NEW DELHI: Maharashtra deputy chief minister Eknath Shinde reacted to comedian Kunal Kamra‘s “gaddar” joke and said there should be a “limit” to freedom of speech.
“Freedom of speech is there. We understand satire. But there should be a limit. This is like taking ‘supari’ (contract) to speak against someone,” he said at a BBC Marathi event.
Responding to the vandalism of Habitat Studio by the Shiv Sena workers, Shinde said, “The other person should also maintain certain level, otherwise, action causes reaction.”
“This same person (Kamra) had commented on the Supreme Court of India, the prime minister, (journalist) Arnab Goswami and some industrialists. This is not freedom of speech; this is working for someone,” he added.
This came after Kamra refused to apologize for his jokes, apparently made at the deputy CM, that caused massive political uproar in Maharashtra on Monday.
“I will not apologise,” Kamra said, taking aim at the “mob and politicians”.
“Our right to freedom of speech and expression is not only to be used to fawn over the powerful and rich even though today’s media would have us believe otherwise,” he added.
What sparked the controversy?
The controversy erupted when Kamra parodied a popular song from Dil Toh Pagal Hai, labeling Eknath Shinde a “gaddar” (traitor), triggering protests and vandalism by Shinde-led Sena workers.
“Meri nazar se tum dekho to gaddar nazar wo aaye. Haaye,” Kunal Kamra said during his show.
“Shiv Sena first came out of the BJP, then Shiv Sena came out of Shiv Sena. NCP came out of NCP, they gave nine buttons to one voter… everyone got confused,” he added.
The joke drew a sharp response from Shiv Sena (Shinde faction) workers who went on to vandalise Habitat Studio, the venue where Kamra performed.