NEW DELHI: The parliamentary committee on external affairs Tuesday raised concerns over the "silence" of the Indian-American diaspora on recent adversarial decisions taken by the US with a visiting five-member delegation of US lawmakers , some of whom "shared the view". The delegates, all Democrats, were led by Ami Bera, who represents Sacramento in US House of Representatives.
"I do want to stress that one of the points we raised is why the Indian-American diaspora has been so silent about all this. One of the Congressmen said not one phone call has come to her office from any Indian-American voter asking her to support a change of policy," chairperson Shashi Tharoor said. "Some of the US lawmakers shared the view."
Tharoor said, "We all need to reach out to the Indian-American population, saying if you care about your relationship with the motherland, then you also have to fight for and speak for it."
"I do want to stress that one of the points we raised is why the Indian-American diaspora has been so silent about all this. One of the Congressmen said not one phone call has come to her office from any Indian-American voter asking her to support a change of policy," chairperson Shashi Tharoor said. "Some of the US lawmakers shared the view."
Tharoor said, "We all need to reach out to the Indian-American population, saying if you care about your relationship with the motherland, then you also have to fight for and speak for it."
You may also like
'Voting for DMK is voting for BJP': Vijay accuses parties of having underground dealings at Namakkal rally; vows crackdown on kidney theft
Gaza's revival, hostage return & beyond: Trump's 21-point peace plan revealed – Breakthrough ahead?
Communal tension in Araria's Jogbani after objectionable post against Prophet Mohammad; one arrested
Zelensky accused of 'losing his mind' as he claims NATO nation flew drones into Ukraine
'Pakistan's PM staged a drama...' India's daughter exposed Shahbaz Sharif at UNGA, slammed him with the mention of bin Laden