Taslima Nasreen free to travel across India, says MEA after BJP MP seeks her return to Kolkata
New Delhi: The Indian government has confirmed that Taslima Nasreen, the exiled Bengali author who fled Bangladesh after facing death threats over her writings, is free to travel anywhere within the country.
The Ministry of External Affairs conveyed this in response to BJP Rajya Sabha MP Samik Bhattacharya’s request urging the Centre to ensure her safe return to Kolkata.
Currently residing in Delhi, Nasreen has been granted a visa of “appropriate category and duration,” the MEA said.
Exile and violent backlash to her writings
Taslima Nasreen gained international recognition in the early 1990s through her feminist perspectives and her criticism of what she termed "misogynistic religions."
The controversy surrounding her novel Lajja led to several fatwas and ultimately forced her to leave Bangladesh in 1994.
She spent the next ten years in Europe and the US before moving to India in 2004.
Nasreen stayed in Kolkata for three years until violent protests broke out in 2007 over passages from her memoir Dwikhandita.
Following the backlash, she moved out of the city, first to Jaipur, and later to Delhi, where she was briefly under house arrest.
Following attacks by Muslim groups in Kolkata and Hyderabad, accusing her of blasphemy, Nasreen has remained based in Delhi.
Successive Indian governments have since granted her a long-term resident permit and a multiple-entry visa.
‘I don’t want to get kicked around anymore’
While BJP MP Bhattacharya has called for her return to Kolkata, Nasreen has said she does not consider moving back from Delhi a practical option at this stage of her life.
“I have been kicked around like a football by the political dispensations who felt ill at ease with my presence within their boundaries because of my literary and world views. At this stage of my life, I don't want to get kicked around anymore,” she told PTI.
However, she expressed a desire to be allowed to occasionally visit the city to attend literary festivals and book fairs, events she remains emotionally attached to.
“It would please me if the governments allow me to travel to Kolkata to attend literature festivals and book fairs from where I continue to receive regular invitations,” she said.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

ISIS terror plot busted: Police arrest doctor with 'Chinese medical degree', 2 others from Gujarat
The Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) has arrested three individuals, including a doctor holding a 'Chinese medical degree', for their alleged links to the Islamic State (ISIS) and a suspected plot to carry out a terror attack in India, according to media reports.

Muslims and Christians can join RSS, says Mohan Bhagwat, with one condition
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Mohan Bhagwat has said Muslims and Christians can join the organisation only if they see themselves as sons of 'Bharat Mata' and part of the broader Hindu society.

India’s INS Sahyadri joins power-packed Malabar 2025 drill in Guam — Here’s why it matters
Indian Naval Ship (INS) Sahyadri is at Guam in the Northern Pacific for participation in the multilateral Exercise Malabar-2025, amid a strained relationship between India and the US over tariff imposition.
Droupadi Murmu in Angola: India expands trade, energy and people-to-people ties
Indian President Droupadi Murmu on Sunday met Angolan President João Manuel Gonçalves Lourenço in Luanda, where the two leaders discussed a broad range of bilateral issues and agreed to deepen cooperation across key sectors, the President’s Office said in a statement.
Latest News

ISIS terror plot busted: Police arrest doctor with 'Chinese medical degree', 2 others from Gujarat

Nepal: Bodies of two missing Indian tourists recovered

Tripura : BJP holds party meeting in presence of CM, top leaders

Bangladesh busts massive Pakistan shipment hiding 25 tonnes of banned poppy seeds

