Yahoo – AFP,
Glenn Chapman, 28 Sep 2015
|
Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
attend a
townhall meeting, at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California,
on
September 27, 2015 (AFP Photo/Susana Bates)
|
Menlo Park
(United States) (AFP) - Standing side-by-side with Mark Zuckerberg, Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a rock star appearance at Facebook on Sunday,
advocating for the political power of social media.
An
invitation-only audience jumped to its feet, cheering and snapping photos as
Modi strode into a sun-splashed courtyard with Zuckerberg -- sporting a jacket
and tie for the occasion, in a sartorial about-face for the typically casual
campus.
"To
leaders all over the world; you are not going to gain by running away from
social media," said the tech-savvy premier during a town hall-style
question and answer session.
|
People
attend a Townhall meeting with
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and
Facebook
CEO Mark Zuckerberg at
Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park,
California, on
September 27, 2015
(AFP Photo/Susana Bates)
|
"The
strength of social media today is that it can tell governments where they are
going wrong and give them an opportunity to do a course correction."
"You
will gain from joining it. You need real time information," said the
65-year-old Modi, who has 30 million fans on Facebook and tweets multiple times
a day.
Modi used
the hour-long session to promote his Digital India drive and promote the
country as a place worthy of tourists, investments, and entrepreneurs with
visions of disruptive technology start-ups.
Choked up
with emotion
But he also
shared some candid moments with Zuckerberg, who told of finding inspiration to
persevere with Facebook during a journey to India while Modi himself choked up
while speaking of his mother.
Zuckerberg
pointed out his parents in the audience before asking Modi about his own
mother. Modi's mother is more than 90 years old, and his father is no longer
living.
The prime
minister recounted coming from a poor family, selling tea at a rail station as
a boy.
"It is
hard to imagine that a tea seller has actually become the leader of the world's
biggest democracy," Modi said.
"When
we were small, what we used to do to get by," he continued, pausing at
times to recompose himself.
"We
used to go to neighbors houses, clean dishes, fill water, do hard chores. You
can imagine what a mother had to do to raise her children."
|
Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg hug after
a
Townhall meeting, at Facebook headquarters
in Menlo Park, California, on
September 27,
2015 (AFP Photo/Susana Bates)
|
In steps
of Steve Jobs
Zuckerberg,
meanwhile, opened the chat by telling of a time, about a decade ago, when
Facebook was going through a "rough patch" and there were thoughts of
selling the startup.
He said he
visited one of his mentors, late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who told him to
travel to a certain temple in India.
"I
went, and travelled for almost a month," Zuckerberg recounted.
"Seeing the people and how people connected, reinforced what we were doing
and is something I've always remembered."
Points
touched on by Modi during the exchange included the hope of connecting all of
India's villages to the Internet with fiber optic cable, and the mighty
challenge of attaining equality for women in India.
"If we
want to achieve our economic goals, we cannot do that if we imprison 50 percent
of our population inside their houses," he said in answer to a question.
"We
have to achieve one thing; to bring women into decision making," said
Modi, who playfully noted that while most religions portray deities as male,
India has no shortage of goddesses.
Google
Internet on rails
Modi's stop
at Facebook was part of a tour of Silicon Valley, ahead of the UN General
Assembly where he will meet US President Barack Obama on Monday.
|
Google
senior vice president of product
Sundar Pichai delivers the keynote
address
during the 2015 Google I/O
conference on May 28, 2015 in San
Francisco, California (AFP Photo/
Justin Sullivan)
|
Late
Sunday, he was later to star at an event attended by some 18,000 people in a
convention center in the city of San Jose in Silicon Valley.
It is the
first time since 1982 that a prime minister of India has visited the West Coast
of the United States.
Modi also
visited Google's main campus in nearby Mountain View, where he and Google
announced a collaboration to provide wireless Internet at railway stations in
India, with a goal of connecting 500 by the end of next year.
"Just
like I did years ago, thousands of young Indians walk through Chennai Central
every day, eager to learn, to explore and to seek opportunity," India-born
Google chief executive Sundar Pichai said in a blog post.
"It's
my hope that this Wi-Fi project will make all these things a little
easier."
Nearly one
billion people in India don't have access to the Internet, according to Pichai.
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