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Why is India prosecuting Muslims who said ‘I love Muhammad’?

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Why is India prosecuting Muslims who said ‘I love Muhammad’?

More than 2,500 people have been charged, as an initial crackdown on the expression has spawned broader protests.

New Delhi, India – For the last month, Indian police have raided multiple markets and homes, arresting Muslim men in states governed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist party. Some of their homes have been bulldozed.

The genesis of their alleged crime is common: writing, “I Love Muhammad”, a reference to Prophet Muhammad, on posters, t-shirts, or in social media posts. The authorities say the expression is threatening “public order”.

So far, at least 22 cases have been registered against more than 2,500 Muslims. At least 40 people have been arrested across multiple states governed by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), according to the nonprofit Association for Protection of Civil Rights (APCR).

So, what is happening? How and where did this start? And is it illegal to say ‘I Love Muhammad’ in India?

What’s happening?
On September 4, Muslims living in Kanpur city of the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh were observing Eid al-Milad al-Nabi, the celebration of the birth of Prophet Muhammad, when a neighbourhood put up an illuminated board saying, “I love Muhammad”.

But the board, mimicking the popular “I Love New York” signage that has been copied all over the world, drew criticism from some local Hindus. Initially, their complaint alleged that the illuminated board was a new introduction to traditional festivities on the occasion, when Uttar Pradesh’s laws bar new additions to public religious celebrations. About 20 percent of Kanpur’s population is Muslim.

However, based on complaints, the police filed a case against two dozen people on much more serious charges: promoting enmity on the grounds of religion. The charge carries a punishment of up to five years in jail if the accused individual is convicted.

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The Kanpur episode drew widespread criticism from Muslim political leaders, and protests against the police action spread to other states, including Telangana in southern India, Gujarat and Maharashtra in the west, and in Uttarakhand and Jammu and Kashmir in the north. The “I love Muhammad” hoardings and writings came up across the country – from people’s social media handles to t-shirts.

Nearly 270km (168 miles) away from Kanpur, in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly, a group of people participating in a demonstration called by a local imam against the Kanpur arrests, violently clashed with the police on September 26.

The police hit back with a crackdown, arresting 75 people, including the imam, Tauqeer Raza, his relatives and his aides. At least four buildings belonging to the accused individuals have been bulldozed by the local authorities.

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In recent years, hundreds of Indian Muslims have lost their homes to such demolitions, which are often carried out without any notice issued by authorities, or any court order. India’s Supreme Court has observed that demolitions cannot be used as a form of extra-legal punishment, warning that state authorities must give prior notice before razing any property. Yet, on the ground, that order is often not followed, say activists.

Meanwhile, dozens of other Muslims have been arrested in different states – including some in Modi’s home state of Gujarat – for social media posts and videos carrying the “I love Muhammad” slogan.

Is it illegal?
India’s constitution guarantees the freedom of religion and the right to express it. Article 25 protects every individual’s freedom to practise their religion. Citizens are also protected under Article 19(1)(a), which guarantees the right to freedom of speech and expression, unless it directly incites violence or hatred.

In the cases of people arrested as part of the “I Love Muhammad” crackdown, the police have mostly charged them under legal provisions that bar large gatherings aimed at committing “mischief”, or for acts that allegedly provoke religious tensions. However, these provisions have been applied against those arrested for social media posts, or wearing t-shirts with “I Love Muhammad” emblazoned on them.

Nadeem Khan, the national coordinator of APCR, the nonprofit that has been tracking these cases, has fought previous lawsuits against government officials for similarly targeting Muslims for social media expressions, or when their homes have been bulldozed.

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Khan told Al Jazeera that authorities were carefully using legal provisions that focus not on the “I Love Muhammad” expression itself, but on alleged offences carried out by those who used the expression or protested against related police crackdowns.

“They know that there is no law that criminalises just the mere expression of ‘I Love Muhammad’,” Khan said.

Khan noted that across India, images of Hindu gods wielding their traditional weapons have long been commonplace. “These images are at every corner of the country; should it also offend or threaten all Muslims then?” he asked. “Everyone should understand that the government cannot criminalise a religion like this,” he added, referring to Islam.

Since 2014, when Modi took over the power in New Delhi, India has consistently slid in a range of international democratic indices.

Criminalising people’s right to freedom of expression and religious belief sets a deeply troubling precedent, said Aakar Patel, the chair of Amnesty International India’s board.

“Targeting people for slogans such as ‘I Love Muhammad’, which is peaceful and devoid of any incitement or threat, does not meet the threshold for criminal restriction under either Indian constitutional law or international human rights law,” Patel told Al Jazeera.

“Public order concerns must be addressed proportionately and cannot justify the blanket suppression of religious identity or expression,” he added.

“The role of the state is to safeguard rights equally, not to police expressions of belief,” said Amnesty’s Patel. “
Upholding constitutional and international commitments is not optional; it is a legal obligation.”

Is there a pattern?
Critics say that the crackdown is only the latest instance of Indian Muslims facing marginalisation, violence or the targeted brunt of the law since Modi came to power in 2014.

In the past 11 years, the incidents of hate speech targeting religious minorities have skyrocketed. Documented instances of hate speech jumped from 668 in 2023 to 1,165 last year, a rise of about 74 percent. A significant majority of these incidents happened in BJP-governed states, or places where elections were upcoming.

Increasingly, local Hindu-Muslim disputes now rapidly transform into national issues, said Asim Ali, a political analyst based in Delhi.

“There is an entire ecosystem in place, from pliant media to social media organisation, to spread this hate rapidly,” said Ali. “And the law is read in such a way that any expression of religious identity, especially of Muslims, can be seen as inciting religious hatred,” he added.

After the “I Love Muhammad” episode in Kanpur, BJP leaders in Modi’s own constituency, Varanasi, put up posters saying, “I Love Bulldozer” at major intersections of the city, in a reference to the bulldozing of houses of the accused.

How does it affect young Muslims?
Rasheed Kidwai, a political analyst, said that the row over “I Love Muhammad” is “overtly very political, and not religious”.

And in India, there is growing frustration among Muslims, especially youth, where they see that one set of rules is not applied for all, when it comes to matters of cultural identity and eating habits, said Kidwai.

Several of the accused, or arrested, as part of the “I Love Muhammad” crackdown, include young adult Muslims, according to data from APCR, including those who were arrested for social media posts.

The crackdown on “I Love Muhammad” expression risks alienating young Muslim adults even more, said Ali. “In theory, everyone is already guilty and can face action for just being,” he told Al Jazeera.

“It is getting difficult to imagine what the future may hold now,” he said. “The tempo of hate is increasing day by day.”

 
I find it hard to believe it's for social media posts. There is something more to this story.

These so called lovers of Muhammad (saw) are known for disrupting public order with their fake displays of piety.

Be good decent citizens instead of empty sloganeering if you want to express your love in the right way.
 
I find it hard to believe it's for social media posts. There is something more to this story.

These so called lovers of Muhammad (saw) are known for disrupting public order with their fake displays of piety.

Be good decent citizens instead of empty sloganeering if you want to express your love in the right way.
It is just that "I love Muhammad ﷺ "...I also participated in it in the past and most people just use Hashtags and Posts on Social Media.

In a massive country like in India there will always be some unrest somewhere but Muslims have been pushed against the wall and every initiative is deemed as a security threat.

The Hindutva brigade want to wipe every overt sign of Islam and Muslims from India except when it suits them e.g. Taliban visit to India

When there are physical expressions then necessary permissions are taken but as I said in a vast country like India with rampant red tape there will always be something somewhere which can be deemed to be "without permission" or disruptive and Hindutva will focus on it and highlight it instead of vast majority who are merely expressing a view



 
It is just that "I love Muhammad ﷺ "...I also participated in it in the past and most people just use Hashtags and Posts on Social Media.

In a massive country like in India there will always be some unrest somewhere but Muslims have been pushed against the wall and every initiative is deemed as a security threat.

The Hindutva brigade want to wipe every overt sign of Islam and Muslims from India except when it suits them e.g. Taliban visit to India

When there are physical expressions then necessary permissions are taken but as I said in a vast country like India with rampant red tape there will always be something somewhere which can be deemed to be "without permission" or disruptive and Hindutva will focus on it and highlight it instead of vast majority who are merely expressing a view



Bro I find it hard to believe they are punishing people for posting on social media. The article seems one sided.
 
Bro I find it hard to believe they are punishing people for posting on social media. The article seems one sided.
I advised Muslims to do this anonymously because if you are caught into the Indian Government dragnet its one more thing which they can twist and use against you.
 
I think its multiple issues clubbed as one. In up , some youth have attacked after a cricket ball from kids game hit the flag.they went on rampage. In Hyderabad, video surfaced some clowns asking for yogi to come down to that locality and take out the flag. I dont think anyone will object the flag or slogans , if they just use it in right context.
 
No freedom of speech in India.

Thanks to Quaid-e-Azam who said you are free to go to your temples.
 
India with RSS is different to India without RSS. These are a bunch of coward jokers. These people will lynch individual people but when British were there they licked there boots.
 
In Sha Allah India will be free from the clutches of shirk once and for all. Only a matter of time now.
 
India with RSS is different to India without RSS. These are a bunch of coward jokers. These people will lynch individual people but when British were there they licked there boots.
Hindus were eager to learn western educated get jobs under British India. May be that is why you are saying Hindus are bootlickers.
Muslims remained backward for their lack of education. They thrived under Mughals, but it did not last long. Till today majority Indian Muslims do not give education its due importance as Hindus do. Most are poor and still go to religious schools. It’s a vicious cycle.
 
Hindus were eager to learn western educated get jobs under British India. May be that is why you are saying Hindus are bootlickers.
Muslims remained backward for their lack of education. They thrived under Mughals, but it did not last long. Till today majority Indian Muslims do not give education its due importance as Hindus do. Most are poor and still go to religious schools. It’s a vicious cycle.
No I did not say Hindus , read my comment again. There were many hindus who fought for freedom of India , how can they be bootlickers ?
Subhash Chander Bose , Khudi Raam , Raaj Guru etc were true patriots .

Muslims suffered because several scholars were killed by british . Islam has never been against education , if any Muslim thinks so he is not well versed with Islam but with culture. Islam is against vices that is prevalent in the society . Islam has proper well documented guidelines and jurisprudence to run a society with proper justice . It does not end with philosophical lectures as in Gita. It gives a solution to those problems not just identifies them.
 
No thanks. Keep your shirkless religion to yourself. :apology
what is your issue with shirk-less society ? You are an atheist , so having one God is closer to your ideology rather than hundreds.
 
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what is your issue with shirk-less society ? You are an atheist , so having one God is closer to your ideology rather than hundreds.
We don’t want Shirk and other similar stuff. It leads to intolerance and makes one’s God insecure(if you are a believer).
 
We don’t want Shirk and other similar stuff. It leads to intolerance and makes one’s God insecure(if you are a believer).
That is what I was asking , if you do not want shirk , then why you against Islam. , it is only faith which is completely free from shirk in its essence. There are no complications in understanding that there is ONE Creator who is independent of its creation. Even a common illiterate Muslim will answer fundamentals.
 
That is what I was asking , if you do not want shirk , then why you against Islam. , it is only faith which is completely free from shirk in its essence. There are no complications in understanding that there is ONE Creator who is independent of its creation. Even a common illiterate Muslim will answer fundamentals.
Who cares if there is one creator or there are a bunch of them coordinating perfectly to create the universe we know?
I and most Indians do not want this kind of thinking in India. I still have lots of family in India and I do not want them to endure such stuff. 👍
 
First try and elect a govt. of people's choice in Pakistan.
First try and decide if you are a Christian or a Hindu. First Christian I’ve seen who loves hinduism more than his own faith. You are a walking contradiction. :asghar
 
First try and decide if you are a Christian or a Hindu. First Christian I’ve seen who loves hinduism more than his own faith. You are a walking contradiction. :asghar
First get this that one don't have to be a Hindu to love his country i.e India.
 
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Why india prosecuting??

Whole world knows the reason... BJP and RSS is there... Simple
 
Who cares if there is one creator or there are a bunch of them coordinating perfectly to create the universe we know?
I and most Indians do not want this kind of thinking in India. I still have lots of family in India and I do not want them to endure such stuff. 👍

I am sorry but the hindu gods do not coordinate perfectly.

If India no one cares , why did they have to build Ram Mandir about a person whose existence does not have any archeological evidence ? Why are people beaten up and killed for eating beef?

What do you do not want family in India to endure? Worshipping one God , clarity about faith and scriptures , equality and justice?
 
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First get this that one don't have to be a Hindu to love his country i.e India.

Loving a country is not wrong but defending the wrongs of the government is wrong. BJP or RSS are not India the country. If I say something against Modi does not mean I am speaking against India.
 
Loving a country is not wrong but defending the wrongs of the government is wrong. BJP or RSS are not India the country. If I say something against Modi does not mean I am speaking against India.
Absolutely correct. BJP is not India, it's a political party.
 
Hindus were eager to learn western educated get jobs under British India. May be that is why you are saying Hindus are bootlickers.
Muslims remained backward for their lack of education. They thrived under Mughals, but it did not last long. Till today majority Indian Muslims do not give education its due importance as Hindus do. Most are poor and still go to religious schools. It’s a vicious cycle.
It’s a shame, despite having access to some of the best education in the world, there’s still a sizable group of Indians who can’t let go of their religiously driven extremism, which naturally aligns them with far right white supremacy.
 
I find it hard to believe it's for social media posts. There is something more to this story.

These so called lovers of Muhammad (saw) are known for disrupting public order with their fake displays of piety.

Be good decent citizens instead of empty sloganeering if you want to express your love in the right way.

They paint on walls and roads, that's why people have started objecting
 
It’s a shame, despite having access to some of the best education in the world, there’s still a sizable group of Indians who can’t let go of their religiously driven extremism, which naturally aligns them with far right white supremacy.
To kya kar lijiyega aap?
 
Loving a country is not wrong but defending the wrongs of the government is wrong. BJP or RSS are not India the country. If I say something against Modi does not mean I am speaking against India.
No political party is india
 
It’s all about intention.

Indian Muslims are mostly taqqiyah practicing two faced snakes who conspire against this country despite all the favours and opportunities they enjoyed over the years.

Make sure you use some form of super Glue to keep the Mask intact. On to many occasions it looks as if its going to fall off 😆
 
Minorities are constantly under attacks from the Indian hindu extremists. Save Indian minorities. World should put pressure on India and stop the oppression.

#SaveIndianMinorities
 

Charged for saying ‘I love Muhammad’, India’s Muslims decry gov’t crackdown​



Several BJP-ruled states file cases against hundreds of Muslims, most of them in northern Uttar Pradesh state, for raising the innocuous religious chant.


Lucknow, India – On the evening of September 4, an illuminated signboard lit up a predominantly Muslim neighbourhood in Kanpur, an industrial town in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

The signboard said: “I love Muhammad” – with a red heart standing in for the word, love.

It was the first time the mainly working-class residents in Kanpur’s Syed Nagar had put up such a sign as part of the decorations as they joined millions of Muslims around the world to celebrate Prophet Muhammad’s birthday.

The day, marked as Eid Milad-un-Nabi across South Asia, involves the faithful organising religious gatherings, Quran recitations, and sermons about the prophet’s life and teachings. At some places, the celebrations include mass processions, with people carrying posters to express their love and reverence for the prophet.

In Syed Nagar, however, as soon as the words glowed, a group of Hindu men swooped in, objecting to the celebration. Police were called in, and following a ruckus that lasted hours, the signboard was removed late that night.

On September 10, the police registered a first information report (FIR) against nine Muslims from Syed Nagar, including a religious scholar, and 15 unidentified people, accusing them of “disturbing communal harmony” and starting a “new tradition” that threatened public order. No arrests, however, have been made so far.


Mohit Bajpayee, a Syed Nagar resident affiliated with a Hindu group named Sri Ramnavmi Samiti, said he had no objection to the text, ‘I love Muhammad’, but to the placement of the signboard at a place used by them for a Hindu festival.


“All religions have equal rights under the constitution,” he told Al Jazeera. “But the sign was put up at a location where our Ram Navami decorations are usually displayed. Everyone has a right to follow their religion, but new traditions should not be started in new locations.”

But the Muslim residents of Syed Nagar say the signboard was put up at a public place they converged at every year for the prophet’s birth anniversary.

“We had official permission for the decorations. Everyone has the right to practise their religion under the constitution,” said a 28-year-old resident who is one of those charged, unwilling to reveal his identity over fears of further action by the government.


MA Khan, the lawyer for the accused in Kanpur, told Al Jazeera that the Muslim men were also accused of tearing a banner of the Hindu community during the Eid Milad-un-Nabi procession on September 5.

“Many of those named were not even present in the procession,” he said

‘Disturbing communal harmony’​

Uttar Pradesh is home to 38 million Muslims – more than the entire population of Saudi Arabia – comprising nearly 20 percent of India’s most populous state. Since 2017, the politically crucial state has been governed by Yogi Adityanath, a hardline Hindu monk known for his anti-Muslim speech and policies, and a prominent politician from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Days later, the spark from Kanpur ignited a fire some 270km (168 miles) away, in another Uttar Pradesh town called Bareilly – headquarters of the Barelvi sect of Sunni Muslims, who number between 200 million to 300 million across the world.

I love Muhammad India protest
A Muslim woman protesting in Lucknow, India [Naeem Ansari/Al Jazeera]
On September 21, Maulana Tauqeer Raza Khan, chief of a Muslim group called Ittehad-e-Millat Council (IMC) and descendant of Imam Ahmed Raza Khan, the founder of the Barelvi sect, announced a protest over the FIRs filed in Kanpur, and urged his supporters to gather at a ground after Friday prayers on September 26 to denounce the police action.

The district administration denied Khan permission for the rally.

On September 25, the IMC issued a statement asking people not to gather for the protest. But hours later, Khan’s supporters allegedly circulated a social media message, claiming the IMC statement was fake and aimed at defaming the Muslim body.

The next day, thousands of Muslims assembled near a famous Muslim shrine in Bareilly after the Friday prayers, holding “I love Muhammad” posters and raising slogans against the police for their action in Kanpur.


District authorities alleged that the march was unauthorised and accused some participants of pelting stones at the police and vandalising public property. The police responded with a baton charge, and arrested Khan and dozens of others, as authorities shut down the internet in the town.

I love Muhammad protest India
Police attacking Muslim demonstrators in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India [Al Jazeera]
In a video message recorded before his arrest, Khan said the crackdown was a targeted suppression of religious expression. “Attempts to suppress our religious sentiments will backfire,” he warned.

A day later, while speaking at an event in the state capital, Lucknow, Chief Minister Adityanath condemned the Bareilly unrest as a “well-orchestrated attempt” to disturb social harmony.

“Sometimes, people are not able to shun their bad habits easily. For that, some denting-painting is required … You saw that in Bareilly yesterday. A maulana [Muslim scholar] forgot who is in power,” he said in Hindi, without naming anyone.

The “denting-painting” soon followed, as has been the pattern with Adityanath’s crackdown on Muslims accused of disrupting public order. A banquet hall belonging to one of the accused was bulldozed by the authorities in Bareilly.

‘Government wants to instil fear’​

Demolition of homes and commercial properties belonging to Muslims accused of a range of crimes has become a common practice in Uttar Pradesh and other BJP-ruled states, despite India’s top court recently banning what it called the “bulldozer justice”. Rights groups say such demolitions are a form of extralegal punishment that bypasses judicial processes and devastates families economically.

While the Uttar Pradesh government claimed the demolitions in Bareilly targeted illegally-constructed buildings, the timing and targets suggest a clear strategy of intimidation.

“Police are registering cases against Muslims across the nation to suppress their legitimate protests … The BJP government wants to instil fear so Muslims lose the courage to speak for their religious and fundamental rights,” Sumaiya Rana, daughter of the famous Urdu poet late Munawwar Rana, told Al Jazeera.

Rana herself organised a protest outside the state assembly building in Lucknow, where more than a dozen demonstrators holding “I love Muhammad” placards were briefly detained by the police.

The Association for Protection of Civil Rights (APCR), a rights group, says at least 22 FIRs have been filed across India in connection with the Muslim campaign, naming more than 2,500 individuals, with at least 89 arrested in Bareilly so far.

“Authorities have treated a slogan expressing love for the prophet as a criminal act and described it as provocative,” APCR secretary Nadeem Khan told Al Jazeera. “In many cases, the administration violated due process in registering cases and demolishing the properties of the accused, which has severe social and economic impacts on Muslim communities.”


SQR Ilyasi, a member of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, a prominent Muslim body, stressed that peaceful protest is not illegal for any community in India. “Expressing love for the prophet is our right,” he told Al Jazeera.

Activist Vandana Mishra of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, a rights group, said the authorities frequently allow the Hindu community to “raise religious slogans freely, while the minority faces arrest for expressing love for the prophet”.

“This contravenes the secular and democratic ethos of our constitution,” she told Al Jazeera.

Opposition parties have also criticised the Uttar Pradesh government’s actions.

The Samajwadi Party, one of the state’s biggest political forces, said it attempted to send a delegation to Bareilly to meet the victims of the police crackdown, but claimed its members were prevented. “The government talks of democracy but acts in complete disregard of it,” the leader of the opposition in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly, Mata Prasad Pandey, told reporters in Lucknow.

Lawyer Zia Jillani, who recently visited Bareilly and is representing some of the accused, told Al Jazeera that most of those arrested or facing charges “belong to the marginalised sections of society and earn on a daily wage basis”.

“For them, due to their financial incapability, pursuing and fighting legal cases against the injustices inflicted upon them is an unbearable task,” he said.

“This kind of hate politics preys on the poor, taking advantage of their vulnerability while ignoring justice and accountability.”




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Charged for saying ‘I love Muhammad’, India’s Muslims decry gov’t crackdown​



Several BJP-ruled states file cases against hundreds of Muslims, most of them in northern Uttar Pradesh state, for raising the innocuous religious chant.


Lucknow, India – On the evening of September 4, an illuminated signboard lit up a predominantly Muslim neighbourhood in Kanpur, an industrial town in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

The signboard said: “I love Muhammad” – with a red heart standing in for the word, love.

It was the first time the mainly working-class residents in Kanpur’s Syed Nagar had put up such a sign as part of the decorations as they joined millions of Muslims around the world to celebrate Prophet Muhammad’s birthday.

The day, marked as Eid Milad-un-Nabi across South Asia, involves the faithful organising religious gatherings, Quran recitations, and sermons about the prophet’s life and teachings. At some places, the celebrations include mass processions, with people carrying posters to express their love and reverence for the prophet.

In Syed Nagar, however, as soon as the words glowed, a group of Hindu men swooped in, objecting to the celebration. Police were called in, and following a ruckus that lasted hours, the signboard was removed late that night.

On September 10, the police registered a first information report (FIR) against nine Muslims from Syed Nagar, including a religious scholar, and 15 unidentified people, accusing them of “disturbing communal harmony” and starting a “new tradition” that threatened public order. No arrests, however, have been made so far.


Mohit Bajpayee, a Syed Nagar resident affiliated with a Hindu group named Sri Ramnavmi Samiti, said he had no objection to the text, ‘I love Muhammad’, but to the placement of the signboard at a place used by them for a Hindu festival.


“All religions have equal rights under the constitution,” he told Al Jazeera. “But the sign was put up at a location where our Ram Navami decorations are usually displayed. Everyone has a right to follow their religion, but new traditions should not be started in new locations.”

But the Muslim residents of Syed Nagar say the signboard was put up at a public place they converged at every year for the prophet’s birth anniversary.

“We had official permission for the decorations. Everyone has the right to practise their religion under the constitution,” said a 28-year-old resident who is one of those charged, unwilling to reveal his identity over fears of further action by the government.


MA Khan, the lawyer for the accused in Kanpur, told Al Jazeera that the Muslim men were also accused of tearing a banner of the Hindu community during the Eid Milad-un-Nabi procession on September 5.

“Many of those named were not even present in the procession,” he said

‘Disturbing communal harmony’​

Uttar Pradesh is home to 38 million Muslims – more than the entire population of Saudi Arabia – comprising nearly 20 percent of India’s most populous state. Since 2017, the politically crucial state has been governed by Yogi Adityanath, a hardline Hindu monk known for his anti-Muslim speech and policies, and a prominent politician from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Days later, the spark from Kanpur ignited a fire some 270km (168 miles) away, in another Uttar Pradesh town called Bareilly – headquarters of the Barelvi sect of Sunni Muslims, who number between 200 million to 300 million across the world.

I love Muhammad India protest
A Muslim woman protesting in Lucknow, India [Naeem Ansari/Al Jazeera]
On September 21, Maulana Tauqeer Raza Khan, chief of a Muslim group called Ittehad-e-Millat Council (IMC) and descendant of Imam Ahmed Raza Khan, the founder of the Barelvi sect, announced a protest over the FIRs filed in Kanpur, and urged his supporters to gather at a ground after Friday prayers on September 26 to denounce the police action.

The district administration denied Khan permission for the rally.

On September 25, the IMC issued a statement asking people not to gather for the protest. But hours later, Khan’s supporters allegedly circulated a social media message, claiming the IMC statement was fake and aimed at defaming the Muslim body.

The next day, thousands of Muslims assembled near a famous Muslim shrine in Bareilly after the Friday prayers, holding “I love Muhammad” posters and raising slogans against the police for their action in Kanpur.


District authorities alleged that the march was unauthorised and accused some participants of pelting stones at the police and vandalising public property. The police responded with a baton charge, and arrested Khan and dozens of others, as authorities shut down the internet in the town.

I love Muhammad protest India
Police attacking Muslim demonstrators in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh, India [Al Jazeera]
In a video message recorded before his arrest, Khan said the crackdown was a targeted suppression of religious expression. “Attempts to suppress our religious sentiments will backfire,” he warned.

A day later, while speaking at an event in the state capital, Lucknow, Chief Minister Adityanath condemned the Bareilly unrest as a “well-orchestrated attempt” to disturb social harmony.

“Sometimes, people are not able to shun their bad habits easily. For that, some denting-painting is required … You saw that in Bareilly yesterday. A maulana [Muslim scholar] forgot who is in power,” he said in Hindi, without naming anyone.

The “denting-painting” soon followed, as has been the pattern with Adityanath’s crackdown on Muslims accused of disrupting public order. A banquet hall belonging to one of the accused was bulldozed by the authorities in Bareilly.

‘Government wants to instil fear’​

Demolition of homes and commercial properties belonging to Muslims accused of a range of crimes has become a common practice in Uttar Pradesh and other BJP-ruled states, despite India’s top court recently banning what it called the “bulldozer justice”. Rights groups say such demolitions are a form of extralegal punishment that bypasses judicial processes and devastates families economically.

While the Uttar Pradesh government claimed the demolitions in Bareilly targeted illegally-constructed buildings, the timing and targets suggest a clear strategy of intimidation.

“Police are registering cases against Muslims across the nation to suppress their legitimate protests … The BJP government wants to instil fear so Muslims lose the courage to speak for their religious and fundamental rights,” Sumaiya Rana, daughter of the famous Urdu poet late Munawwar Rana, told Al Jazeera.

Rana herself organised a protest outside the state assembly building in Lucknow, where more than a dozen demonstrators holding “I love Muhammad” placards were briefly detained by the police.

The Association for Protection of Civil Rights (APCR), a rights group, says at least 22 FIRs have been filed across India in connection with the Muslim campaign, naming more than 2,500 individuals, with at least 89 arrested in Bareilly so far.

“Authorities have treated a slogan expressing love for the prophet as a criminal act and described it as provocative,” APCR secretary Nadeem Khan told Al Jazeera. “In many cases, the administration violated due process in registering cases and demolishing the properties of the accused, which has severe social and economic impacts on Muslim communities.”


SQR Ilyasi, a member of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, a prominent Muslim body, stressed that peaceful protest is not illegal for any community in India. “Expressing love for the prophet is our right,” he told Al Jazeera.

Activist Vandana Mishra of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, a rights group, said the authorities frequently allow the Hindu community to “raise religious slogans freely, while the minority faces arrest for expressing love for the prophet”.

“This contravenes the secular and democratic ethos of our constitution,” she told Al Jazeera.

Opposition parties have also criticised the Uttar Pradesh government’s actions.

The Samajwadi Party, one of the state’s biggest political forces, said it attempted to send a delegation to Bareilly to meet the victims of the police crackdown, but claimed its members were prevented. “The government talks of democracy but acts in complete disregard of it,” the leader of the opposition in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly, Mata Prasad Pandey, told reporters in Lucknow.

Lawyer Zia Jillani, who recently visited Bareilly and is representing some of the accused, told Al Jazeera that most of those arrested or facing charges “belong to the marginalised sections of society and earn on a daily wage basis”.

“For them, due to their financial incapability, pursuing and fighting legal cases against the injustices inflicted upon them is an unbearable task,” he said.

“This kind of hate politics preys on the poor, taking advantage of their vulnerability while ignoring justice and accountability.”




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#FreeMinoritiesOfIndia

#SaveIndianMinorities

#SanctionIndia

Indian minorities are getting regularly oppressed by the low-IQ sanghi terrorists.

This is worse than South African apartheid. Countries should start boycotting India until they ensure minority protections.

#SaveIndianMinorities
#SanctionIndia
 
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