'Trashy ruminations': India rubbishes Epstein files email reference to PM Modi’s 2017 Israel visit
- On Saturday | January 31, 2026, the Ministry of External Affairs rejected references to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 2017 Israel visit in a purported Epstein Files email, calling them baseless.
- The U.S. Department of Justice on Friday released over three million pages, more than 2,000 videos, and around 180,000 images linked to Jeffrey Epstein.
- The July 2017 visit was the first by an Indian prime minister to Israel since 1992, and Jaiswal clarified the Epstein email referred only to that trip.
- India's Congress party sought answers after the Prime Minister was named in the released documents from the Epstein estate, while Pawan Khera alleged an unexplained association and Epstein survivors said abusers `remain hidden'.
- Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the disclosure process under the law ends with records on Ghislaine Maxwell, noting Jeffrey Epstein died in custody in 2019.
22 Articles
22 Articles
"Trashy Ruminations By Convicted Criminal": India On PM's Mention In Epstein Files
India on Friday moved swiftly to reject any suggestion of impropriety after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's name surfaced in a reference contained in newly released United States Justice Department files linked to Jeffrey Epstein.
'Trashy ruminations': India rubbishes Epstein files email reference to PM Modi’s 2017 Israel visit
India on Friday rejected any suggestion of wrongdoing after PM Modi’s name surfaced in a reference in newly released US Justice Department documents linked to Jeffrey Epstein, with the government clarifying that the mention was limited to Modi’s official visit to Israel in July 2017 and dismissing the rest as baseless.
'Deserve to be dismissed with utmost contempt': India rubbishes PM Modi's mention in Epstein files
The Ministry of External Affairs on Saturday rejected references to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 2017 visit to Israel mentioned in an email that is purportedly part of the recently released Epstein Files, dismissing the claims as baseless. Responding to reports, MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said the reference should not be taken seriously. “We have seen reports of an email message from the so-called Epstein files that has a reference to th…
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