Millennium Post

Those involved in lynchings cannot call themselves nationalis­ts: Vice President

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NEW DELHI: Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu has said those involved in incidents of hate and lynching cannot call themselves nationalis­ts while holding that legislatio­n alone was not enough as a change in societal behaviour was required to prevent such cases.

The vice president also expressed anguish over the politicisa­tion of incidents of lynching, saying such cases should not be linked with political parties.

“Societal change (is needed). This (lynching) is not because of this party or that party. The moment you attribute it to these parties, the cause is lost. That is what is happening, let me be very frank,” he said.

Asked about the incidents of hate and lynching, he said it was not a new trend, and there were such instances in the past also.

“It is the social behaviour that has to change... when you kill the other man, how can you call yourself nationalis­t. By religion, by caste or by colour, or by gender, you discrimina­te. Nationalis­m, Bharat Mata Ki Jai has a wider meaning,” Naidu said.

He said “some of these things” cannot be tackled through legislatio­n alone, and a societal change was needed to check them.

The government has been under attack from the Indian National Congress and several other opposition parties for a spate of lynchings in various parts of the country in the last couple of years.

According to Home Ministry data, around 40 people were lynched in nine states in the past one year.

The opposition and various civil rights groups have also accused the government of not coming down hard on those involved in the incidents.

On July 17, the Supreme Court said that “horrendous acts of mobocracy” cannot be allowed to overrun the law of the land and issued a slew of guidelines to deal with mob lynching and cow vigilantis­m. It also asked the Centre to consider enacting new legislatio­n to deal with such incidents sternly

A panel appointed by the government to examine ways to contain such incidents is believed to have recommende­d framing new legislatio­n.

“When the Nirbhaya issue came, there was a clamour for Nirbhaya act. Nirbhaya act has come, did they stop. I am not getting into politics, the political parties they have their way of highlighti­ng it. I (had) said, what is required is not a mere bill, political will, administra­tive skill, and then go for the kill of the social evil. I had said in Parliament,” said Naidu.

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