NEW DELHI: India and Japan have lashed out at US President Joe Biden for his ‘xenophobic’ comments suggesting that both the nations were struggling economically because they rejected immigrants.

Biden, who is seeking reelection against Republican rival Donald Trump in November, made the remarks at a campaign fundraising event in Washington this week.

“India is not xenophobic,” Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar told a media roundtable, insisting that Biden’s comments did not match India’s reality.

“First of all, our economy is not faltering,” he said, according to a report of the discussion published on Saturday by the Economic Times newspaper.

“India has been a very unique country,” he added. “I would say actually, in the history of the world, that it’s been a society which has been very open … different people of different societies come to India.”

India is one of the world’s fastest-growing economies with annualised GDP growth of 8.4 per cent in the December quarter, according to official data in February.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalist government has been accused by critics of discriminating against Muslims, including through recently enacted reforms to India’s citizenship law.

The amended law sparked huge protests when it was first passed by parliament in 2019 and finally enacted in March, with Amnesty International warning that it still risked being used as a tool, alongside a mooted National Register of Citizens, to deprive some Muslims of citizenship.

“There are people who publicly said on record that… a million Muslims will lose their citizenship in this country,” Jaishankar said.

“Why are they not being held to account? Because nobody has lost citizenship.”

‘Unfortunate’

Biden had clubbed allies India and Japan in with rivals China and Russia in remarks intended as a defence of US immigration policy.

“Why is China stalling so badly economically? Why is Japan in trouble? Why is Russia in trouble? And India? Because they’re xenophobic. They don’t want immigrants,” Biden had said at the Wednesday fundraiser.

Tokyo responded on Saturday by saying it was “unfortunate that comments not based on an accurate understanding of Japan’s policy were made”.

The Japanese government had already delivered this message to the White House and explained once again about its policies and stances, it said in a statement.

Biden’s remarks came less than a month after he hosted a lavish state dinner for his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida in a rare gesture of high-level diplomacy.

The 81-year-old Democrat’s unexpected digs at Japan soon prompted the White House to tone them down.

The president was merely trying to send a broader message that “the United States is a nation of immigrants,” National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters. “It’s in our DNA,” he said.

Tokyo, for its part, said this clarification hadn’t been lost.

“We’re aware of the US government’s explanation that the comments in question weren’t made for the purpose of harming the importance and perpetuity of the Japan-US relationships,” its statement said.

Published in Dawn, May 5th, 2024

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