Leaderless Protests: A New Wave of Political Activism in the 21st Century

Twenty-first century protests across the world are distinct from the ideological battles of the 20th century. They are episodic, unplanned, and unstructured. The masses may be inspired to protest against generally incompetent, inefficient, and unresponsive governments, economic distress, inequality, and corruption.

Shakespeare’s plays, writes Stephen Greenblatt in Tyrants, probe the psychological mechanisms that lead a nation to abandon its ideals and even its self-interest. “Why would anyone, he asks himself, be drawn to a leader manifestly unsuited to govern, someone dangerously impulsive or viciously conniving or indifferent to the truth? Why, in some circumstances, does evidence of mendacity, crudeness, or cruelty serve not as a fatal disadvantage but as an allure, attracting ardent followers? Why do otherwise proud and self-respecting people submit to the sheer effrontery of the tyrant, his sense that he can get away with saying and doing anything he likes, his spectacular indecency?”

These troublesome questions hold resonance for us till today. Entire societies are in thrall to right-wing tyrants who lack both competence and compassion. They have emptied democratic institutions and practices but retained the shell. And yet people admire them and return them to power in election after election. Fortunately, all citizens are not held in thrall. They cannot be. So the discerning and the critical draw up a litany of grievances against the tyrant-institutional capture, weakening of the opposition, centralisation of the executive, control of the media, and suppression of civil society.

Still they are unable to figure out what the reason for the popularity of right-wing populists is. Without a worry line on his forehead, the populist continues to reinvent and implement colonial policies of divide and rule, suspend civil liberties, and puts activists, cartoonists, satirists and artists into prison. He thumbs his nose at critics. And people accept him because somewhere he touches a sentiment that might, otherwise, form part of the political unconscious-fear of those who are not like us.

In plural societies, he excavates and manipulates memories of conflict between communities in days long past. This acts as a trigger to unearth suspicion and anxiety. We live in an age of distrust of our fellow citizens. We live in an age of fear that dissent will be brutally repressed. Societies that had managed to construct a fragile social contract between communities that have a history of conflict, as in India, witnessed the collapse of that balance. This is the tragedy because the makers of the Constitution did their best to provide alternative norms for the restructuring of society.

The task was formidable. In 1947, chaos in northern and eastern India had begun to resemble Thomas Hobbes’ state of nature; war of all against all. But the solution that Hobbes proposed in his 1651 Leviathan – a powerful state – was simply not enough. In India, society had to be transformed and social relations had to be reworked and strengthened. The makers of the Constitution had to introduce a modicum of sanity in a society that had been wracked by insanity. A new society had to be created out of the wreckage of the old, it had to cluster around norms that were far removed from religious mobilisation and enmity that marked the pre-Partition and Partition days of the 1940s. The political community had to be reinvented.

On November 25, 1948, B.R. Ambedkar, the chairman of the drafting committee of the Constitution, stated that political democracy cannot last unless there is at its base social democracy. Social democracy means a way of life which recognises liberty, equality, and fraternity as the principles of life. These three principles are not separate items. “They form a union of trinity in the sense that to divorce one from the other is to defeat the very purpose of democracy…Without fraternity, liberty and equality would not become a natural course of things. It would require a constable to enforce them.” Indian society, he said, lacks fraternity. “What does fraternity mean? Fraternity means a sense of common brotherhood of all Indians – if Indians being one people. It is the principle which gives unity and solidarity to social life. It is a difficult thing to achieve.”

The conceptual twin of fraternity is solidarity. Without solidarity, a democratic community is disaggregated into a collection of highly self-centred individuals.

Solidarity enables us to come together in networks of shared concerns, establish a dialogical relationship with our fellow citizens, and enter into discussions on the distinction between what is and what can be.

Expectedly, it is precisely the civic virtue of solidarity that the autocrat attacks. Social polarisation has not only ripped apart society, it has damaged friendships and associations. In the process, the idea of ‘the people’ as a political category has been fractured along the lines of ‘we’ versus ‘them’, ‘citizens’ versus ‘outsiders’, and those who ‘belong’ versus those who have ‘infiltrated’ into the body politic, namely refugees.

The deleterious consequences of the institutionalisation of right-wing majoritarianism or Hindutva could have been predicted. Terrible slurs and violence have been catapulted to the forefront of public consciousness and the political agenda. Our own people are subjected to abuse, hate campaigns, and violence. The multiculturalist project that was initiated in the 1990s has come full circle; now, members of a numerical majority, whose prejudices have been skillfully manipulated by pernicious ideologies such as hyper-nationalism, racism, or ethnic superiority, believe that the minorities have to be shown their place. Fragmentation of citizens and opinions allows Shakespeare’s tyrant to implement nefarious schemes. And we, the remaining fragments of the people, are silenced.

And silence we must remember is acquiescence even as the ‘tyrant’ goes for the gut of suspected opposition. The political community has been once again divided because people once again have mobilised on religious grounds. Today, we, the people of India, have been once again divided by cynical power politics. This is the tragedy of contemporary India; the shuttering in of the Indian mind through unbelievable stories of fabricated conflict. This is what tyranny means for a society that had learnt to live together after the earth-shattering events of the Partition.

And we, who have been part of the civil liberties movement, and fellow travelers of the Left, watch in sheer helplessness and a degree of suffocation at the way the ruling class casts a pall of fear over the country. Brahma Prakash, author of the work on Body On The Barricades, writes, “I take the risk to assume that at least some of us are feeling suffocated by the situation shaping Indian society. We are feeling barricaded, chained in our bodies and spaces. I am looking for words and phrases to describe the times we are living through. For me, no other words match the potential and vulnerability of ‘I can’t breathe’. I am looking for a figurative image that can capture his situation in body and action. The image I see is that of the body on the barricades.” The feeling he calls breathlessness is akin to the condition that afflicted people who were struck by the pandemic. It is inspired by the last words of George Floyd in May 2020 when he was murdered by white racists in the United States.

Also read: How Hate Has Been Normalised, Behaviourally and Institutionally, in Modi’s India

Protest movements and hope

Still there is a glimmer of hope.

If absolute power leads to suffocation, then resistance to power is as natural as struggling to breathe in conditions of ultimate breathlessness. It has been estimated that since 2010, protest movements that number around 60 span every region of the world. These unplanned and unorganised protest movements, which are quintessentially urban, were initiated by the Arab Spring in 2010-2011 against corruption and regressive political policies. The second wave commenced in 2019 across the world.

Since the first wave of protests, we have witnessed the awesome spectacle of masses without leaders or hierarchical command structures, spontaneously coming together to fight for the right to breathe. Twenty-first century protests across the world are distinct from the ideological battles of the 20th century. They are episodic, unplanned, and unstructured. They do not have alternate agendas. The masses may be inspired to protest against generally incompetent, inefficient, and unresponsive governments, economic distress, inequality, and corruption.

We have read about leaderless spontaneous protests in history. For example, the storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789 in France. Leaders of the French Revolution, Danton and Robespierre, emerged later to trigger the protest into a political revolution. But 21st century protests do not plan to move into a revolution that will bring about institutional change and political transformation. No longer do protesters wish to patiently and laboriously disseminate ideologies of nationalism, socialism, and revolutionary transformation, build up cadres, organise rural peasants and the urban working class to launch a movement with clearly defined strategies and ideals.

The objectives of the contemporary protest movement are not to take over state power in the Leninist sense. Nor do they want to posit civil societies as an alternative to a power-hungry state and a profit-driven economy, as was the trend in social movement literature after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Protesters just want their voices to reverberate in regimes that are indifferent to voices from the ground. The trigger for the uprising may be a rise in prices of metro-tickets as in Chile in 2019 or a rise in gasoline tax that was imposed in France.

The protests of this century are fueled by new communications technology. Social media, particularly messaging apps such as Telegram, are used to announce where the next meeting will be. The use of messaging to connect with each other summons huge crowds at the touch of a button on mobile phones. The ability of protesters to link with others, inspire, and coordinate to bring millions onto the street is extraordinary. This phenomenon has been termed the digital flash mob. Sometimes movements achieve their objective; often, they do not. Sometimes they assemble rapidly and dissolve just as quickly. In other cases, such as the famous Yellow Vest movement of France, protests initially spurred by a rise in the gasoline tax periodically erupt to make a point.

Leaderless protests have few attachments to traditional political groupings or ideologies. Some of them have the desired effect, the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak in Egypt (2011), the resignation of the Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika (2019), and the resignation of President Rajapaksa in Sri Lanka (2022). In other cases, members of the movement are put in jail and there is no perceptible change in the polity. In still other cases, political uproar creates a crisis situation, subsides, and things return to normal, as in Sri Lanka.

Also read: Resisting Dictatorship, One Video at a Time

Mass movements without leaders or organisations can, admittedly, prove unpredictable. The demonstration can go this way or that, turn into a mob, wreak violence, and dissolve rapidly.

Still there is no political performance comparable to the one wrought by ordinary people who leave their homes and their workplaces to demand their rights and the rights of their fellow citizens as the anti-CAA movement did in India from 2019-2020.

Such is the power of solidarity that can bring together fellow citizens, who are till then strangers to each other, in a mass movement against Shakespeare’s tyrant and his policies of social polarisation. We strive to articulate the constant niggling unease that our people are besieged by tyrants. We struggle for our own humanity and we can do so only through solidarity. We have to do this because in authoritarian regimes, we suffocate. We are disoriented when we see that urban spaces that were once alive with assemblies, demonstrations, colourful banners, and revolutionary songs, have declined to urban wastelands upon which nothing conducive to democracy is allowed to take root.

Leaderless protests, as in the case of the anti-CAA movement, serve to hammer in the message that masses can come together fired by the spirit of solidarity, and cast doubts on Shakespeare’s tyrant, his competence to rule, his many injustices, and his cynical exploitation of emotional vulnerabilities. The picture presented by autocratic societies, such as ours, is not pretty, yet there is a glimmer of hope. There is nothing quite as awesome in history as the spectacle of masses without leaders or hierarchical command structures that spontaneously come together to fight for the right to breathe.

Neera Chandhoke was a professor of political science at Delhi University.

New Report Sees Law Enforcement Agencies’ Role in Furthering Hate Crimes in India

“There is a clear pattern which suggests that incidents of hate crime against religious minorities have occurred largely in BJP-ruled states,” the report by the US-based NGO CMRI adds.

New Delhi: By helping offenders, detaining victims and failing to register first information reports (FIRs) in some cases, law enforcement agencies played a role in furthering hate crimes last year, a new report published by the United States-based NGO, Council on Minority Rights in India (CMRI), says.

The ‘Religious Minorities in India’ report was launched by the CMRI at the Press Club of India in New Delhi on November 20 and covers a number of topics related to the condition of India’s religious minorities: instances of hate crimes against minorities; their portrayal in the media; the intersectional nature of oppression; and more.

The report was released by lawyer Kawalpreet Kaur and student activists Safoora Zargar, Nidha Parveen, Sharjeel Usmani and Tazeen Junaid. The latter three were involved in compiling the report. The launch was presided over by senior advocate Colin Gonsalves.

‘More incidents in BJP-ruled states’

In a chapter on hate crimes, the report details the ways in which the actions of law enforcement agencies, in some cases, furthered hate crimes. In this chapter, the report records that based on both primary and secondary data, 294 cases of hate crimes against Christians, Muslims and Sikhs were recorded in India in 2021. Of these, the majority of crimes (192) were recorded against Muslims, 95 against Christians and seven against Sikhs.

The Christian community was predominantly targeted on allegations of forceful conversion while the Muslim community was chiefly targeted for inter-faith relationships and allegations of cow slaughter, the report says. In most instances, the perpetrators were right-wing vigilantes or Hindu extremist groups, it says. “There is a clear pattern which suggests that incidents of hate crime against religious minorities have occurred largely in BJP-ruled states,” the report adds.

“Hate crimes against Sikhs are not documented at all and are not reported by news media as well. During our primary research for cases of hate crimes against members of the Sikh community, we found several cases of enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings,” the authors say.

The role of law enforcement

The role of law enforcement agencies, in the absence of a “definite meaning and insufficient legal provisions to implicate offenders of hate crime”, is effectively driven by discretion, the report says. “There is a definite lack of action on part of the law enforcement against perpetrators of hate crimes that reveals a bigger pattern of discrimination in the criminal-judicial system,” it says.

The record also shows a “clear bias” of the police by detaining or arresting the victims of hate crimes, it says, adding that there are also incidents of police “helping the offenders in a crime or overlooking the offence that is committed”.

“There are also incidents wherein law enforcement personnel have in fact engaged in offences against members of the minority community. Institutional power and lack of accountability of law enforcement make the victims of hate crimes directly or indirectly affected by police action or inaction,” it says.

The authors say there are also incidents where the police have filed FIRs against the victim, making it “all the more difficult for them to be able to seek justice or any redressal”.

“It may also be argued that police discretion allows politically motivated behaviour like arbitrary detention of the victims or refusal to register complaints of the victim or terming the hate crime as a quarrel or clash between two parties, at the behest of political influence or pressure,” it says.

Representative image of a police officer. Photo: Harini Calamur/Flickr CC BY NC ND 2.0

‘Second emergency’

Speaking at the launch, Gonsalves shared several examples of cases of political prisoners where the crime of the accused couldn’t even be established. “It shows the power of the Union government to frighten people,” he said.

“We are deep into the second emergency,” he continued. “For some reason, it hasn’t attracted the world’s attention and the media’s attention like it should have. Amid this, there is participation of the legal system.” 

Addressing young activists, he said, “Our battle against this government and why they hate us is because of our speech. They are going for our minds and our tongues; they are going after our rebellion and our spirit.” 

The report contains chapters authored by activist Afreen Fatima, journalist Aditya Menon, lawyer Vikasan Pillai, social worker Mohammad Uzair and research students Mehwish Asim, Mohammad Kamran, Tazeen Junaid, Nidha Parveen J.A., Nada Nasreen, and Sabah Maharaj. 

Parveen, the vice-president of the student union at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) Mumbai and author of the chapter on ‘Gendered Islamophobia’ in the report, said, “Muslimness is seen as a threat in our times, We have to carry the burden of secularism and nationalism. We are asked to carry this burden for collective consciousness.”

“There is an intersectional nature of oppression; the bodies of Muslim women have become sites of violence. This is something that was witnessed in Gujarat, the Northeast Delhi violence, and elsewhere. The accused enjoy impunity while Muslim women are objectified, raped and auctioned online.” 

Also read: ‘Bulli Bai’, ‘Sulli Deals’: On Being Put Up for ‘Auction’ as an Indian Muslim Woman

Activist Usmani raised the question of how young Muslims growing up right now might be affected by the current atmosphere.

“We saw four of our friends go to jail; four of our friends get harassed online; four of our friends auctioned online. We have documented our lives, our friends’ lives and the lives of our families. Young Muslim kids growing up right now are witnessing this consistently, relentlessly on phones, on televisions, and in the streets. [They] are hearing and seeing their friends and relatives being beaten up, being threatened. Every aspect of their lives is being demonised and vilified. How is that child looking at his future in India right now? How do they understand their own belongingness in this country?” he said. 

The authors and editors of the report, collectively, said, “Principally, the report is written by young students who are impacted by the deepening divide in society – with a hope of a better and equal future in the country.”

Kaur, speaking at the event, discussed the legal aspects of persecution. “It is evident that minorities are facing the brunt of the state in varying degrees. When we see the example of the 2020 Northeast Delhi pogrom victims, we see the cases lying in the high court for the last two years. Indian courts need to keep their eyes and ears open; it is not a one-off case of Afreen Fatima’s house being bulldozed; it is not a one-off what happened in Khargone, or when the stalls of working-class Muslims were razed in Delhi, despite a stay from the courts,” she said.

“The judiciary should see that it is an attack by the Indian state against its minorities. It is also a campaign of misinformation and Islamophobia that we see everyday,” the lawyer added.

The release of CMRI’s report comes at a time when numerous countries and organisations are calling upon India to take stock of the plight of its religious minorities.

Six international rights groups – the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), Inter­national Dalit Solidarity Network, Amnesty International, and Human Rights Watch – in a joint statement reminded New Delhi that it is yet to implement recommendations of a recent UN report on India which cover topics which include the protection of minorities and human rights defenders, upholding civil liberties, and more.

“The Indian government should promptly adopt and act on the recommendations that United Nations member states made at the UN Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review process on November 10,” the joint statement read.

Free-Flowing Hate Speech, Rampant Racial Profiling: How Manipur Grew Intolerant

Several examples have shown that there is little hope of bringing violators to justice as long as hatred is directed towards a particular group.

Imphal: In recent times, hate speech has become a cause for concern for all responsible citizens. Disconcertingly, the canvas is no longer limited religious minorities but is increasingly getting broader. Northeast India with its multi-diverse cultures has become a hotspot for hate speech in recent times.

Manipur, once regarded as mini-India for its diverse composition of communities, is particularly becoming intolerant. Rampant hate speech and racial profiling are becoming the norm; several examples have shown that there is little hope of bringing violators to justice as long as it is directed toward a particular group.

The state’s forest policies

The Manipur government recently issued a notification that villagers settling in what is called “reserved forests” would be evicted. The notification was resisted tooth and nail by the settlers therein. The state government’s move was opposed by tribal legislators who argued that the state would require the approval of the Hill Area Committee (HAC) – represented by all tribal MLAs – in any policy matter related to the hill districts of Manipur.

With regard to that particular right of the HAC granted by the Constitution, the former chairman of the committee, K. Leishiyo, had released a statement last year. The legislator had then reminded the state government of the “procedural error on the Declaration of Reserve Forest after 1972”, further stating that “any declaration of Protected Forests, Reserve Forests and Wild Life Sanctuaries on or after June 20, 1972 shall not be enforced by the department until the approval of the Hill Areas Committee” as it pertains to Schedule Matters of Article 371C of the Presidential Order of 1972.

Most recently, in response to one such notification, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA from Saikot, Paolienlal Haokip, wrote to the concerned officer asking if procedural norms were fully adopted while declaring some areas as “reserved forest”.

The legislator also sought evidence and documents pertaining to the declaration of such forests as “reserved forest” under the Indian Forest Act, 1927 and the Forests Rights Act, 2006. Haokip remains one of the most vociferous among the hill area MLAs to have raised the issue of anomalies even though he belongs to the ruling dispensation led by chief minister N. Biren Singh.

Stiff opposition to the government order by the public, mostly belonging to the Kuki community, has inexplicably turned into a war of words between the Kukis and the valley-based Meitei community to which the chief minister belongs. The Meiteis are being perceived as suspecting the Kukis of grabbing forest land. The Kukis are suspicious of government policies, such as this notification which is strongly backed by the non-tribal Meitei community, who are also the majority community in the state.

Ideally, the issue should have been settled between the government and the dwellers of the forests but it began to take an entirely new shape based on community lines. In support of the government’s move, some Imphal valley-based groups organised mass plantation drives on a few occasions ­­– only to be confronted by the tribal communities.

In diverse cultures with competing values, every policy of a government can be a point of discord. The claims and counter-claims over the ownership and authority of such forests have led to the spread of hate speech to a magnitude never experienced in the past. The involvement of the valley-based civil society groups in confronting the hill tribes on the matter speaks volume of the “majoritarian agenda” in the state’s forest policies. The non-tribals of the Imphal valley claim certain areas of Koubru and Thangting Hills as a secret place of the Meiteis.

In certain plantation drives, the flags of the Salai Taret, symbolising the seven Meitei clans, were also planted. To the tribal communities, this is perceived as the majoritarian intention of the government’s forest policies backed by the valley-based communities of Manipur.

Also read: Free Speech in Manipur: A Slippery Slope Between a Facebook Post and Arbitrary Detention

Hate speech and racial profiling

The ensuing war of words between those for and against the declaration of reserve forests have brought few tribesmen under police scrutiny. A tribal social media influencer, Romeo Kipgen, was asked by the state police to seek a public apology for a speech made on April 4 in which he mentioned “Kuki Hills”, a term he used to indicate Kuki inhabited hills within the present boundary of Manipur.

On the other hand, no police action has been noted thus far when hate speech has been directed towards the Kukis. A social media user, Suraj Nameirakpam, posted the following words [now deleted] in the last week of May:

“Your 2nd Black Day Will Be Against Meiteis & there will be no one to observe. U r ur Last Kind”.

The social media post was a direct warning that mass killing of Kukis would be taken up by the Meiteis and that none would be left to mourn. A degree of hate as evident as in those lines could have been enough for the authorities to take immediate suo motu cognisance of the matter and action against the culprit. However, nothing happened, even though the chief minister was tagged on social media about it. Though on May 29, a first information report (FIR) was registered against the particular social media user at the Churachandpur police station, there is no report of his arrest or any action against him until now.

Additionally, Colonel R.K. Rajendro, leader of a civil society group International Meitei Forum (IMF), and Sapamacha Jadumani, president of another civil society group Federation of Haomee (FOH), have been instrumental in spreading venomous hate speech directed at the Kukis since the past few years. Highlighting a few instances of involving the Kukis in the recent past, these leaders from the majority community are habituated to generalising the entire Kuki population as refugees and migrants.

The Kuki Reformation Forum (KReF) had registered an FIR against these two individuals and their organisations about a year ago. No action was taken by the authorities and they continue to speak on that mode at several platforms.

What is being noticed is that hate speech, earlier the territory of individuals, was now taking place at the institutional level. On May 27, the youth wing of the BJP Manipur Pradesh, Bharatiya Janta Yuva Morcha-BJYM Manipur Pradesh, uploaded a social media post with an image of Kukis mourning the death of their members, and stated:

“Kuki singna 1993 da Imphal Kangjeibung da o-khongna kapkhiba NSCN na takhairakpadagi..maduda kanbiruba Meitie gi asoibani”

This translates into:

“Kukis mourning the death of their members at Imphal Kangjeibung as a result of NSCN aggression… It’s a mistake of the Meiteis that we helped them.”

The act of only threat and intimidation carried out by the youth wing of the BJP once again exposes the influence of the majority over the lives of the minority – evident elsewhere in the country. While individual engagements in libellous acts are a concern, such acts committed at the political, organisational and institutional level speak of the degree of hate and intolerance on the part of those in authority. This leads to the question: has BJYM become the organisation of a particular community?

The Imphal block of Kuki Students Organisation (KSO) along with its legal advisor had registered an FIR on May 31 at the Lamphel police station against that online upload. However, till date, no action has been taken up against any functionary of BJYM or its social media handler.

Racial profiling is nothing new in Manipur. Among the three major indigenous communities – the Meiteis, the Nagas and the Kukis – the Kukis often become the soft target of such profiling. They often end up being labelled as “refugees” and the “later migrants” to Manipur. In this regard, the latest incident took place with the arrest of social activists Mark Haokip, president of International Human Rights Association (IHRA, India and Coordinator, Myanmar). After Mark was arrested over defamatory social media posts, the chief minister N. Biren Singh made a statement that he was a “Myanmarese”. When The Hills Journal, a news portal with which this author is associated, inquired about the veracity of the chief minister’s statement, it came to light that Mark Haokip’s grandfather happened to be an Indian National Army (INA) veteran who joined the Japanese forces along with Subhash Chandra Bose to overthrow the British during the INA-Japanese campaign in 1943-44.

To set the record straight, the Kukis were one of the earliest inhabitants of the region if the words of notable academics such as professor J.N. Phukan and professor Gangmumei are to be taken into consideration.

The royal chronicles of the Meitei kings don’t shy away from mentioning Kuki inhabited villages and settlements dating back to several hundred years. Therefore, the charge levelled against Kukis as “foreigners” or “refugees” are a result of ignorance of their history. In fact, the geographical domain of the Kukis is spread beyond Manipur as one can see in the present set-up. Kukis, sometimes called “Chin” and “Mizo”, are found in Myanmar and Bangladesh. This is enough indication that Kukis were very much a part of that entire territory. If the issue of Kuki migration to Manipur is to be discussed, it should begin with the nature of the boundary drawn during the British colonial era.

Respond harshly or perish

The return of the BJP in the recently concluded state assembly election, securing 32 out of 60 seats, comes with huge expectations. With that in mind, initiatives such as the “100 Action Points For First 100 Days”, “Chief Ministers-gi Hakshelgi Tengbang” (CMHT), “CM Da Haisi” (Lets Meet CM) and “Lairik Tamhallasi” (Let Them Go to School) are noteworthy, but these cannot be a substitute for peace, harmony and stability in the region. Building an accommodative, tolerant and inclusive environment should precede any development policies, not the other way round.

The real challenge of the BJP-led government in the state lies in how effectively it acts against hate speech, intolerance and racial profiling, irrespective of which community is attacked with such offences. Any further delay in checking such offences will undermine all other efforts of the government to create a bridge between communities. The onus is on the chief minister in setting the house in order first and everything else will follow suit.

Haoginlen Chongloi authored the book History, Identity and Polity of the Kukis published by Hornbill Press, 2020.

PMO ‘Unaware’ If Modi Took Action After 49 Celebs Raised Lynching Concerns in 2019

In July 2019, a group of 49 celebrities, including Ramchandra Guha and Mani Ratnam, had asked the prime minister to act against the mob lynchings and rising hate crimes.

New Delhi: The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) has responded that it is unaware if any action was taken in response to the July 2019 open letter written by a group of 49 celebrities asking Narendra Modi to take action against mob lynchings and hate crimes. This has been revealed by the PMO in response to the information sought under the Right to Information (RTI).

The matter assumes significance as it, at that time, had created quite a buzz and led to the registration of a first information report (FIR) by a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) supporter against the 49 personalities – including Ramchandra Guha, Mani Ratnam, Aparna Sen, Shyam Benegal and Anurag Kashyap. Subsequently, it evoked a strong response from 185 other celebrities who issued a statement saying “more of us will speak every day” against mob lynching, silencing of people’s voices and misuse of courts to harass citizens. The case was shut down eventually.

Ram Kumar, in an RTI application first filed in September 2019, sought to know what “requisite steps” were taken by the prime minister in the matter. With no information forthcoming, Kumar filed two appeals over the years.

During the hearing in the matter before chief information commissioner (CIC) Y.K. Sinha late last month, the central public information officer (CPIO) of the PMO, who is the respondent, said “requisite information is not part of the record held in this office” and “since the information sought was not available on records, hence the appellant had been informed accordingly.”

In response to the query by Kumar, the PMO first did not reply on what Modi had done in the matter. He then filed his first and second appeals in September 2019 and January 2020, respectively. On both occasions, the CPIO said the PMO did not have any such information. The response surprised the applicant as the PMO is supposed to have information on issues pertaining to the Prime Minister’s official work.

Also read: Sedition Case for Open Letter: Over 180 Personalities Endorse Statement, Condemn Charges

The applicant says that no attempt was made by the PMO to gather the required information over the past two years. The appeal was nevertheless disposed of, as the CIC observed that the reply furnished “did not suffer from any legal infirmity.”

Concerns raised by celebrities 

Incidentally, the issue which was raised in the case had hogged the headlines during the latter part of 2019.

Following a spate of hate killings, the 49 signatories had written to Modi that the Citizen’s Religious Hate-Crime Watch had recorded that Muslims (14% of India’s population) were the victims in 62% of cases and Christians (2% of the population) in 14% cases. They had added that “about 90% of these attacks were reported after May 2014, when your Government assumed power nationally.”

They had demanded that “the lynching of Muslims, Dalits and other minorities must be stopped immediately.” They had also stated that as per the National Crime Records Bureau reports there had been 840 instances of atrocities against Dalits in the year 2016 alone, and a definite decline in the percentage of convictions.

Also, the letter had charged that 254 religious identity-based hate crimes were reported between January 1, 2009 and October 29, 2018, where at least 91 persons were killed and 579 were injured.

Stating that he had “criticised such lynchings in parliament”, the celebrities had pointed out to the PM that this was “not enough.” They asked “what action has actually been taken against the perpetrators?” and stated that they “feel that such offences should be declared non-bailable, and that exemplary punishment should be meted out swiftly and surely.”

The letter had also regretted that “‘Jai Sri Ram’ has become a provocative ‘war-cry’ today that leads to law and order problems, and many lynchings take place in its name. It is shocking to see so much violence perpetrated in the name of religion! These are not the Middle Ages!”

Following this letter, an FIR was lodged against the 49 celebrities on October 3, 2019. It was lodged under several sections of the Indian Penal Code, including sedition. This happened despite the Supreme Court’s stance that sedition charges cannot be invoked for criticism of the government.

The issue drew the ire of a larger community of celebrities and 185 of them charged that the FIR was lodged against their “colleagues in the cultural community simply because they performed their duty as respected members of civil society.”

The second set of celebrities in a statement subsequently asked if writing such a letter could be called an act of sedition. “Or, is harassment by misusing the courts a ploy to silence citizens’ voices?”

The signatories of the statement included actor Naseeruddin Shah, writer Nayantara Sahgal, dancer Mallika Sarabhai, historian Romila Thapar, academic Anand Teltumbde, singer T.M. Krishna and artist Vivan Sundaram.

HRRF Awards: The Wire’s Journalists in Shortlists for Reporting on Communalism, Hate Speech

The HRRF has shortlisted Alishan Jafri, Ismat Ara, Naomi Barton, Kaushik Raj and Shehlat Maknoon Wani across categories for their stories for The Wire.

New Delhi: The Wire’s journalists, their reports and those by freelancers whose work has been published by The Wire have been shortlisted by Human Rights and Religious Freedom (HRRF) Journalism Awards 2022 on June 6, for making a mark in their reporting on communalism and hate speech.

Shortlists were announced across five categories of the awards: ‘Best Text Reporting’, ‘Best Photo Story’, ‘Best Video Story’, ‘HRRF Young Journalist of the Year’ and ‘HRRF Best Media Organization’.

The shortlisted candidates were chosen across categories from more than 100 submissions from across India. The winners will be announced on Sunday, June 19.

The five reporters shortlisted in the ‘HRRF Young Journalist of the Year’ category are:

Alishan Jafri, a freelance journalist who often writes for The Wire. Jafri writes on communalism in India, and has consistently reported on Hindutva activists and leaders who played a prominent role in the Delhi 2020 riots. He has watched online propagation of hate closely and has reported on dog-whistling terms like “land jihad” and “redi jihad”.

Ismat Ara, a freelance journalist, also reported extensively on the implications of communalism and hatred for The Wire. She has covered minute topics like the consequences of ‘love jihad’ claims slapped on a Muslim teenager in Uttar Pradesh and on the reactions surrounding a temple encroachment in Delhi’s Jamia Nagar.

Naomi Clarette Barton, who is audience engagement editor at The Wire, has reported on hate crimes and polarising speeches of the ruling party’s politicians.

Also on the shortlist are of Fatima Khan, who works at The Quint, and has reported on communalism, and conflicts between Rajasthan’s tribal communities and Hindu bodies.

The shortlist ends with Aishwarya S. Iyer, who works at Scroll.in, and has written on how Hindutva activists hijacked India’s child protection body. Another of her stories covered how Delhi riots’ accused from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh-Bharatiya Janata Party were aiming to become civic leaders.

In the ‘Best Text Reporting’ category, Kaushik Raj was shortlisted for reporting on the anti-Muslim sloganeers at The Kashmir Files screenings for The Wire.

He also reported on the teenager who had opened fire at students from Jamia Millia Islamia who were marching against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019. Another one of his stories covered how a Hindu priest in Madhya Pradesh threatened mass sexual violence against Muslim women in the presence of the police. All these stories were done in collaboration with Alishan Jafri for The Wire.

In the ‘Best Video Story’ category, Shehlat Maknoon Wani was shortlisted for his role in the immersive investigative collaboration titled Delhi 2020: The Real Conspiracy for The Wire.

Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman Slams Modi for ‘Aurangzeb-Shivaji Binary’, Silence on Hate Speeches

The former Supreme Court judge proposed amending existing laws to prescribe a minimum punishment for those who deliver hate speeches.

New Delhi: Former Supreme Court judge Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman hit out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, without naming him, for his recent comments on Aurangzeb and Shivaji in a communal angle, and his stoic silence in the wake of rising hate speeches, The Leaflet has reported.

“We heard the other day from the very head of the ruling party a juxtaposition of a Mughal emperor known for being a bigot, namely, Aurangzeb as against Shivaji who was known to be a secular leader…”, Justice Nariman said on January 14 during his keynote address delivered on the occasion of the inauguration of D.M. Harish School of Law, Mumbai (watch and read the full speech).

On December 13, 2021, inaugurating the Kashi Vishwanath Corridor project – weeks ahead of Uttar Pradesh elections where the Prime Minister was seen overtly involving himself in elaborate Hindu rituals – Modi played up “Aurangzeb-Shivaji binary”, aimed at pitting ‘good’ Hindu rulers against ‘bad’ Muslims “invaders”.

“Invaders attacked this city, tried to destroy it. History is witness to Aurangzeb’s atrocities, his terror. He tried to change civilisation with the sword. He tried to crush culture with fanaticism. But the soil of this country is different from the rest of the world. Here if a (Mughal Emperor) Aurangzeb comes, a (Maratha warrior) Shivaji also rises,” Modi had said.

Also read: By Raising Aurangzeb-Shivaji Binary at Kashi Vishwanath, Modi Indicates Divisive Agenda

To this Justice Nariman said, “Now if as a matter of fact, fraternity is a cardinal value in our constitution and you want to engage persons in brotherhood, I would have thought you should have chosen a Mughal emperor such as Babar or his grandson Akbar. Akbar was famous for perhaps being one of the most secular rulers that any nation ever known at any point in time.”

Building on Babar’s tolerance, Justice Nariman read out a letter Babar had written to his son Humayun in which the former had advised the latter to deliver justice as per the tenets of each community and not to allow the sacrifice of cows.

In another veiled attack aimed at the BJP leadership on the issue of rising hate speeches, the former Supreme Court judge said, “We also have unfortunately other higher echelons of the ruling party not only being silent qua hate speech but almost endorsing it.”

Without actually naming it, Justice Nariman referred to the recent Haridwar Dharma Sansad, lamenting that there was a lot of reluctance among the authorities to book those who give hate speeches calling for a genocide of an entire community.

“Not only it is unconstitutional, but it also happens to be a criminal act. It is criminalised in 153A and 505 (C) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC),” he added.

Proposing that the parliament should amend laws to prescribe a minimum punishment in the case of hate speeches, he said, “Unfortunately, in practice, though a person can be given up to three years of imprisonment, this never really happens because no minimum sentence is prescribed. If we really want to strengthen rule of law as contained in our constitution, I would suggest strongly that parliament amend these laws to provide minimum sentences, so that it creates deterrence for others who make hate speech.”

The former Supreme Court judge also expressed concern over the fact that youngsters, students, comedians and those critical of the government are being booked under harsh laws, including under sedition.

“When you have 19(1)(a) being administered as it is being administered today there is a big red signal that is put up so far as the rule of law is concerned. It is time to do away completely with the sedition laws and allow free speech so long as ultimately, it does not exhort somebody to violence and end up as being hate speech,” he noted.

He also criticised the authorities concerned for failing to enforce the Sabarimala judgment, and added that despite five judges having allowed the entry of women of all age groups to the temple, no woman was let in.

“Most unfortunately, the Supreme Court itself sent this judgment by way of review petition – something unheard of – to a bench of nine judges to decide along with other matters and thereby Sabarimla now has gone into limbo,” Justice Nariman said.

At this point, he noted that often the constitutional rule of law in the country was taken for granted. “It is very important to remember that eternal vigilance is necessary not only for liberty but for liberty enforced by courts, which is the rule of law of this country,” he said, emphasising the need for independent judiciary in the country.

Six Reasons Why Bhagwat Can’t Act On His ‘Peace Offer’ to Muslims

The RSS chief’s gesture is aimed more at addressing the Modi government’s foreign critics. His hands are tied when it comes to any policy fine-tuning.

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat’s ‘same DNA’ remarks at a book releasing function on July 4 evoked two different kind of responses. Opposition leaders like Congress’s Digvijaya Singh and Bahujan Samaj Party’s Mayawati dismissed his pronouncements as “hypocrisy”. However, sections of the Muslim intelligentsia saw silver linings and hoped this will open up new possibilities for communal harmony.

Unfortunately for them, the RSS camp has not been so enthusiastic about Bhagwat’s glasnost. For the record, this is not the first time that Bhagwat is making such gestures. He had thrown such hints during his ‘outreach’ programmes earlier. Notwithstanding the dampening signals from Nagpur, there are six compelling factors that act as roadblocks, even if Bhagwat wishes to push his ‘reconciliation’ offer.

First is a fundamental riddle: can the RSS, whose very raison d’etre has always been Hindu supremacism and hatred of Abrahamic religions, suddenly come down to equality of all religions and reconciliation? Those of us who reported the RSS and its innumerable allied outfits for 40 years view such gestures with a pinch of salt. At times, Nagpur did compromise on its hard Hindutva ideology but only as a strategy to gain a firmer foothold.

It briefly compromised during and after the Emergency. But it put its foot down when the ruling Janata Party leaders objected to the remote control of Bharatiya Jansangh representatives from Nagpur. The ‘dual’ membership issue took it to the breaking point. In 1984, the RSS toppled Vajpayee for his deviation from its ideals and clinging to ‘Gandhian’ socialism. Advani himself was later punished for his pro-Jinnah remarks in 2005. Soon he was ousted as BJP president. With such a track record, can one expect a sudden change of heart by Mohan Bhagwat?

Also read: ‘Vajpayee: The Years That Changed India’: A Ringside View of the Political Saga in 1996-1999

Second, the RSS hierarchy has always carefully adhered to a two-level strategy. While the right-wing organisation’s seniors and its journals like Organiser and Panchjanya harp on the ‘nationalism’ part of Hindutva, the role of operationalising hatred on the ground is left to allied outfits like the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, Bajrang Dal and other unknown local groups. The assaults on minority communities lynching of Muslims by cow vigilantes, ‘love jihad‘, attacks on churches or harassment of nuns are largely done by the ‘fringe’ groups like the Shiv Sena in North India and such other right-wing outfits.

In the RSS, the real breeding ground for communal hatred has been the local shakhas (branches). Anyone who has attended a shakha will tell you how it works. After the drill and games like kabaddi, the indoctrination begins. It can be in the form of heroic tales of Rana Pratap Singh’s valiant fight against Muslims or the alleged harassment of Hindu girls by the “skull caps”. Stories of Christian padris converting tribals by luring them into their faith are frequently told at the shakhas. There are innumerable jokes about Abrahamic religions which are repeated at shakhas from Tamil Nadu to Jammu. Since what happens at the shakhas is not known to others, no one can be held accountable for the false narrative.

Third, if Nagpur is really serious about a detente, it could bring about a halt to the ongoing harassment of minorities within weeks. Like it silenced its outfits such as the Swadeshi Jagran Manch, the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) and the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) which had in the early months of Modi’s rule persistently opposed the new government’s liberalisation policies. The RSS imposed a compromise between the two sides at a three-day meeting of top leaders, including then party chief Amit Shah, in Agra on September 3-5, 2015. In the event of major policy shifts, the RSS holds chintan baithaks of all allied outfits, including its senior ministers when in power to bring about an internal alignment. Now, five weeks after Mohan Bhagwat’s olive branch, there are no signs of any such policy review.

Remember what happened to the adamant Akhada groups at the Hardwar Kumbh Mela. Hours after an appeal by Prime Minister Modi, they all obligingly agreed to make their celebrations symbolic. That is the kind of sway Modi and Bhagwat have on the Hindutva groups. But in the present case, the two have scrupulously avoided taking any initiative.

Also read: Bhagwat’s Call For Hindu-Muslim Dialogue Is Welcome, but a Shift in BJP’s Politics Is Crucial

Instead, and that is the fourth, the Muslim bashing and frenzied war cries continue unabated. Look at the hate incidents that happened after Bhagwat’s peace offer on July 4 and just before it.

  • On August 8, a Hindutva crowd drunk on hate shouted anti-Muslim slogans at Jantar Mantar
  • On August 6, local BJP workers and Hindutva groups gathered in Dwarka, New Delhi and objected to building a Haj house at an officially allotted plot
  • On August 9, 19 members of three families were reconverted to Hinduism at a function at the Surajkund temple in Kandla town of Shamli. A week before, another Muslim family was reconverted as part of the VHP’s ongoing ‘ghar wapsi’ campaign
  • A month before Bhagwat’s ‘same DNA’ gesture, i.e. June 6, a group of unidentified people barged into a mosque in Greater Noida at night and attacked the imam and others. The incident happened in Rampur Maura village while Muslims were offering evening prayers.
  • In January this year, The Print carried a write-up detailing how local outfits like the Hindu Vahinis, Hindu Samaj and Hindu Army have mushroomed in Uttar Pradesh playing havoc. All with the tacit support of official agencies.

Fifth, Prime Minister Modi’s highly successful hybrid regime model is sustained by various pillars: his own image as a doer, a vice-like grip on communication, high-cost election campaigns and the systematic use of law enforcement agencies like Enforcement Directorate and National Investigation Agency, both to tire out the Opposition and to force defections.

But the creation and sustenance of a hate-based Hindutva vote bank is a key pillar. A Lokniti survey highlighted a discernible Hindu consolidation in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections. This meant Modi has fairly succeeded in building a broad Hindu coalition, it said.

In this scheme of things, Nagpur has been assigned to play a crucial role. As per the calculation doing rounds among the BJP MPs, if the BJP under Modi could win 50% of India’s 80% Hindu electorate, it constitutes 40% of the national vote share. This is an attractive proposition for Modi’s hybrid model. A reconciliation with the minorities will upset all such power calculations. Neither the Modi-Shah duo or Bhagwat are going to risk this.

Sixth, the advent of a more liberal regime in the US has its echo on Modi-Bhagwat’s Hindutva-based survival strategy. Despite all diplomatic camouflaging, there has been growing concern in the US about the Modi government’s illiberal approach and divisive policies. The western media has been increasingly highlighting the hate crimes and organised attacks on minorities. New Delhi turns defensive whenever a human rights body or democracy rating institution comes out with a critical report.

Such snubs have begun acting as speed-breakers in the Modi juggernaut’s March onward. New Delhi has been taking the line that most of the minority bashing is the handiwork of fringe elements. Bhagwat’s July 4 gesture has to be viewed in this light. Incidentally, the RSS’s ‘outreach’ programmes since 2017 have been on similar lines. The six factors discussed above show how the RSS chief’s hands are tied when it comes to any policy fine-tuning.

P. Raman covered politics for national dailies since 1978 and is the author of Strong Leader Populism: How Modi’s Hybrid Regime Model is Reshaping Political Narrative, Ecosystem and Symbols. (In press)

Canadian Man Accused of Murdering Muslim Family to Face Terror Charges

Nathaniel Veltman was arrested shortly after the June 6 attack in a parking lot in London, Ontario.

Ottawa: A Canadian man who is accused of deliberately running over five members of a Muslim family with his truck, killing four of them, is now facing terrorism charges in addition to counts of first-degree murder and attempted murder, prosecutors said on Monday.

Nathaniel Veltman, 20, was arrested shortly after the June 6 attack in a parking lot in London, Ontario, a short distance from the city’s oldest mosque. He was wearing what appeared to be body armor and a helmet at the time, police said.

Due to a publication ban, details from a hearing in which Veltman appeared by Zoom on Monday from jail cannot be revealed. Veltman has not yet retained a lawyer.

However, provincial and federal prosecutors provided their consent to commence terrorism proceedings against him, alleging that the killings of Salman Afzaal, his wife, their daughter and Afzaal’s mother, and attempted killing of the couple’s son constituted terrorist activity, according to a statement from police in London, a city west of Toronto.

Also read: Canada, You Have a Racism Problem. Deal With It.

The 9-year-old boy the sole survivor of the attack was released from the hospital on Monday, the London Free Press reported, citing a family friend.

Canadian deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland reacted to the new charges afterwards, saying: “It is really important for us to name it as an act of terror… and it is important for us identify the terrible threat that white supremacism poses to Canada and to Canadians.”

The five members of the Afzaal family were out for an evening walk near their home when they were run over on the sidewalk.

It was the worst attack against Canadian Muslims since a man gunned down six members of a Quebec City mosque in 2017.

So far, few details have emerged that would shed light on why police say the attack was a pre-meditated, hate-motivated crime. Veltman is due in court again on June 21.

(Reuters)

Eight Killed, Including Six of Asian Descent, in Shootings Near Atlanta

The violence in Georgia unfolded days after US President Joe Biden used a nationally televised speech to condemn a recent surge in hate crimes and discrimination against Asian-Americans.

Eight people, six of them women of Asian descent, were shot dead in a string of attacks on Atlanta-area day spas on Tuesday, and a man suspected of carrying out all of the shootings was arrested hours later in southern Georgia, police said.

Although authorities declined to offer a possible motive for the violence, the attacks prompted the New York Police Department’s counter-terrorism unit to announce the deployment of additional patrols in Asian communities there as a precaution.

The bloodshed in Georgia began about 5 pm local time when four people were killed and another was wounded in a shooting at Young’s Asian Massage in Cherokee County, about 40 miles north of Atlanta, said Captain Jay Baker of the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Department. Two women of Asian descent were among the dead there, along with a white woman and a white man, Baker said, adding that the surviving victim was a Hispanic man.

In Atlanta, the state capital, police officers responding to a call of a “robbery in progress” shortly before 6 pm arrived at the Gold Spa beauty salon and found three women shot to death, police chief Rodney Bryant told reporters.

Also read: Racism and Inequality: Protesting for a Better, Truer US

While investigating the initial shooting report, the officers were called to a separate aroma-therapy spa across the street where a fourth woman was found dead of a gunshot wound, Bryant said. All four victims slain in Atlanta were of Asian descent.

Robert Aaron Long, 21, of Woodstock in Cherokee County, was taken into custody at about 8:30 pm in Crisp County, about 150 miles (240 km) south of Atlanta. A photo of Long, who is white, was released by authorities.

Baker told Reuters by telephone that investigators were “very confident” that the same suspect was the gunman in all three shootings. A separate statement from the Atlanta Police Department said the suspect was connected to all the attacks by video evidence from the crime scenes.

Investigators were still working “to confirm with certainty” that the shootings in Atlanta and Cherokee County were related.

Long was spotted in southern Georgia, far from the crime scenes, after police in Cherokee County issued a bulletin providing a description and license plates of the vehicle involved in the attacks, Baker said. He was arrested without incident after a highway pursuit by Georgia state police and Crisp County Sheriff’s deputies, who used a tactical driving manoeuvre to stop the suspect’s vehicle, sheriff’s officials said later.

Also read: Coronavirus and Anti-Asian Racism: How the Language of Disease Produces Hate and Violence

Authorities said that a motive for the rampage was not immediately clear, and that it was not determined whether the victims were targeted because of their race or ethnicity. But the NYPD’s counter-terrorism branch said on Twitter late Tuesday that although there was no known connection to New York City, the department “will be deploying assets to our great Asian communities across the city out of an abundance of caution”.

The violence in Georgia unfolded days after US President Joe Biden used a nationally televised speech to condemn a recent surge in hate crimes and discrimination against Asian-Americans. Civil rights groups have suggested that former President Donald Trump contributed to the trend by repeatedly referring to the coronavirus as the “China virus” because it first emerged there.

A spokesperson for the Atlanta field office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation said the agency was assisting police in Cherokee County and Atlanta. Atlanta police said they were stepping up patrols around businesses similar to those attacked on Tuesday evening.

(Reuters)

Himachal Pradesh: Kashmiri Workers Say Communal Corona Campaign Led to Assault

Three labourers from Banihal say they were targeted by unidentified locals in Barot, Mandi district for being Muslim.

Srinagar: Three Kashmiri labourers attacked in Barot village in the Mandi district of Himachal Pradesh on Saturday by a group of unidentified locals apparently fearful of the coronavirus are anxious to return home as they continue to fear for their safety

The three Kashmiri labourers – among a group of nine Gujjars from Banihal who had come to Barot to work on a transmission tower in November – claimed that they were subjected to an unprovoked attack at their place of residence. The assailants also hurled obscenities and warned them to leave the place or bear the consequences, claimed 60-year-old Abdullah.

Even after attacking the labourers with cricket bats, the men allegedly followed them to the government hospital and threatened them while calling them “aatankwadi (terrorists)”. “They hate us because we are Muslims,” said Bahaardeen Naik, a 32-year-old victim, who sustained injuries in his arm.

Abdullah, who was severely beaten, is bedridden as a result. “I cannot work now, I feel like I am crippled,” he said, speaking to The Wire.

On April 11, at around 10:30 pm, Naik and eight other workers  were sleeping in two separate rooms when the men broke into their house and attacked them.

“They started thrashing us without telling us the reason,” Naik said. “I tried to escape and ran out crying for help, while others were struggling to get rid of them,” he said.

Joy Choudhary, a digital marketing consultant, who lives half a kilometre away from the labourers, was the first person to come to their rescue after Naik narrated the whole incident to him. “I saw his right hand severely injured when he ran for help towards my place,” said Choudhary.

After that Choudhary, with the help of another friend, reached the place of the incident and saw the labourers lying on the road with injuries on different parts on their bodies. “We then took them to the hospital,” he said.

Also read: For Bengali Muslim Migrants in Wadala, Discrimination and Hunger Go Hand in Hand

Chaudhary had previously made the acquaintance of the labourers after he would see them getting groceries from the same place where he used to have his meals.

Yashwant Singh, the station house officer, Padhar, told The Wire over the phone, “The incident took place after there was a scuffle between one of the labourers and the locals, so they beat them up later”. “We arrested three of the people,” he said.

However, Naik told The Wire that he and his fellow workers had never spoken to them. “We used to do our work here, we don’t know them,” he said.

Sixty-year-old Abdullah receiving treatment in the hospital after sustaining injuries during the attack. Photo: Special Arrangement

Narrating the sequence of events, one of the workers said a friend of theirs came the previous to help them with money from Hara Bagh, after they called him. “We had no money to survive due to the complete lockdown,” said Naik.

After locals heard about the visitor, they assembled near the labourers’ place and demanded that the labourers be exiled from the area as they feared that the labourers were spreading the coronavirus. “That day, in the afternoon, a few men were roaming around our place with sticks in hands,” said Naik. “Later, the next night, we were attacked,” he said.

“The premises where the labourers were residing is adjacent to the Durga Mata Mandir. Some people already had issues about the labourers living there,” said Chaudhary. “They are Muslims and their passage is through the temple, so the locals were troubled by that. They thought they [the labourers] were polluting the place and there is already a campaign in the media about it as well,” he said.

Advocate Deshraj, a lawyer who lives near Mandi, Himachal Pradesh, however, said that the attack against the labourers was communal in nature as the locals felt that Muslims are responsible for spreading the coronavirus. “It is a result of the hate campaign which is creating a communal divide between two communities,” he said.

Also read: The Coronavirus Has Morphed Into an Anti-Muslim Virus

“There is no other reason,” he said. “The police is calling it an altercation, which is not the case.”

“We have not seen such cases from here before this, but what is being circulated on social media and also by certain sections of the media, has made a target out of these labourers right now,” he said. “People here have also circulated posters about not providing rooms to Muslims on the grounds that they are responsible for spreading the coronavirus,” he added.

SHO Singh, said that the labourers were being kept in a safe place now, and that the government of Himachal Pradesh was taking care of them.

The accused g0t bail within 24 hours of the incident.

The Wire tried to reach the investigating officer. However, he refused to comment on the case. The story will be updated if he responds.

Quratulain Rehbar is a Kashmir-based freelance journalist.