"I am pretty concerned about a Modi-run government. The indications that it would be a fairly bullying government are already there. We have already seen journalists and writers being bullied and (the BJP) has not taken power yet," Rushdie told PTI during a session on the importance of freedom of expression at the 10th annual PEN World Voices Festival here.
"You already see even more worryingly a kind of self-censorship setting in, people worry that they are going to be bullied and therefore try not to do anything that will attract the wrath of the 'Modistas'," he said voicing his thoughts on an India with Modi as its leader.
Rushdie said there has never been a politician "quite like Narendra Modi in India" and given the high likelihood of the BJP winning the national elections and Modi becoming India's next prime minister, "we have to see whether the experience of office serves to moderate him".
During his address at the literary festival's opening, Rushdie described Modi as a "highly divisive figure" and a "hardliner's hardliner" and voiced concern that the attacks on freedom of expression and literary works could worsen in an India run by BJP.
He said for India, democracy should not mean just conducting free and fair elections but also ensuring free speech rights to its citizens.
"If freedom of expression is under attack, if religious freedom is threatened and if substantial parts of society live in physical fear for their safety, then such a society cannot be said to be a true democracy," Rushdie said.
In contemporary India, all these problems exist and they are getting worse. The attack on literary, scholarly and artistic freedom have gathered force" ever since his book the Satanic Verses was banned, he said.
"This already lamentable state of affairs looks likely to become much worse if it, as seems likely, seems probable, the election results bring to power the Hindu Nationalist BJP so that the highly divisive figure of Narendra Modi a hardliner's hardliner becomes India's next Prime Minister," he added.
Last month, Rushdie and sculptor Anish Kapoor were among a group of Indian-origin writers, artists and lawyers who had signed an open letter "worrying about Modi's rise to power".
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