Sarah Khan
Religious extremism has increased
exponentially in India especially during sway of Hindu extremist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Exploiting
their hold in government during recent elections, the
BJP won a three-fourths overwhelming majority in the 403-member Uttar Pradesh
Legislative Assembly and is returning to power after 14 years. As a result of
land slide victory in local elections, Yogi Adityanath, BJP’s Lok Sabha MP from Gorakhpur, has been
named Uttar Pradesh’s new chief minister. Yogi Adityanath, whose real name is Ajay Singh
Bisht, is a five-time BJP MP from Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh. He runs the Hindu Yuva Vahini in Purvanchal, an outfit
that has been known for instigating communal tension. This Bajrang Dal-style organisation
is particularly effective in the east UP districts of Deoria, Kushinagar,
Maharajganj, Basti, Sant Kabir Nagar and Siddharthnagar. Activists of Yuva
Vahini have been involved in forced conversions often resulting in communal
conflagrations.
THE BJP
government headed by Narendra Modi, ever since its inception has been pursuing discriminatory policies against Indian
Muslims and other minorities, inspired by the RSS ideology of Hindutva, a form
of extremist Hindu nationalism which explodes the myth of the much touted
Indian secularism. Hindutva means India for Hindus to the exclusion of all
other communities and religions. That philosophy adequately explains the
occurrence of incidents of violence against Muslims and Christians under the
Modi government. In fact even during the previous
BJP government anti-Muslim and anti-minorities policies were either pursued at the official level or the
extremist elements were encouraged to pursue the BJP agenda based on RSS
ideology.
Adityanath, the chief priest of one of Uttar Pradesh’s
largest temples, has regularly stirred controversy – and significant personal
popularity among rightwing Hindus – with incendiary rhetoric about Indian
minorities, particularly Muslims, who make up one-fifth of Uttar Pradesh’s 220
million residents. Adityanath is facing criminal charges of attempted
murder, defiling a place of worship and inciting riots in Uttar Pradesh, a
state where communal tensions run high and religious violence four years ago
killed more than 60 people.
The
newly appointed CM of most populous state, Uttar Pardesh has spent 11 days in
jail in 2007 for violating public restrictions imposed in an area at risk of
erupting into Hindu-Muslim violence, and vowed
in one speech: “If one Hindu girl marries a Muslim man, then we will take
100 Muslim girls in return ... If they [Muslims] kill one Hindu man, then we
will kill 100 Muslim men.” In 2015, famous filmstar Shah Rukh Khan complained
of growing “extreme intolerance” in India,
Adityanath said the Muslim actor was “speaking the same language of
terrorist”. He has also called Mother Teresa “part of the conspiracy to
Christianise India”.
Appointment
of a radical as CM, who possess extreme fanatic views against Muslim minority
in UP will usher an era of endless merciless terror in India. BJP is already
ruling a reign of terror against minorities particularly Muslims and
Christians. The findings of United States Commission on International Religious
Freedom in India are glaring. The report has noted that India is becoming worst
place in terms of religious freedom and it might be ranked as country of
particular concern in years ahead. In such a situation, Adityanath’s
appointment is a matter of grave concern for Muslims in UP. The international
organizations on Human Rights and religious freedom must take notice of this
radical decision by BJP and must ensure that extremist and criminals must not
be appointed on ministerial position in states with sizable Muslim population.
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