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Uttar Pradesh: Mob attacks Bareilly police after they arrest cow smuggler Anees

A team of Uttar Pradesh police has been brutally assaulted by a mob in Bareilly district during an ongoing operation to nab a cattle smuggler, reported Navbharat Times.

According to the reports, the Izzatnagar police station under Bareilly range was conducting an ongoing investigation against a local cow smuggler based on a complaint registered in Faridpur village.

The Izzatnagar police had reportedly received information that cattle smuggler Anni alias Anees was planning illegal slaughter near his house. Following information, the Izzatnagar police had launched an operation on Monday (July 1) to catch the smuggler.

The police succeeded in nabbing the culprit but the female members in Anees’ household reportedly shouted and called their neighbours for help. Soon, a mob assembled at the spot soon and launched an assault on the police team.

In the attack, two police personnel were brutally beaten by the mob and their clothes too were torn off. Later, a large contingent of police force led by SP KK Verma rushed to the spot and chased off the mob.

Following the incident, two people along with the cow smuggler have been arrested, said Bareilly police. The police have also assured that it would take strict action against the attackers and has deployed a large force to quell tension in the area.

Video and stats highlight from India v Bangladesh match

Indian team officially secured the semi-final spot of the World Cup 2019 after beating Bangladesh by 28 runs at Edgbaston. India now has to wait for the England-New Zealand’s match result to see who they will be facing in the semis.

At Edgbaston, India won the toss and decided to bat first on a pitch used on Sunday for India-England clash. Rohit Sharma, who is in the form of his life smashed yet another hundred in the tournament. This was his fourth in the current edition and in that process, he became the highest run scorer of World Cup 2019. He along with KL Rahul, added 180 runs for the opening partnership, their best of the tournament. Rohit (104)  got out soon after scoring the hundred, while Rahul (77) again failed to convert a well made fifty into a hundred.

Kohli (26), Pant (48) and Dhoni (35), helped India to score a total above 300 on board. Although at one time India looked like scoring anything above 375 in the innings. Mustafizur restricted India to 314 in 50 overs as he took 5 Indian wickets in his ten overs quota.

Bangladesh in reply had a solid start, as their openers added 39 runs in 9 overs before Shami rattled Tamim’s defense and the ball crashed into the wickets. To chase down a target of more than 300, Bangladesh required one great partnership in the middle, but the batsmen with only chipped with low scores and small partnership.

After losing their best batsman Shakib in the 34th over at the score 179, the fans thought it was all over but Sabbir Rahman and Mohammad Saifuddin added 66 runs in 10 overs brought back the hope of winning the match. When just 29 runs were required to win, Bumrah bowled two consecutive toe-crushing yorkers to win the game for India. Bumrah picked four wickets while Pandya took 3.

Watch the video highlight

STATS

  • Rohit Sharma has now 5 World Cup Hundreds; only Sachin Tendulkar has more (6) World Cup Hundreds.
  • Rohit Sharma has scored 4 World Cup Hundreds in the current edition. Only Sangakkara (in 2015) has scored four hundreds in single World Cup tournament.
  • One hundred eighty runs partnership between Rohit and Rahul is the highest partnership for the first wicket for India in the World Cup. Previous best was between Rohit and Dhawan off 174 runs against Ireland in 2015.
  • Bumrah took four wickets, all bowled. He is the only Indian pacer to achieve this feat, and only the second Indian bowler after Anil Kumble (in hero cup final, 1993) to bowled four batsmen in an ODI inning.

Nitish Kumar govt draws flak for distributing mangoes in the state Assembly just days after hundreds of children died in AES outbreak

The Nitish Kumar government in Bihar faced sharp criticism after it distributed mangoes and mango saplings in the Bihar Assembly today. RJD leaders refused to accept the mangoes and the mango saplings. Rabri Devi, RJD leader and former CM of Bihar, condemned the state government for distributing mangoes and mango saplings while children are dying of malnutrition in the state. She led a protest outside the Bihar Assembly by holding placards.

However, the state government defended its acts by claiming that the gesture was intended to create awareness towards the environment.


Defending the move, Bihar Minister Shyam Rajak said that mango saplings were distributed to urge people to plant more trees. “The environment is in danger these days. Mango saplings are a way to ask people to plant more trees so that the problem can be solved”, said Rajak.

The monsoon session of the Assembly is going on and today the budget of the Agriculture Department was tabled. It has reportedly been the convention that whenever the budget of a Department is to be presented in the Assembly, some gifts are presented to the Assembly members by the concerned Department.

Bihar has been struggling with the outbreak of Acute Encephalitis Syndrome (AES) which has claimed the lives of over two hundred children.

Rahul Gandhi posts his resignation letter on Twitter, makes contradictory claims

Ending a month-long drama since devastating defeat in the Lok Sabha election, today Congress president Rahul Gandhi publicly announced his resignation from the post, sticking to his decision. He posted a four-page letter on Twitter reiterating his decision to step down from the post of Congress president, and also taking responsibility for the election results.


The entire Congress party spent the last month trying to convince Rahul Gandhi not to resign and continue as Congress president. The Congress Working Committee had immediately rejected his resignation which was tendered just a few days after the declaration of election results. This was followed by a long line of Congress leaders, chief ministers including, queueing up in front of Rahul Gandhi’s residence to convince him. But the Kerala MP remained adamant, and now it seems the Congress party will have to choose a new President, and to their horror, probably from outside the family, until and unless Priyanka Vadra steps in.

In the letter, Rahul Gandhi says that he is taking responsibility for party’s bad performance, where he admits that the party needs a new leadership that could lead the fight against BJP and the RSS. However, the second half of the same letter he hints that the 2019 Lok Sabha elections were not free and fair.

Rahul Gandhi says that Congress party didn’t fight a political party in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, but they fought the entire machinery of the Indian state. He alleged that every institution of the country was marshalled against the opposition. He says that once cherished institution neutrality no longer exists in India.

From the letter, it It appears that Rahul Gandhi is confused whether it was his lacklustre leadership that limited Congress to just a little over 50 Lok Sabha seats, or whether it was some grand conspiracy by the BJP where all institutions were compromised and made to work against Congress.

If Rahul Gandhi genuinely believes that Congress lost due to unfair elections – and there have been reports earlier that he was planning a nation-wide agitation against EVMs – then why is he being unfair to himself and resigning taking the responsibility?

And if he genuinely believes that Congress lost due to issues with his leadership, why is he bringing issues about an unfair election and compromised institutions? Is it to give excuses for Congressmen to do drama where they will blame it all on “rigged elections” and plead Rahul Gandhi not to go? Is it a hint that Congress will now start another round of “institutions under attack” narrative because Rahul Gandhi needs a face-saver?

According to latest reports, veteran Congress leader and a co-accused in the National Herald scam, Motilal Vora will be the interim president of the Congress party till a new president is elected.

West Bengal: TMC leader who had allegedly taken ‘cut money’ from MGNREGA workers thrashed by locals

The West Bengal’s chief minister’s inadvertent admission that ‘cut money’ was taken by members of her own party as bribes, for implementing the welfare schemes of the government, has left the West Bengal locals fuming.

In a recent incident, the angry locals of East Burdwan district, agitating over the refund of cut money, dragged a local Trinamool leader from his house, tied him to a tree and thrashed him. Only after receiving a written declaration that he would refund the money within a month, was he released, reports The New Indian Express.

Locals alleged that Sheikh Habibul had collected cut money from the labourers involved in MGNREGA work at Durgapur gram panchayat in East Burdwan district. “We came to know he has given a written declaration. No formal complaint was lodged in this regard,’’ said a police officer.

Moreover, reports have also emerged that several traders on Wednesday, shut down their shops in Siliguri’s Ghogomali area for an indefinite period as a mark of protest against TMC Councillor Ranjan Shil Sharma who had allegedly taken ‘cut-money’ from them.

The protesters blocked roads and set tyres on fire in the area to mark the protest against the TMC councillor of Ward No 37.

In another incident, locals put up banners and posters in Ranaghat north-west Assembly constituency in Nadia district, West Bengal, accusing Trinamool MLA Shankar Singh of raking up crores of rupees in the name of ‘cut money’.

While reprimanding several party turncoats who switched to BJP after the Lok Sabha disaster, Mamata Banerjee, last month had confessed that the ‘cut money’ taken by members of her own party, for implementing the welfare schemes of the government, ought to be returned to the public.

“I do not want to keep thieves in my party. If I take action they will join some other party. Some leaders are claiming 25 per cent commission for providing housing grants to the poor. This should stop immediately. Return the money if any of you have taken it,” Banerjee had said. Little did the CM know, that by saying this she was opening a Pandora’s box.

As a consequence of her remarks, people across the state started agitating against the elected Trinamool representatives and leaders in the areas, demanding the return of the money they had paid as bribes. The crowd forced Trinamool leaders to declare in writing that they will return the money. One even admitted that he had charged between Rs 8,000 to Rs 10,000 from the beneficiaries of welfare schemes.

Moreover, such allegations go down to almost the Panchayat level. It is believed that TMC leaders, at the grassroots, are taking ‘cut money’, or ‘illegal commissions’ to facilitate the grant of Central and State government schemes.

An Indian Express report quoting villagers in Burdwan stated that TMC leaders often have a ‘fixed rate card’ of cut money for schemes starting from last rites to house construction ranging from Rs 200 to Rs 25,000.

Be it from getting an LPG connection under the central government’s Ujjwala scheme or for getting benefits of the state government’s Samabyathi scheme, which provides financial assistance of up to Rs 2,000 for the last rites and related expenses, the TMC leaders extort money from locals for getting benefits of every central or state government schemes.

Former ABP News managing editor, Milind Kahndekar, took to Twitter to share the ‘rate list’ of cut money of bribes the TMC asks people to pay for government schemes.


On June 27, BJP MP Saumitra Khan had raised this issue in the Zero hour of the Lok Sabha and sought an inquiry into how much funds have gone into the chief minister and her family’s account.

Ignored by the BCCI, Ambati Rayudu announces his retirement from International cricket, gets offer from Iceland cricket

Ever since KL Rahul’s promotion to the top order, the Indian cricket team’s World Cup campaign has been plagued with the long-standing conundrum of the batsman at number 4. Though Rishabh Pant was flown in to England to replace an injured Dhawan, he was given chance in place of Vijay Shankar, who was tried at the number 4 position for the initial few matches. After Vijay Shankar’s ouster from the World Cup, apparently because of his toe injury, the BCCI has now sent Mayank Agarwal in his place, ignoring Ambati Rayudu.

Amidst this, the flamboyant middle-order batsman Ambati Rayudu who had been listed in the reserves prior to the World Cup has announced his retirement from the international cricket without offering any reason for his decision. He also added that he won’t be playing in the Indian Premier League and is open for playing in the other T20 leagues abroad.

Rayudu had been spurned by the BCCI twice after two of the original members of the Indian cricket team sustained injuries in the ongoing tournament. Earlier, Rayudu had expressed his displeasure and mocked the chief selector for his statement defending the selection of Vijay Shankar over him.

Rayudu sent a letter to the Hyderabad Cricket Association informing about his decision and HCS forwarded the same to the BCCI. Rayudu wrote in the letter, “Respected sir, I would like to bring to your kind notice that I have come to decision to step away from the sport and retire from all forms and levels of the game.”

The decision to quit international cricket from Rayudu comes at a time when the Iceland cricket has offered Rayudu permanent residency in their country so that he can play for them after he was once again ignored for a World Cup spot in the Indian team. Iceland Cricket had tweeted about their offer to Rayudu on July 1, referring to his April 16 Tweet where the cricketer had stated that he has ordered a new set of 3D glasses to watch the world cup. They mentioned that they have prepared the documents for Rayudu, and invited him to join them.offer


The BCCI has chosen Mayank Agarwal ahead of Ambati Rayudu to replace injured Vijay Shankar for the position at number 4. Although Agarwal has appeared for India in test matches as an opener and not as a number 4 batsman.

If Halala is allowed why not acting? Congress’ Abhishek Manu Singhvi on Zaira Wasim controversy

In a surprise move, Congress leader Abhishek Manu Singhvi took on Islamist fundamentals while questioning Zaira Wasim’s reason for quitting Bollywood. In a tweet, he questioned that if halala is allowed why is acting considered as haraam.


He was also worried about what would happen if every Indian Muslim adopted this line of reasoning.


As per Sharia custom, the nikah-halala is a custom by which a woman divorced by triple talaq gets to reunite with her husband. Nikah-halala requires a woman to marry another man and consummate the marriage and then take another triple talaq in order to return to her first husband. Often, such temporary marriage is done with another male member of the husband’s family, including father and brothers of the husband.

A few days ago, Zaira Wasim announced her retirement from movies saying that Bollywood had taken away from Islam. In a six-page letter, she explains the reason for doing so while quoting the Quran. Her retirement was hotly debated on social media with several people criticizing her actions.

Before the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, Congress had promised to scrap the anti triple talaq bill. Following which former Union Minister Arun Jaitley wrote a blog  titled “Does the Bareilly “Nikah-Halala” not shock your conscience?”

After the initial confusion over the claim that Zaira Wasim’s account was hacked, it has now been clarified Zaira Wasim had indeed taken a conscious decision to quit acting so that she could focus on practising her religion.

Gujarat: Congress shifting all its MLAs to Mount Abu ahead of Rajya Sabha elections to avoid cross voting

The Congress party has decided to shift all its MLAs in Gujarat to Mount Abu for a ‘workshop’ to prevent cross-voting in the Rajya Sabha election due to be held on the 5th of July. The bypolls were necessitated after Smriti Irani and Amit Shah vacated their Rajya Sabha seats after they were elected from Amethi and Gandhinagar respectively.


Congress’ nervousness is understandable as close Sonia-aide and senior leader of the party, Ahmed Patel, had only barely managed to scrape through in the Rajya Sabha elections in 2017. Even then, the MLAs were taken to the resort in Karnataka owned by Karnataka MLA DK Shivakumar to prevent them from defecting to the BJP and cross-voting.

While Rajya Sabha elections have traditionally been low-key affairs, Ahmed Patel’s election was marred by controversies and involved high voltage drama. With rampant defections already in Gujarat, the party’s move to shift its MLAs to Rajasthan appears to be a desperate move to keep its flock together.

Gujarat Congress has suffered a lot of defections in recent times. In March, Jamnagar Rural MLA, Vallabh Dharaviya, resigned from the party yesterday to join the BJP. Prior to him, Congress MLAs from Manvadar, Unjha and Halvad Dhrangadhra had resigned and joined the BJP. Jasdan MLA Kunvarji Bavaliya had resigned last year to join the BJP.

The Congress MLA from Gujarat, Dr Asha Patel, had resigned from her seat in Februrary ahead of the Lok Sabha elections citing infighting. She had even praised Narendra Modi while resigning. Alpesh Thakor, too, had stirred speculations about joining the BJP when he met the Gujarat Deputy CM post the Lok Sabha Election results and claimed that Congress was bound to lose since their leaders have ‘Chemical Locha’. He had also said that as many as 15 other Congress MLAs were contemplating resignation.

Cricket World Cup Preview – England v New Zealand: Whoever wins will be in the semis

A must win game for both the teams, the team who wins today will book the place for semis, while the second team’s fortune will be decided by Bangladesh v Pakistan match result.

England has 10 points, and they would be more eager to win the match as if they lose, it will be clear cut that Pakistan would need to beat Bangladesh to win the 4th spot for Semifinal. The home team won the biggest match of the tournament against India, in Birmingham. The team is back in form and would be hoping to repeat the same performance against the Kiwis. Their most significant strength is their batting, and with Jason Roy is back, their batting looks more dangerous.

Kiwis have been on the decline ever since they played against Pakistan. If they win this match, they are through to the semis, but if they lose, they have to hope that even if Pakistan win the game against Bangladesh, they do not win by a significant margin. New Zealand has all the issues in their batting. Baring the captain, Kane Williamson and at some extent Neesham, no other batsman scored runs when required. The players need to give their best; otherwise, even if they win here, they may not be able to win the semis.

Players to watch out

Ben Stokes, with four fifties on his name and picking wickets in the middle overs, he is the most valuable player in this England squad. His fielding is a bonus for the team. He would be hoping to contribute again in the win and steal the semi-final spot.

Trent Boult, Kiwis primary weapon in the bowling department and also the hat-trick man is in great form. It will be a match of Kiwis bowlers against England’s batsmen. Boult needs to pick the English openers early on and also needs to restrict to a small total in the death overs. If he could then Kiwis would have the best chance to win the contest.

England v New Zealand in ODIs:

Overall: Matches 89, England Won 40, New Zealand Won 43, Tied 2 No Result 4

World Cup: Matches 8, England Won 3, New Zealand Won 5

Recent Form (most recent first): England  W W L L W, New Zealand L L W W NR

ICC Rankings: England (1), New Zealand (3)

Upcoming Records:

Martin Guptill has scored 967 runs in World Cup and needs 33 more to become the second New Zealand player to reach the 1,000 runs milestone.

Morgan needs 15 more runs to become the 8th England batsman to reach 500 runs milestone in the World Cup tournament.

Squads:

England: Eoin Morgan (capt), Moeen Ali, Jofra Archer, Jonny Bairstow (wk), Jos Buttler (wk), Tom Curran, Liam Dawson, Liam Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jason Roy, Ben Stokes, James Vince, Chris Woakes, Mark Wood.

New Zealand: Kane Williamson (capt), Tom Blundell (wk), Trent Boult, Colin de Grandhomme, Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Matt Henry, Tom Latham (wk), Colin Munro, Jimmy Neesham, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor.

If the Indian State does not dismantle the power structures within Islamic society, the country will be condemned to perpetual anarchy

On Sunday night, a Durga Mandir in Old Delhi was vandalized by a Muslim mob that comprised of around 300-400 people. Communal tensions prevailed in the area following the hate crime and forces have been deployed in significant number to prevent the situation from escalating.

Chants such as “Allah-hu-Akbar” and “Naara-e-Takbeer” were raised as the mob busied itself damaging the home of the Gods. The Police, reportedly, has arrested three so far and one of them is believed to be a juvenile. However, as recent events in Delhi and elsewhere in the country have demonstrated, there doesn’t appear to be any long term strategy to deal with the menace of ‘community crimes’.

Before we proceed any further, we need to define what ‘community crimes’ are. To put it succinctly, there are crimes apart from mob violence that are occasionally not always motivated by religion, but often are, which appear to have the backing of the entire local community, or at least the family.

For instance, there have been occasions when Muslim youths have kidnapped Hindu women or assaulted them sexually. When the family of the Hindu women went to confront the family of the alleged perpetrators, they were murdered by them. There are other occasions when entire Muslim localities attacked the Police to help heinous criminals escape.

Then, there was the recent mob violence in Delhi on Eid when a Muslim mob went on a rampage after a Muslim driver rushed past them perilously. All such crimes, in addition to hate crimes, which have either the active or tacit support from significant sections of the community, and often their involvement as well, are referred here as ‘Community crimes’.

We have no strategy in place to deal with such crimes. Efforts to have one are scuttled by false notions of all religions being the same. But they are not. Every religion has its own unique brand of power structures, its own particular way of organizing society and its own specific manner of relationship between the devotees and the God. Therefore, to brush all these differences under the carpet only leaves us vulnerable to the threats that such differences pose.

To understand why most community crimes are committed by one particular community, we need to understand the power structures that dominate their society. When Dera Sachcha Sauda chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insan was convicted for rape, his followers went on a rampage in NCR, damaging public property at will. The power structures within Muslim society is such that there are hundreds and thousands of such individuals in the form of Maulvis and Maulanas and Muftis.

These Islamic leaders hold great sway over the Muslim community and it can be argued that the primary loyalty of Muslims does not lie with the wider civic sense but to these clerics. The clergy in Islam is decentralized, there is no one leader such as the Pope for Catholics. In fact, it has a lot in common with Protestant society.

Thus, to prevent community crimes, the first and foremost challenge is to destroy the hold these leaders have over the Muslim population. There have been numerous occasions when such people have instigated violence and quite blatantly vitiated communal harmony in the country. However, politicians have allowed such individuals to walk away scot free.

In doing so, they have endangered the safety of citizens across the country by encouraging such elements with their inaction. Now, they feel emboldened enough to preach hatred from their pulpits secure in their belief that they will not be persecuted. Their sense of security needs to be dispelled. Otherwise, the consequences could be grave.

Apart from religious leaders within the community, there are also politicians and local goons who sow the seeds of division to reap fruits during the election cycle. Leaders such as Akbaruddin Owaisi, who openly incited violence against Hindus in the country, has suffered no consequences at all for his hate speech.

If we are to prevent community crimes, such actors cannot be permitted to evade the consequences of their actions. Instead of being behind bars, he is now an elected representative of the Telangana Legislative Assembly. Such callousness while dealing with such figures is one of the primary reasons why our country has been utterly ineffective in dealing with radicalization and Jihad.

There is another aspect to the whole problem that needs proper investigation. A pattern of events has emerged over time where the Muslim community has demonstrated its ability to gather hundreds of people within a very short span of time to commit acts of violence. It was seen in Kolkata in the attack against doctors and interns at the NRS hospital, it has been seen in attacks in the past and it was again seen during the desecration of the Durga Mandir in Old Delhi.

The state needs to investigate the mechanisms which enable Muslims to organize in such large numbers in such a short span of time with the objective of committing violence. Social media, undoubtedly, plays a critical part in this. However, a detailed investigation is required to uncover other aspects and factors which contribute to the phenomenon.

Technology has advanced in leaps and bounds these days which can be used by the state machinery to maintain a tab on such incidents which could enable to pursue preemptive measures to prevent such incidents from occurring in the future. The hotspots for such violence need to be identified, common factors ought to be deduced and modern technology must be used by the law enforcement authorities to prevent such mishaps from happening again and again.

Another variety of community crimes which is an even greater threat is the one where rapes and sexual assault and kidnapping of women from other religious communities appear to have the tacit support from the family members of the perpetrators. We have to entertain the very disturbing possibility that ‘Love Jihad’ does have widespread community support. It should not come as a shock as the pattern has been observed in Western countries as well. There, the phenomenon is called ‘Grooming Gangs’.

In India, radical Islamist outfits have been exposed to invest heavily in ‘Love Jihad’ of Hindu and Christian girls with ulterior motives. Despite that, such outfits haven’t been banned across the country. The state must step in and take the harshest of actions against such elements and ensure that they do not succeed in their evil plans. Such groups must be dismantled root, stem and branches to ensure communal harmony in the country.

More than that, if it is discovered after investigation that family members collaborated or cooperated with the perpetrators of Love Jihad in any manner whatsoever, including not taking steps to ensure that the girl is returned to her family without any further harassment, then they need to be treated at par with the rapists themselves and must receive adequate punishment. Also, such crimes should not be treated as rape or sexual harassment alone, they should be considered by law to be attempts to create disharmony between communities and consequently, the quantum of punishment ought to reflect that.

The main problem with the Indian State’s policy towards Islamic extremism is that it believes it can sway Muslim youth away from the rabid Mullahs and Maulanas through education alone. However, it doesn’t work that way. As was evident in the case of even Zaira Wasim who quit her acting career because it was taking her from her religion, education will not be sufficient to contain the rise of Islamic extremism.

There is often the talk in intellectual circles about the necessity of reforms in Islamic society. However, they never quite specify what exactly such a reform would entail. We are aware of the necessity of reforms within the Muslim community, as much for our safety as for their development, but there has to be a clear strategy involved.

If we look at the history of societal reformations, it has involved the fundamental restructuring of the power structures of society. Muslims in India, anywhere in the world for that matter, haven’t experienced such reformations. Regardless of their defeat in military battles, their power structures endured and therefore, a respite from Jihad has always been temporary. The Indian state, if it has to succeed in containing Islamic extremism, must destroy the power structures within Muslim society which are the pillars of Jihad.

Destruction of power structures would mean Maulvis, Maulanas, Muftis and toxic politicians losing their hold over Islamic society. Such a feat is possible only if the state decides to inflict exemplary cost for indoctrinating Muslim society with the concept of Jihad. If any Muslim leader says anything remotely incendiary, the punishment should be swift and harsh. Such toxic people should be positively scared out of their wits by any means necessary. Only then could there ever be hope for reformation.

Legislative measures need to be adopted to disrupt these power structures. The Triple Talaq Bill is a positive development towards that end. It will empower Muslim women to take action against those who exploit them sexually and emotionally and sow the seeds of fear within clerics and toxic men who harbour extremely problematic opinions. More laws along the lines of the Triple Talaq Bill are of utmost necessity.

Madarsas, which even certain Muslim leaders admit are terrorist manufacturing units, ought to be heavily regulated and the syllabus that is taught to the children should be government approved. Government approval must be made mandatory for operating madarsas, violation of it should attract harsh punishment. CCTVs ought to be installed and frequent checks should be conducted to ensure that problematic concepts are not being taught to students. The students themselves should be interviewed regularly to gauge the concepts they are being taught. Additional measures such as surveillance should also be considered.

Such measures are only far too obvious, surely, people far more qualified than I am have suggested these measures as well. However, the only reason such measures have not been adopted is because the Indian State is far too scared of the violence that might occur if any effort is made to implement them. As a consequence, we have allowed ourselves to be held hostage by people whose ideology is no different than that of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. That Akbaruddin Owaisi is an elected representative of the Telangana Legislative Assembly is a slap on the face of the Indian constitution. And it ought to embarrass every single person who has ever held public office.

We cannot allow the most toxic elements from the Indian Muslim community to hold us hostage for the same reason that we cannot allow the Taliban and the Al Qaeda to hold us hostage. There’s no doubt that violence is a distinct possibility if efforts are made to take action against the toxic leaders of the Muslim community. However, the State must prepare for every manner of contingency before proceeding with its plan.

The Indian State is perennially scared to cause affront to the Muslim community. We are still living with the Ghosts of Partition. When supporters of Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insan ran riot across NCR, law enforcement authorities did not hesitate to shoot them at sight. Where does this courage flee when confronted with Muslim mobs? In West Bengal, in Delhi, in Uttar Pradesh, in Madhya Pradesh, in every single state of the country, the Police remains mute spectators when Muslim mobs run amok destroying everything in sight. Why are criminals treated differently on the basis of their religion?

The mentality of the country has to change. It’s not the Indian State that is responsible for the pitiable living conditions of the Muslim community. Their own leaders have used them as pawns for furthering their own political objectives and increasing their own power. By treating these mobs and their leaders with kid gloves, we have only provided them with more incentives to indulge in criminal activities. The more they behave criminally, the more we appease them and empower the leaders of their community. It hasn’t worked thus far and it won’t in the future.

Going forward, every measure must be taken and a holistic approach should be embraced to undermine the hold of the Clergy in Islamic society at every step. Relying only on Education alone will not work, has never worked. There is an urgent need to prevent community crimes, the overwhelming majority of which is committed by the Muslim community. Legislative measures combined with effective implementation of laws that already exist is of utmost importance. Modernization of the Police Force is also an urgent necessity to enable them to deal with these entities effectively. Unable to do so would lead the country towards a path that ends in catastrophe.

Radicalization is a two-way street, it will be extremely naive for people to assume that incessant lawlessness by the toxic elements from the Muslim community will not have an overbearing impact on the psyche of Hindu society as well. To prevent this cycle of violence, it is of utmost importance that the state takes these issues extremely seriously. Otherwise, the country is condemned to anarchy and perhaps, even another partition.