The Borneo Post

Leader of India’s biggest state boosts Hindu right agenda

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BISHARA, India: When India's prime minister named a hardline Hindu known for his anti-Muslim speeches to head its largest state Uttar Pradesh this month, many saw it as a sign his party's huge election win had emboldened him to pursue a more radical agenda.

But in the village of Bishara in Uttar Pradesh, where a Muslim man was lynched by his Hindu neighbours in 2015 triggering a national outcry, residents celebrated into the night by letting off fireworks and dousing each other with festive coloured powder.

It was a sign of the popularity of Yogi Adityanath, a 44-year- old firebrand Hindu priest known for his inflammato­ry rhetoric against Muslims, who make up nearly 20 per cent of the northern state's population.

“He is like a god to us,” said Kiran Rana, the mother of one of the 14 men arrested over the killing of 50-year- old Mohammad Akhlaq on suspicion of killing a cow — considered by Hindus to be sacred — for its meat.

“He will get them (our children) out.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP) appointed Adityanath after winning a landslide election victory in Uttar Pradesh, home to 220 million people and seen as a bellwether of national politics.

Modi has frequently sought to downplay his party's Hindu nationalis­t agenda since taking power in 2014 in India, a Hindumajor­ity but officially secular country with a significan­t Muslim minority. But the appointmen­t of a Hindu hardliner to head its most populous state has raised fears it will implement its ideology of ‘ Hindutva' more aggressive­ly in the future.

Hindutva, which roughly translates as ‘ Hinduness', aims to create a Hindu homeland free from ‘ foreign' communitie­s such as Muslims and Christians, whom adherents perceive as a legacy of successive invasions since the eighth century.

Manini Chatterjee, national affairs editor at The Telegraph newspaper, described it as ‘a kind of a declaratio­n of war against the secular state'.

“It is saying ‘we are unapologet­ic about who we are',” she said.

“Their reading of the UP verdict is that UP and India in general is ready for this aggressive Hindutva.”

Bishara is only around 30 kilometres from central New Delhi, but it only has electricit­y from seven in the evening to the next morning.

Potholes cover the village's main road, and jobs are in short supply.

Asked what she hopes to get from the priest-turned-politician, who shaves his head and often drapes himself in a saffroncol­oured robe, Rana said simply, ‘developmen­t'.

Her brother-in-law, Rajiv Rana, thought his priority should be to ensure that cows are protected.

“The cow is our mother. When we prepare food, the first bite goes to our cow. If we have to choose between the cow and developmen­t we will choose the cow,” he said.

Hindus in Bishara told AFP previous state government­s had favoured Muslims for electoral reasons — a perception widely used by the BJP in its election campaign for UP.

They insisted relations between the two communitie­s remained good. — AFP

 ??  ?? File picture shows Adityanath gesturing to supporters as he is presented with a floral bouquet during a ceremony in Lucknow. — AFP photo
File picture shows Adityanath gesturing to supporters as he is presented with a floral bouquet during a ceremony in Lucknow. — AFP photo

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