New Delhi: A cartoon published by the prominent Norwegian daily Aftenposten has triggered intense backlash online, with critics and social media users accusing the publication of resorting to blatant racism and reinforcing outdated, colonial-era stereotypes about India. The illustration, which accompanied an opinion piece by journalist Frank Rossavik titled “A clever and slightly annoying man,” was released to coincide with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s state visit to Norway for the India-Nordic Summit in Oslo.
The caricature depicts Prime Minister Modi sitting cross-legged and holding a fuel-station nozzle shaped like a snake rising from a basket, combining a critique of India’s foreign policy on energy with a centuries-old Western visual trope. Netizens quickly flooded social media platforms to condemn the imagery, calling it xenophobic, derogatory, and completely out of touch with today’s global realities. Many commentators pointed out the deep irony of the publication, noting that Prime Minister Modi has frequently spoken on global platforms about how India has successfully transitioned in the global imagination from a historical stereotype of “snake charmers” to a technology-driven nation of “mouse charmers.” A similar controversy had previously surfaced in October 2022 when a Spanish publication faced widespread condemnation for utilizing identical snake-charmer motifs to describe India’s economic growth.
The cartoon row has significantly intensified an already simmering diplomatic and media debate surrounding the Prime Minister’s trip to Oslo. During a joint press appearance with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, local journalist Helle Lyng confronted the leaders as they exited, publicly questioning why an open press conference was not being held and raising concerns regarding human rights and press freedom. Video clips of the confrontation quickly went viral on platform X, drawing sharp responses from the Indian delegation.
Defending India’s democratic and legal framework, Ministry of External Affairs Secretary Sibi George delivered a robust counter-argument during a subsequent press briefing. The senior diplomat dismissed external criticisms as being heavily reliant on selective, narrow accounts from isolated non-governmental organizations that fail to comprehend the massive scale, diversity, and vibrancy of India’s internal media ecosystem. He highlighted that Delhi alone possesses roughly 200 distinct television channels operating across multiple languages, emphasizing that India’s constitutional mechanisms remain entirely robust, guaranteeing fundamental rights and clear judicial remedies for all citizens.