- Web Desk
- Today
Indian election casts spotlight on Modi look-alikes
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- Reuters
- May 22, 2024
NEW DELHI: Muslim electric-rickshaw driver Rashid Ahmed is fondly called “Our Modi” in his Delhi neighbourhood for his resemblance to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, now seeking a third consecutive term in general elections.
If, as widely expected, Modi wins the polls, which conclude on June 1 with vote-counting set for June 4, he will be only the second person after Indian independence hero and first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru to serve three consecutive terms.
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“I have been like this from the beginning, but since Modi has become prime minister, there has been more discussion of it,” said Ahmed, 60, whose white hair and beard, trimmed like Modi’s, along with similar clothing, spurred the comparison.
Living with his wife, children and grandchildren in a two-room home, Ahmed is a celebrity in the surrounding area, and often interrupted at his daily tasks by visitors who want to meet him or take pictures with him.
He is known only as “Modi uncle” to the children there, many of whom he drives to school every day.
Ahmed’s has also attended rallies of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as a Modi-lookalike, exciting those in the crowd who initially mistook him for the prime minister.
Such events have earned him about 1,000 rupees ($12) each, about what he gets from his rickshaw driver’s job each day.
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Rights and opposition groups have often accused Modi and his government of targeting the minority Muslim community, to which Ahmed belongs.
Religion has also taken centre-stage in the current seven-phase elections with Modi, in his speeches, accusing the main opposition Congress party of being pro-Muslim.
Modi has denied such accusations, saying he does not oppose Islam.
Another Modi look-alike is Jagdish Bhatia, 68, who runs a real-estate business in a more affluent area of the capital and belongs to a spiritual sect independent of any religion.
He says he does not accept money for attending BJP rallies, because he considers the task a “social service”, since he likes Modi’s vision.
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“I really like the way Modi worked, the things he did for the development of the country,” Bhatia added. “That is why I like to be of some use to the party.”
Bhatia accentuates his similarity to Modi by altering his clothing style to match, though Ahmed dismisses his own resemblance to the leader as coincidental.