Shashi Tharoor apologised "unconditionally" for a blunder in his manifesto for the Congress chief's election — a map of India in it did not have parts of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh. He shared corrected versions after social media users attacked him over it, particularly BJP supporters on Twitter where he has more than 8 million followers.
The Congress sought to distance itself from the "egregious error", trying to deflect the BJP's attacks on Rahul Gandhi's ongoing 'Bharat Jodo Yatra'.
"No one does such things on purpose," Mr Tharoor tweeted with links to the revised manifesto, saying that his team "made a mistake". "We rectified it immediately and and I apologise unconditionally," he added.
Social media users called the wrong map "a massive goof-up" and "a shameful act", with some accusing him of having "a divisive agenda".
Congress communications chief Jairam Ramesh said the BJP was using "any flimsy excuse" as ammunition against party leader Rahul Gandhi's 'Unite India March'.
Mr Tharoor's apology came soon after. In the replies, a Twitter user said: "Don't you think you could have checked an important document like manifesto before its release? It's not even a big document." It's a 13-page document.
This was the second time in three years that Shashi Tharoor, a former union minister, landed in a map-in-a-booklet controversy. In December 2019, he shared publicity material about a Kerala Congress protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and that had a similar problem. He deleted that tweet after the BJP's IT Cell and leaders such as Sambit Patra went after him. He'd said the map was to "depict not the territory but the people of India".
In the latest row, in his manifesto booklet with the tagline 'Think Tomorrow, Think Tharoor', he used a map with a network of dots representing Congress units being across the expanse of India. It was different from India's official map that includes parts of Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh occupied by Pakistan and China.
In the Congress polls, Shashi Tharoor is the main opponent of the party's Rajya Sabha leader, Mallikarjun Kharge, who is the frontrunner thanks to apparent backing of the Gandhis. Former Jharkhand minister KN Tripathi is the third candidate for the October 17 election, results of which will be declared two days later.
This is the first Congress chief election in over 20 years in which a Gandhi — current interim chief Sonia Gandhi and her son, MP Rahul Gandhi — aren't contesting. In fact the family, in an apparent counter to nepotism charges, insisted that a non-Gandhi take up the job.
"Our Recollections Differ": Shashi Tharoor On Hardeep Puri's George Soros Claim Hardeep Puri vs Shashi Tharoor Over 2009 Dinner With George Soros In US "Bit Absurd On Both Sides": Shashi Tharoor On INDIA Bloc-NDA Faceoff Is Safe Car Enough? Volvo Crash That Killed CEO, Family Sparks Big Question "Nothing Short Of Nightmare": Woman Misses Life Event, Slams Air India Snack Food Epigamia Founder Rohan Mirchandani Dies Of Cardiac Arrest At 41 ISRO To Study How Crops Grow In Space On PSLV C60 Mission AAP vs BJP As Delhi Tableau Rejected For Republic Day Parade Yet Again At Least Nine Killed As Small Plane Crashes into Brazilian Tourist City Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.