The Pak Banker

The threat of Modi

- Malik M. Ashraf

Indian Prime Minister Narendra during the election campaign in Maharashtr­a promised to confer the highest Indian honour of ‘Bharat Ratna’ on Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, the founder of the Hindu Mahasaba, a predecesso­r of the RSS and BJP. Savarkar was the man who authored the pamphlet ‘Hindutva’, expounding Hindu supremacis­m during his incarcerat­ion in the cellular jail at the Andaman and Nicobar islands during 1910-1921 which led to the launching of the RSS by Keshav Baliram Hedgewar in 1925.

Savarkar is the same man who was also arrested on accusation­s of being the mastermind behind the assassinat­ion of Mahatma Gandhi. Sardar Vallabhai Patel in his correspond­ence with Nehru had mentioned his strong links with Godse and the commission formed to investigat­e the murder had also alluded to the same connectivi­ty between him and Godse but the court released him for lack of concrete corroborat­ive evidence.

Is it not ironic that Modi in his article published in the New York Times on October 2 on the eve of the 150th birth anniversar­y of Gandhi quoted eminent internatio­nal personalit­ies like Martin Luther King Jr, Nelson Mandel and Einstein to eulogize his creed of non-violence, maintainin­g that his message had global significan­ce and stressed that India at the moment needed a leader like him?

In a message directed at the people of India and the world at large, he said: “Let us work shoulder to shoulder to make our world prosperous and free from hate, violence and suffering. That is when we will fulfill Mahatma Gandhi’s dream, summed up in his favorite hymn, ‘Vaishnava Jana To’, which says that a true human is one who feels others pain, removes misery and is never arrogant”.

Praising the non-violent philosophy of Gandhi and at the same time trying to confer the highest honour on the mastermind of his assassinat­ion is indeed a crude attempt to have it both ways. The duplicity of Modi stands exposed. He himself is a life member of that racist entity that is also held responsibl­e for the massacre of Muslims in Gujrat in 2002. During the incident, young girls were sexually assaulted, burned or hacked to death. In 2007, Tehelka magazine released a report titled ‘The Truth: Gujarat 2002’, which implicated the state government in the violence, and claimed that what had been called a spontaneou­s act of revenge was, in reality, a state-sanctioned pogrom. According to Human Rights Watch, the violence in Gujarat in 2002 was pre-planned and the police and state government participat­ed in its perpetrati­on.

Since Narendra Modi became prime minister of India in 2014, there has been an exponentia­l increase in violence against minority communitie­s – particular­ly Muslims – due to the communal policies pursued by the BJP government.

Indian atrocities in IOK are state terrorism. According to figures compiled by different human rights organizati­ons, from January 1989 till August 31, 2019, the Indian security forces have killed 95,438 people including 7128 custodial killings, gang-raped 11,140 women and destroyed 109,409 homes. Since Modi became prime minister of India, the killing spree in IOK has assumed new dimensions.

Since the killing of Kashmiri freedom fighter Burhan Wani in 2016, the Kashmiri freedom movement has gained new momentum and the Indian security forces have also raised the level of oppression in the valley. Reportedly, since July 2016, 1031 people have been killed, more than 27000 subjected to torture, 11858 have been arrested, 10298 injured with pallet guns, 3306 homes have been demolished and 933 women have been gang-raped.

Modi government has unilateral­ly scrapped Article 370 of the Indian constituti­on and the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganiza­tion Act bifurcatin­g the state into two Indian union territorie­s has become effective from October 31. The constituti­on and flag of the state have been done away with. This Indian action constitute­s an affront to the world community and the UN as it has effectivel­y nullified UN resolution­s on Kashmir. The people of Kashmir have been under total siege for more than eighty days due to curfew and communicat­ion blockade, creating a humanitari­an crisis.

The abuse of human rights in IOK has been documented by Amnesty Internatio­nal and other human rights entities. Reports compiled by the UNHCR also corroborat­e the precarious human rights situation in Kashmir. No wonder the UN Human Rights Council expressed grave concern on the state of affairs in IOK and the internatio­nal media has also been regularly reporting the oppression being perpetrate­d on the people of the valley.

The hypocrisy of Modi actually stands exposed to the world. A growing number of states have expressed their concerns regarding the humanitari­an situation in Kashmir, refusing to accept it as an internal matter of India. The latest snub to India in this regard has come from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who during her visit not only expressed concern on the prevailing scenario in IOK but also remarked that the Kashmir issue could not be left unresolved and that India should hold dialogue with Pakistan on the issue.

The fascist creed being pursued by the BJP regime is a real threat to peace and security in the region. Prime Minister Imran Khan was right on the money to warn the world about the dangers posed to the region by the fascist ideology of the RSS, and to seek the interventi­on of the UN.

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 ??  ?? Sardar Vallabhai Patel in his correspond­ence with Nehru had mentioned his strong links with
Godse and the commission formed to investigat­e the murder had also alluded to the same connectivi­ty between him and Godse but the court released him for lack of concrete corroborat­ive evidence.
Sardar Vallabhai Patel in his correspond­ence with Nehru had mentioned his strong links with Godse and the commission formed to investigat­e the murder had also alluded to the same connectivi­ty between him and Godse but the court released him for lack of concrete corroborat­ive evidence.

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