Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Media briefing on cabinet meeting: Fawad hopes Pakistan will exit UK’s ‘red list’

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Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry has said that the federal government had taken steps to allay United Kingdom’s fears regarding coronavirus in order to get out...
Indian-Atrocious-Face-in-Kashmir

Rights Violations in IIOJK by Indian troops: A report

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KMS in a report demands UN to look into the atrocities committed by Indian troops in Kashmir.

There are separate rules for poor and rich in Pakistan, regrets PM Imran

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Prime Minister Imran Khan has regretted that “there have been separate sets of rules for the poor and the rich” in Pakistan. Speaking at the...
Ramiz Raja

Shocking revelation by sources, Ramiz asked Waqar & Misbah to step down

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In another shocking turn of events in the resignations of Pakistan’s bowling coach Waqar Younis and head coach Misbah-ul-Haq, it is learnt that newly...

India charges Geelani’s family under draconian law

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The police in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu & Kashmir have charged the family members of late freedom movement leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani...
taliban panjshir fall the correspondent

Taliban claim fall of Panjshir

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The Taliban say that they have taken complete control of Panjshir province, the last stronghold of the anti-Taliban resistance forces. Pictures circulated on social...

Desire for peace, not weakness, PM warns India

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Paying tributes to martyrs and Ghazis with reference to September 6, Prime Minister Imran Khan has warned India not to mistake Pakistan's desire for...
The chants of "Hindustan Zindabad" and "Jai Shri Ram" echoed across Kanpur, a city in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh in India, as a Hindutva-inspired extremist mob paraded a 45-year-old Muslim rickshaw driver through the streets as his daughter begged the crowd to stop. The video took over the social media but the general consensus among the populace is that these lynch mobs have become a routine in India followed by little condemnation and little tangible action from New Delhi. This gruesome attack followed an incident in Indore, a city in the central state of Madhya Pradesh where a Muslim bangle-seller was the target of the Hindu vigilante mob. In the police complaint, Tasleem Ali, the victim in question, alleged five-six men hurled communal slurs at him for selling bangles in a Hindu-dominated area while robbing him of his money and other valuables. If the assault was not enough, what followed the complaint revived the horrific memories of the Nazi Germany. Ali was arrested the very next day on the allegation that he had molested the 13-year-old daughter of one of his alleged attackers. The eyewitnesses say the Ali’s religious identity was the sole reason behind the assault and the baseless accusation against him. The comparison with the Nazi Germany might have been a misplaced assertion had these been isolated incidents in a society where communal harmony was thriving. These two attacks are just a sneak peek into the fallacy that is the largest ‘secular democracy’ India claims to be. Attacks of similar nature have been commonplace, especially since 2014, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janta Party swept to power and then was reelected with a bigger majority for a second-term. It has been 7 years that the extremist Hindutva ideology has enjoyed the state-backing. The assault of a 14-year-old Muslim boy for entering a Hindu temple to drink water in March, beating of a vendor for selling fruit in a New Delhi Hindu locality in June, and putting up Muslim women "for sale" online in July are some of the heinous, appalling events this year alone. If this was not enough, a Muslim member of the Congress party Ms Amin, including others, were offered in another mock online auction. The cow vigilantism needs no introduction. Even over 70-years after the Independence of India, religious divide have permeated but the critics say that the Muslim hate has spiked since 2014 under the Hindu nationalist government. The experts say that the violence against minorities, especially Muslims has become very acceptable in India and three-four videos get viral every day on the social media depicting atrocious violence against the minorities. Academics say that communal violence is not recent in India but the power structures have enabled the political mobilization and vigilantism. One recent example of blatant patronage of the perpetrators was when a union minister of state garlanded eight Hindus convicted for lynching a Muslim. The claims that the government is complicit in the violence is not really untrue. In the aftermath of these rampant incidents, Prime Minister Modi has faced repeated criticism for not reproaching the attacks swiftly or strongly enough either. The federal government’s official line is that lynching is bad but the individual states are responsible for implementing law and order. Moreover, the BJP government repeatedly accuses the media of "biased and selective journalism" by focusing on attacks on Muslims. Fact-checking websites said that more than 90 per cent of the victims of hate crimes in the past 10 years were Muslims. The Nazi equivalent becomes more relevant when the violence takes a more subtle, insidious form that vilifies and demonises the minority community. The BJP government perpetrated the idea of ‘corona jihad’ when Muslim community attended a religious gathering in Delhi. This incident followed ‘roti jihad’, ‘love jihad’, and the list goes on. The power structure is using laws subjugate while the BJP rallies are rife with slogans calling for Muslims to be killed. Violence, both delicate and blatant, has become mainstream in Modi’s India. There is a favorable political and social atmosphere that encourages attacks on Muslims where the assailants protected, if not rewarded, for their actions.

The Nazi neighbour

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The chants of 'Hindustan Zindabad' and 'Jai Shri Ram' echoed across Kanpur, a city in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh in India, as...

Bilawal, Shehbaz agree to join hands for ECP appointments

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The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and the Nawaz League (PML-N) have agreed to join hands for the appointment of candidates of their choice to...

Important to engage with Taliban, says UK

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British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has said that “we do not recognise the Taliban as a government, but we do see the importance of...