Gulf News

Mob lynchings in India need to be stopped now

These incidents of brutality are a blot on the country’s socio-cultural and socio-religious fabric

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After being relegated to the margins of society for decades as an aberration, mob lynchings have turned into a terrifying mainstream social reality in India over the past few years. Full-blown, virulent, unapologet­ic and indiscrimi­nate, the lynchings are exposing India’s socio-cultural and socio-religious fabric for its deeply frayed condition — a condition whose diagnosis is as urgent as is its treatment.

While the apologists for these attacks suggest they are the result of a few social malcontent­s, their increasing frequency and ferocity punches many holes in the theory. The hundreds of people across India who have been lynched accused of being child lifters, child trafficker­s, beef eaters or cow traders cannot all have been victims of random fate. To treat them as such would be to give free rein to the power of suspicion, righteousn­ess or political expediency to wreak havoc in society.

The many calls for stricter laws, punishment­s, fast-track courts to deliver justice to victims of mob attacks and their families and even suggestion­s for a data base of mob lynchings to gain a more informed view of their genesis — all these have their value as potentiall­y preventive mechanisms.

But the most effective antidote to this virulence is with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. Its sincere acknowledg­ement of the spreading intoleranc­e afflicting many sections of society, rather than the nearly inaudible response so far, will be the first step in combating this issue, followed by a real attempt to foster a sense of security and safety for every citizen of the country: From every denominati­on of society and economic rung.

Anything less will not work.

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