The award-winning artist, who has been based in London since the 1970s, said, "I am not the first one to point out that India has always been a secular state and Narendra Modi just takes too partisan a view and has shown himself to be, at the very least, associated with terrible riots and death."
"The whole matter of Modi's guilt or otherwise is before the courts. India has huge number of problems. We aren't going to solve them by giving morally questionable leadership," Kapoor told BBC World Service radio in a rare interview for its 'World Update' show.
The Turner Prize winning artist, who was awarded a knighthood by the Queen last year, has been a vocal critic of the Gujarat chief minister.
In September 2013, he had urged the UK government to withdraw an invitation for the senior BJP leader to visit Britain.
