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Politicians in the state of Maharashtra, home to India's financial capital Mumbai, have also called for a ban on the book and, along with Modi, have asked the central government to bar publication nationwide. "It has become a fashion to tarnish the image of great Indian leaders for self publicity and sale of books," said Sanjay Dutt, spokesman for the ruling Congress Party in Maharashtra. "The government should invoke a law to severely punish anyone who tarnishes the image of the father of the nation." Ranjit Hoskote, a writer and general secretary of PEN India, which fights for free expression, condemned the ban and said local media had misconstrued both Lelyveld's intentions and the nature of Gandhi's relationship with Kallenbach. "You can't cite a worse example of third hand reportage and comment," he said. "How can you ban a book you haven't read?" He said Gandhi's correspondence with Kallenbach has been available in library archives for decades. "There's no secret. There is no scandal," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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