India seen as too protective of Sonia Gandhi’s image

MUMBAI, (Reuters) – Indian authorities have tried to  crack down on portrayals of Sonia Gandhi in movies, books and  cartoons, triggering criticism that the world’s largest  democracy is too reverent towards its most powerful politician.

Gandhi is a member of a family of Congress leaders that has  dominated Indian politics since independence in 1947. As head  of the ruling Congress party, she is widely seen as the power  behind- -the-scenes in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s  government.  An upcoming Bollywood film “Rajneeti” (Politics), a political  saga featuring a woman politician said to resemble Sonia  Gandhi, has had trouble with the censor.

Filmmaker Prakash Jha denies his lead actor in “Rajneeti”  — seen in promotional material draped in a saree like Sonia  Gandhi — is modeled after her.

Jha said he had had difficulty getting his film classified  “U/A” (universal) after first receiving an adult certification  that would have drawn smaller audiences. A new controversy  threatens to overshadow the movie’s premiere on Friday.

A Spanish novel “El Sari Rojo” (The Red Sari), purporting  to dramatise the “tale of the Nehru-Gandhi family told through  the story of Sonia Gandhi”, has recently come under fire from  the powerful Congress party

There have been moves to block the English publication of  the novel, which in some editions has pictures of Sonia Gandhi  on the cover with folded hands.

Congress party spokesman Abhishek Singhvi was cited in the  Indian Express daily as saying the work was “completely  unauthorised, defamatory and salacious”.

Congress has been blamed for shutting down the office of an  Urdu-language newspaper in Kashmir over a caption under a  picture of Sonia Gandhi deemed derogatory by local officials.
The main Hindu nationalist opposition, the Bharatiya Janata  Party, says such censorship moves are a throwback to the  Emergency in the 1970s when then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi  banned books, movies and newspapers seen as anti-government.