along with 10 other groups outside the office of Labour Party MP Barry Gardiner in north London on Monday.
Gardiner, in his capacity as the chair of the Labour Friends of India group, sparked widespread debate last month with an invitation for Modi to speak on "The Future of Modern India" at a special event in the House of Commons. But the election campaign chief of the BJP has since declined the invitation and said he has no immediate plans to visit the UK.
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"Modi has already tried to make political capital in India from this invitation, and we need to send a clear message that he is not welcome here. This is part of a larger campaign and we will also take our protest to the Conservative Friends of India, which had also sent Modi an invitation," she added.
The protest, which included a theatrical skit on the relationship between Gardiner and Modi, was backed by a range of UK-based groups such as the Council of Indian Muslims, Islamic Human Rights Commission, CasteWatch UK and Southall Black Sisters. The group waved placards demanding "justice" for three British citizens - Saeed and Shakeel Dawood and Mohammed Aswat - who lost their lives in the 2002 Gujarat riots.