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Nikki Yadav Murder Case: Initial plan was to portray the murder as road accident, prime accused Sahil tells Delhi police

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The Delhi police probing the murder of Nikki Yadav said that Sahil, the prime accused in the case, has confessed during interrogation on Monday, February 20, that his initial plan was to show the murder as a road accident. He further stated that he had planned to push Nikki out of the car in order to divert the murder charges.

During the questioning, Sahil also confessed that because his plan to portray Nikki Yadav’s death as a road accident could not be carried out, he killed Nikki at Nigambodh Ghat. Sahil’s police remand is also coming to an end today.

In another revelation, the Delhi Police said that the accused Sahil Gehlot’s father Virender has a criminal past. As per the police, he had been arrested in a murder case earlier.

On February 10 Sahil choked Nikki to death using a data cable in his car. Later, his family members hid her body in the freezer of their family restaurant. The case came to light on February 14 after he went to marry another woman.

On February 18, police arrested Sahil’s father, Virender, two cousins, Ashish and Naveen, and two close friends, Lokesh and Amar, in connection with the murder. Naveen, the son of Sahil’s maternal aunt, is a constable in the Delhi Police. Delhi Police arrested these accused after interrogating Sahil who was in 5-day police custody. 

Nikki’s death was planned so that Sahil could marry another girl

On February 19, Delhi Police confirmed that the five accused had ‘planned’ to get rid of her so that the principal perpetrator Sahil could get married to a woman of the family’s choice.

Earlier, it was assumed that Sahil had committed the crime during a fit of anger. Investigations started pointing in the direction of the idea that this was a ‘pre-planned’ conspiracy by his family after they were arrested.

Nikki and Sahil were thought to be a live-in couple. It was established through further investigation that the couple had been married since 2020. The police discovered their wedding certificate during the investigation. 

Gaurakshaks: How cow theft and cow vigilantism is more of law and order problem, not a communal one

Cow vigilantism has been painted as a “communal” issue where Gau Rakshaks (cow vigilantes) are depicted as rogue groups that attack “innocent” Muslims transporting cows to slaughter houses. The 2015 Dadri lynching case became one of the first most-talked-about case since Bharatiya Janata Party took charge at the centre in 2014.

It was claimed that Gau Rakshaks attacked a Muslim man named Mohammed Akhlaq and his son Danish after beef was found in their refrigerator. Akhlaq succumbed to injuries. Lynching is a crime and must be condemned. In a civil society, mob justice should not have any place. While reports claimed he was attacked for keeping beef in the refrigerator, he was accused of slaughtering a calf. The mob had attacked them after acting on a rumour that a calf in the neighbourhood had gone missing, and the same remains were found outside Akhlaq’s home.

While the family had claimed the meat in question was mutton, the final report on the same confirmed it was from a cow. Cattle smuggling is a criminal menace where smugglers, often working in tandem with butchers, steal cows, sometimes even stray cows, for slaughter. In India, most slaughterhouses are halal slaughterhouses, which means most butchers are Muslims; subsequently, cattle thieves also tend to be Muslims.

In short, it was not that Akhlaq was murdered because of his faith or his personal food preference which outraged the entire village the way the mainstream media painted it. He was murdered because villages in India generally have violent histories and contexts regarding cattle theft.

A crime was given a communal angle just to fit the ‘intolerance’ narrative. This is why, despite knowing deep in their hearts that Modi would return to power in 2019, the ‘liberals’ smouldered as the BJP crossed the majority mark.

The emotional shock when cattle are stolen by smugglers

Cattle are source of livelihood for millions in the rural India and are loved as their family members. Cows, especially, are also considered holy by Hindus and slaughtering them is a sin.

Speaking to OpIndia, Bittu Bajrangi of Gau Raksha Bajrang Force said, “The first impact on any person who loses his cow or bull is on the emotional state. It is equivalent to losing a family member. Imagine if someone kidnaps your sibling or parent, and later you find out that the sibling or parent has been killed. It is the same feeling. The emotional impact on the person is unbearable.”

It takes time for the family to understand the economic impact of the loss. The immediate reaction is always linked to the emotional value of the bond between cows, bulls and their owners.

The economic ramifications of cow theft

In rural India, animal husbandry is one of the primary occupations of people, along with agriculture. For millions of Indians, cow and buffalo breeding and selling products such as milk is their primary source of income. Cows, therefore, are not just holy for Hindus; for many, their livelihood depends on them. When someone steals a cow or a calf, it could lead to severe economic loss for the person.

Speaking to OpIndia, Dr Surendra Jain, Joint General Secretary, Vishwa Hindu Parishad, said, “Many farmers have small land pieces. It is not possible for them to use tractors in such fields. They often use bulls to plough the land. When these bulls are stolen, those cows that they have kept for personal consumption or to sell milk are stolen, directly impacting their income source. It breaks the backbone of the housing economy.”

The need for Gau Raksha groups

India has over 80 crore Hindus. The majority of Hindus worship cows, and in many states slaughtering a cow is a criminal offence. Despite strict laws, the Gau Raksha groups operate in almost every region to save cows. The question arises when there is a law, why Gau Raksha groups? There are several reasons behind it.

First of all, no matter how vigilant the police department is, they cannot be present at every nook and corner of their region to catch cow thieves. It is not just about the innocent cows and bulls roaming on the streets, as there have been countless reports where cows and bulls were stolen from farmers and from those who keep cows for personal milk consumption.

Bittu Bajrangi said, “There are many police officers helping save cows. However, some corrupt officials do not take action in such cases. This is one of the main reasons we must take matters into our hands.”

Furthermore, no matter how much the police department has changed and progressed, especially in developing communication with the public, people, in general, avoid interacting with police officials, let alone filing a complaint in cases of atrocities against cows and bulls. They feel much more comfortable informing Gau Raksha groups about the incidents.

VHP’s Dr Jain gave the example of Mewat in Haryana. He said, “There are villages in Mewat that are 100% Muslim. Some villages have as low as 10% of the Hindu population. Most of the cow smugglers of the area live there. Police think multiple times before raiding such locations. Even if they go, in many cases, they were severely attacked by the criminals.”

Cross border cattle smuggling and terrorism

Cattle smuggling is also one of the major crimes that takes place in border areas, especially near India-Bangladesh border. There have been reports where Bangladeshi cow smugglers have tied explosives to the neck of cows and thrown them in the river to discourage the BSF from intercepting. A lot of such smuggling and income generated from it goes towards terrorism on Indian soil.

However, things are improving at the border lately. Dr Jain said the Border Security Force (BSF) has curbed cow smuggling to a large extent. Praising the central government for swift action against international cow smugglers, he said, “The work that BSF has done is commendable. It is all about leadership. If the leadership is strong, the forces will not hesitate before taking strict action against the culprits.”

While the situation has improved at the international borders, the situation at the state level has a lot of scope for improvement. Due to the political pressure, the culprits manage to escape the law which needs a fix, and it can be achieved only when state-level and central agencies work together to curb smuggling and stop cow smugglers from stealing ‘Gau Dhan’ (cow wealth).

Hence, it is important to see cow vigilantism as a law and order issue and not a communal one. As said earlier, in India, most of the slaughterhouses are halal slaughterhouses and as per Islamic laws, only a practicing Muslim can be allowed to slaughter an animal as prescribed in their holy book for it to be ‘allowed’. Cow slaughter is also banned in various states of India. Since practicing Hindus who consider cow holy do not consume beef, the consumer of such illegal meat, are Muslims. For that, those who commit the crime of stealing cow for illegal slaughter, also tend to be mostly Muslims.

Owing to votebank politics and general police apathy, cow, cattle smuggling as a crime is often ignored but when vigilantes take law in their own hands to rescue the cows and cattle, they are made to be bigger criminals rather than the ones who committed the original sin of stealing a cow.

The elites of India writing commentaries from the comfort of their homes would not have same views if their puppy was stolen. They will cry hoarse to get dog meat banned. But somehow, cows are a free pass. Protesting against illegal cow slaughter becomes a ‘Hindutva agenda’ but protesting at India Gate against dog meat festival becomes activism. The barometers are different when it comes to cows because these are the same elites who would not think twice before throwing the ‘gau mutra’ jibe for Hindus, the way Islamist terrorists do.

India would not need Gau Rakshaks if people become empathetic towards cow stealing and smuggling and their illegal slaughter and call out the crime for what it is – instead of building false narratives for their international audience to play up the ‘Muslims under attack’ rhetoric.

Kamal Nath will lead Congress in the 2023 MP elections, says Digvijaya Singh. Read about his links with the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

Madhya Pradesh is gearing up for assembly elections, scheduled to take place later this year. On February 19, a senior Congressman and a member of Rajya Sabha, Digvijaya Singh stated that Kamal Nath would represent the party in the elections. “We will fight the elections in MP under the leadership of State Congress chief Kamal Nath. So, he will be the CM face,” he said while addressing the media.

Digvijaya Singh was asked about Congress’ CM face when he was attending a party meeting in Rehti in the Sehore district of Madhya Pradesh.

Kamal Nath, a close associate of Congress supremo Sonia Gandhi, has been a controversial figure in Indian politics since his role in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

In a five-hour siege on November 1, 1984, two Sikh men were burned alive at the Rakab Ganj Gurudwara, which is located across the street from Parliament House. The gurudwara’s structure was also damaged by the mob.

It was widely reported that, Nath was “controlling the crowd, and that the mob was looking to him for directions.” Harvinder Singh Phoolka and Manoj Mitta’s book ‘When a Tree Shook Delhi’ explicitly documents Nath’s involvement in the riots.

His participation has been confirmed by numerous eyewitness accounts, including those of journalists who were covering the riots. Their testimonies are with the Nanavati Commission.

Despite the allegations against him, Kamal Nath continued to hold significant party positions and was inducted into the Union Council of Ministers multiple times, when Congress-led governments were in the centre. He was also appointed Madhya Pradesh’s 18th chief minister, and served as Leader of the Opposition in the state’s Legislative Assembly from March 2020 to April 2022, after the fall of his government.

Sikh political figures have frequently raised the issue of his complicity in the riots. Bhartiya Janta Party leader, Manjinder Sirsa who was then in The Shiromani Akali Dal, attacked Nath, saying, “Congress has rubbed salt in the wounds of Sikhs,” after then Congress president Rahul Gandhi cleared Nath’s name as the CM of Madhya Pradesh in 2018. He called Nath’s selection for the CM post “shameful.”

Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga, a leader of the Delhi BJP, protested the decision by going on an indefinite hunger strike in Delhi’s Tailak Vihar area, which is home to many victims’ families from the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

The 15-month-old Congress government in Madhya Pradesh fell in 2020, as all 22 MLAs who supported Jyotiraditya Scindia, who had quit the party earlier, resigned. Kamal Nath who was the CM, resigned ahead of a trust vote ordered by the Supreme Court, as he fell short of numbers.

The pogrom against the Sikh community was reportedly initiated by the Congress Party, after the assassination of the then-prime minister Mrs Indira Gandhi by her two Sikh bodyguards. Rajiv Gandhi, who was made the PM after the demise of his mother, had justified the carnage, saying, “When a big tree falls, the earth shakes,” in a public meeting held in the memory of the late prime minister.

Sam Pitroda, the head of the Indian Overseas Congress in 2019, mocked the riot victims in 2019, by brushing off the atrocity and remarking, “Hua to hua (riots happened in 1984, so what)”. He eventually issued an apology.

Congress had released a press statement, attacking BJP and claiming that the party has “shown the moral and political courage to punish people and leaders accused of violence/role in 1984.”

In reality, the political party has rewarded the leaders like Kamal Nath, Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar with lucrative party posts and election tickets.

Clashes erupt after leftists vandalize Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s portrait in JNU, accuse ABVP of attacking students

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On Sunday, February 19, clashes erupted between 2 student groups at Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi. Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) alleged that the members of Left student organizations allegedly vandalized Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s portrait in the office of the student union on the occasion of his birth anniversary at the university. Reportedly, over a half-dozen, ABVP students were injured in the incident.

ABVP also tweeted images of the vandalized portrait. The group condemned the incident and sought strict punishment against the offenders.

In a tweet posted on Sunday, ABVP paid tributes to Veer Shivaji but Maoists vandalized the picture which was installed by the students. ABVP condemned the act of vandalism of Veer Shivaji’s photos by Anti-national elements and also the constant vandalism by the left.

Hindi media outlet Navbharat Times quoted students of ABVP as saying that the leftist students while vandalizing the portrait, stated angrily that chanting ‘Shivaji-Shivaji will not work in JNU’. The ABVP has also accused the Students’ Federation of India (SFI) of defiling images of Savitribai Phule and Maharana Pratap, along with that of Shivaji Maharaj.

ABVP JNU Secretary Umesh Chandra Ajmera said, “Today is the birth anniversary of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj. We had put up a portrait of Shivaji Maharaj on the walls outside the student activity center as a tribute. But the ‘communists’ of JNU couldn’t digest this. People from ‘100 Flowers Group’ and SFI came and vandalized the portrait of Shivaji Maharaj.”

Ajmera went on to say that individuals who were involved in the ransacking were “illegal laborers” (outsiders) who had illegally entered the college premises.

Meanwhile, Kumar Ashutosh, Social media convenor, ABVP JNU said, “ABVP members kept Shivaji’s portrait at the JNUSU office. The leftists came there & removed all portraits and threw the garland in the dustbin and then a fight broke out. 5-6 ABVP members were also injured during this.”

“We demand the JNU administration and Delhi Police take strict action against them and also demand to name the JNUSU office to be named after Shivaji Maharaj,” he added.

“ABVP members kept Shivaji’s portrait at JNUSU office for which permission from JNUSU delegation was needed. Despite that, they did it illegally. Other students came there & removed all portraits for screening program due to which fight broke out between two groups,” said the general secretary of the Congress student wing the National Students Union of India (NSUI).

Notably, this is not the first time a ruckus has erupted between the two factions at Jawahar Lal University in the national capital. Last year, on April 10, the members of Leftist organizations at Jawahar Lal University allegedly attacked the residents of Kaveri Hostel who were celebrating Ram Navami. 

According to Left organizations, the members of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the student wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, had a scuffle with the mess manager as non-vegetarian food was being served on the day of Ram Navami.

On the other hand, ABVP accused Left student organizations and the National Students Union of India (NSUI) of stopping them from doing Hawan and Puja on Ram Navami. 

Madhya Pradesh Congress workers clash and trade insults at each other while Digvijaya Singh tries to pacify them: Watch

A video has been going viral on social media wherein two factions of Congress workers came face to face in Sodalpur village of Timarni assembly constituency late on Sunday evening. The brawl reportedly occurred in front of senior Congress leader Digvijaya Singh, who had arrived in the village to meet with Congress workers ahead of the 2023 Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly elections.

According to reports, the workers got into fistfights and exchanged insults in front of senior Congress leader Digvijaya Singh. Singh attempted to calm his workers over the microphone but to no avail. The workers allegedly continued to fight and assault each other while Singh stood watching.

Ironically, the brawl erupted while Digvijaya Singh was teaching the party leaders a lesson in discipline. He was attempting to motivate the office-bearers of Mandalam of Timarni assembly seat, where the Congress had been defeated in the previous four assembly elections, when Congress members from opposing groups, Pratap Rajput and Anil Verma, began fighting and abusing one other. The fight escalated so much that the workers threatened to kill each other.

According to sources, the fight lasted several minutes, and Digvijaya Singh tried unsuccessfully to pacify his workers. After the workers finally calmed down, Singh addressed them and prepared them for the impending elections.

Notably, another video surfaced last month wherein former Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Kamal Nath was seen threatening officers of the police administration ahead of the state assembly elections to be held this year. The former Madhya Pradesh CM was addressing a public rally here, where he said “Acha Hisab Liya Jaaega” within eight months as elections are approaching. 

Aryan Invasion Theory: Let us revive the debate again

The last thirty years, there have been plenty of lectures, papers and now online videos promising to “debunk the Aryan Invasion Theory” (AIT). Their impact has been very poor, essentially limited to Hindu students, not even Hindu politicians. But outsiders, particularly the champions of that same AIT, have barely noticed this wave of attempted refutations, and certainly haven’t felt moved by them to rethink their assumptions.

Let us first get our terminology straight. Squeamish AIT scholars are making everyone toe their line that instead of an “invasion” there was an “immigration”. They have to, for unlike in Europe, where the “Aryan” (meaning Indo-European-speaking, IE) invasion from the steppes ca. 2800 BCE was a dramatic and sometimes genocidal event, India presents no evidence at all of such foreign conquest in the period considered. So they shifted to the thesis of a subtle infiltration under the archaeological radar, yet revolutionary in its impact: unlike the Scythians, Greeks, Huns or Kushanas, these intruders succeeded in not just conserving their language and religion, but imposing both on the far more numerous natives. Well, the word “invasion” is not about the means used, but the resulting power equation: it’s an “immigration” if the foreigners adapt, but an “invasion” if they take power. And this is clearly what the supposed Aryan invaders did. So it was definitely an invasion, but we won’t insist: even with an “immigration”, it remains the “AIT”.

The IE language family was discovered by a French Jesuit living in South India, Gaston-Laurent Coeurdoux. In 1767, he sent a paper to the Academy in Paris in which he showed the close kinship of Sanskrit with Latin and Greek. The French freethinker Voltaire soon publicized it and concluded that European culture and its treasures had originated on the banks of the Ganga. This was taken over by other leading intellectuals like Immanuel Kant, and note that they spontaneously assumed India as the land of origin of the IE family. The Out-of-India Theory (OIT) is not a recent “concoction” by Hindu Nationalists, as widely alleged, but was thought up by 18th-century Europeans.

In India, the new insight was given currency by justice William Jones speaking in Kolkata 1786. Note about his speech what admiration he expresses for the Sanskrit language, deemed superior to Latin and Greek. Indomania was widespread at the time, best represented by Friedrich Schlegel’s 1808 book Language and Wisdom of the Indians. This goes completely against the widespread Hindu rumour that IE linguistics stemmed from “racist colonialism”. Most of India was not a colony yet, and the heyday of racial thought contaminating “Aryan” studies had yet to arrive.

However, another consideration started to undermine the dominant position of the OIT. Linguists realized that Sanskrit was not the mother but merely an elder sister of the other branches. There was a distance between the putative language of origin (Proto-Indo-European, PIE) and Vedic Sanskrit, and this translated into a possible distance between the Homeland and India. Not really compelling logic, for languages can evolve while staying in the same place; but this change of opinion won through.

What made the scales tip was probably August Schlegel’s proposal in 1834 that the Homeland lay in or near the Caucasus mountains. Bible-thumpers had already thought of Armenia, where Noah’s Ark had landed: the Aryans were deemed the descendants of Noah’s son Jafeth. Successive Homeland theories after this would rarely move away sharply from the Caucasus area. Since Gordon Childe’s choice in 1926 for the Don-Volga region, this area has mostly remained the favourite, today known as the Yamnaya (“pit-grave”) culture.

But the OIT school did not give up. The defence was taken up again by Europeans living in India. The most prominent and surprising figure here is Mountstuart Elphinstone, a proverbial colonialist. After his retirement as governor of Bombay, he wrote a History of India. Among his arguments, the most compelling is that no Hindu scripture gives any indication of a foreign origin: “There is no reason whatever for thinking that the Hindus ever inhabited any country but their present.” (1841)

Yet this could not save the OIT. In the mid-19th century, two developments served as nails in its coffin. One was the start of Linguistic Paleontology, the “science” of discovering a language’s habitat from its vocabulary. Thus, it was realized that PIE flourished in a society familiar with wheeled transport: six words for the cart and its parts exist throughout the daughter languages and must have existed in PIE. Now for the Homeland question, it was deemed significant that there were words for cold-climate species like birch tree, wolf and bear. This doesn’t really refute the idea of an Indian Homeland, for these species also occur in India, which has islands of cold climate. Recently, OIT mastermind Shrikant Talageri has shown that hot-climate species like ape, lion and elephant are equally present in the PIE lexicon, and they are hard to reconcile with a northern climate zone. But back then, the exclusion of India as a Homeland candidate won the day.

The other factor was the appearance of Veda translations which followed the then-emerging racial paradigm. Thus, in the Rg-Vedic description of the Battle of the Ten Kings, it was commonly pretended that the enemies were “black aboriginals”. In reality, the names of the kings and of their tribes (most notably Dâsa, Dasyu) are recognizably Iranian, and their characterization as “the black tribe” is a mistranslation. The word Asiknī does not refer to a skin colour, but to the area they come from, the basin of “the Black River”, the Vedic name of the Chenab. This way, several racialist distortions, perhaps made in good faith because of the racialist Zeitgeist, created the impression that an Aryan invasion into India had been described by the Vedic composers themselves. It thus became futile to deny the AIT.

The ensuing political abuse of the AIT by the British colonialists and even by the National-Socialists could not inspire the Indo-Europeanists to a rethink. After 1945, the “Aryan” political discourse went out of fashion in the West, but in India its political use by Christian missionaries, Ambedkarites (though not BR Ambedkar himself, an articulate opponent of the AIT), Dravidianists and Nehruvians continued. In the West this has not been noticed till today. Hilariously, the few Western scholars who have heard of the OIT at all, claim that it is “a politicized concoction”, when in fact it is their own AIT that has played a poisonous role in Indian politics all along.

The OIT started a second life in 1982, when KD Sethna published the book Karpasa (cotton), showing that cotton was common in the Harappan cities (starting 2600 BCE), and in Sanskrit writings younger than them, but not yet in the Rg-Veda. He concluded that the Rg-Veda largely predated them. This high chronology is detrimental to the AIT, which postulates an Aryan invasion (importing the Vedic language) only in the 2nd millennium.

In 1984 the US archaeologist James Shaffer showed that there is zero archaeological proof for an Aryan invasion, including a peaceful immigration. Indian archaeologists became more outspoken about their findings to the same effect. Even BB Lal, long the main archaeological supporter of the AIT, shifted to the position: “Vedic and Harappan are two sides of the same coin.” Several linguists and historians joined in, and latterly some geneticists: people of the same academic rank as any pro-AIT professors you can cite.

Until the millennium year 2000, there had been many voices doubting or plainly rejecting the AIT, and contributing many little arguments from linguistics or archaeology, all indirect evidence, but a clear alternative was lacking. Shrikant Talageri, after a preparatory book in 1993, then broke through the wall of ignorance about the enigmatic Vedic age. In The Rigveda, an Analysis, and its 2008 sequel, The Veda and the Avesta, he pioneered a convincing OIT, which should henceforth count as the OIT.

This work is, as I have been able to verify at Indo-Europeanist conferences, completely unknown in the West and also in India’s AIT camp. Whereas the mere handful of OIT thinkers know the AIT quite well and often write answers to it, the well-established AIT doesn’t really get beyond derogatory comments on the OIT and stonewalls all arguments in its favour. Around the year 2000 there was a little bit of dialogue, mostly thanks to the American scholar Edwin Bryant (the coiner of the term “OIT”), but this has remained a blip.

Today, the AIT camp is a happy valley protected from the rising waters of counter-evidence by a protective dam. But the waters keep rising, and the time can’t be far off when the waters will overcome the dam and drastically impact the cosy life in the valley.

Dr. Koenraad ELST, °Leuven (Belgium) 1959, is an Oriental Philologist & Historian and a prominent old hand in the “Aryan” debate.

Pakistan chose extremist Islam over economic stability: Foreign Policy report

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The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), on February 3, blocked Wikipedia nationwide. Although the ban was overturned three days later, in its statement the PTA said that Wikipedia refused to remove “sacrilegious contents” from the website. By curtailing free speech and doubling down on blasphemy laws, Islamabad is endangering its relationship with Europe and the United States, Foreignpolicy.com reported.

In 2020, Pakistan threatened legal action against Google and Wikipedia for “disseminating sacrilegious content,” regarding Islamic beliefs held by minority Muslim sects. On February 11, a man was lynched by a mob in the eastern city of Nankana Sahib over allegations of blasphemy. The victim was killed inside the local police station, with the law enforcement authorities being hapless bystanders.

The Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) was co-opted after Partition in 1947 from the Indian Penal Code (IPC) of 1860, with Sections 295 and 298 dedicated to desecrating worship places and outraging religious sensibilities, respectively. The original sections in the IPC are equally applicable to all religions. But in the 1980s Pakistan added Islam-specific clauses.

In January 2023, the National Assembly of Pakistan amended PPC to expand its blasphemy laws. One of those amendments, the Criminal Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2023, ups the penalty from three years to life imprisonment.

The PPC criminalizes any sacrilege against the Quran and the prophet, with penalties including capital punishment.

Foreignpolicy.com reported that even though Pakistan is yet to execute anyone for sacrilege, its blasphemy laws continue to encourage mob violence. The most high-profile victim of the blasphemy laws was one of their staunchest critics, former Punjab Gov. Salman Taseer, who was gunned down by his security guard in 2011.

Last year, a teacher was attacked and killed by her colleague and students in an all-girls school, a mentally unstable man was stoned to death by a mob, and a man born without arms was drowned, in separate incidents of blasphemy killings.

Last month, a Muslim man threatened to incite mobs against a Christian security officer working at the Karachi airport. He accused her of blasphemy after the woman denied his acquaintance entry into the premises.

While the blasphemy laws have disproportionately harmed non-Muslims and Muslims in Pakistan. The man was killed for blasphemy in October for expressing devotion at the graves of Sufi saints that the vast majority of South Asian Muslims have traditionally adhered to.

The ideology of takfir, or excommunicating Muslims, is based on outlawing divergent beliefs and penalizing those deemed guilty per sharia, with punishments for apostasy that include execution.

The takfiri ideology fuels murderous sharia codes and jihadi groups alike. Outfits such as the Islamic State and its Pakistani Taliban affiliates have bombed Sufi shrines over the years, deeming the mystic practices heretical. The Islamic State-orchestrated 2017 bombing at the Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine in Sehwan, killing at least 90 people, remains one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Pakistan’s history.

The Islamic State and the Pakistani Taliban have similarly targeted Shiite mosques across the country, dubbing Shiites, comprising the second-largest sect of Islam, collectively guilty of blasphemy. And the Criminal Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2023, passed last month, is the systematization of this anti-Shiite narrative, which borders on the codification of the entire sect’s ex-communication, Foreignpolicy.com reported.

The amendment passed by the National Assembly outlaws Shiite beliefs by enforcing Sunni theology and tradition. Following the enactment of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act in 2016, the state initiated a war on nonbelief, sending official texts nationwide asking users to report any form of blasphemy.

Just as Shiites today are being compelled into shunning their beliefs so as to be accepted as Muslims in Pakistan, Ahmadis were forced to do the same with their faith in their sect’s 19th-century founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, via the Second Amendment to the Pakistani Constitution in 1974.

The official declaration of Ahmadis as non-Muslims was followed by Sections 298-B and 298-C a decade later, banning the community from “posing as Muslims,” including referring to Islamic literature or expressions.

This veritable apartheid against Ahmadi Muslims over the past four decades has seen members of the community killed, their mosques vandalized, and graves desecrated. Ahmadis have to be declared non-Muslims for individuals to obtain a passport, exercise the right to vote, or even get a marriage certificate. Among the Wikipedia contents flagged by the PTA are pages on Ahmadiyya Islam.

While Shiites and Ahmadis are subjugated owing to their beliefs, nonbelievers are also targeted in Pakistan. Atheism and apostasy, as an extension of blasphemy, are punishable by death in Pakistan.

Within a month of the Punjab bill being passed, 42 blasphemy cases were lodged, predominantly against the Shiite community, including against a 3-year-old. The toddler, Syed Fazal Abbas Naqvi, was taken into custody along with his father and uncle, with all of them facing terrorism charges before being released on bail.

The Criminal Laws (Amendment) Bill, of 2023 has been followed by a spike in Shiite killings in the town of Dera Ismail Khan.

While the financially motivated Arab states that historically spread radical Salafism worldwide are now embracing moderation, Pakistan appears to be wholly invested in being the bastion of Sunni fundamentalism.

The United States, despite its withdrawal from the region, wouldn’t want a Pakistan that spirals further into radical Islamist disintegration at a time when the Western powers are still mulling the fate of the jihadi takeover in Afghanistan. Pakistan’s devastating economic crisis can further push the United States to condition any financial support to human rights advancements.

The Saudi and U.S. petrodollars that helped sustain Pakistan’s jihadi structure are no longer on the table. Global institutions are mulling sanctions over Pakistan’s human rights abuses, especially its blasphemy laws. Any government expanding these codes in a way that risks increasing global sanctions is clearly not invested in Pakistan’s economic well-being.

(This news report is published from a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has not been written or edited by OpIndia staff)

Chhattisgarh: Two police personnel killed in Naxal attack in Rajnandgaon, search operation underway

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On Monday, two policemen lost their lives in an early-morning Naxalite attack in the Rajnandgaon region of Chhattisgarh. According to the joint ITBP-district force investigation, Naxals fired 20 rounds at Head Constable Rajesh Singh and another officer while they were on their way to work at the checkpoint between Chandsuraj and Bortalav. 

According to the reports, Singh was posted at the Bortalav Police Station. The event is said to have happened between 7 and 8 in the morning as the two officers were traveling on a motorcycle in the Bortalav police station area in the region close to the state of Maharashtra, confirmed Abhishek Meena, the superintendent of police at Rajnandgaon.

He said that the two were traveling from the Bortalav police camp to the Maharashtra border without any weapons. The two have been identified as head constable Rajesh Singh Rajput and Chhattisgarh Armed Forces constable Anil Kumar Samrat. 

The official stated that one of the personnel passed away immediately and the other succumbed to injuries while being rushed to a nearby hospital. He said that the Naxalites also set their motorcycle on fire before fleeing the area, which is 180 kilometers from Raipur, the state capital.

Several Naxal attacks have been reported from the state of Chhattisgarh in recent times. Recently, three BJP workers identified as Neelkanth Kakkem, Sagar Sahu, and Ramdhar Alami were murdered by the Naxalites in the month of February. Chhattisgarh BJP president Arun Sao raised the issue in the Lok Sabha and urged the Centre to direct the Chhattisgarh government to ensure the safety of the people. He said that the murders of BJP members were a result of targeted killings and political conspiracy.

In the current case, Abhishek Meena, the superintendent of police at Rajnandgaon confirmed the death of two policemen and said that a search operation is being conducted in the area to try and nab the accused.

Congress-Soros saga continues as Rahul Gandhi to give lecture at Cambridge, where Soros is a donor, to hold closed-door meetings about India-China relations

Congress scion Rahul Gandhi is scheduled to address the ‘Judge Business School’ of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, later in February 2023.

In a tweet on Thursday (February 16), the business school informed, “Delighted to welcome back Rahul Gandhi to Cambridge University later this month. He will lecture on @CambridgeMBA and hold closed-door sessions on Big Data and Democracy and India-China relations, with Shruti Kapila…”

The archive of the tweet can be accessed here. Interestingly, Shruti Kapila is the same Congress apologist who had earlier urged Rahul Gandhi to hold ‘scripted interviews‘ for high-impact messaging.

The Congress scion acknowledged the tweet by ‘Judge Business School’ and wrote, “Looking forward to visiting my alma mater Cambridge University and delivering a lecture at CambridgeJBS.”

He further added, “Happy to engage with some of the brightest minds in various domains, including geopolitics, international relations, big data and democracy.”

As per the tweet by the Judge business school, Rahul Gandhi would hold close-door meetings about Indo-China relations. It must be mentioned that the Congress party had signed an MoU in 2008 with the Communist Party of China in Beijing to ‘exchange’ high-level information.

George Soros is connected to the University of Cambridge

Coincidentally, the Open Society Foundations (OSF) of Hungarian-American billionaire George Soros is a member of the University of Cambridge’s Guild of Benefactors since 2013.

The foundation provides post-graduate scholarships in “programmes that represent a long-term response to ongoing social and political transformations in the countries served.”

OSF is a member of the University of Cambridge’s Guild of Benefactors since 2013.

Rahul Gandhi’s visit to the University of Cambridge, subsequent lecture at its business schools and closed-door meetings about India-China relations come at a time when Soros has targeted India and alleged collusion between the Modi government and the Adani Group. The Adani controversy is also being played up by Congress and their leaders, leading to people wonder if Congress is working in tandem with foreigners who might be interested in regime change with 2024 general elections right around the corner.

The nefarious anti-India agenda of the Hungarian-American billionarie

George Soros has several intellectuals on his payroll, including the former PM Manmohan Singh’s daughter Amrita Singh. Not to forget the curious case of ‘author’ and ‘social activist’ Harsh Mander who had been at the forefront of creating civil unrest during the Anti-CAA protests.

In 2018, George Soros-funded NGO, Sherpa, had attempted to thwart India’s defence deal with France and stall the delivery of Rafale fighter jets.

Moreover, Open Society Foundations (OSF) run by the billionaire had funded the Socio-Legal Information Centre (SLIC), which had been active in seeking the repeal of the sedition law currently used against anti-India elements.

In September 2019, George Soros also met Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan shortly after US President Donald Trump attended Narendra Modi’s ‘Howdy Modi’ event in Houston, Texas.

Interestingly, he is also friends with prominent Congressman Shashi Tharoor, who also happens to have a Pakistani connection. In 2021, there was a hullabaloo in India over allegations of snooping by the Modi government through the use of Israeli spyware, Pegasus.

These allegations stemmed from a report by the leftist-propaganda news outlet, The Wire, which in turn was fed the story by ‘Forbidden Stories (FS). Coincidentally, George Soros’ Open Society Foundations (OSF) happens to be one of the donors of the organisation.

eorge Soros had been unabashed in his attempt to fuel a dangerous anti-India narrative through media and ‘civil society. Organisations funded by him played a key role in creating chaos and unrest under the pretext of anti-farm law protests.

In 1999, the Open Society Foundation began activities in India by providing scholarships and fellowships to pursue studies and research at Indian colleges. Through the OSF, George Soros made significant contributions towards the spread of instability in India.

The Hungarian-American billionaire has also tried to use international institutions, which are funded by him, including Freedom House and  V-Dem (Varieties of Democracy) Institute to tarnish the image of India at a global level.

As India retains KL Rahul as opener for next two Tests against Australia, Venkatesh Prasad once again highlights his poor Test record

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Former India seamer Venkatesh Prasad fired a fresh salvo at struggling India opener KL Rahul for his inconsistent performances in the longest format of the game, pointing out the batter’s modest overseas record and comparing it with home/overseas statistics of players such as Shikhar Dhawan, Mayank Agarwal, Shubman Gill and Ajinkya Rahane, three of whom have turned out for India as openers in Test cricket.

Rahul’s last century in Tests came in December 2021, against South Africa at Centurion. His horror run with the willow in international cricket continued in the second Test of the ongoing series for the Border-Gavaskar trophy, at Delhi’s Arun Jaitley stadium, as the right-hander could aggregate just 18 runs across two innings.

Chasing just 115 runs to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the series, fans would have expected Rahul and Rohit Sharma to romp home without much hassle. However, Rahul fell to the spin of Nathan Lyon, who trapped him in front of the stumps for just one run.

“There is a view that KL Rahul has an outstanding overseas Test record. But stats speak otherwise. He has a test avg of 30 overseas in 56 innings. He has scored 6 overseas centuries but followed it up with a string of low scores that’s why averaging 30. Let’s look at a few others,” tweeted Prasad on Monday.

He brought up veteran Shikhar’s solid overseas records, pointing out his average of “nearly 40, with 5 100s”.

“Shikhar Dhawan has the best overseas average amongst recent openers. Avg of nearly 40 with 5 100’s. Though he too hasn’t been consistent in Test but had Outstanding centuries in SL and NZ, plus a much better home record,” the former India seamer wrote in another tweet.

He also brought up Mayank Agarwal, who as opener has fared exceedingly well in home conditions.

“Mayank Agarwal after the brilliant start in Aust did struggle in away test matches. But he has by far the best home record. Avg of nearly 70 in 13 innings,2 double 100’s & a 150 on a Wankhede pitch where everyone else struggled. Great against spin & had a prolific domestic season,” Prasad tweeted.

He further pointed out that young opener Shubman Gill averages 37 in his brief overseas run in Tests, with the knock of 91 against Australia at The Gabba in Brisbane being “one of the best overseas fourth innings”.

“Shubhman Gill has had a brief international career and in 14 overseas innings averages 37, with his 91 at Gabba amongst the best overseas 4th innings and has been in outstanding form,” he tweeted.

He also pointed to veteran Ajinkya Rahane’s overseas record, saying he averages “over 40 overseas in 50 Test matches”.

“And if overseas performance is a criteria, Ajinkya Rahane, despite being out of form and also inconsistent before being dropped had one of the best overseas Test record, averaging over 40 overseas in 50 test matches. Was out of form and dropped …,” the former India seamer added in another tweet.

He added that after being retained for the final two Tests of the ongoing series for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, Rahul’s best chance of coming back to form is the third Test at Indore or else he should play county cricket, perform well and earn back his place in the national side.

“But with KL being retained for the remaining 2 test matches, if he is picked in the playing 11, Indore is his best chance of coming back to form and silencing critics like me. Else needs to play county cricket, perform well and make a comeback in the Test side,” Prasad tweeted.

The opener had a horror 2022. After missing nearly six months of action, Rahul blew hot and cold ever since Asia Cup 2022. He did score some half-centuries but drew criticism from fans and veteran India cricketers for his lack of attacking intent and inability to deliver in big matches.

Rahul played four Tests last year, aggregating 137 runs at an average of 17.12, with just one fifty. In 10 ODIs last year, he scored 251 runs at an average of 27.88, with two half-centuries and a best score of 73. In 16 T20Is in 2022, he scored 434 runs at an average of 28.93 and six half-centuries, with a best score of 62. Overall in 30 matches last year, he aggregated 822 runs at an average of 25.68, with nine half-centuries.

This year, he has scored a paltry 38 runs in three Test innings. Overall, he has totaled just 148 runs across five international matches at an average of 29.60, with one half-century and the best score of 64*.

India’s squad for the final two Test matches and three ODIs against Australia was announced on Sunday.

India’s Test squad for the third and fourth Test against Australia: Rohit Sharma (Captain), K L Rahul, Shubman Gill, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, KS Bharat (wk), Ishan Kishan (wk), Ravichandran Ashwin, Axar Patel, Kuldeep Yadav, Ravindra Jadeja, Mohd. Shami, Mohd. Siraj, Shreyas Iyer, Suryakumar Yadav, Umesh Yadav and Jaydev Unadkat.

India’s ODI squad against Australia: Rohit Sharma (Captain), Shubman Gill, Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, Suryakumar Yadav, K L Rahul, Ishan Kishan (wk), Hardik Pandya (Vice-captain), Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav, Washington Sundar, Yuzvendra Chahal, Mohd. Shami, Mohd. Siraj, Umran Malik, Shardul Thakur, Axar Patel and Jaydev Unadkat.

(This news report is published from a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has not been written or edited by OpIndia staff)