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Manohar Parrikar Has Some Crude Advice For Critics: Remove Your Clothes And Dance Naked For Publicity

"Some people do not understand their limits."
Union Minister of Defence Manohar Parrikar in conversation with Nitin Gokhale, National Security Analyst, during the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit 2016 at Taj Palace, on December 2, 2016 in New Delhi, India.
Hindustan Times via Getty Images
Union Minister of Defence Manohar Parrikar in conversation with Nitin Gokhale, National Security Analyst, during the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit 2016 at Taj Palace, on December 2, 2016 in New Delhi, India.

In a stern critique of a section of the Goan media, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar said his advice to those who blabber needlessly was to take-off their clothes and dance naked to get publicity.

Parrikar, who attended a Bharatiya Janata Party meeting in Sattari sub district in north Goa, located 40 km from Panaji, was speaking on Monday vis-a-vis the limits of criticism.

"Some people do not understand their limits. They keep blabbering. I have some good advice for them. Remove your clothes and dance naked (kapde kadha ani nagde nacha). One will get even better publicity."

"I still remember in 1968 during the Watergate issue, he (an editor) had written a large editorial advising (Richard) Nixon. Now, how could an editorial written by him in Marathi reach Nixon? He is in America.

"Some people do not understand their limits. They keep blabbering. I have some good advice for them. Remove your clothes and dance naked (kapde kadha ani nagde nacha).

"One will get even better publicity," Parrikar said, while referring to an editor of a vernacular newspaper here.

"I give one advice to those who abuse to get publicity. There was a newspaper here. It is still there. I will not take its name. It had an editor. He was an international level editor, he was brought here in his old age. His newspaper had a sale of 1,000..." the former Goa Chief Minister said.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.