TMC is a political party that is prominent in the Indian state of
West Bengal. The party is notorious for pandering to its Muslim voting
bloc. With the state holding elections this week, the TMC leader,
reflecting the ideology of his party, campaigned on Muslim identity,
unity and brotherhood. “We are 30 percent and they are 70 percent.
They (BJP) will come to power with the support of 70 percent; they
should be ashamed. If our Muslim population moves to one side, then we
can create 4 new Pakistans. Where will 70 per cent of the population
go?”
After the partition of India, Pakistan, on the West and the East of
India, decided to be an Islamic republic, while India maintained itself
as a secular state where Muslims were welcome to remain, despite having
voted in large numbers for the formation of Pakistan in a 1947
referendum.
Independent secular India has had numerous Muslim politicians and
ministers, who were directly, and at times indirectly, voted into power
by the people of India.
However, it was a shock for the secular Indians when several of their
Muslim politicians exposed Islamic supremacist attitudes and
assumptions, and were unabashed about doing so. Despite enjoying two
terms as the Vice President of India, Hamid Ansari asserted that Muslims
were unsafe in India and that secularism had “almost disappeared” from
the Indian government’s vocabulary.
One would wonder why Mohammad Hamid Ansari, whose diplomatic career
spreads across decades, never leveled such strong allegations against
the Indian government when the genocide and ethnic cleansing of Hindus
was being orchestrated in Kashmir in the late 1980s and early 1990s,
right under the nose of the then-Home Minister, Mufti Mohammad Sayeed.
Mufti Mohammad Sayeed hailed from Kashmir, the very Kashmir that has
given India another seasoned politician, Mehmooba Mufti. Having served
as the Chief Minister of the State of Jammu and Kashmir, Mufti
infamously declared that she wouldn’t raise the Indian flag until the
separate flag of the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir was restored,
after the BJP government in the central government abrogated Articles
370 and 35A in August 2019, which provided for special status for Jammu
and Kashmir. There is no concept of separate flags for different states
in India; hence it is only fair that Jammu and Kashmir should stand
under the National flag. Supreme Court advocate Vineet Jindal observed
that Mufti’s demand insinuated that Jammu and Kashmir was not a part of
the Indian Union, but a separate entity.
Mufti’s remarks may have sounded outrageous to some, but the Hindus
are accustomed to being verbally abused by Islamist politicians of
Mufti’s ilk, who sometimes have even called for their slaughter
publicly. Back in 2013, Akbaruddin Owaisi of the All India
Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (AIMIM) party delivered an incendiary
speech declaring that if the police were diverted for fifteen minutes
“we 30 crores (Muslims) will finish 100 crore Hindus,” that is, 300
million Muslims will finish one billion Hindus. It was not some one-off
slip of the tongue; the politician from Hyderabad boastfully repeated
his provocative speech while addressing a rally during the 2019 general
elections.
On the other hand, a Member of the Legislative Assembly of Delhi,
Amanatullah Khan, has reportedly helped over 300 Rohingya Muslim
infiltrators to illegally settle in the Madanpur Khadar region. The Aam
Aadmi Party legislator was spotted leading the anti-Hindu riots in
Delhi’s Jamia Nagar last year. These riots claimed numerous Hindu lives
and caused untold damage to private and public property. Intelligence
Bureau official Ankit Sharma was brutally murdered during these riots.
The charge sheet filed by Delhi Police accuses Tahir Hussain, another
prominent leader of AAP, of being a major conspirator in this gruesome
murder.
With the kind of secularism India professes, it becomes very easy for
any Islamist to rant against the Hindus and gain influence in any part
of India that has a dominant Muslim population. During the outbreak of
the global pandemic, a 24-year-old Muslim cleric from Bengal, Abbas
Siddiqui, was captured on camera addressing his followers and praying to
Allah to kill 50 crore (500 million) Indians by Corona.
Within a year, Siddiqui rose to significant political prominence and
now helms the Indian Secular Front (ISF) party. He will be calling the
shots in West Bengal’s administration if the ruling government led by
the TMC loses power in the upcoming elections and the BJP doesn’t gain
enough seats to form the government.
But does the return of the ruling dispensation augur well for the
Hindus who live in a state sharing a border with Bangladesh? While
speaking to Pakistani journalist Maleeha Hamid Sidiqqui, the present
mayor of the state capital, TMC leader Firhad Hakim, allegedly referred
to a Muslim-dominated area of Kolkata as “Mini Pakistan.” Hakim drew
some major flak from all directions for this remark.
Though he
vehemently denies the accusations, the denial does little to salvage his
image.