Close X
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Feb, 2015 11:59 AM
  • Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature
A woman teacher in an Indian school in Qatar's capital Doha has reportedly been forced to quit her job after she posted a caricature of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on her Facebook page, media reported Thursday.
 
According to the report in The Peninsula daily, the incident took place last week triggering a big controversy among a section of the expatriate Indian community who said the Photoshop caricature was an insult to Modi.
 
In the caricature, a picture of the Indian prime minister is superimposed with that of a black-and-white striped dog emptying its bladder.
 
According to the teacher who is an Indian, the caricature was circulating in social media and she just picked it and shared it on her Facebook account. 
 
“I didn’t create the caricature nor did I post it to insult Modi,” the teacher of the MES Indian School was quoted as telling the newspaper. 
 
“I just used it to protest against what has been happening back home (a reference to alleged gagging of freedom of speech!).” 
 
According to the report, the teacher was initially suspended for three days pending an inquiry by the management. This week she was asked to resign which she did.
 
Her friends told The Penisula that they found the school’s action shocking because India being a democratic country, its citizens enjoyed freedom of expression. 
 
When contacted by the newspaper, the school management said the teacher was asked to quit since she used the school’s name and logo with Modi’s caricature.
 
“Also, being a teacher, she shouldn’t have posted such a derogatory caricature on her Facebook account. A teacher is a role model for the entire society,” a senior official from the management was quoted as saying.
 
However, the teacher, who did not want to be identified, said she did not know how the school’s name and logo appeared on her posting as she was part of a group.
 
Stating that she received threats after she posted the caricature, she said: “The influence of these people (a reference to Hindu rightist supporters of Modi) can be gauged from the fact that they can silence anti-Modi comments and photographs on social media even in the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) countries.” 
 
The GCC countries comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, are home to a large expatriate Indian population.
 
The school, however, said that after the posting of the caricature, the school got calls from several parents.
 
The report, citing a source, said the school came under intense external pressure 
to dismiss the teacher ”and her resignation was a compromise formula, although a school official denied it”.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea
The US, which had blamed North Korea for a cyber attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment, Monday demanded that the communist country should...

Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia
An Indian housemaid who has not been paid for six years by her employer in Saudi Arabia is still awaiting her salary in arrears and a final exit home...

Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad
Law enforcement agencies have identified 1,159 educational institutes in the Pakistani capital as soft targets for terrorists, the media reported Tuesday....

1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?
As South Asia was watching the terrible tragedy at Peshawar unfold another drama was coming to head in Hollywood. At the eye of the storm was ‘The Interview’...

Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive
A fresh look at data collected by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its 2001 flyby of Jupiter shows that its moon Europa's tenuous atmosphere is even thinner than previously thought....

Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

More power to Indian diaspora in US

More power to Indian diaspora in US
Notching successes in fields as diverse as poetry and politics, some three million- strong Indian American community packed more power and influence...

More power to Indian diaspora in US