Modi meets Zuckerberg as Indian PM wraps up Silicon Valley tour

Indian prime minister Narendra Modi visits Facebook and takes to the stage at a sports stadium on the last day of a whirlwind tour of Silicon Valley as he hopes to convince them tech companies to bring more investment and jobs to India.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses the crowd during a community reception at SAP Center in San Jose. Stephen Lam / Reuters
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San Jose, CALIFORNIA // Lights flashed and chants of “Modi, Modi” filled the 18,000-seat sports arena in San Jose, California, on Sunday as the Indian prime minister took the stage for the final event of his Silicon Valley tour.

Indian prime minister Narendra Modi was winding up a whirlwind two-day US West Coast trip and Sunday’s event followed visits to some of the world’s biggest technology companies, hoping to convince them to bring more investment and jobs to India.

Mr Modi, 65, was the first Indian leader to visit the West Coast in more than 30 years. His trip followed a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping, who met several tech leaders in Seattle last week.

Mr Modi aimed to deepen ties with the US technology sector and boost India’s digital infrastructure by promoting his “Digital India” campaign, which seeks to connect thousands more villages to the internet.

“[India] has moved on from scriptures to satellites,” Mr Modi said. “The world has started to believe that the twenty-first century belongs to India.”

Technology executives, eager to expand into India with its 1.3-billion population, embraced Mr Modi’s initiative, with CEOs from Facebook, Google and Tesla Motors all hosting him at their headquarters. Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook met with Mr Modi at his hotel.

The second day of his visit began with a town hall at Facebook headquarters with Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, where Mr Modi spent 50 minutes on stage and discussed the importance of social media, Digital India and technological expansion in the country. Mr Modi is an avid user of social media and the second-most followed world leader after Barack Obama.

He became emotional at one point when Mr Zuckerberg asked him to speak about his mother. “I came from a very poor family. ... We went to our neighbours’ houses nearby [to] clean dishes, fill water, do hard chores. So you can imagine what a mother had to do to raise her children.”

Mr Modi later visited Google headquarters and met with Indian-born Chief Executive Sundar Pichai, who announced that Google would bring wireless internet to 500 Indian railway stations, news that Mr Modi revealed at a dinner Saturday night with more than 350 business leaders.

Though Mr Modi remains wildly popular in India with an 87 per cent approval rating, some of his stops were met with protests of his human rights record. Some claim that Mr Modi did not do enough to stop 2002 religious riots in Gujarat that killed about 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, when he was chief minister of the state. He has vehemently denied any wrongdoing.

Mostly Sikh protesters calling on Mr Modi to answer for his rights record temporarily blocked one of Facebook’s entrances. Several hundred people gathered outside San Jose’s SAP Center ahead of Modi’s speech that lasted several hours. Half were protesters shouting over metal barricades and holding signs that said “Modi believes in violence, not development,” and “#ModiFail” that resulted in several scuffles.

Much of Mr Modi’s US visit, on which he received rock-star welcomes, also focused on connecting with the Indian diaspora in Silicon Valley, the IT professionals who migrated in their droves over the past two decades to seize job opportunities that weren’t available back home.

*Reuters