Designed To Create a Regime of Fear: IMSD Condemns Attack on Salman Rushdie

IMSD said that none of the prominent Indian Muslim organisations have condemned the attack on the author.

New Delhi: Condemning the attack on author Salman Rushdie, Indian Muslims for Secular Democracy (IMSD) said there can be no doubt that the assault was prompted by the fatwa issued by Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989.

IMSD, which is a forum of Indian Muslims committed to the values of democracy, secularism, equality and justice, said that in Islamic theology, an apostate can be forgiven if he apologises but a blasphemer against Prophet Muhammad – which Rushdie was accused of – is not to be given any such quarter and has to be “summarily executed”.

“That a young Muslim man, Hadi Matar, who was not even born when The Satanic Verses was published, willed to execute the fatwa, only goes on to prove the extraordinary sway of such a theology,” the statement said.

IMSD said that none of the prominent Indian Muslim organisations have condemned the attack on Rushdie, adding, “It is this silence that emboldens the Islamophobes to paint the religion as a creed of violence and terror.”

The statement said that the recent murder of Kanhaiya Lal for another case of blasphemy by two Muslim fanatics also raised important questions that the Indian Muslim community must address. “Though all major Muslim organisations condemned the murder, but did do so under the pretext of a hate-crime, but refused to acknowledge the fact that it was a murder for blasphemy. Such is the blatant hypocrisy, which only serves to weaken and further isolate the Muslim community due to it’s dual standards,” IMSD said.

Read the full statement and the list of signatories below.

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Progressive Muslims and leading members of Secular Civil Society condemn the dastardly attack on Salman Rushdie!

The IMSD condemns the murderous attack on Salman Rushdie in the strongest possible terms. There cannot be any doubt that the assault on the world-renowned writer is due to the Iranian fatwa in 1989 which pronounced that Rushdie should be killed for blaspheming against the prophet of Islam. Despite the apology tendered by Rushdie for ‘hurting the sentiments of Muslims’, the fatwa against him remained in force; the bounty on his head was doubled. In Islamic theology, an apostate can be forgiven if he apologizes but the blasphemer against the prophet is not to be given any such quarter; he has to be summarily executed. That a young Muslim man, Hadi Madar, who was not even born when Satanic Verses was published, willed to execute the fatwa, only goes on to prove the extraordinary sway of such a theology.

Any such attack is designed to create a regime of fear. Translators of Satanic Verses were killed, discussions on the book were violently repressed and bookstores were forced to take the novel off their shelves. The regime of fear made sure that very few stood with Salman Rushdie, except for those Islamophobes who delighted in telling the world that this thuggery was ‘real Islam’. Thirty-three years later, we hear the same loud silence from Muslim countries and organizations. None of the prominent Indian Muslim organizations have condemned this barbarous attack on a prominent writer. It is this silence that emboldens the Islamophobes to paint the religion as a creed of violence and terror.

The recent murder of Kanhaiya Lal for another case of Blasphemy by two Muslim fanatics, is another case in point of the intolerance within sections of the Indian Muslim community. Though all major Muslim organizations condemned the murder, but did do so under the pretext of a hate-crime, but refused to acknowledge the fact that it was a murder for blasphemy. Such is the blatant hypocrisy, which only serves to weaken and further isolate the Muslim community due to it’s dual standards.

It is rather rich on the part of Muslim organizations that they only remember human rights when they are being attacked but do not extend the same rights and dignity to others, Muslims or not, who differ from them on matters of religion. This is plain hypocrisy which does not help the Muslim cause. Being a minority, Indian Muslims should be championing a rights-based discourse on the importance of free speech and dissent. It is unfortunate that despite living in a political democracy for 75 years, Muslim organizations today are demanding a national blasphemy law. Muslims do not need the Hindu right wing to argue that Islam and human rights are incompatible; they themselves have been advertising this position for long.

Satanic Verses was one of the first novels to inquire into the nature of Muslim immigration into Europe. And yet the irony is that Muslims burnt it to proclaim a politics of distinction and separateness. The IMSD firmly states that without free speech, freedom to read, write and dissent, we cannot uphold the freedoms enshrined in our constitution. And we believe that only by investing in these freedoms can we uphold the values of our republic. In this hour of grave crisis, we stand firmly with Salman Rushdie and wish him speedy recovery. We once again appeal to all Muslim organizations to rethink their position on blasphemy; a form of politics which is doing Muslims more harm than good.

For further information contact:
Javed Anand, National Convener:
+919870402556

Feroze Mithiborwala, National Co-Convener: +919029277751

Arshad Alam, National Committee:
+919968200945

Endorsed by:
1. Prof. Ram Puniyani, Author, Mumbai

2. Medha Patkar, NAPM, Mumbai

3. Sultan Shahin, Editor, New Age Islam, Delhi

4. Prof. Zeenat Shaukat Ali, Islamic Scholar, IMSD, Mumbai

5. Yogendra Yadav, Swaraj Abhiyaan, Delhi

6. Anand Patwardhan, Documentary Filmmaker

7. Dr. Sunilam, Farmer’s Leader, Indore

8. Prof. Shamshul Islam, Delhi

9. Zakia Soman, BMMA, Ahmedabad

10. Irfan Engineer, CSSS, Mumbai

11. Anjum Rajabali, IMSD, Film Scriptwriter, Mumbai

12. Sandeep Pandey, Magsaysay Award, Lucknow

13. Justice Kolse Patil (Retd), Pune

14. Ghulam Rasool Delhvi, Classical Islamic Scholar, IMSD, Delhi

15. Adv. A J Jawwad, IMSD, Chennai

16. Amir Rizvi, Designer, IMSD, Mumbai

17. Faisal Khan, Khudai Khidmatgar, Delhi

18. Bilal Khan, IMSD, Mumbai

19. Shabana Dean, IMSD, Mumbai

20. Ali Bhojani, IMSD, Mumbai

21. Sheeba Aslam Ferhi, Researcher, Delhi

22. Aziz Lokhandwala, IMSD, Mumbai

23. Salim Sabuwala, IMSD, Mumbai

24. Saleem Yusuf, IMSD, Mumbai

25. Askari Zaidi, IMSD, Mumbai

26. Masooma Ranalvi, IMSD, Mumbai

27. Muniza Khan, IMSD, Mumbai

28. Hasina Khan, Bebaak Collective, Mumbai

29. Taizoon Khorakiwala, IMSD, Mumbai

30. Akbar Sheikh, IMSD, Sangli

31. Muhammad Imran, USA

32. Sadique Basha, IMSD, Mumbai

33. Mansoor Sardar, Bhiwandi

34. Nuruddin Naik, IMSD, Mumbai

35. Kasim Saif, Chennai

36. Prof. Qamarjahan

37. Lata P. M., Researcher, Bahujan Feminist, Mumbai

38. Prof. Rooprekha Verma, Lucknow

39. Prof. Rakesh Rafique, Moradabad

40. Prof. Rajiv, Lucknow

41. Jagriti Rahi, Gandhian, Varanasi

42. Prof. Ajit Jha, Swaraj Abhiyan, Delhi

43. Geeta Sheshu, Journalist, Free Speech Collective, Mumbai

44. Thomas Matthew, Delhi

45. Adv. Arun Maji, Dalit Human Rights Defender, Kolkatta

46. Shekhar Sonalkar, Writer, Sholapur

47. Adv. Lara Jesani, IMSD, Mumbai

48. Putul, Sarvodaya, Varanasi

49. Varsha Vidya Vilas, Social Activist, Mumbai

50. Guddi S L, Social Activist, Mumbai

51. Jyoti Badekar, Social Activist, Mumbai

52. Ravi Bhilane, Ex-Editor, Journalist, Mumbai

53. Vishal Hiwale, Save Constitution Movement, Mumbai

54. Prof. Om Damani, Mumbai

55. Prof. Vasantha Raman

56. Prof. Dipak Malik

57. Prof. Cyrus Gonda

58. Yashodhan Paranjpe, IMSD, Mumbai

59. Shalini Dhawan, Designer, Mumbai

60. Neelima Sharma

NIA Arrests 19-Year-Old Man in Kanhaiya Lal Murder, Taking Total to Eight

Mohammad Javed, a resident of Sindhi Sarkar Ki Haweli, Kheradiwala, was the eighth accused arrested in connection with the gruesome killing of Kanhaiya Lal.

New Delhi: A 19-year-old man, who allegedly played an “important role” in the conspiracy to kill a tailor in Rajasthan’s Udaipur last month, has been arrested from the state, a National Investigation Agency (NIA) official said on Friday.

Mohammad Javed, a resident of Sindhi Sarkar Ki Haweli, Kheradiwala, was the eighth accused arrested in connection with the gruesome killing of Kanhaiya Lal by two assailants armed with sharp-edged weapons at his shop in Udaipur’s Maldas street, a spokesperson of the NIA said.

“Mohammad Javed, who was arrested on Thursday, played an important role in the conspiracy to kill Lal by conducting reconnaissance and passing on the information about the victim’s presence at the shop to the main killer, Riyaz, prior to the attack,” he said.

Lal was killed with a cleaver inside his tailoring shop on June 28 and the NIA took over the case the next day. Earlier, seven accused, including the main culprits, were arrested during separate raids on June 29, July 1, July 4 and July 9.

The gruesome attack by Riaz Akhtari on the tailor was recorded on a mobile phone by Ghouse Mohammad and the video was posted online.

In another video, the duo said they hacked Lal to death to avenge an alleged insult to Islam. Both were arrested within hours of the killing.

(PTI)

MP: In Right-Wing Protests Against Udaipur Murder, Calls for Violence Against Muslims

A case has been registered against four members of a right-wing group in Sagar for threatening the Muslim community.

Bhopal: In the days after Kanhaiya Lal was brutally killed in Udaipur, provocative slogans and threats of violence were issued at protest marches held by various right-wing groups between June 29 and July 1.

Lal, a tailor, was hacked to death in his shop on June 28. The prime accused in his killing are Riyaz Attari and Ghouse Mohammad. The duo claimed responsibility for the killing in an online video saying the tailor was killed to “avenge” Prophet Muhammad. Lal had made a social media post in support of suspended BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma, who had made controversial remarks against the Islamic religious figure. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has taken over the probe into the case.

Close to 100 protests and rallies were held in Madhya Pradesh after the central committee of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) issued an advisory asking its members to hold state-wide protests against the Udaipur killing on June 29 and 30. The units were also asked to send memorandums to the President of India, said Kundan Chandrakar, the VHP’s prachar pramukh (publicity in-charge) for the Malwa region.

In the two-page memorandum, the VHP blamed the Congress-led government in Rajasthan for Lal’s killing and demanded Rs 5 crore ex-gratia to his family, an investigation by the Central Bureau of Investigation and sacking of the Rajasthan government to impose President’s rule.

Members of the VHP and the Bajrang Dal with the support of local right-wing outfits jointly held protests across the state. They burnt effigies of ‘terrorists’ – which were simply a figure dressed in green cloth with a skull cap – or Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot.

Rajesh Tiwari, the VHP’s Madhya Pradesh legal head, said, “We held protests across the state, burnt effigies of either Ashok Gehlot or terrorists and handed over memorandums to the district officials demanding stern action against both the accused.”

Tiwari emphasised that these protests were peaceful and were organised only to condemn the killing. Nonetheless, the videos of the various protests led by the VHP and Bajrang Dal run contrary to Tiwari’s claim. 

Additionally, the rallies were held when many districts have imposed Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the model code of conduct is in place because of the ongoing civic body polls.

Hate speech at protests

The Sagar district of the Mahakaushal region witnessed a protest led by the VHP and Bajrang Dal on June 29 at the district collector’s office with slogans like “Jab k***e kate jayenge, tab Ram Ram chillayenge [When (a slur for Muslims) are killed, they will shout Ram Ram).”

In one of the videos of the protest, Kapil Swami of the Vishwa Hindu Mahasabha can be heard saying, “If half of the Hindus (40 crore) took to the streets, then this country would be declared a Hindu Rashtra that day.” 

He also said, “Hindus of Sagar are not that weak that they can’t avenge the death of a Hindu. There would not be any protests or memorandums if any incident [in which Muslims are accused] takes place in Sagar. The entire community will pay the price for the crime.”

Swami made similar provocative slogans on October 24 last year at Sagar’s Teen Batti square.

In a written complaint, locals accused him and others of raising provocative slogans against the Muslim community in a bid to disrupt the peace and hurt their sentiments. “They not only raised slogans but also posted it on social media. Their recent social media posts are full of hatred for the community,” the complaint to the Kotwali Police station says.

Even after this, no action was taken against the men.

As the video of the protest went viral, the Sagar police lodged an FIR against four named and “others” under sections 188 (disobedience to order promulgated by public servant) and 295 A (deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) at the Gopalganj police station.

Confirming it, Gopalganj town inspector Kamal Singh said, “Police have filed a suo motu FIR against four named people on the basis of videos of the protest in which they were threatening a particular community and held a rally without permission while Section 144 is in place.”

The investigation is underway and the accused are absconding, he added.

Similarly in the Khandwa district, where VHP members held a protest on Tuesday afternoon near Ghanta Ghar, raised slogans such like “Jihadiyo ke kabar khudenge Khandwa ki dharti par (The graves of jihadis will be dug in the land of Khandwa).”

In Indore, Rajesh Bijve of the Bajrang Dal allegedly provoked people during a protest held at Malwa Mill Square on June 30. Speaking to the media, he threatened to “repeat 2002” – a reference to the anti-Muslim violence in Gujarat – to “teach” the minority community a lesson. “Whatever Nupur Sharma said is right and we Bajrang Dal stand for it. It’s time for Hindus to hit the streets and take our revenge,” he said.

While in the tribal-majority Mandla district, Awdesh Pratap of the VHP also made similar provocative statements.

Speaking to reporters, he said, “VHP and Bajrang Dal will not burn effigies anymore but take revenge for incidents like the Udaipur killing by beheading them. Today’s Hindus cannot be suppressed and will take revenge in their own way.”

Similar slogans and threats were allegedly issued in Rajgarh and other districts.

Rajesh Tiwari, the legal head of VHP Madhya Pradesh, told The Wire that he is neither aware of any provocative slogans or calls to violence nor is he aware of the FIR lodged against four right-wing men in Sagar.

Congress spokesperson K.K. Mishra told The Wire that people are entitled to hold protests with the permission of the district administration and have the right to condemn the killing of Kanhaiya Lal. “The Congress party too condemns it and the Rajasthan government is taking all necessary steps to punish the offenders. But giving hateful speeches and threatening a community in the garb of protest can’t be justified. District authorities must take action against such people,” he said.

He also suggested that among the BJP-ruled states, the protests have been most intense in Madhya Pradesh because the state is in election season. “Panchayat polls are underway in Madhya Pradesh and the state is going for assembly polls next year. The protests were held to polarise voters,” he said.

Despite repeated attempts, the additional director general (law and order) of Madhya Pradesh police, Sajid Farid Shapoo was not available for comment.

Hours after the news of Kanhaiya’s killing, Madhya Pradesh home minister Narottam Mishra released a video on Twitter saying, “I saw the video, it is gruesome. I have asked the director-general of police to keep an eye out but there is no issue in Madhya Pradesh. The state is peaceful.” 

Mishra then went on to accuse the Congress government in Rajasthan of allowing the state to be “Talibanised”. “The morale of terrorist are high,” said Mishra.

Kashif Kakvi is a journalist with Newsclick.

UP Police Take Anchor Rohit Ranjan in Custody After Chhattisgarh Police Arrive to Arrest Him

The police action is in response to FIRs registered over a ‘misleading’ video featuring Rahul Gandhi that Ranjan’s channel had aired and apologised for.

New Delhi: Television anchor Rohit Ranjan was detained by Uttar Pradesh Police on July 5, Tuesday, hours after Chhattisgarh Police arrived at his house in Uttar Pradesh to arrest him over an allegedly misleading video featuring Rahul Gandhi that Ranjan’s channel had aired and apologised for.

Videos circulating on social media showed arguments and fist fights as Chhattisgarh police attempted to take Ranjan into custody.

NDTV has reported that Chhattisgarh Police arrived at Ranjan’s house at 5.30 am. Ranjan tweeted tagging Uttar Pradesh Police officials and chief minister Adityanath, alleging that local police had not been informed.

To this, Chhattisgarh police replied that it was not required to inform local police, and asked Ranjan to cooperate.

However, Ghaziabad Police is understood to have arrived at his house and taken him into custody, thus preventing his arrest by Chhattisgarh Police.

 

A case was registered against Ranjan and others of the Zee News on Sunday, July 3, for allegedly promoting enmity between different groups and outraging religious feelings of people based on the complaint of Congress MLA Devendra Yadav, Raipur Senior Superintendent of Police Prashant Agrawal told news agency PTI.

A team was constituted to investigate the case and it was sent to Ghaziabad to arrest the accused, he said.

“Complying with the due process of law, the Raipur police team reached the residence of the accused in Ghaziabad this morning for execution of the warrant issued by the competent court in the case. After taking the accused into custody, the team was completing the procedure of arrest. Meanwhile, the local police (Uttar Pradesh police) forcefully took the accused along with them and obstructed the procedure despite the Raipur police showing the warrant” Agrawal said.

Ranjan’s show had aired a statement of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on the SFI violence on his Wayanad office. The video allegedly made it seem like Gandhi amde a comment on the murder of tailor Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur.

The channel issued an apology, with Ranjan saying, “Yesterday, in our show DNA, Rahul Gandhi’s statement was taken in the wrong context by linking it to the Udaipur incident, it was a human error for which our team apologises.”

Among those who criticised the report was Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot.

“Gandhi had said that the children who did this (vandalised his office in Wayanad) they’ve acted in an irresponsible way. They are kids, forgive them. But the TV channel and the anchor ran that Rahul Gandhi was saying those who killed Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur were kids and should be forgiven,” Gehlot had said.

After Congress’ Push, FIRs Against BJP Leaders for Sharing Doctored Video of Rahul Gandhi

The Congress party has alleged that BJP has been trying deliberately – by falsely claiming that Rahul Gandhi is sympathising with the killers of the Udaipur tailor – to whip religious frenzy.

New Delhi: Amidst a political row over a doctored video circulated by Zee News that wrongly shows Congress leader Rahul Gandhi justifying the heinous killing of Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur, police in Chhattisgarh have registered a first information report (FIR) against the former information and broadcasting minister Rajyavardhan Rathore at the behest of Congress party, which said that it was intended to spread communal disharmony through the video. 

Congress spokespersons Pawan Khera and Supriya Shrinate told the press that the FIR was lodged against Rathore and other senior BJP leaders –  two MPs, Subrat Pathak and Bhola Singh, and Uttar Pradesh MLA Kamlesh Soni –  who have not yet removed the doctored video from their Twitter timelines. 

The video in question was aired during Zee News anchor Rohit Ranjan’s show which took Gandhi’s remarks that implied he had forgiven the students belonging to the Students’ Federation of India (SFI) who attacked his Wayanad office in Kerala and mischievously doctored it to say that the Congress leader sympathetically called Kanhaiya Lal’s killers as “children” and was willing to let them go off the hook.

Since then, Congress leaders have been hitting out at the BJP for “portraying” Gandhi and the Congress wrongfully and “spreading communal disharmony”. Following the backlash, Zee News removed the video and issued an apology.

“Yesterday, in our show DNA, Rahul Gandhi’s statement was taken in the wrong context by linking it to the Udaipur incident. It was a human error for which our team apologises,” the channel showed Ranjan as saying.  

However, the Congress party seems determined to pursue the matter in the courts, as the FIR against BJP leaders indicates. On July 2, Congress’ general secretary Jairam Ramesh wrote a letter to BJP president J.P.Nadda to protest against the doctored video, and take immediate action against the channel and those leaders who hosted the video on their Twitter timelines. 

Also read: News Anchor, BJP’s Rajyavardhan Rathore Booked Over ‘Doctored’ Rahul Gandhi Video

On Monday morning, Khera said that an FIR against Zee News had also been filed, as it was a “repeat offender”, and by the time it issued an apology, the “damage had already been done”. He also said that the party was taking action against the BJP leaders as no action had been initiated by the BJP against those leaders who shared the video on social media despite Ramesh raising the issue personally with him. 

Khera said that apart from the FIR in Chhattisgarh, complaints had been filed in Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and Delhi too.

Shrinate, who shared the dais with Khera, lashed out at the BJP leaders to say that “apart from the fall from grace, this is conspiracy”, pointing out that the BJP machinery continued to share the doctored video on WhatsApp and other messengers apps, even after some deleted it from their Twitter timelines. 

Khera said that Zee News and the BJP appeared to be working together as minutes after Rohit Ranjan had aired the doctored video on his show, the BJP’s social media cell began to amplify it by sharing it widely. 

If anybody thinks that our decency is our shackle, they are sadly mistaken. It is our ornament and we are free to take that ornament off and take legal action. Gone are the days we continued to be decent because we have been watching the BJP and its IT cell,” he said. 

Shrinate said that such circulation of a doctored video was being done with an intention to provoke religious frenzy and communal disharmony among Indian people. The Congress’s complaint alleged that Zee News conspired with former Union minister Rathore, Major Surendra Poonia (Retired) and others to whip up a religious frenzy.

“The anchor and the promoters of the TV channel were clearly aware that what Gandhi stated was for the youngsters in Wayanad and not the killers of Kanhaiya Lal,” the complaint noted. 

Rathore, on the other hand, has refused to apologise. In a tweet, he hit out at the Congress by alleging that the party is trying to divert public attention and investigation by making “baseless allegations”  against the BJP and the RSS. Rathore’s criticism appears to be an attack on the grand old party for releasing photographs on Saturday, July 2, to suggest that one of the alleged killers of Kanhaiya Lal had been a close associate of the local unit of BJP.

Watch | The Full Story Behind the Murder of the Udaipur Tailor

The murder of Kanhaiya Lal on June 28 has drawn national attention and its communal aspect is hard to miss.

It all started with a purported shivling believed to have been found on the premises of Gyanvapi mosque in Uttar Pradesh’s Varanasi on May 12. The issue since then has come to dominate discussions and debates on news outlets, particularly with television channels discussing it threadbare. It was in one such television debate, where tempers generally are high, that now-suspended Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokesperson Nupur Sharma made controversial remarks about Prophet Mohammad.

The remarks then soon snowballed into a huge controversy, resulting in nationwide protests by Muslims. The remarks also led to global condemnation. The murder of Kanhaiya Lal, a tailor in Rajasthan’s Udaipur, on June 28 was done by men who said on video that Lal’s purported support for Sharma’s comments was why he was targeted. The murder has drawn national attention and assumed significance because of this vicious communal angle.

News Anchor, BJP’s Rajyavardhan Rathore Booked Over ‘Doctored’ Rahul Gandhi Video

The complainant alleged that a channel aired a statement of Rahul Gandhi’s on violence on his Wayanad office, mischievously doctoring it to make it seem like it was a comment on the murder of Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur.

Jaipur: An FIR was registered on July 2 at night against a TV news anchor, BJP national spokesperson Rajyavardhan Rathore and others for allegedly spreading falsehood by doctoring Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s comment in Kerala to appear as if it was a remark on the Udaipur tailor’s murder.

The FIR was registered on a complaint lodged by local Congress leader Ram Singh at the Banpark police station under IPC sections 504 (intentional insult), 505 (criminal intimidation), 153A (promoting enmity between different groups on ground of religion, race, place of birth, etc.), 295A (deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs) and 120B (criminal conspiracy).

The development came hours after Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot criticised the channel for the same.

The complainant alleged that Zee News anchor Rohit Ranjan in his show aired a statement of Gandhi on the SFI violence on his Wayanad office and mischievously doctored it to make it seem like it was a comment on the heinous murder of Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur.

Also Read: Rahul Gandhi’s Wayanad Office Vandalised; 8 SFI Activists Held

He claimed that it was done by the media group in conspiracy with former Union minister Rathore, Major Surendra Poonia (retired) and Kamlesh Saini, who also shared the clip on Twitter to reap political advantage and trigger public sentiments.

“The anchor and the promoters of the TV channel were clearly aware that what Gandhi stated was for the youngsters in Wayanad and not the killers of Kanhaiya Lal,” the complainant said in the FIR.

The channel, however, has issued an apology, with Ranjan saying, “Yesterday, in our show DNA, Rahul Gandhi’s statement was taken in the wrong context by linking it to the Udaipur incident, it was a human error for which our team apologises.”

Earlier in the day, Chief Minister Gehlot criticised the channel for running the incorrect report.

“Gandhi had said that the children who did this (vandalised his office in Wayanad) they’ve acted in an irresponsible way. They are kids, forgive them. But the TV channel and the anchor ran that Rahul Gandhi was saying those who killed Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur were kids and should be forgiven,” Gehlot said.

Also Read: Udaipur: Two Arrested for Brutal Murder of Tailor Who Had Backed Nupur Sharma on Social Media

Gehlot was speaking at a meeting on the Eastern Rajasthan Canal Project with party MLAs and public representatives of 13 districts at his residence.

(PTI)

Udaipur Killing: Bajrang Dal, VHP Members Booked for Raising ‘Abusive’ Slogans at Gurugram Rally

The Gurugram Police, which took suo moto cognisance of the matter, said the protesters’ slogans amounted to ‘promoting enimity’.

New Delhi: Two days after members of Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) staged a protest in Gurugram demanding strict punishment for the accused in the murder of a tailor, Kanhaiya Lal, in Udaipur, Gurugram Police has booked the organisers of the rally for allegedly raising abusive slogans and promoting enmity between communities.

According to police, on Wednesday, June 29, at least 80 people had assembled at Gurugram’s Nehru Park around 5 pm and marched towards Sadar Bazar before dispersing at Harish Bakery chowk. The protesters had also burnt an effigy of ‘Islamic Jihad terrorism’, the Indian Express has reported.

In purported videos emerged of the rally, protesters are heard raising provocative slogans against the Muslim community near Jama Masjid. The protesters also shouted ‘desh ke gaddaron ko, goli maaro saalon ko (shoot the traitors)’. The rally did have police permission with condition that the protest will ensure the maintenance of law and order.

The first information report (FIR) lodged at the City Police Station was based on videos shared on social media after police had taken suo motu cognisance of the incident.

“The FIR was registered on the basis of videos shared on social media and some Youtube channels. We are verifying the facts, and action will be taken as per the law,” said Deepak Saharan, DCP (West).

According to the Gurugram Police’s official statement, the case was lodged under Sections 116, 153A (promotion enmity between different communities on ground of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language etc and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony), 295A (deliberate and malicious act intended to outrage religious feelings of any class, by insulting religious beliefs), 34 (common intention) and 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

Subhash Boken, spokesperson of the Gurugram Police told Indian Express, “During this rally/procession, slogans were raised by using abusive language against a particular community. Taking action in this regard, an FIR has been registered against organisers and others who had raised slogans in the rally.”

Kanhaiya Lal was killed on June 28 afternoon by two cleaver-wielding men, who posted a grisly video of the crime online claiming responsibility for the beheading.

(With PTI inputs)

Udaipur: 32 Police Officers Transferred Amid Criticism Surrounding Murder of Kanhaiya Lal

The police had come under heavy criticism following tailor Kanhiaya Lal’s murder on Tuesday for failing to act on his complaints of receiving death threats.

New Delhi: In the aftermath of the killing of tailor Kanhaiya Lal in Rajasthan’s Udaipur on Tuesday, June 28, 32 officers of the Indian Police Service (IPS) have been transferred.

A number of senior officers also feature in the list of transfers, including the inspector general of police (IGP) and the Udaipur superintendent of police (IPS), according to a report by NDTV.

Lal, 48, was killed by two individuals – Riaz Akhtari and Ghouse Mohammad – for sharing on Twitter the derogatory remarks against Prophet Mohammad made by suspended Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Nupur Sharma last month.

After Lal’s murder, the Udaipur police had come under heavy criticism for failing to pay heed to Lal’s reported allegations that he had been facing death threats after the post was shared from his handle. The police had even arrested Lal for the post, but had later released him.

Also read: ‘Barbaric’, ‘Gruesome’: English Editorials Unanimously Condemn Killing Of Tailor In Udaipur

Following the brutal killing, the two perpetrators had released a video in which they claimed that the act had been committed to “avenge an insult to islam”, an ostensible reference to Sharma’s remarks being shared by Lal.

In the video, the two accused were also seen threatening Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Subsequently, one of the two accused was found by the Rajasthan police to have had links with the Pakistan-based Dawat-e-Islami organisation. The police also said that the accused had visited Karachi in 2014.

“One of the accused, Ghouse Mohammad, has links with the Karachi-based Islamist organisation Dawat-e-Islami. He had visited Karachi in 2014. So far, we have detained five people, including the two prime accused,” Rajasthan director general of police (DGP) M.L. Lather had said.

The case how been transferred to the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and will be investigated in conjunction with the Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) of the Rajasthan Police.

On Thursday, June 30, the two accused were produced before a local court and sent to 14-day judicial custody. A total of five others have been detained in the case so far.

In the aftermath of the incident, Lather said that an assistant sub-inspector had been suspended for failing to take appropriate action in the case. Now, amid the heavy criticism being levied against the state police, 32 more officers have been transferred.

Protests were seen in Udaipur in the days that followed the killing, in light of which heavy police presence has been deployed in the region and curfews have been imposed.

‘Barbaric’, ‘Gruesome’: English Editorials Unanimously Condemn Killing of Tailor in Udaipur

‘It is incumbent on religious leaders to emphatically denounce violence in the name of religion and God; and, for the sake of peace and harmony, political leaders must desist from making provocative, divisive statements and prodding their followers towards violence.’

New Delhi: The brutal killing of tailor Kanhaiya Lal in Rajasthan’s Udaipur on Tuesday, June 28, sent shockwaves across the country, drawing unanimous condemnation from all corners.

It was revealed that the perpetrators’ intention behind the murder was to exact revenge on Lal for sharing suspended Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Nupur Sharma’s derogatory remarks on the Prophet. In a video the perpetrators recorded after the murder, they also issued a threat to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Later, it even came to light that the Rajasthan police had arrested Lal for his tweet – which he claimed was an accident – and were aware of threats to his life being made in response.

Editorials in leading English newspapers and outlets, while universally condemning the gruesome act, chose to focus of a number of aspects and implications of the incident – the rising communal tensions in the country; the Rajasthan police’s failure to act preemptively; and even the potential role of the Islamic community at large.

Also read: Udaipur Killing: One Prime Accused Has Links to Pakistan-Based Islamic Group, Say Police

Blaring red: On the Udaipur killing

The editorial published in the Hindu locates Kanhaiya Lal’s killing within the “communal volcano” engulfing the country today. The actions of the accused – found by the Rajasthan police to have links to the Pakistan-based Dawat-e-Islami organisation – have been highlighted by the newspaper as being likely to make the remainder of the vulnerable Muslim population of the country all the more vulnerable.

As such, it called for “quick” and “exemplary” action to be taken against the perpetrators, while giving credit to the Rajasthan police for its promptness in arresting them.

It also regards the action coming from Muslims – disenfranchised and persecuted in other parts of the country – as the boiling over of a communal conflict with more violence from both sides likely to follow.

Placing the blame for India’s communal atmosphere squarely on political parties and “pathetically irresponsible television anchors”, the Hindu article portends that this killing – brutal, premeditated, and caught on tape as it was – will mark communal tensions reaching a fever pitch.

The editorial also notes that the incident should act as a “chilling tale of caution” to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which has been stoking communal fires across the country, failing to act on the numerous instances of Hindutva violence perpetrated in the country.

As such, it ends with a plea to the BJP to tone down its communal rhetoric to stop the country from falling into a “cauldron of endemic violence”.

Murder in Udaipur

The Tribune, in its editorial, notes that Kanhaiya Lal’s killers deserve the most “unequivocal, strongest possible condemnation” for their gruesome actions. Yet, it calls for the murder to be met with a “responsible, restrained” response from the country’s religious and political leadership.

“It is incumbent on religious leaders to emphatically denounce violence in the name of religion and God; and, for the sake of peace and harmony, political leaders must desist from making provocative, divisive statements and prodding their followers towards violence.” 

The editorial concludes with an impassioned plea to the people of the country to stop giving precedence to ideology over human life. 

Also read: ‘Muslims of India Won’t Allow Talibanisation’: Religious Leaders, Politicians Condemn Udaipur Killing

“The sanctity of human life is paramount,” it reads, noting that in a modern democracy, even the most “loathsome” ideas can find expression as long as they are directed at ideological or belief systems and not trained on human beings. 

Act against the barbaric killing

The incident is described as one that “strikes at the heart of a multi-cultural, pluralist society and underlines an intolerant, orthodox impulse that must be stamped out legally, socially and culturally” in the Hindustan Times editorial.

It goes on to lambast the “indefensible” act, emphasising that no comment – referring to Nupur Sharma’s comments on the prophet which reportedly prompted the killing – can be used to justify violence and that no possible explanation can justify the brutal crime. 

“The two suspects must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law to send a message that such acts of medieval brutality cannot be tolerated in any modern society.”

The newspaper called for all leaders – local, religious, political – to come together to ensure that fanaticism of this sort is not allowed to spread to the minds of other citizens.

Moreover, while commending the police’s prompt action, the editorial questioned its failure to act preemptively despite reportedly having known of the threats beforehand.

Highlighting this moment in time as a pivotal one in India’s journey as a nation, the Hindustan Times article calls on all actors to come together and stamp out dogma and a blind allegiance to faith and calls for respect and dignity to be afforded to every religious group in the country.

Act of terrorism: Horrific Udaipur incident must lead to thorough investigation to see if there’s a bigger pattern 

Unlike the other editorials on this list, the Times of India’s chose not to focus inward, on the increasingly volatile communal atmosphere in the country, but rather, on how the killing potentially ties into a pattern of potential forthcoming violence.

Describing the murder as a plain “act of terrorism” and likening the video shared by the perpetrators to the methods of the Islamic State, the Times of India, in its editorial called for a “mutli-level, mutli-agency” response to investigate the act.

As such, it extended its full support to the Union government’s directions to the National Investigative Agency (NIA) to probe the matter for and the accused for links to overseas actors.

“A thorough investigation by NIA into Lal’s murder, with the state government cooperating, and quick, definitive results are the best first responses to the act of terrorism. Interminable delays do great harm to the cause of fighting terror, especially when social situations are volatile.”

The Times’s editorial also joins those of the Hindustan Times and the Hindu in pulling up the Rajasthan police for its failure to take preemptive action to prevent the heinous crime. 

“…this horrifying incident shows the cost of states’ reluctance to implement even most basic police reforms. In state after state, and in incident after incident, local police forces have been found wanting even when clear indications of threats have been available.”

Barbarians on the loose

The Free Press Journal editorial, equally vehement in its condemnation of the incident, chose to direct its focus on the comments against the Prophet made by Nupur Sharma, noting that the communal row sparked off by her comments within and beyond India could have been mitigated if some Islamic scholar was brought to comment on them.

It goes on to warn readers against radical sections within the Islamic community which the news outlet fears will see Kanhaiya Lal’s murder as a heroic act by two of the faith’s self-styled defenders.

Further, it suggests that the “one-sided” way in which Sharma’s remarks and the ensuing controversy played out could have pushed the perpetrators to “pursue jihad” for the supposed rewards.

“As Arif Mohammad Khan, the Kerala Governor and a rare voice of sanity in a community held in thrall by the mullahs and the maulvis, said, unless the thousands of madrassas are made to modernise their teachings, there can be no stopping germinating “martyrs” like Riyaz and Ghouse in the factories of zealots. If we are not to become another Pakistan, we need to ensure that our children are taught a modern, 21st century education.”

It also contends that the “Sangh parivar mostly draws its sustenance from the narrowness of the Indian Muslim”.

Also read: The Sangh’s Dream of a ‘Hindu Rashtra’ is Not Even Shared By Most Hindus

The through line in the editorial seemed to be that Nupur Sharma’s remarks against the Prophet had some truth to them in the Islamic oral tradition and that the apparent failure to acknowledge that in the media is what, eventually, led to the incident at hand. 

Targeting an imagined audience of “secular-liberals”, the editorial alleges duplicity on their part for coming out in support of Mohammad Zubair – co-founder of Alt News who was recently arrested for tweeting a frame from an old Bollywood film – but remaining silent on Kanhaiya Lal being arrested for sharing Nupur Sharma’s remarks.