Indian
Prime Minister, Narendra Modi (centre) with the African leaders during a dinner
hosted on the sidelines of the 3rd India Africa Forum Summit, in New Delhi.
(Image source: Mashable)
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Since being elected to office last year, Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s sharp dressing and flamboyant wardrobe have consistently made
headlines both in India and abroad. On Thursday, his government took his sartorial
diplomacy a step further when over 40 African heads of state donned traditional
Indian attire at a dinner held on the sidelines of the 3rd India-Africa Summit
in New Delhi.
The African leaders were
dressed in raw silk kurtas,
“Modi jackets” and safas
(Indian headgear), a look frequently sported by Modi. The only exceptions to
the dress code were the presidents of Zimbabwe and South Africa, Robert Mugabe
and Jacob Zuma. The summit is being held between Oct. 26 and 29, to boost
economic ties between India and African countries.
Mashable report continues:
A sleeveless waist coast,
the “Modi jacket” is a more colourful variant of the iconic “Nehru jacket” worn
by India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. For the India-Africa summit,
the Indian government had specially commissioned the Indian fashion label Biba
to design bespoke jackets and kurtas
in various colours for each leader. Last year, the Indian PM had also gifted a
“Modi jacket” to Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visit to India.
In interviews, Modi has described
his flair for “mixing and matching colours” as a gift from god. His attention
to clothes is said to extend to designer glasses, pens and watches. Most of his
clothes are made by his long-time Ahmedabad-based tailor Jade Blue, who even
sells a trademarked "Modi kurta",
the short-sleeved cotton tunic associated with the PM.
Narendra Modi wearing a
colourful Rajasthani turban at the Republic Day Parade in New Delhi, on Jan.
26, 2015. Image: Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press
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In January, Narendra Modi
wore a dark pinstriped suit with his name monogrammed in dull gold stripes
during a reception for U.S. President Barack Obama in New Delhi.
The most famous instance
Modi’s sartorial flamboyance is the pinstripe bandhgala (an Indian suit) worn by him during US
President Barack Obama’s visit to India in January. Its navy-blue fabric had
his full name monogrammed in tiny letters into the golden pinstripe. Following public
debates about the value of the suit, which allegedly cost around 1 million
rupees or US$15300, it was finally sold at a charity auction for approximately
43.1 million rupees or US$693,000.
During the same visit by
Obama in January, Modi came under the Indian media’s scanner for changing his
clothes thrice in a single day, even overtaking the American First Lady
Michelle Obama. This record was surpassed during Modi’s recent visit to the US
in September, when he donned four different outfits in a day, between visits to
Tesla Motors, meetings with CEOs such as Google’s Sundar Pichai and Microsoft’s
Satya Nadella, a Facebook town hall with CEO Mark Zuckerberg, and a reception
by the Indian community.
He has also been in the
news for adopting the colourful headgear of different Indian states during his
visits.
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