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India - A nightmare for minorities? What migration reveals about religion in India



This is truly low. Not sure what it says about the hindutva movement, but it will tear India apart unless it is addressed.
 
@Hitman cmon dont let the sanghis dictate to you - why are these so common in india, against every faith?


@uppercut - let us hear your denial - can't wait for it
 
@Hitman cmon dont let the sanghis dictate to you - why are these so common in india, against every faith?


@uppercut - let us hear your denial - can't wait for it

You are unlikely to see sanghis condemn this. They are the worst of humanity.

@Hitman claims to be a Christian but never condemns sanghi attacks on Christians. I wonder why. Is he truly a Christian? :inti
 
Show me any Muslim country who had/have Hindu President? On the contrary India had a Muslim as President.

If Muslim behaves like a real Muslim ( I believe Arab Muslims are original muslims), then there is no issue with them in India. N India If the converted Muslims trying to pretend as they are the real ones then only problem occurs. These converts tries to implement practices/ methods which are not mentioned and against Quran
 

“We’re living in fear”: 30 Christian families denied access to Church in Odisha | BBC News India​





@Hitman - let us know more above the above video, why in india christians are treated this bad, its identical how christians are treated in israel,


sanghis below- what are your thoughts, are you ashamed?, is it fake news? - or as you lot say india doesnt produce any fake news??, are these christians actualy privillaged???, let me know your opinion


@Rajdeep @cricketjoshila @Champ_Pal @Devadwal @uppercut @straighttalk @Vikram1989 @Romali_rotti @Bhaijaan @Cover Drive Six @rickroll @RexRex @rpant_gabba, @kron @globetrotter @Hitman @jnaveen1980 @Local.Dada @CrIc_Mystique @Van_Sri @nish_mate @SportsWarrior @kaayal @saimayubera @JaDed @Prince of Dorne @Cryin Out Loud @just a fan @deltexas @Ramsay @Hikaru @Bhimja turtle
 

'Went for Sehri, Meant to Return by Prayers': Howrah Man Shot Dead, Shooters Caught on CCTV​


Howrah Shooting: A Howrah man, who went out for Sehri and was expected back by Fajr prayers, was shot dead. The tragic incident was captured on CCTV, raising shock and concern locally.




Howrah Shooting: A real estate promoter was shot dead early this morning under the jurisdiction of Golabari Police Station in Howrah, West Bengal. At around 4:00 a.m., miscreants opened fire on Shafik Khan, who was associated with a real estate website, in the Pilkhana Second Bye Lane area under Golabari Police Station. After being shot, he was rushed to Anand Kanan and then taken to Howrah District Hospital, where doctors declared him dead.
Following the incident, tension gripped the Pilkhana area of Howrah. As soon as the police received information, officers from Golabari Police Station under Howrah City Police reached the spot and began an investigation.

Family members of the deceased said that Shafik was shot from behind when he stepped out of his house for sehri before offering prayers during the month of Ramadan. They stated that two youths were seen talking to him - one was engaged in conversation, while the other fired at him from behind, leaving him critically injured and bleeding.

Considering the seriousness of the situation, police have deployed additional forces in the area and cordoned off the crime scene. An investigation is underway, and based on CCTV footage, the attackers have been identified. A search operation has been intensified to nab them.
When contacted, Howrah City Police Commissioner Akash Meghbaria said over the phone that the incident occurred during an early-morning clash between two groups, during which Shafik was shot. The shooters are currently absconding, but efforts are on to arrest them. He added that Shafik sustained two bullet injuries. The entire incident is being thoroughly investigated, and the accused will be arrested soon.
"Around 4 AM in the morning a shooting was reported in this area. One person was injured, the doctors declared him dead after he was taken to the hospital. We have started the case, currently we're investigating all angles to figure out the shooter and others who maybe are involved," said the official.
The official said:

What did the victim do? He used to be a small businessman. This can be an outcome of old rivalry/enmity.​

Could you recognise any of the criminals? Yes, to some extent. We know, we're still investigating. We're all here, patrolling and now we're trying to control it. Have controlled it. We're all. The car of the accused was put on fire. Now the situation is under control.



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Expert warns of impending ‘genocide’ of Muslims in India


Gregory Stanton, who founded the Genocide Watch group, is sounding the alarm on violence against Muslims in India.


A genocide of Muslims in India could be about to take place, an expert said to have predicted the massacre of the Tutsi in Rwanda years before it took place in 1994, has warned.

Gregory Stanton, the founder and director of Genocide Watch, said during a US congressional briefing there were early “signs and processes” of genocide in the Indian state of Assam and Indian-administered Kashmir.

“We are warning that genocide could very well happen in India,” Stanton said, speaking on behalf of the non-governmental organisation he launched in 1999 to predict, prevent, stop and seek accountability for the crime.


Stanton said genocide was not an event but a process and drew parallels between the policies pursued by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the discriminatory policies of Myanmar’s government against Rohingya Muslims in 2017.

Among the policies he cited were the revocation of the special autonomous status of Indian-administered Kashmir in 2019 – which stripped Kashmiris of the special autonomy they had for seven decades – and the Citizenship Amendment Act the same year, which granted citizenship to religious minorities but excluded Muslims.

Stanton, a former lecturer in genocide studies and prevention at the George Mason University in Virginia, said he feared a similar scenario to Myanmar, where the Rohingya were first legally declared non-citizens and then expelled through violence and genocide.

“What we are now facing is a very similar kind of a plot,” he said.

Stanton said the Hindutva ideology was “contrary to the history of India and the Indian constitution and referred to Modi as an “extremist who has taken over the government”.

In 1989, Stanton said he had warned the then-Rwandan president Juvénal Habyarimana that “if you don’t do something to prevent genocide in your country, there is going to be a genocide here within five years”.

The early warning signs were followed by the massacre of 800,000 Tutsis and other Rwandans in 1994.

“We cannot let that happen in India,” Stanton said.

Genocide Watch began warning of genocide in India in 2002, when a three-day period of inter-communal violence in the western Indian state of Gujarat resulted in the killing of more than 1,000 Muslims.

‘Take it seriously’​

Aakar Patel, a Bengaluru-based rights activist, writer and the former head of Amnesty International in India, told Al Jazeera that the reports should be taken “very seriously”.

“I think the history on the record of India’s civic violence shows either the state does something that provokes the violence (against Muslims) or does not do enough to stop it,” Patel said.


“I think the government of India needs to take it seriously … The people outside are naturally alarmed when such things are said in India and nothing is done by the state,” he said referring to a recent call for Muslim genocide made at an event by right-wing Hindu groups.

MM Ansari, a former information commissioner and educationist based in New Delhi, termed the report “alarming”. “The fear is very genuine,” he said.

Other experts have denounced rising attacks on Muslim vendors and businesses by Hindu supremacist groups.

In November, Hindu hardliners set fire to the home of a Muslim former foreign minister, Salman Khurshid, who had compared the kind of Hindu nationalism that has flourished under Modi with “extremist groups” such as ISIL (ISIS).

Videos of Hindu religious leaders calling for mass killings and for the use of weapons against Muslims that went viral on social media last month prompted the Supreme Court to order an investigation into hate speech in Uttarakhand state.

“Under BJP’s leadership, India became one of the most dangerous countries for Muslims and Christians in the world. They are being persecuted physically, psychologically and economically,” activist and academic Apoorvanand wrote in an OpEd for Al Jazeera.

“Laws are being passed to criminalise their religious practices, food habits and even businesses.”

Syed Zafar Islam, the spokesperson of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government, rejected Genocide Watch’s report, saying “no such things exist as [is] being portrayed”.

“First of all the impression they have created is factually incorrect,” Islam said, adding that many instances being highlighted by the media were far from reality.


“There have been instances (of attacks) but it is not restricted to one community. In society, we have sometimes attacks on each other over reasons like property disputes or other disputes. These things do not only happen between Hindu and Muslims only but they happen among Hindus as well,” he said.

Muslims comprise nearly 14 percent of India’s 1.4 billion people, while Hindus still form nearly 80 percent of the population.

Modi’s BJP and its ideological parent, the far-right Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), have warned Hindus about religious conversions to Islam and Christianity, and called for action to prevent a “demographic imbalance” in the world’s second most populous nation.

Modi’s BJP has been accused of encouraging the persecution of Muslims and other minorities by hardline Hindu nationalists since coming to power in 2014, allegations it denies.



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@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal - yet another report - i'm sure your more right than Aakar Patel,
 
Rallies don't just happen on their own. They are organized. There's homework done beforehand. There are expenses. Police and authorities are aware. Routes are decided. Volunteers are called. Everyone knows it can't happen without the sangh backing.

Desh ke gaddaro ko goli maro salo ko…slogans echo through rallies in Uttam Nagar while crowds chant against Delhi Police.
Multiple videos show Hindutva groups openly spreading hate and incitement on the streets and look like they are preparing for riots during Eid.

Hate rallies and openly violent speeches are happening almost daily in Uttam Nagar, Delhi, clearly with the protection of the police and the government. It looks like the ground is being prepared for riots around Eid. The atmosphere is tense & dangerous. Courts must take action




Sanghis below, i thought india is peaceful, lets hear how this is all due to muslims not the hindus:

@Rajdeep @cricketjoshila @Champ_Pal @Devadwal @uppercut @straighttalk @Bhaijaan @Vikram1989 @Romali_rotti @Cover Drive Six @rickroll @RexRex @rpant_gabba, @kron @globetrotter @Hitman @jnaveen1980 @Local.Dada @CrIc_Mystique @Van_Sri @nish_mate @SportsWarrior @kaayal @saimayubera @JaDed @Prince of Dorne @Cryin Out Loud @just a fan @deltexas @Ramsay @Hikaru @Bhimja turtle @GoogleToggle @big_gamer007 @IndoorCricket
 

Ramzan Under Siege: India in a World at War​


Each year, as Muslims in India fast and gather in prayer, the country braces, not for celebration, but for the familiar rhythm of threats, arrests, and violence​



Muslims prepare to break their fast at a mosque in New Delhi during the holy month of Ramzan. Image: Rana Ayyub

You know it is Ramzan in India when calls for genocide against Muslims echo in the capital, New Delhi. As has become the norm, Ramzan this year brought yet another cycle of predictable physical, cultural, and psychological violence against Muslims in India.

Yesterday, a plea was moved in a Delhi court seeking protection against potential violence in Uttam Nagar, a Hindu-dominated society after calls for bloodshed on Eid surfaced. Hindu nationalist leaders have given speeches warning of a ‘Khoon ki Holi’ (blood soaked festival) on Eid after an altercation between the two communities. (https://news.abplive.com/cities/utt...ash-death-khoon-ki-holi-1831763#goog_rewarded)

That such a petition feels necessary is itself a measure of how far the line has shifted in India just before a Muslim religious festival.

In Uttar Pradesh, Muslims gathering for iftaar along the banks of the Ganga were arrested following allegations that they consumed non vegetarian food while eating their iftaar, transforming an act of faith into an act of alleged criminality. According to multiple Indian news publications, “The persons were booked under sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita pertaining to defiling a place of worship with intent to insult the religion of a class, deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings of a class by insulting its religious beliefs and promoting enmity between groups.

They were also booked under sections pertaining to public nuisance and using evidence known to be false, The Indian Express reported.” (https://scroll.in/latest/1091440/va...-eating-chicken-biryani-during-iftar-on-ganga)


The message is unmistakable: even the most intimate expressions of Muslim life are now subject to scrutiny, suspicion, arrest and sanction. Muslims in India are being labeled as criminals just by virtue of observing their faith or wearing markers of faith in public. In Maharashtra, Muslim men were booked for simply using a space in an Electricity board office to offer their evening prayers for five minutes during Ramzan. maharashtra

In Uttarakhand, north India, an elderly Muslim man was subjected to slurs and assaulted by a mob after he was found offering Ramzan prayers in the vicinity of a temple. (https://www.ptinews.com/story/natio...maz-on-vacant-land-in-front-of-temple/3410935)

These are just some of the few reported cases from all over India during Ramzan; they are not the aberration, they are the norm.

None of these violent hate crimes takes place in isolation. Over the past few years, Ramzan has come to mark a grim pattern in India’s public life, a season where hate finds both amplification and impunity. It plays out on the streets, as well as through institutions and culture. The release of films like The Kerala Story 2 feeds into a narrative ecosystem that casts Muslims as perpetual suspects, if not enemies within. In the film, Kerala story, Muslims are accused of hatching a conspiracy to convert Hindu women to Islam, a claim that has been debunked on multiple occasions by fact checkers and official news reports. Yet the film was cleared by the Censor Board of India for release despite its potential to create communal disharmony.

In Mumbai’s Dadar, a suburb with a significant Hindu population, a large poster with images of Bharatiya Janata Party leaders asks citizens to attend a special screening of the film. In another suburb, citizens are seen taking a pledge to boycott Muslims socially and economically after the screening of the film. What was once the language of the fringe now echoes in the mainstream, repeated often enough to acquire the veneer of legitimacy.

Ironically, this is taking place at the same time as India was allegedly pleading with Iran through backdoor diplomacy to clear its consignments stuck in the Strait of Hormuz. Critics have pointed out the stark contradiction: a government that presides over deepening hostility toward Muslims at home continues to rely on Muslim-majority nations abroad for strategic and economic interests.

International observers have begun to take note. Genocide Watch has warned that India shows early indicators associated with societies at risk of mass atrocities. The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, a bipartisan U.S. government body, has gone further, recommending targeted sanctions against the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a Hindu nationalist organization widely seen as the ideological parent of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party. These are serious assessments, and they reflect a pattern that is now visible beyond India’s borders. These are not conclusions arrived at lightly; they reflect a pattern visible enough to transcend national boundaries.

Yet, within India, there is little introspection. Over the past two weeks, sections of the right wing openly celebrated the deaths of Iranians, Palestinians, and even the reported killing of Ali Khamenei, not as geopolitical events, but as victories defined by the religion of the dead. The dehumanisation is so complete that Muslim lives, anywhere in the world, are rendered expendable.

This makes the Indian government’s foreign policy posture all the more striking. Even as hate intensifies at home, New Delhi continues to rely on Iran for strategic access, at times appearing, critics argue, to stand before Tehran with a begging bowl to ensure passage through the Strait of Hormuz. The contradiction is hard to ignore: hostility domestically, dependence diplomatically.

There is irony, too, in the silence of the Muslim world. Countries like Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Qatar have bestowed their highest civilian honours, the March of honours, upon Prime Minister Narendra Modi, even as over 220 million Muslims in India face increasing marginalisation and humiliation. Realpolitik may explain these gestures, but it does not erase their symbolism.

On Instagram and Twitter, influencers share images of food walks and Ramzan evenings at the famous Jama Masjid in Delhi and Mohammed Ali Road in Mumbai. But as one of the iconic shopkeepers near Minara Masjid told me, “They come and eat with us, but when there is a demolition or a hate crime in this very area, they pretend we do not exist.” The shop owner was referring to the demolition of Muslim shops in the area on the occasion of the Ram Temple inauguration in January 2024. He says he is angry but not bitter. Refusing to be named for fear of consequences, he added, “They will still find ‘mohabbat ka sharbat’ (The drink of love) and ‘Irani chai’ in our neighbourhood, and we will welcome them with open arms.” It is 2 a.m. as I speak to him near his shop on Mohammed Ali Road. There is barely space to breathe as locals revel in the food-filled streets, a significant number of them non-Muslims.

What emerges through events in Ramzan is not a series of disconnected events, but a coherent landscape: cultural vilification, economic exclusion, political silence, and global complicity. Ramzan, a month meant for restraint and reflection, has instead become a mirror, reflecting the steady erosion of India’s constitutional promise. All of this is unfolding even as war engulfs parts of the Middle East, with US and Israeli strikes and civilian casualties across Iran and the region. This Ramzan, Muslims have eaten their pre-dawn and post-sunset meals alongside images of children killed in schools and hospitals across Iran, Gaza, and Lebanon.


In that context, what is happening in India does not stand apart; it echoes a wider moment where Muslim lives, across geographies, are being made increasingly vulnerable and dispensable.

As I write this, a news alert lands in my inbox: Muslims in Uttam Nagar, Delhi, have begun packing their bags two days before Eid, fearing violence and bloodshed. This isn’t Gaza; this is the world’s largest democracy, long held up as the nation of Gandhi, a nation of peace. And yet, each year, Muslims in India brace for the worst, even as they pray for peace and serenity during Ramzan. No one should have to choose between faith and safety. And yet, that is the choice many are quietly making in the 21st-century India.


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@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru - yet another report - i'm sure your more right than Aakar Patel,
 

'Khoon Ki Holi': Tension Grips Uttam Nagar Ahead Of Eid, Families Fear Violence After Clash Death​


Threats of violence have prompted some Muslim families to consider leaving. Police have increased security, but residents fear online threats and inflammatory content.​



Tension continues to simmer in Uttam Nagar ahead of Eid-ul-Fitr, days after a 26-year-old man died following clashes between two families from different communities earlier this month.

The unrest traces back to an altercation during Holi, when a dispute escalated into violence. With Eid approaching and threats surfacing, several Muslim families are now considering temporarily leaving the area until the situation stabilises, according to a report by Hindustan Times.

Clash Triggered by Holi Incident​

The initial confrontation began on March 4 after an 11-year-old girl threw a water balloon that struck a Muslim woman, leading to a heated argument. The situation quickly spiralled, and 26-year-old Tarun Kumar later succumbed to injuries sustained in the clashes.

Police have arrested 14 people and detained two minors in connection with the incident.

Residents Fear ‘Khoon Ki Holi’ Threats​

Local residents say tensions have escalated due to alleged threats by certain leaders and religious groups warning of a “khoon ki Holi” — a phrase implying bloodshed.

Jameel Ahmad, a 55-year-old restaurant owner who has lived in the area for over five decades, expressed deep concern for his family’s safety.

“We are all scared because we have seen leaders say they will play ‘khoon ki Holi’. We have nowhere to go,” he said, adding that the dispute was originally between two families and not communal in nature.

Ahmad also claimed that some religious figures made threatening remarks during condolence visits, while videos circulating online have heightened anxiety among residents. According to him, some nearby families have already left, and his own children are urging him to do the same before Eid.

Police Step Up Security, Appeal for Calm​

The Delhi Police said it is engaging with local residents and maintaining that no one has officially expressed plans to leave due to fear.

Deputy Commissioner of Police (Dwarka) Kushal Pal Singh appealed to residents to stay put, assuring them of adequate security arrangements for the festival.

Authorities have barricaded the Hastsal village area, with each lane secured by temporary barriers and police personnel deployed on the ground.

Online Threats Add to Concerns​

Despite heightened security, concerns persist over inflammatory content and open threats circulating on social media, which, according to reports, remained unaddressed as of Monday.

No FIR has yet been registered against those issuing threats, and action against individuals posting such videos is still pending.



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@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru - yet another report - i'm sure your more right than Aakar Patel,
 

Malegaon namaz row: Day after prayers were offered inside civic office, Maharashtra Police file FIR​


The incident took place during a protest by residents over alleged unresolved electricity supply issues in one of Malegaon’s wards. The demonstration was led by Lukman Kamal, president of the Malegaon Lok Sangharsh Samiti
A political controversy erupted in Maharashtra after a video showing namaz being offered inside the electricity department office of the Malegaon Municipal Corporation went viral, prompting police to register a first information report (FIR) against several individuals.
The incident took place during a protest by residents over alleged unresolved electricity supply issues in one of Malegaon’s wards. The demonstration was led by Lukman Kamal, president of the Malegaon Lok Sangharsh Samiti. As the protest coincided with the Asr prayer during the holy month of Ramadan, some protesters offered namaz in congregation inside the municipal office premises.

The video of the prayers circulated widely on social media, sparking debate over the appropriateness of holding religious observances inside a government office.

Following the controversy, Malegaon Police registered a first information report (FIR) against two named persons — Lukman and Salim Ikka — and four to five unidentified individuals. The case has been filed under relevant provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), including sections related to unlawful assembly and obstruction or assault of a public servant, along with sections of the Maharashtra Police Act concerning illegal assembly and disruption of official duties.

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Kirit Somaiya wrote to Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis seeking strict action. He said offering namaz inside a government office was unacceptable and called for an FIR and disciplinary action against those responsible.

“Namaz cannot be offered inside government offices. Whoever is responsible should face strict action. The police should also register an FIR,” he said.


Malegaon namaz row: Mixed political reactions as leaders debate religion in government spaces​

The episode drew sharp reactions from other political leaders as well. Maharashtra Minister Nitesh Narayan Rane condemned the act and demanded action. BJP legislator Atul Bhatkhalkar termed it illegal and called for strict measures, while Shiv Sena Member of Legislative Assembly (MLA) Sanjay Gaikwad said religion should not be mixed with administration and government offices should not be used as places of worship.

However, Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar) state president Shashikant Shinde cautioned against politicising the issue.

“In Maharashtra, there had never been unrest in the name of religion or caste before, but today we are seeing that people are trying to politicise any issue,” he said.




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@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru @Hitman - yet another INDIAN report - why is india such a hateful place to minorities
 

U'khand: Muslim man assaulted for offering namaz on vacant land in front of temple​



RUDRAPUR (UTTARAKHAND): (Feb 25) An elderly Muslim man was allegedly assaulted by some people and forced to chant religious slogans after he offered namaz on a vacant land in front of a temple here, police said.

A video of the incident is doing the rounds on social media. In the video, the accused are seen thrashing the man with sticks and hurling abuses at him.

The man, Shahid, a resident of the Resham Bari area, offered namaz during the ongoing month of Ramzan in front of the Atriya Temple in Jagatpura, the police said on Tuesday.



@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru @Hitman - yet another INDIAN report - why is india such a hateful place to minorities
 
Hyderabad, Telangana: AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi says, "...I ask youth, especially Hindu youth - data has come that 67% of the graduates in India are unemployed...You are not getting food in your stomach, but your mind is being filled with hatred...The youth have been made 'Gau Rakshak'...In Delhi's Uttam Nagar, outfits affiliated with RSS are saying that they won't let Eid be celebrated there...Several Muslims in Uttam Nagar have left their houses. Delhi High Court had to intervene and say that let Eid be celebrated peacefully...This is what India has come to...and we say that we will be the third-largest economy..."




@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru @Hitman - yet another INDIAN report - why is india such a hateful place to minorities
 
Hyderabad, Telangana: AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi says, "...I ask youth, especially Hindu youth - data has come that 67% of the graduates in India are unemployed...You are not getting food in your stomach, but your mind is being filled with hatred...The youth have been made 'Gau Rakshak'...In Delhi's Uttam Nagar, outfits affiliated with RSS are saying that they won't let Eid be celebrated there...Several Muslims in Uttam Nagar have left their houses. Delhi High Court had to intervene and say that let Eid be celebrated peacefully...This is what India has come to...and we say that we will be the third-largest economy..."




@Vikram1989 @Champ_Pal @uppercut @Hikaru @Hitman - yet another INDIAN report - why is india such a hateful place to minorities
 
Bacche hain ye? Atan*w**di ke p!lle hain saale...A disturbing video circulating online shows a 14-year-old Hindu boy openly threatening Muslims, saying: "This time there will be no Eid, no goats will be slaughtered, all the mullahs will be slaughtered.

"He further alleges that police receive weekly payments from Muslims and threatens violence, adding, “If any mullah is seen, we will cut him immediately.”The video also includes calls to throw pigs and pig-related items during Eid, while crowd surrounding him cheers & encourages the hate speech.




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@Champ_Pal - how about this, is this islamophoia? also why does the thick kid think muslims sacrafice a goat on this eid?, you know my opinion in india education,

why does he say = all the mullahs will be slaughtered."He further alleges that police receive weekly payments from Muslims and threatens violence, adding, “If any mullah is seen, we will cut him immediately

why does he say what @uppercut said to me = The video also includes calls to throw pigs and pig-related items (@uppercut can you answer this question, and also the above)
 
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