The Guardian view on India’s G20 summit: a backsliding democracy gets to play host | Editorial
Western democracies are wrong to overlook a country's descent into electoral autocracy because they believe they need it to contain China
Narendra Modi is an authoritarian figure who, as India's prime minister since 2014, has pushed his country into increasingly becoming a de facto ethnic democracy", in which Hindus define the national identity and non-Hindus are seen as second-class citizens. Yet as the host of the upcoming talks of the world's 20 largest economies, Mr Modi will be feted by major global leaders - except his absent fellow strongmen Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.
Mr Modi's dangerous majoritarianism is too easily overlooked by the west, as the G20 glad-handing will show. India had been considered an exemplary liberal parliamentary democracy among developing countries. This is being slowly dismantled by Mr Modi's brand of Hindu nationalism. State intimidation has seen civil society harassed and critics jailed. A report by a group of prominent lawyers last year warned that the administration of law has become the means by which ... the Muslim community can be kept in a state of perpetual fear". Since May, the north-eastern Indian state of Manipur has been burning, with its valley Hindus and highland Christians sinking into bloody fighting. Mr Modi's party blames non-Hindus for the violence.
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