Thursday, May 21, 2026

When India Was Burning, Modi Was Gifting Melody to Meloni

 From “Mitron” to “Melodi”: Spectacle, Silence, and the Politics of Distraction in the Age of Crisis

By Ramphal Kataria

“When Rome was burning, Nero was playing the flute.”

History remembers rulers not merely for what they did in moments of triumph, but for what they chose to perform while their societies were sinking into anxiety, humiliation, and decline. The proverb survives because it captures a universal truth about power: rulers often mistake spectacle for governance.

In contemporary India, the proverb acquires a new political form:

“When India was in financial distress, Modi was gifting Melody to Meloni.”

The image was carefully staged. Prime Minister Narendra Modi handing a packet of Melody toffees to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni in Rome was instantly transformed into viral internet content. The “Melodi” meme machine exploded again. Television anchors laughed. Instagram reels romanticized the chemistry. BJP social media cells celebrated it as proof of Modi’s unmatched charisma and diplomatic brilliance.

But behind the choreography stood another reality.

At precisely the moment India was confronting currency weakness, investor flight, rising unemployment, democratic criticism abroad, allegations of institutional decline at home, and growing dependence on Washington’s strategic diktats, the political communication machinery chose confectionery symbolism over national introspection.

The spectacle was not accidental. It was diversion.

And perhaps nothing captures the defining contradiction of the Modi era more accurately than this image: a Prime Minister smiling for viral content while the foundations of the republic grow increasingly fragile beneath the surface.

The Norway Embarrassment: A Simple Question That Shook the Image Machine

The Rome optics cannot be understood without understanding Norway.

During his state visit to Norway, Modi encountered something his government increasingly appears uncomfortable with: unscripted democratic questioning.

Norwegian journalist Helle Lyng asked a straightforward question regarding press freedom and Modi’s refusal to take open media questions. It was not an abusive question. It was not even an aggressive one. It was a routine democratic query expected in liberal political systems.

Yet the response from sections of India’s diplomatic and media establishment turned the moment into an international controversy.

Instead of projecting confidence, the incident reinforced a growing global perception that India’s leadership prefers controlled messaging over accountability.

What transformed the controversy into something larger was the reaction that followed. The Indian establishment treated the question not as journalism but as provocation. Social media ecosystems aligned with the ruling party launched attacks against the journalist. Television debates reframed scrutiny itself as anti-India conspiracy.

And then came the second blow.

Norway’s newspaper published a controversial cartoon depicting Modi as a “snake charmer,” reviving racist colonial stereotypes historically used by Europeans against Indians. The cartoon rightly triggered outrage among Indians across ideological lines because it reproduced deeply orientalist imagery.

But even here, the Indian state found itself trapped in contradiction.

A government that aggressively brands domestic critics “anti-national” suddenly demanded sensitivity and respect from foreign media institutions. The same ecosystem that routinely mocks dissenters within India demanded dignity abroad.

The Norway episode exposed something fundamental:

A government that cannot tolerate ordinary democratic scrutiny at home eventually loses the moral authority to confront prejudice abroad.

The crisis was not merely diplomatic. It was reputational.

And reputational crises in the digital age are managed not through policy correction, but through narrative replacement.

That replacement arrived in Rome — wrapped in a packet of Melody toffees.

The “Melodi” Spectacle: Politics as Meme Management

The Modi era perfected something few democratic leaders have mastered at this scale:

the transformation of governance into perpetual media performance.

Every handshake becomes content.
Every hug becomes symbolism.
Every slogan becomes branding.
Every foreign trip becomes spectacle.

The “Melodi” meme between Modi and Meloni did not emerge organically. It was cultivated carefully through digital amplification. By gifting Melody chocolates to Meloni, the Prime Minister inserted himself into a viral narrative that instantly displaced discussions about Norway.

For 48 hours, the conversation changed.

Not press freedom.
Not investor exits.
Not the rupee.
Not unemployment.
Not institutional decline.

Only:
“Melodi.”

This is not diplomacy in the classical sense. It is algorithmic politics.

The objective is no longer to shape long-term geopolitical outcomes alone. The objective is to dominate attention cycles.

And in this model of governance, optics become more important than outcomes.

The ruler does not need to solve the crisis if he can successfully redirect public conversation away from it.

The Republic of Spectacle

Modern Indian politics increasingly operates through emotional theatre rather than material governance.

The Modi government understands a crucial truth of mass communication:

Citizens overwhelmed by spectacle often stop examining structural decline.

This explains why symbolism dominates governance discourse.

Temple inaugurations overshadow unemployment.

Roadshows overshadow inflation.

Nationalist slogans overshadow wage stagnation.

Viral diplomacy overshadows currency depreciation.

The Prime Minister’s politics depends heavily on emotional mobilization through performance.

And few examples illustrate this more clearly than Modi’s repeated emotional appeals to citizens during crises.

The Seven Appeals: Sacrifice for the Masses, Spectacle for the Leader

Over the years, Modi repeatedly asked ordinary Indians to sacrifice, endure hardship, and display patriotic discipline in the name of national interest.

1. Demonetisation

Citizens were told to stand in endless queues because black money and terrorism would end.

Instead:

informal economies collapsed,

migrant workers suffered,

small businesses died,

and cash eventually returned to the system.

Yet the pain was reframed as patriotism.

2. “Thali Bajao”

During the pandemic, citizens were asked to bang utensils in solidarity.

The symbolism was emotionally powerful.
But symbolism could not replace oxygen cylinders.

3. “Diya Jalao”

Indians lit candles and lamps during lockdown.

Meanwhile:

hospitals were collapsing,

migrant workers walked hundreds of kilometers,

and crematoriums overflowed.

4. Appeals to Buy Local

Citizens were urged to embrace “Atmanirbhar Bharat.”

Yet economic concentration accelerated toward a handful of giant corporations.

5. Appeals to Reduce Fuel Consumption

People were told to adapt lifestyles while fuel taxes remained extraordinarily high for years.

6. Appeals for Patience During Inflation

Citizens were repeatedly told global conditions required sacrifice.

But corporate profits soared even as real wages stagnated.

7. Appeals During Conflict and Crisis

Following terror incidents and military escalations, emotional nationalism was mobilized intensely while questions regarding preparedness, intelligence failures, or strategic outcomes were discouraged.

The pattern is unmistakable:

The masses are repeatedly asked for sacrifice, restraint, patience, and nationalism — while the leadership projects confidence through spectacle and personal branding.

And after these appeals, what followed?

Roadshows.
Mega-events.
Foreign tours.
Carefully curated photo opportunities.

The contrast became politically jarring.

Roadshows in a Time of Economic Anxiety

India today faces deep economic contradictions.

Official GDP figures may project optimism, but beneath headline growth lies widening insecurity.

The rupee has weakened dramatically compared to 2014 benchmarks. Foreign portfolio investors have pulled billions from Indian markets. Youth unemployment remains persistently high. Consumption distress affects rural India. Small businesses continue struggling in the post-pandemic and post-demonetisation environment.

Yet political communication often appears disconnected from economic anxiety.

Instead of confronting difficult questions directly, the political ecosystem increasingly prefers:

spectacle,

emotional nationalism,

celebrity diplomacy,

and digital distraction.

The day after appealing emotionally to citizens, Modi appeared at massive public roadshows before flying on a five-nation foreign tour.

The optics mattered more than the contradictions.

The Rupee and the Myth of Economic Invincibility

When Modi became Prime Minister in 2014, one US dollar traded near ₹58–63.

Today, the rupee fluctuates far weaker.

Today, the rupee fluctuates far weaker.

y=58+2.7x

The depreciation cannot be simplistically blamed on one government alone; global market forces matter. But the political contradiction is impossible to ignore.

The same political ecosystem that once weaponized rupee depreciation against previous governments now normalizes similar or worse trends as inevitable global realities.

Economic nationalism was central to Modi’s political rise.

Yet today:

import dependence remains high,

inequality has widened,

and capital concentration intensified.

The symbolism of strength increasingly masks structural vulnerability.

Foreign Investors Are Voting With Their Money

One of the least discussed realities in television nationalism is capital flight.

Foreign investors withdrawing billions from Indian markets reflects deeper concerns:

valuation stress,

geopolitical uncertainty,

slowing consumption,

and global strategic shifts.

Markets are not ideological entities.
They respond to risk perception.

And despite relentless branding about India becoming a global superpower, sustained investor exits reveal nervousness beneath the surface.

Ironically, the same government that projects muscular nationalism increasingly depends on foreign capital inflows to stabilize economic confidence.

This creates a contradiction:

politically anti-Western rhetoric for domestic audiences,

strategically dependent economic positioning internationally.

Strategic Autonomy or Managed Dependency?

Modi’s foreign policy has often been celebrated as “multi-alignment.”

India strengthened ties simultaneously with:

the United States,

Israel,

Gulf monarchies,

Russia,

and European powers.

But recent developments have triggered uncomfortable questions regarding actual autonomy.

Critics increasingly argue that India’s geopolitical posture resembles calibrated dependency rather than independent balancing.

The debate intensified around:

sanctions pressure over Russian oil,

trade tariff negotiations,

and alleged US pressure during regional military tensions.

The symbolism became humiliating for many observers:

A nation that once championed non-alignment now appears increasingly compelled to negotiate “waivers” regarding whom it can buy oil from.

For decades, India projected itself as a sovereign civilizational state unwilling to bend before superpower pressure.

Now critics ask:
Has strategic autonomy become strategic adjustment?

The Silence on Israel and Iran

India historically maintained deep ties with Iran while supporting Palestinian rights internationally.

Under Modi, relations with Israel deepened dramatically:

defense cooperation,

intelligence sharing,

technological partnerships,

and strategic coordination expanded rapidly.

India’s response during the Iran–Israel–US tensions reflected this balancing act.

Rather than adopting a morally assertive position, New Delhi chose strategic ambiguity.

The priority was not ideological consistency.
It was risk management:

oil flows,

diaspora protection,

geopolitical alignment,

and economic stability.

This is understandable from a realist perspective.

But it also reveals how contemporary Indian foreign policy increasingly prioritizes transactional alignment over principled diplomacy.

Operation Sindoor and the Question of Sovereignty

Nothing exposes nationalist contradictions more sharply than perceived external interference in security decisions.

Reports and debates surrounding American pressure during regional military tensions triggered severe criticism domestically.

The core question became simple:

Can a government that projects hyper-nationalist rhetoric domestically simultaneously appear strategically constrained internationally?

Critics argued that external pressure influenced operational decisions.
Supporters claimed restraint prevented escalation.

But politically, the symbolism mattered enormously.

A leadership that built its legitimacy on muscular sovereignty suddenly appeared vulnerable to Washington’s preferences.

The Crisis of Institutions

The problem extends beyond one foreign tour or one viral meme.

India is witnessing growing distrust toward institutions once considered relatively autonomous.

Among the concerns raised by critics:

media concentration,

weakened parliamentary scrutiny,

investigative agency politicization,

and questions surrounding the independence of the Election Commission of India.

Whether every allegation is correct is secondary to the larger issue:

institutional credibility itself is eroding.

Democracies survive not merely through elections, but through trust in institutions.

Once citizens begin believing that institutions operate selectively, polarization deepens rapidly.

The Election Commission Debate

The accusations surrounding voter list revisions, welfare schemes during elections, and selective enforcement have intensified opposition distrust.

Supporters of the government dismiss these concerns as conspiracy theories.

But perception matters profoundly in democracy.

Even if institutions act procedurally correctly, the appearance of asymmetry damages legitimacy.

And legitimacy, once weakened, is difficult to restore.

Media Management as Governance

Perhaps the most defining feature of the Modi era is the centrality of narrative management.

Government communication today resembles corporate brand architecture:

slogans,

emotional campaigns,

visual symbolism,

and highly controlled media access.

Press conferences are rare.
Unscripted questioning is limited.
Communication increasingly flows one way:
from leader to public.

This explains why the Helle Lyng question became so explosive.

In mature democracies, leaders routinely face uncomfortable questions.

But in India’s current political culture, questioning itself increasingly becomes suspect.

The consequence is dangerous.

When criticism becomes equated with disloyalty, democratic culture weakens.

Nationalism as Emotional Insurance

The BJP’s greatest political success has been converting nationalism into emotional insurance against governance failures.

Economic pain can be redirected toward patriotic emotion.
Institutional criticism can be reframed as anti-national conspiracy.
Foreign criticism can be transformed into civilizational victimhood.

This creates an extraordinarily resilient political structure.

But it also produces a society increasingly unable to distinguish between:

criticism of government,
and

hatred of nation.

That confusion benefits ruling power immensely.

The Colonial Irony

The racist Norwegian cartoon exposed another contradiction.

The Indian right often condemns colonial attitudes from the West — correctly.

Yet domestically, sections of the same ecosystem reproduce hierarchical attitudes toward minorities, dissenters, intellectuals, journalists, and marginalized communities.

Anti-colonial dignity abroad loses credibility when democratic dignity weakens at home.

Digital India, Distracted India

India today is perhaps the world’s most politically digitized democracy.

But digitization has not necessarily deepened democratic understanding.

Instead:

outrage cycles dominate,

memes replace analysis,

propaganda spreads instantly,

and complex issues are flattened into emotional binaries.

The “Melodi” moment succeeded precisely because it fit this ecosystem perfectly.

It was meme-friendly.
Emotionally light.
Visually attractive.
Algorithmically shareable.

Meanwhile:

rupee depreciation,

capital flight,

unemployment,

institutional decline,

and foreign policy contradictions remained structurally invisible.

Nero in the Age of Reels

The original proverb survives because it symbolizes elite detachment during crisis.

Nero’s alleged flute-playing was not merely entertainment.
It represented indifference to suffering.

Today’s equivalent is not music.

It is performance politics.

Roadshows amid economic distress.
Hashtags amid institutional anxiety.
Memes amid democratic criticism.
Photo-ops amid financial uncertainty.

And perhaps most strikingly:

gifting Melody while the republic struggles with deepening structural contradictions.

The Manufacturing of Invincibility

Every strongman political project depends on one psychological requirement:

the leader must appear perpetually invincible.

This is why:

criticism is delegitimized,

failures are externalized,

and symbolism is intensified during crises.

The Norway controversy threatened the invincibility image.
The Meloni spectacle restored it temporarily.

That is the logic of contemporary political communication.

Not governance.
Not accountability.
Image preservation.

India Beyond the Spectacle

Yet India remains larger than any one leader.

The republic still contains:

constitutional aspirations,

democratic memory,

social resistance,

and institutional possibilities.

Questions continue to emerge despite pressure.
Journalists continue reporting.
Citizens continue debating.
Opposition continues challenging.

The real struggle in India today is not between left and right alone.

It is between:

spectacle and substance,

image and accountability,

emotional nationalism and democratic scrutiny.

Conclusion: Melody Over Meltdown

The image will endure.

Narendra Modi smiling, gifting Melody chocolates to Giorgia Meloni while social media celebrated “Melodi.”

But another image will endure too:

a weakening rupee,

anxious youth,

departing investors,

strained institutions,

democratic criticism abroad,

and a republic increasingly governed through spectacle.

The deeper tragedy is not that a Prime Minister shared chocolates with another leader.

The tragedy is that symbolic performance now routinely substitutes for political accountability.

Nero’s flute was never merely about music.

It was about a ruler disconnected from the fire consuming the republic around him.

And in modern India, the metaphor acquires its own devastating adaptation:

When India was burning, Modi was gifting Melody to Meloni.

 

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Prime Minister Who Would Not Take Questions

From Sabrina Siddiqui in Washington to Helle Lyng in Oslo — the Story of How India’s Democracy Learned to Fear the Press

When journalists ask questions abroad that Indian media no longer dares to ask at home, the crisis is no longer about journalism alone — it is about democracy itself.

By Ramphal Kataria

There was a time when Indian prime ministers argued with journalists, sparred with editors, defended themselves in hostile press conferences, and treated uncomfortable questions as part of democratic life. Today, India has a Prime Minister who has completed twelve years in office without holding a single open, unscripted press conference.

That fact alone should disturb every citizen of a constitutional democracy.

The controversy surrounding Norwegian journalist Helle Lyng during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Norway is therefore not an isolated diplomatic episode. It is a mirror. A mirror reflecting the shrinking space for independent journalism in India, the transformation of media into political spectacle, and the emergence of a political culture where power no longer tolerates scrutiny.

Lyng asked a question so basic that in any healthy democracy it would barely qualify as controversy:

“Why don’t you take questions from the freest press in the world?”

That was it.

Not sedition.
Not conspiracy.
Not defamation.
Just a question.

And yet the question travelled across the world precisely because India’s political climate has made such questions extraordinary.

The Fear of Unscripted Democracy

Modi is perhaps the most media-visible leader in modern Indian history, yet simultaneously the least accessible to independent media questioning.

He appears constantly:

on giant television screens,

in carefully choreographed interviews,

in monologues like Mann Ki Baat,

in podcasts,

in cinematic documentaries,

in election spectacles,

in social media productions.

But the communication is almost always one-directional.

The Prime Minister speaks. The nation listens.

Questions are either pre-selected, softened, redirected, or eliminated altogether.

This explains why Lyng’s question struck a nerve internationally. The issue was not merely that Modi avoided a question. It was that the avoidance has become institutionalized.

India today has perhaps the world’s most media-conscious leadership and simultaneously one of the least press-accessible democratic governments.

The irony becomes sharper when contrasted with earlier prime ministers.

Prime Minister

Press Engagement

Jawaharlal Nehru

Frequent press conferences and editorial interactions

Indira Gandhi

Controlled but still responsive to media

Atal Bihari Vajpayee

Open engagement and spontaneous interaction

Manmohan Singh

Regular national and foreign press conferences

Narendra Modi

Predominantly one-directional communication

India’s Prime Ministers and Press Engagement

 

Even the often-criticised Manmohan Singh faced hostile media questioning repeatedly. Yet he still addressed press conferences and answered uncomfortable questions. His famous remark now feels prophetic:

“History will be kinder to me than the contemporary media.”

The Sabrina Siddiqui Precedent

This was not the first time.

In June 2023, during Modi’s state visit to the United States, Sabrina Siddiqui of The Wall Street Journal asked Modi a direct question on minority rights and freedom of speech in India.

She asked:

“There are many human rights groups who say your government has discriminated against religious minorities and sought to silence critics…”

The response to Siddiqui was immediate and vicious.

She was trolled online.
Abused.
Targeted for her Muslim identity.
Accused of being anti-India.

The White House itself publicly condemned the harassment campaign against her.

Now, three years later, the same pattern repeats with Helle Lyng.

A foreign journalist asks a democratic question.
A nationalist outrage machine activates.
The journalist becomes the story instead of the question.

This is how democratic decline normalizes itself.

The Media That Once Questioned Power

Indian journalism was not always like this.

Under Jawaharlal Nehru, the press was often sharply critical. Nehru still addressed journalists frequently and tolerated dissenting editors. He understood that criticism was not an insult to democracy but evidence of it.

Indira Gandhi imposed the Emergency and censored the press outright — the darkest chapter in Indian media history. Newspapers resisted, journalists were jailed, and censorship became explicit state policy.

But what makes the current era more dangerous is that censorship is often unofficial.

No formal Emergency exists.

No written censorship order is necessary.

The media largely disciplines itself.

This is more sophisticated than authoritarian censorship because it creates the illusion of freedom while hollowing it out internally.

From Watchdog to Megaphone

Indian television journalism after 2014 underwent a structural transformation.

The media that aggressively questioned the UPA government over:

corruption scandals,

inflation,

governance paralysis,

policy failures,

suddenly became deferential once the BJP came to power.

The same anchors who once screamed nightly against state power began defending it.

The same channels that demanded accountability began manufacturing consent.

Criticism of government policy increasingly became framed as:

anti-national,

urban Naxal,

toolkit politics,

foreign conspiracy,

anti-Hindu propaganda.

The result is what popular political vocabulary now calls “Godi Media” — media sitting in the lap of power.

The phrase survived because millions recognized the truth behind it.

The Business Model of Silence

Indian media’s crisis is not merely ideological. It is structural.

Large sections of Indian media today are no longer journalism institutions. They are corporate-political ecosystems dependent upon:

government advertising,

regulatory protection,

corporate ownership,

political access,

business interests.

This transformed journalism from public accountability into market-managed nationalism.

Television news especially became less about reporting and more about emotional mobilization.

Debates became theatre.
Anchors became prosecutors.
Dissenters became enemies.

The objective shifted from informing citizens to manufacturing political mood.

The Fall of NDTV and the Message It Sent

Perhaps no event symbolized this transformation more than the takeover of NDTV by the Adani Group.

For decades, NDTV represented one of the few mainstream television spaces that maintained relative editorial independence. Its founders, Prannoy Roy and Radhika Roy, faced years of investigative pressure, raids, regulatory scrutiny, and financial stress before the eventual corporate acquisition.

Whether one supports NDTV or not is irrelevant.

The political message was unmistakable:
Independent media can survive only within limits tolerated by power.

The takeover signaled to every newsroom in India that autonomy carries costs.

India’s Declining Press Freedom Ranking

According to the Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index, India’s ranking has steadily fallen in the last decade.

Norway consistently ranks near the top. India has slipped deep into the lower tiers globally.

The ranking is not merely symbolic.

It reflects:

intimidation of journalists,

raids on media institutions,

concentration of ownership,

online harassment,

sedition and anti-terror laws,

shrinking editorial independence,

violence against reporters.

Government supporters dismiss these rankings as “Western bias.” But dismissing every criticism as foreign conspiracy has become the easiest substitute for introspection.

India’s Press Freedom Ranking Over the Years

(Reporters Without Borders – World Press Freedom Index)

Year

India’s Rank

Political Context

2002

80

Coalition era, expanding private media

2010

122

UPA-II, rise of aggressive TV journalism

2014

140

BJP comes to power

2016

133

Nationalist television consolidation intensifies

2020

142

Increasing raids, sedition cases, internet shutdowns

2023

161

One of India’s lowest rankings globally

2024

159

Slight improvement, concerns remain

2025

151

Continued criticism over media concentration

2026

Around 157

Ongoing concerns regarding press autonomy

Meanwhile, Norway has consistently ranked either first or among the top three countries globally in press freedom.

The government dismisses these rankings as biased. Yet the rankings reflect measurable realities — intimidation of journalists, concentration of ownership, raids on media organisations, internet shutdowns, online harassment, and shrinking editorial independence.

When foreign journalists repeatedly ask India about press freedom, it is because India’s democratic image is visibly eroding.

The irony is painful: journalists abroad increasingly ask the questions that Indian mainstream television abandoned long ago.

Why Norway’s Role Matters

The Oslo episode also raises uncomfortable questions for Norway itself.

If Norway prides itself on being among the world’s freest press environments, why did it permit a joint appearance without open questioning?

Why are democratic governments increasingly accommodating media-managed political events for powerful leaders?

Modern diplomacy increasingly resembles stage management.

Questions are filtered.
Interactions are choreographed.
Journalists are contained.
Optics replace scrutiny.

Ironically, Helle Lyng ended up defending the spirit of democratic journalism more vigorously than many large Indian media houses currently do.

And instead of solidarity, she received trolling, abuse, and suspension of social media accounts.

The Manufactured Nationalism of Media

One of the greatest achievements of the current political-media ecosystem has been equating criticism of government with insult to the nation.

If a journalist questions the Prime Minister:
they insult India.

If international media reports democratic decline:
they target India.

If human rights concerns are raised:
they attack civilization.

This fusion of leader, state, civilization, religion, and nationalism is deeply dangerous because it eliminates democratic distinction between:

nation and government,

patriotism and obedience,

journalism and propaganda.

A democracy survives only when power remains question-able.

The moment questioning itself becomes suspicious, democracy begins mutating into spectacle.

The Silence of Indian Journalism

Perhaps the saddest part of the Helle Lyng episode was not the government’s defensiveness.

Governments everywhere dislike difficult questions.

The tragedy was the silence of much of Indian mainstream media.

Many Indian journalists privately admit what foreign correspondents publicly ask:

access journalism dominates Delhi,

editorial independence is shrinking,

owners influence coverage,

political proximity determines careers.

Yet very few say it openly.

That is why foreign journalists increasingly ask the questions Indian television abandoned long ago.

Manmohan Singh and the Difference Between Criticism and Fear

Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh faced relentless media hostility during his tenure.

He was mocked as weak, silent, indecisive, and remote.

Yet he held press conferences.

He answered hostile questions.

He tolerated ridicule.

And he famously said:

“History will be kinder to me than the contemporary media.”

That statement now appears almost prophetic.

Because the issue is no longer whether media criticizes governments too much.

The crisis now is whether media still possesses enough independence to criticize power at all.

Democracy Cannot Function Without Discomfort

A free press is not supposed to make governments comfortable.

Journalism is not public relations.
Questions are not insults.
Accountability is not anti-nationalism.

When journalists fear power, democracy weakens.

When media becomes spectacle, truth becomes negotiable.

When leaders avoid scrutiny, institutions decay silently.

And when foreign correspondents must ask the questions domestic media no longer asks, the crisis has already become international.

Helle Lyng’s question was not merely directed at Narendra Modi.

It was directed at the condition of Indian democracy itself.

And the discomfort it generated may have answered the question more honestly than any official response ever could.