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2025 set a new benchmark for hate speech in India​





Hate speech targeting religious minorities surged across India in the aftermath of the country’s border conflict with Pakistan last year, according to a new report by an American think tank.

Researchers documented a sharp rise in rallies and speeches portraying Muslims as “internal enemies” in 2025, suggesting external security crises were utilised to justify attacks against India’s own minority communities.


This link was especially evident after a terror attack targeting Indian tourists in the Kashmiri village of Pahalgam on 22 April, in which 26 people were killed. India accused Pakistan of harbouring the gunmen who carried out the attack, and responded by launching air strikes against targets inside Pakistan. Fierce clashes at the border and between the two countries’ air forces followed, ending in a ceasefire agreement after four days.

According to a new report from the India Hate Lab (IHL), a project run by the Washington DC-based Center for the Study of Organized Hate, at least 1,318 hate speech events targeting Muslims and Christians were recorded across India last year. This translates to an average of four incidents a day, and a 13 per cent increase on 2024. It is nearly double the number documented in 2023.

The report identified a concentrated burst of hate speech in late April and early May, after the Pahalgam terror attack and in the days preceding the India-Pakistan hostilities. In the 16-day period between 22 April 2025 and 7 May 2025 alone, 98 in-person hate speech events were recorded nationwide, pointing to what researchers described as coordinated anti-Muslim mobilisation during a period of escalating regional tension.


Eviane Ledig, executive director of the Center for the Study of Organized Hate, says the spike was “not a surprise”, explaining that periods of interstate conflict often become sources of division at home.

“Tensions between India and Pakistan create this perfect storm for mobilising activities,” she tells The Independent. “It offers up, for many, a justification for hateful attacks, which are then seen as lending further legitimacy to the Hindu nationalist cause.


While hate speech was documented across much of the country, the report found it was most prevalent in states governed by prime minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), where nearly nine in 10 incidents took place. The majority of speeches explicitly targeted Muslims, often framing them as internal enemies at a time of external conflict.

“We believe the primary reason we see a higher number of recorded incidents in BJP-controlled states is that much of the hate speech has been top-down,” she says. “But we also see growing grassroots mobilisation in these states, where people feel emboldened to carry out hateful and violent acts.”

The state of Uttar Pradesh led the country in the number of recorded hate speech events, with 266 incidents, followed by Maharashtra (193), Madhya Pradesh (172), Uttarakhand (155), and the national capital of Delhi (76).


Leidig says what was most alarming was that the surge came in a non-election year. Typically, spikes in hate speech have been recorded during election campaigning by political parties in India.

“The fact that the baseline has been elevated in a non-election year is deeply concerning. It indicates that a new normal has been reached, where hate has been normalised and legitimised,” Leidig says.


Across the 23 states and federal territories that were studied, 16 were governed by the BJP for most of the year. Nearly 88 per cent of all hate speech events occurred in BJP-ruled states or territories, a 25 per cent increase from 2024. By contrast, opposition-ruled states saw a decline, with 154 incidents recorded in 2025 – down 34 per cent from the previous year.

Pawan Khera, a spokesperson for the opposition Congress party, said the report’s findings “almost certainly capture only a fraction of the truth”.

“The actual scale of hate speech in India is likely far more pervasive and far more dangerous than what even these alarming figures reveal,” he told The Independent.

“That BJP-ruled states consistently dominate the hate-speech landscape is no coincidence. It points to a deeper pattern of political patronage, institutional silence, and deliberate normalisation of hate,” he said.


The Independent contacted the BJP’s national spokesperson for comment, but had not received a response at the time of publication.

The IHL report shows that hate speech often surged around specific political or religious flashpoints. April emerged as the most volatile month, with 158 incidents recorded during processions and rallies organised to mark the Hindu festival of Ram Navami, following the Pahalgam terror attack.

Leidig says those rallies were rarely spontaneous. “What we are seeing is a decade of sustained organising,” she says. It “really is organised hate” and “coordinated activity”.

“Much of the documented incidents in response to the Pahalgam terror attack was particularly facilitated by a wave of hate speech at rallies that were organised by Hindutva groups in response to the attacks. So indeed, it was a flashpoint for organised hate.”


Nearly half of all recorded speeches referenced to conspiracy theories portraying minorities as existential threats, including narratives such as “love jihad” – an unfounded conspiracy theory where it is claimed Muslim men are enticing Hindu women to convert to Islam through marriage; “land jihad” – which accuses Muslims of encroaching on public lands through the construction of religious edifices or conducting prayers; “population jihad” – the claim that Muslims are intentionally increasing their birth rates with the aim of surpassing and eventually dominating the population of other communities; and “vote jihad” – which accuses Muslims of voting as a block to manipulate elections, increase their political influence, and weaken Hindu dominance.

Almost a quarter of all speeches contained explicit calls for violence, while more than 130 included direct calls to arms.


More than 270 speeches called for the removal or destruction of places of worship, most frequently targeting the Gyanvapi Mosque and the Shahi Idgah Mosque in Uttar Pradesh. At least 120 speeches explicitly urged boycotts of minority communities.

Both mosques are at the centre of a new flashpoint in a decades-long dispute. A section of India’s majority Hindu community believes they were constructed after destroying Hindu temples.


Maharashtra recorded the highest proportion of such high-risk speeches, with nearly 40 per cent involving explicit calls for violence. Among those identified as delivering the most dangerous speeches was Maharashtra minister Nitesh Rane.

The report notes that “rather than receding after the electoral cycle, hate speech in Maharashtra remained elevated, indicating the normalisation of anti-minority hate speech and incitement to violence beyond campaign periods”.

The Independent has contacted the BJP’s Maharashtra cadre for comment.


Researchers also recorded widespread use of dehumanising language, with minorities described as “termites”, “parasites” and “mad dogs”.

Leidig says such language plays a critical role in enabling violence. “Dehumanising labels create a psychological bypass,” she says.

“So then it kind of creates this emotional resonance with individuals, to be able to participate in acts of physical violence or sort of social ostracisation. And we see that this type of rhetoric has been witnessed historically and at present in sort of major communal and genocidal conflicts.”


The IHL report says that organised right-wing Hindu groups played a prominent role. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal were linked to more than one-fifth of all incidents, while over 160 organisations and informal groups were identified as organisers or co-organisers. Hindu monks and religious leaders were involved in 145 incidents, reinforcing the religious framing of anti-minority rhetoric, the report says.

“Alarmingly, these rallies often occur in the presence, sometimes under the protection of police,” the report says.

The Independent has contacted the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal for comment.

Christian community leaders have repeatedly warned that they face growing hostility in India, allegations that the ruling BJP has previously denied.

Ahead of Christmas last month, Hindu vigilantes across the country attempted to disrupt celebrations, leading to a sharp rise in attacks on Christians. They vandalised churches, interrupted prayer services, harassed carol singers and dismantled festive decorations.


Christians make up about 2.3 per cent of India’s population and major events in the calendar like Christmas and Good Friday are national holidays. Yet that too was eroded last year, with the local government in the most populous state Uttar Pradesh ordering schools to open on Christmas Day, and for children to mark the day by honouring the birthday of freedom fighter and former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

Social media played a central role in amplifying hate speech. Videos from nearly all documented events were first shared or live-streamed online, with Facebook accounting for the majority of initial uploads, followed by YouTube, Instagram and X.

Leidig says the failure of platforms to intervene was a growing concern. “The fact that social media platforms are continuing to fail in acting upon these violations on their platforms, despite having guidelines that prohibit this type of hate, is also something that is of concern for us.” She added: “Hate, conspiracy theories and disinformation are now intertwined into a perfect storm.”



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India shuts Kashmir medical college – after Muslims earned most admissions

India has shut down a medical college in Indian-administered Kashmir in an apparent capitulation to protests by right-wing Hindu groups over the admission of an overwhelming number of Muslim students into the prestigious course.

The National Medical Commission (NMC), a federal regulatory authority for medical education and practices, on January 6 revoked the recognition of Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Medical Institute (SMVDMI), located in Reasi, a mountainous district overlooking the Pir Panjal range in the Himalayas, which separates the plains of Jammu from the Kashmir valley.

Of the 50 pupils who joined the five-year bachelor’s in medicine (MBBS) programme in November, 42 were Muslims, most of them residents of Kashmir, while seven were Hindus and one was a Sikh. It was the first MBBS batch that the private college, founded by a Hindu religious charity and partly funded by the government, had launched.

Admissions to medical colleges across India, whether public or private, follow a centralised entrance examination, called the National Entrance Examination Test (NEET), conducted by the federal Ministry of Education’s National Testing Agency (NTA).

More than two million Indian students appear for NEET every year, hoping to secure one of approximately 120,000 MBBS seats. Aspirants usually prefer public colleges, where fees are lower but cutoffs for admission are high. Those who fail to meet the cutoff but meet a minimum NTA threshold join a private college.

Like Saniya Jan*, an 18-year-old resident of Kashmir’s Baramulla district, who recalls being overwhelmed with euphoria when she passed the NEET, making her eligible to study medicine. “It was a dream come true – to be a doctor,” Saniya told Al Jazeera.

When she joined a counselling session that determines which college a NEET qualifier joins, she chose SMVDMI since it was about 316km (196 miles) from her home – relatively close for students in Kashmir, who often otherwise have to travel much farther to go to college.

Saniya’s thrilled parents drove to Reasi to drop her off at the college when the academic session started in November. “My daughter has been a topper since childhood. I have three daughters, and she is the brightest. She really worked hard to get a medical seat,” Saniya’s father, Gazanfar Ahmad*, told Al Jazeera.

But things did not go as planned.

‘No business being there’

As soon as local Hindu groups found out about the religious composition of the college’s inaugural batch in November, they launched demonstrations demanding that the admission of Muslim students be scrapped. They argued that since the college was chiefly funded from the offerings of devotees at Mata Vaishno Devi Temple, a prominent Hindu shrine in Kashmir, Muslim students had “no business being there”.

The agitations continued for weeks, with demonstrators amassing every day outside the iron gates of the college and raising slogans.

Meanwhile, legislators belonging to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – which has been accused of pursuing anti-Muslim policies since coming to power in 2014 – even wrote petitions to Kashmir’s lieutenant governor, urging him to reserve admissions in SMVDMI only for Hindu students. The lieutenant governor is the federally appointed administrator of the disputed region.

In the days that followed, their demands escalated to seeking the closure of the college itself.

As the protests intensified, the National Medical Commission on January 6 announced that it had rescinded the college’s authorisation because it had failed to “meet the minimum standard requirements” specified by the government for medical education. The NMC claimed the college suffered from critical deficiencies in its teaching faculty, bed occupancy, patient flow in outpatient departments, libraries and operating theatres. The next day, a “letter of permission”, which authorised the college to function and run courses, was withdrawn.

‘The college was good’

But most students Al Jazeera talked to said they did not see any shortcomings in the college and that it was well-equipped to run the medical course. “I don’t think the college lacked resources,” Jahan*, a student who only gave her second name, said. “We have seen other colleges. Some of them only have one cadaver per batch, while this college has four of them. Every student got an opportunity to dissect that cadaver individually.”

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Rafiq, a student who only gave his second name, said that he had cousins in sought-after government medical colleges in Srinagar, the biggest city in Indian-administered Kashmir. “Even they don’t have the kind of facilities that we had here,” he said.

Saniya’s father, Ahmad, also told Al Jazeera that when he dropped her off at the college, “everything seemed normal”.

“The college was good. The faculty was supportive. It looked like no one cared about religion inside the campus,” he said.

Zafar Choudhary, a political analyst based in Jammu, questioned how the medical regulatory body had sanctioned the college’s authorisation if there was an infrastructural deficit. “Logic dictates that their infrastructure would have only improved since the classes started. So we don’t know how these deficiencies arose all of a sudden,” he told Al Jazeera.

Choudhary said the demand of the Hindu groups was “absurd” given that selections into medical colleges in India are based on religion-neutral terms. “There is a system in place that determines it. A student is supposed to give preference, and a lot of parameters are factored in before the admission lists are announced. When students are asked for their choices, they give multiple selections rather than one. So how is it their fault?” he asked.

Al Jazeera reached out to SMVDMI’s executive head, Yashpal Sharma, via telephone for comments. He did not respond to calls or text messages. The college has issued no public statement since the revocation of its authorisation to offer medical courses.

‘They turned merit into religion’

Meanwhile, students at SMVDMI have packed their belongings and returned home.

Salim Manzoor*, another student, pointed out that Indian-administered Kashmir, a Muslim-majority region, also had a medical college where Hindu candidates are enrolled under a quota reserved for them and other communities that represent a minority in the region.

The BJP insists it never claimed that Muslim students were unwelcome at SMVDMI, but encouraged people to recognise the “legitimate sentiments” that millions of Hindu devotees felt towards the temple trust that founded it. “This college is named after Mata Vaishno Devi, and there are millions of devotees whose religious emotions are strongly attached to this shrine,” BJP’s spokesman in Kashmir, Altaf Thakur, told Al Jazeera. “The college recognition was withdrawn because NMC found several shortcomings. There’s no question of the issue being about Hindus and Muslims.”

Last week, Omar Abdullah, chief minister of Indian-administered Kashmir, announced that SMVDMI students would not be made to “suffer due to NMC’s decision” and they would be offered admissions in other colleges in the region. “These children cleared the National Entrance Examination Test, and it is our legal responsibility to adjust them. We will have supernumerary seats, so their education is not affected. It is not difficult for us to adjust all 50 students, and we will do it,” he said.

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Abdullah condemned the BJP and its allied Hindu groups for their campaign against Muslims joining the college. “People generally fight for having a medical college in their midst. But here, the fight was put up to have the medical college shut. You have played with the future of the medical students of [Kashmir]. If ruining the future of students brings you happiness, then celebrate it.”

Tanvir Sadiq, a regional legislator belonging to Abdullah’s National Conference party, said that the university that the medical college is part of received more than $13m in government aid since 2017 – making all Kashmiris, and not donors to the Mata Vaishno Devi shrine – stakeholders. “This means that anyone who is lawfully domiciled in [Indian-administered Kashmir] can go and study there. In a few decades, the college would have churned out thousands of fresh medical graduates. If a lot of them are Muslims today, tomorrow they would have been Hindus as well,” he told Al Jazeera.

Nasir Khuehami, who heads the Jammu and Kashmir Students’ Association, told Al Jazeera the Hindu versus Muslim narrative threatened to “communalise” the region’s education sector. “The narrative that because the college is run by one particular community, only students from that community alone will study there, is dangerous,” he said.

He pointed out that Muslim-run universities, not just in Kashmir but across India, that were recognised as minority institutions did not “have an official policy of excluding Hindus”.

Back at her home in Baramulla, Saniya is worried about her future. “I appeared for a competitive exam, which is one of the hardest in India, and was able to get a seat at a medical college,” she told Al Jazeera.

“Now everything seems to have crashed. I came back home waiting for what decision the government will take for our future. All this happened because of our identity. They turned our merit into religion.”

 
I would say Hindus in Pakistan is worst and Muslims in India is best from the options , but it has more to do with size of minority and than numeric strength it entails than the attitude of majority.
 
Temple desecrated in Hyderabad, India. Too many Islamists have arrived there from outside. Many illegal.

Y'all desecrated historic mosques, then turned around and elected the very people who led and celebrated it. That isn’t an anomaly, that’s a pattern. Radicalism isn’t creeping into India, it’s been woven into the political fabric for years.

Which is why, despite the label, India stands out as one of the most intolerant democracies on the planet.
 
Y'all desecrated historic mosques, then turned around and elected the very people who led and celebrated it. That isn’t an anomaly, that’s a pattern. Radicalism isn’t creeping into India, it’s been woven into the political fabric for years.

Which is why, despite the label, India stands out as one of the most intolerant democracies on the planet.
How many? Only 1 mosque.

The other mosques that were razed down are all illegal constructions encroaching on the roads or in the middle of a busy street (Dargahs). Temples have also been razed down that were illegally built on Government lands.

Also, another difference is, India is supposed to be a Hindu nation with Hindu majority as per the partition of India. Temples are getting desecrated in a so called Hindu India. Comeback to me when Hindu extremists desecrate a Mosque in BD or Pak. :mv
 
I don't usually post threads on India but came across this and it seemed a bit too petty and ludicrous, even for the sanghi brigade. The graduates would have become doctors who would have served Indian people, not just Muslims. They got in through merit so I don't see the problem in this. This is what we call Apne pair pe khud khulhadi maarna.
 
How many? Only 1 mosque.

The other mosques that were razed down are all illegal constructions encroaching on the roads or in the middle of a busy street (Dargahs). Temples have also been razed down that were illegally built on Government lands.

Also, another difference is, India is supposed to be a Hindu nation with Hindu majority as per the partition of India. Temples are getting desecrated in a so called Hindu India. Comeback to me when Hindu extremists desecrate a Mosque in BD or Pak. :mv
There are no Hindutva in Pakistan and BD, only India.
 
If the students are selected on the basis of merit, it should not matter if someone is a Muslim or Hindu or Sikh or Christian.

As the article says it is a private college and only partly funded by government. Absolute nonsense to ban the college.

I hope there was no discrimination and sifarish involved in this. :mv
 
I don't usually post threads on India but came across this and it seemed a bit too petty and ludicrous, even for the sanghi brigade. The graduates would have become doctors who would have served Indian people, not just Muslims. They got in through merit so I don't see the problem in this. This is what we call Apne pair pe khud khulhadi maarna.

I think India is heading toward major corrections/setbacks/declines.

Process has already started.

Sanghis are too stupid to realize they are shooting themselves on the feet.
 
What kind of medicine does this college teach?

Is it the real deal or the version which includes Gobar studies and muttarology?

If it's the latter then it should obviously be reserved for those who live by and cherish those teachings and the Muslims kid should stop complaining.
 
There are no Hindutva in Pakistan and BD, only India.
Hindus in Pak and BD are scared to even do anything like desecrating Islamic shrines. The repercussions will be very bad for them.

India is a Hindu country as per partition. Muslims got their share of the land. But they still want more. Greedy bunch.
 
I don't usually post threads on India but came across this and it seemed a bit too petty and ludicrous, even for the sanghi brigade. The graduates would have become doctors who would have served Indian people, not just Muslims. They got in through merit so I don't see the problem in this. This is what we call Apne pair pe khud khulhadi maarna.
nothing new from the dumb sanghis, they can't handle the kashmiris, thr used to thr own stupid kind failing, bribing to get certificates, failing exams numerous of times and just paying the college to re-take exams, as the college and uni's have been caught numerous of times preferring students who actually fail - pay to take the exams again = make more money.


watch the below sanghis refuse to comment on this article:


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Hindus in Pak and BD are scared to even do anything like desecrating Islamic shrines. The repercussions will be very bad for them.

India is a Hindu country as per partition. Muslims got their share of the land. But they still want more. Greedy bunch.
you mean kashmir shoud be either independent or part of pakistan - i get you, you still find it hard to write the truth


Heres another, safe place for muslims in india:

Delhi riots: 'My brother died after police beating’ - BBC News​





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If the students are selected on the basis of merit, it should not matter if someone is a Muslim or Hindu or Sikh or Christian.

As the article says it is a private college and only partly funded by government. Absolute nonsense to ban the college.

I hope there was no discrimination and sifarish involved in this. :mv
If its a medical college set up by temple trust funds, then it should collect more from non Hindus just like any other muslim minority colleges .nonsensical to shut it down .
 
Hindus in Pak and BD are scared to even do anything like desecrating Islamic shrines. The repercussions will be very bad for them.

India is a Hindu country as per partition. Muslims got their share of the land. But they still want more. Greedy bunch.

Why do you expect Hindus of Pak and BD to desecrate Islamic shrine?
 
Why do you expect Hindus of Pak and BD to desecrate Islamic shrine?
Just like why Islamists rearrange the idols in the temples whenever they get a chance. :mv

Hindus have been oppressed in Pak and BD too. Yet they do not dare to do any such pathetic acts. But Islamists are a different breed. They do such acts even when they are in minority. One would shudder to imagine when they become majority. :dw :mv
 
What kind of medicine does this college teach?

Is it the real deal or the version which includes Gobar studies and muttarology?

If it's the latter then it should obviously be reserved for those who live by and cherish those teachings and the Muslims kid should stop complaining.
Don't be too quick dismiss the potential of Animal urine that cheaply. :srt :mv

Zakir Naik who has millions of followers believes in CamelCola. So in your religion Muttarology is real. :apology

 
I don't usually post threads on India but came across this and it seemed a bit too petty and ludicrous, even for the sanghi brigade. The graduates would have become doctors who would have served Indian people, not just Muslims. They got in through merit so I don't see the problem in this. This is what we call Apne pair pe khud khulhadi maarna.
I Post this about 2 month's ago and students were selected basis of religion instead of merit.

Enough of these victim mentality. Good decision.

:kp
 
It’s Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Institute of Medical Excellence, not Kashmir Medical College. It's in Jammu not Kashmir. Get the fact right. :kp
 
In the case of Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Medical College, money is taken from Hindu devotees, a medical college is opened. In this Institute fully funded by Hindu devotees money, there is no provision for reservations for Hindu faith students unlike many other institutes like CMC Vellore and Jamia Milia. The first batch of 50 students in Shri Mata Vaishno Devi only 4 Hindu students are given admission.

Yet the persecuted minority Hindus are the bad ones here to dare to protest against this discrimination and ask for an Institute which gives fair representation to the Hindu community that fully funds it. The hypocrisy is jaw dropping

:klopp :kp.
 
No wonder Al Jazeera is hub of terrorists. There were multiple complaints about the inadequate infrastructure , faculty and clinical equipment.
 

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Al Jazeera is based in Qatar. If it is a hub of terrorists then why are so many Indians apply to work there?

Unless you mean it's the Indians who are the terrorists? :unsure:
As usual half baked comprehensive skills and knowledge.


Egypt court declared atleast 170 journalists as terrorists.

Am talking about Al Jazeera not about Qatar.
 
I have always maintained that more than Gandhi, we Indians need to thank Jinnah for taking millions of those garbage Islamists and their upcoming generations away from our country. If not for him, we would not have been able to even go outside our home without the fear of getting killed in some suicide blast or other terrorist activity.

Thank you, Jinnah!​
 
Ahh the poor Umar Khalid. The same dude that said he will break the chicken neck and separate India from the rest of the northeast.
These choohas are useful idiots for the Ashraf Muslims and for external forces who want nothing but destruction of India. :mv
 
Ahh the poor Umar Khalid. The same dude that said he will break the chicken neck and separate India from the rest of the northeast.
These choohas are useful idiots for the Ashraf Muslims and for external forces who want nothing but destruction of India. :mv
Hope he has enjoyed so far planning breaking up the chicken neck in prison. Long may his misery continue. Also, salute to the judges so far for not allowing this plague infected rat bail.​
 
Hope he has enjoyed so far planning breaking up the chicken neck in prison. Long may his misery continue. Also, salute to the judges so far for not allowing this plague infected rat bail.​
Hows all the destruction done to churches and christmas in india, just only done by the HINDUS....

noticed you never commentated on it.
 
How many churches in the whole of India were vandalised?
loads - but i cant say a figue as the indian reports i listed wre using overally figures, no indian video/ article i read or listed showed just number on churches - but thats typical indian media for you - every report i list (doesnt atter which subject) never shows you depth.

Many churches reported smashed windows / doors, stones pelting at people enterring and coming out the church.

Do you have a number? Did you also notice the difference inbetween pakistan and india over christmas?

I also noticed you tried to take a sideways deflect - typical you hitman.
 
Hows all the destruction done to churches and christmas in india, just only done by the HINDUS....

noticed you never commentated on it.

He claims to be a Christian but sides with the sanghis and didn't condemn sanghi attacks on Indian Christians.

Something doesn't add up. :inti
 
In this thread you’re talking about Hindus being killed in Bangladesh and their homes being destroyed. In other threads you’re defending the actions of extremist Hindus killing minorities in India.
The reality is minorities are flourishing in India. You have been a fed a lie by Samaa TV. You dont have to trust me...just ask any Indian minority on this forum. I have been asking for this for last few years but wonder why no one does it. Also listen to what likes of what Asaduddin Owaisi had to say. There was an election in Mumbai yesterday and the party that won is named Islam Party. Does this anyway suggest minorities are getting persecuted in India?

BD killing Hindus is a world wide news and even British MPs raised this in parliament.
 
The reality is minorities are flourishing in India.

Is that why Christian’s are attacked during Christmas?

Dalits don’t have the same rights as Brahims.

Muslims get attacked for transporting beef.

You’re going to respond to this by talking about minorities in Pakistan. And, if you are then I’ll just say that I’m not the one claiming minorities are flourishing in ‘x’.

You have been a fed a lie by Samaa TV

I live in the UK, the last place I’ll be going to for checking up on world events is south Asian news channels lol.

Does this anyway suggest minorities are getting persecuted in India?

Bangladesh has a Hindu cricket captain, does that in anyway suggest minorities are getting persecuted in Bangladesh?

Bidhan Ranjah Roy, a Hindu serves as an adviser in the interim cabinet, in Bangladesh. Does that suggest Hindu’s are being killed in Bangladesh?
 
Is that why Christian’s are attacked during Christmas?

Dalits don’t have the same rights as Brahims.

Muslims get attacked for transporting beef.

You’re going to respond to this by talking about minorities in Pakistan. And, if you are then I’ll just say that I’m not the one claiming minorities are flourishing in ‘x’.



I live in the UK, the last place I’ll be going to for checking up on world events is south Asian news channels lol.



Bangladesh has a Hindu cricket captain, does that in anyway suggest minorities are getting persecuted in Bangladesh?

Bidhan Ranjah Roy, a Hindu serves as an adviser in the interim cabinet, in Bangladesh. Does that suggest Hindu’s are being killed in Bangladesh?

Dalits are Hindus not any religious minority

There are christian majority provinces in India.

Killing a cow is illegal in India and people can go to jail for it,
 
The reality is minorities are flourishing in India. You have been a fed a lie by Samaa TV. You dont have to trust me...just ask any Indian minority on this forum. I have been asking for this for last few years but wonder why no one does it. Also listen to what likes of what Asaduddin Owaisi had to say. There was an election in Mumbai yesterday and the party that won is named Islam Party. Does this anyway suggest minorities are getting persecuted in India?

BD killing Hindus is a world wide news and even British MPs raised this in parliament.
Dalits are Hindus not any religious minority

There are christian majority provinces in India.

Killing a cow is illegal in India and people can go to jail for it,

"They Killed Cows, I Killed Them," Lynching Accused Brags: NDTV Expose​






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