Showing posts with label minorities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label minorities. Show all posts

Sunday, August 7, 2011

MINORITIES ARTICLE CASE: Subramanian Swamy's house compound vandalised!


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August 7, 2011 / IANS, New Delhi / DC.

Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy during a press conference - PTI
Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy during a press conference - PTI.


Suspected Congress workers entered the compound of Janata Party chief Subramanian Swamy's house in south Delhi on Sunday and ransacked his garden to protest a controversial article he wrote recently, police said.

The incident took place around 5.30p.m., when the police received a call about protests at Swamy's house in East Nizamuddin.

Swamy, meanwhile, posted on microblogging site Twitter: "Rowdy Congress persons break open into my Nizamuddin compound (and) destruct my garden. Police have arrived. Please inform police (sic)."

In another tweet, Swamy said: "A plain clothes police officer was witness and has given evidence for FIR."

A police officer said that a few Congress workers shouted slogans and entered the garden. "They ransacked the garden and left in fifteen minutes."


Dr. Subramanian Swamy with his stature should never have stooped to the level of cheap communal passion instigation through his controversial article;

Similarly, Congress workers or whoever it was not right in indulging in physical violence and destruction of properties;

Both should be prosecuted for their crimes under relevant legal provisions!!!


Full Story at,

MINORITIES ARTICLE CASE: NHRC reserves decision on MP's plea against Swamy!


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Special Correspondent, The Hindu / NEW DELHI, August 7, 2011.

The National Human Rights Commission has reserved decision on Wayanad MP M.I. Shanavas' petition seeking its intervention in the matter of a recent article by Janata Party president Subramanian Swamy where he prescribed a code of conduct for Muslims and suggested linking their voting rights to their acknowledging their Hindu ancestry.
The article appeared in the Daily News & Analysis on July 16, 2011, three days after the Mumbai serial bomb attacks.
Arguing that the article violated the human rights and other laws held sacred by the Constitution, the MP urged the NHRC to direct the Centre to start prosecution proceedings against Dr. Swamy.
“A model of harmony”
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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

MINORITIES ARTICLE CASE: Minorities' commission to press criminal charges against Swamy!


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Vidya Subramaniam, The Hindu / NEW DELHI, August 3, 2011.

The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) has decided to press criminal charges against Janata Party president and columnist Subramanian Swamy for an incendiary article he wrote against Muslims in the Daily News and Analysis.
In the article, written against the backdrop of the July 13 Mumbai blasts, Dr. Swamy had asked for India to be declared a Hindu Rashtra and sought severe punitive measures against Muslims, including their disenfranchisement if they did not acknowledge their Hindu ancestry.
NCM chairperson Wajahat Habibullah told The Hindu that the full Bench of the Commission met on Tuesday and unanimously resolved to act against Dr. Swamy.

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Monday, August 1, 2011

MINORITIES ARTICLE CASE: Arrest Swamy, rights body urges Mumbai police!


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July 30, 2011 / IANS, Mumbai / DC.

Subramanian Swamy is under flak for his comments on minorities in a recent article - PTI file photo
Subramanian Swamy is under flak for his comments on minorities in a recent article - PTI file photo.

Maharashtra's minorities commission on Saturday called for the arrest of Janata Party leader Subramanian Swamy for his 'extreme xenophobic right-wing thoughts' expressed in a newspaper article.
State Minorities Commission vice chairman Abraham Mathai wrote to Mumbai police chief Arup Patnaik, urging him to initiate criminal charges against Swamy under Section 153 (A) of the Indian Penal Code.
"I am writing to you following uproar and a feeling of insecurity among the minority community caused by an article written by Dr. Subramanian Swamy entitled 'How to wipe out Islamic terror' published in the DNA of 16th July 2011," the letter said.
Swamy, a doctorate from Harvard, penned an op-ed that advocated denial of voting rights to non-Hindus with the goal of stemming terrorist attacks in India.
"The extreme xenophobic right-wing thoughts expressed in it are quite disturbing and the article is socially irresponsible and completely anti-Islamic. It is also alarming that Dr. Swamy is trying to incite Islamophobia using his freedom of expression to propagate hate through stereotyping," Mathai said.


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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

COMMUNAL VIOLENCE: A bill to settle a terrible debt!


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SIDDHARTH VARADARAJAN / The hindu.

This October 21, 2008 photo shows a taxi damaged during a protest by Maharashtra Navnirman Sena supporters in South Mumbai against the arrest of their chief Raj Thackeray for his alleged involvement in the attack on Biharis. File Photo: Vivek Bendre
This October 21, 2008 photo shows a taxi damaged during a protest by Maharashtra Navnirman Sena supporters in South Mumbai against the arrest of their chief Raj Thackeray for his alleged involvement in the attack on Biharis. File Photo: Vivek Bendre.

For decades, the victims of communal and targeted violence have been denied protections of law that the rest of us take for granted. It's time to end this injustice.
In a vibrant and mature democracy, there would be no need to have special laws to prosecute the powerful or protect the weak. If a crime takes place, the law would simply take its course. In a country like ours, however, life is not so simple. Terrible crimes can be committed involving the murder of hundreds and even thousands of people, or the loot of billions of rupees. But the law in India does not take its course. More often than not, it stands still.
If the Lokpal bill represents an effort to get the law to change its course on the crime of corruption, the new draft bill on the prevention of communal and targeted violence is a modest contribution towards ensuring that India's citizens enjoy the protection of the state regardless of their religion, language or caste.
The draft law framed by the National Advisory Council and released earlier this month for comment and feedback is a huge improvement over the bill originally drawn up by the United Progressive Alliance government in 2005. The earlier version paid lip service to the need for a law to tackle communal violence but made matters worse by giving the authorities greater coercive powers instead of finding ways to eliminate the institutional bias against the minorities, Dalits and adivasis, which lies at the heart of all targeted violence in India.
The November 1984 massacre of Sikhs provides a good illustration of how the institutionalised “riot system” works. Let us start with the victim. She is unable to get the local police to protect the lives of her family members or property. She is unable to file a proper complaint in a police station. Senior police officers, bureaucrats and Ministers, who by now are getting reports from all across the city, State and country, do not act immediately to ensure the targeted minorities are protected. Incendiary language against the victims is freely used. Women who are raped or sexually assaulted get no sympathy or assistance. When the riot victims form makeshift relief camps, the authorities harass them and try to make them leave. The victims have to struggle for years before the authorities finally provide some compensation for the death, injury and destruction they have suffered. As for the perpetrators of the violence, they get away since the police and the government do not gather evidence, conduct no investigation and appoint biased prosecutors, thereby sabotaging the chances of conviction and punishment.
With some modifications here and there, this is the same sickening script which played out in Gujarat in 2002, when Muslims were the targeted group. On a smaller scale, all victims of organised, targeted violence — be they Tamils in Karnataka or Hindi speakers in Maharashtra or Dalits in Haryana and other parts of the country — know from experience and instinct that they cannot automatically count on the local police coming to their help should they be attacked.

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