India’s stand on ‘ban Gita’ case in Russia vindicated: Government
December 29th, 2011 - 10:31 pm ICT by IANS
New Delhi, Dec 29 (IANS) With a court in the Russian city of Tomsk dismissing a ‘ban the Gita’ case Wednesday, the Indian government Thursday said its views that the prosecutors had not read up the original Bhagavad Gita text have been vindicated by the verdict.
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, just ahead of the Lok Sabha adjourning sine die at the end of its winter session, informed the house that the state prosecutors’ case in Tomsk was based on “some erroneous conclusions” from a Russian translation of the Hindus’ holy scripture.
“Yesterday (wednesday), I received information from the Foreign Secretary that the higher court, in which the case was being heard, have rejected the petition and clearly demonstrated that even those who filed the petition and made comments, did not go through the original text of the language,” Mukherjee said.
Mukherjee, who is Leader of House in the Lok Sabha, said the state prosecutors had “depended on the translation of somebody” and based their arguments on “some erroneous conclusions” from the translated work.
Referring to the uproar in the house on the ‘ban Gita’ move in the Siberian city district court, he said External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna had in his earlier statement before the house noted that the case was “absurd” and his observations were vindicated by the Russian court’s verdict.
India had dubbed the Tomsk court judgment, rejecting the state prosecutors’ plea to ban the Bhagavad Gita and brand it as “extremist” literature, as a “sensible resolution of a sensitive issue” and that India was happy to “put this episode behind us.”
The case had been going on in the Tomsk city court since June and an IANS report on it earlier this month when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was in Moscow for the summit meeting with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had caused a political storm in India.
A day ahead of the court verdict, Krishna met Russian Ambassador to India Alexander Kadakin and sought a resolution of the controversy.
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- 'Ban Gita' court battle restarts in Russia (Lead) - Feb 16, 2012
- 'Ban Gita' plea dismissed in Russia (Roundup) - Dec 28, 2011
- 'Ban Gita' plea dismissed in Russia (Second Lead) - Dec 28, 2011
- Russian court dismisses plea to ban Gita (Second Lead) - Mar 21, 2012
- 'Ban Gita' plea dismissed in Russia (Intro Roundup) - Dec 29, 2011
- Krishna meets Russian envoy over Gita row - Dec 27, 2011
- Russian prosecutors to move higher court seeking Gita ban - Jan 26, 2012
- Russia should help resolve Gita issue: India (Lead) - Dec 27, 2011
- Russian court dismisses case seeking Gita ban - Mar 21, 2012
- Anxiety grips Hindus in Russia; prosecutors pursue 'Ban Gita' case - Mar 19, 2012
- Hindus in Russia celebrate Gita verdict; brace for possible appeal - Dec 29, 2011
- Russian court dismisses plea to ban Gita (Lead) - Dec 28, 2011
- Russian court resumes hearing on Gita ban - Mar 20, 2012
- Russian envoy denounces 'madmen' seeking ban on Gita - Dec 20, 2011
Tags: bhagavad gita text, case in russia, court judgment, dmitry medvedev, external affairs minister, extremist literature, holy scripture, Lok Sabha, manmohan singh, political storm, pranab mukherjee, prime minister manmohan, prime minister manmohan singh, russian ambassador, russian court, russian translation, siberian city, state prosecutors, tomsk city, uproar