Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Don't Be Flippant With Indian Symbols, Amazon Told

IANS, 16 Jan, 2017 12:31 PM
    Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das on Sunday asked e-tailer Amazon to refrain from being flippant about Indian symbols and icons and warned the American e-commerce giant that "indifference will be at your own peril".
     
    "Amazon, better behave. Desist from being flippant about Indian symbols & icons. Indifference will be at your own peril," Das said in a tweet.
     
    "Remain committed to economic reforms, ease of doing business & open trade. Sometimes get touchy when our icons are involved," he said in a separate tweet. 
     
    In a third tweet, however, he added: "Comment on Amazon was as a citizen of India as I felt strongly about it. Nothing more should be read into it."
     
    The Secretary's comments came days after External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj received a complaint about doormats portraying the Indian flag being listed for sale on Amazon's Canada website.
     
     
    Two days after Amazon's Canada portal removed the article with doormats depicting the Indian flag after India objected to it, the online company, on its US portal, put up another article of slippers with Mahatma Gandhi's image on it.
     
    This provoked the Indian Ministry of External Affairs to say on Saturday that the company should respect Indian sensitivities and sentiments.
     
    "As a follow up to the matter regarding the sale of doormats with the Indian flag on Amazon, our Ambassador in Washington has been instructed to convey to Amazon that while providing a platform for third party vendors, they should respect Indian sensitivities and sentiments," said MEA spokesperson Vikas Swarup.
     
    Amazon describes the products as 'Gandhi flip flops' as a pair of "foam rubber flip flops". It costs $16.99, or about Rs 1,200.
     
    Soon after India threatened it won't grant visas to any Amazon official if the company did not withdraw the Indian flag-themed doormat from its Canadian platform, the e-commerce website removed the article from the online marketplace, a media report said on Thursday.
     
    "Amazon must tender unconditional apology. They must withdraw all products insulting our national flag immediately," Swaraj had said in a tweet.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide
    WASHINGTON — A feeling of dread is rippling through one particular group in the United States, as hundreds of thousands of young people fear they might have to hide in society's shadows during a Donald Trump presidency.

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action
    TORONTO — Class-action lawyers wasted little time Friday in jumping on word of a cyberattack on an Ontario casino in which sensitive information was stolen.

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court
    An Indian-origin futures trader, who was extradited to the US after being arrested in the UK for his alleged role in the 2010 Wall Street "flash crash" which wiped nearly USD 1 trillion off the value of American shares in minutes, has pleaded guilty in a court in Chicago.

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Describing as "shambolic" British Prime Minister Theresa May's just-concluded visit to India, former Liberal Democrats leader Paddy Ashdown today criticised her hardline stance on immigration as "damaging" to UK's economy.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I
    World leaders gather in Belgium on Friday to mark the 98th anniversary of the end of World War I in which 1.5 lakh Indian soldiers participated as part of the largest volunteer army in the world.

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma
    US Ambassador to India Richard Verma today reiterated that convergence of views was the "new normal" in Indo-US ties which is "based on results" and not on "rhetoric", seeking to assuage nerves in New Delhi on Donald Trump's election as President.

    Convergence Of Views New Normal In Indo-US Ties: Envoy Richard Verma