Arab News

Indian anti-hate group ‘victim of hate’ after leaders arrested

Several members detained on charges of inciting deadly religious riots in Delhi

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

A prominent group establishe­d three years ago to fight incidents of hate and prejudice against the Muslim minority community in India said on Monday that it is “gasping for breath” after officials detained some of its founding members under the country’s draconian terror law.

The authoritie­s have accused the United Against Hate (UAH) group of inciting religious riots in New Delhi in February this year.

“The platform which has been fighting against religious and communal hate in society has become a victim of hate itself,” Nadeem Khan, 35, one of the founding members of UAH, told Arab News.

“With the detention of some of our founding members and the questionin­g of a large number of youths, there is a strong sense of fear among people who are part of such a platform,” he said.

Founded in 2017, when

incidents of alleged hate crimes against Muslims – on the pretext of selling or consuming beef – were on the rise, the UAH was one of the few nonpolitic­al groups which played a significan­t role in mobilizing the masses against the controvers­ial Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) which became law in December last year.

While the CAA guarantees citizenshi­p for minority Hindu, Sikh, Jain, Parsi, and Buddhist communitie­s from neighborin­g Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanista­n, it excludes Muslims.

The CAA is part of the proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC), an exercise aimed at identifyin­g “genuine citizens” of India. However, many Indians, and not only Muslims, feel that the CAA is discrimina­tory as any non-Muslim who does not find a mention in the NRC can seek recourse under the citizenshi­p law.

Muslims, on the other hand, would become stateless.

“People, mostly Muslims, across India came on the streets against the CAA, and the UAH was just an agency for creating awareness. But the Indian government did not like the political mobilizati­on of Muslim masses,” Khan said.

Protests against the CAA, which began in late December, surged for months, resulting in the leaders of the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) launching a countercam­paign.

The heightened communal tensions led to religious violence in the Indian capital toward the end of February, in which more than 50 people, mostly Muslims, died. “It was a peaceful and democratic protest against the discrimina­tory policy of the government. This was our right to protest. But the government is now calling our protest sedition and arrested some of our founding members,” said Khan, who has been questioned by Delhi police in connection with the February riots after being named in the charge sheet.

Other UAH members who felt “the need to respond to such hate crimes through a social platform” include 28-year-old Umar Khalid and 36-year-old Khalid Saifi.

They have since been arrested. “What was the crime of my husband? When has serving people and fighting for unity and secularism of the country become a crime in this nation?” said Khalid Saifi’s wife, Nargis.

Saifi was detained in February for “inciting religious violence” in New Delhi while Khalid was arrested on September 16 and faces multiple charges.

“This is nothing but an attempt to break the spirit of the people, particular­ly Muslims, and tell the community that they can live in India like ordinary citizens without raising their political voice,” said Nargis, a mother of three.

 ?? AFP ?? Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) activists wave an Indian national flag and shout pro-Indian slogans during a demonstrat­ion in Srinagar on Monday.
AFP Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) activists wave an Indian national flag and shout pro-Indian slogans during a demonstrat­ion in Srinagar on Monday.

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