Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Anti-muslim rhetoric feeds anxiety, voting

- Faisal Malik and Surendra P Gangan faisal.malik@htlive.com

MUMBAI: Right wing Hindu outfits have been holding Hindu Jan Akrosh Morchas across Maharashtr­a for over a year, where provocativ­e speeches against Muslims have been a key component. Leaders of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) followed suit. On April 27, PM Narendra Modi reminded voters in Kolhapur that the Karnataka model is “extremely dangerous” as it puts the entire Muslim community in the OBC category, implying that if Congress is voted to power, it can implement the same in the country. “The Congress-led Karnataka government implemente­d this model overnight and robbed the entire 27% OBC quota by making Muslims its stakeholde­rs,” he alleged.

Three days later, while addressing a rally in Zaheerabad Lok Sabha constituen­cy, in Telangana, he said, “As long as Modi is alive, I will not let reservatio­ns of Dalits, Adivasis and OBCS to be given to Muslims on the basis of religion.” When Congress won a record number of MPS and MLAS in undivided Andhra Pradesh in 2004 and 2009, it gave away a slice of the reservatio­n quota of the backward classes to Muslims, he had claimed.

This was a recall of his speech at a rally in Rajasthan on April 21, when he had implied that Muslims were “infiltrato­rs”, and said if voted to power Congress could give the first rights on the country’s assets to Muslims.

Soon after the announceme­nt of the general elections, Congress’s retort that reservatio­n and democracy of the country are in danger as the BJP is looking to make a constituti­onal amendment, has rattled both the minority community and the backward classes.

The anti-muslim stance has made even fence-sitters within the community choosing sides. The main objective now is that the anti-bjp votes should not get divided. Unlike the last two general elections, where the successes of Samajwadi Party, Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi (VBA) and All India Majlis-e-ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) resulted in losses to Congress and the undivided NCP, the scenario is different now.

In Solapur where Muslims are in a sizable population, AIMIM could not field its candidate. The reason: local party leaders were under pressure from the community. Subsequent­ly, they threatened mass resignatio­ns if the party chose to take such a decision.

There are 17 million Muslims in Maharashtr­a, and Mumbai has roughly 1.8 million eligible voters. The community resides in dominant pockets such as Bhiwandi, Mira-bhayander, Mumbra, Malegaon, Dhule city, Amravati, Chhatrapat­i Sambhaji Nagar, Nandurbar, among others. The over-arching sentiment here is that Lok Sabha 2024’s course is different from the previous elections – today, they feel “isolated” and “threatened”.

Shabbir Ansari, president, All India Muslim OBC Organisati­on said, “The community feels targeted given the speeches made by top BJP leaders. In the last two polls, a section of Muslims held a positive sentiment towards BJP, but now, they have decided to support the opposition alliance en-bloc.” Ansari added that while the community voted for AIMIM and VBA in 2019, this time it was not in the mood to “waste its vote and will stand by the MVA”.

Ansari’s sentiment stems from his visit to 21 Lok Sabha constituen­cies, where except for Sangli in which its choice is independen­t Vishal Patil, the community is determined to vote against BJP.

“Most influentia­l voters in Hatkananga­le have decided to vote for Satyajit Patil Sarudkar (Shiv SENA-UBT candidate from the constituen­cy) this time,” said 25-year-old Mustafa Bagwan, who has just acquired a bachelor’s degree in technology and lives in Ichalkaran­ji city.

Sarfaraz Arzoo, editor of Urdu daily ‘Hindustan’, said the community will vote for the opposition, especially, Sena (UBT). “In 2014 and 2019, Muslims did vote for BJP and other parties like AIMIM and Samajwadi Party, but this time Thackeray has become their popular choice out of old belief ‘enemy’s enemy is my friend’.”

“Thackeray has been taking on BJP’S top leadership, including PM Modi, without any fear. He has also appealed to Muslims to try his friendship after having tried animosity,” he said.

A Congress leader from Mumbai said the turnout among Muslim voters has significan­tly improved in the first two phases. “They came out to vote in large numbers in Amravati, Akola, Parbhani and Nanded. While they are not in favour of any party, they want to vote out the ruling dispensati­on,” he said.

 ?? PTI ?? On April 27, PM Modi claimed that if Congress is voted to power, they would include Muslims within the OBC category.
PTI On April 27, PM Modi claimed that if Congress is voted to power, they would include Muslims within the OBC category.

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