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Thursday, April 18, 2024

India protests Iran’s Delhi violence comment

Iranian FM Javed Zarif strongly condemned violence on Muslims. The violence took place when BJP supporters started thrashing Muslims who were protesting against discriminatory law. India’s new citizenship law has triggered months of demonstrations between anti-government demonstrators and police.

India on Tuesday summoned the Iranian ambassador and lodged protest over Tehran’s comments on the recent incidents of “organized violence” against Muslims in Delhi, local media reported.

Envoy Ali Chegeni was told that Iran’s foreign minister “commented on a matter which is purely internal to India,” sources told the Press Trust of India.

Condemning the communal violence, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif had urged Indian authorities to “ensure the wellbeing of all Indians and not let senseless thuggery prevail”.

Read more: OIC, Erdogan slam India for “massacre of Muslims”

“Path forward lies in peaceful dialogue and rule of law,” he tweeted on Monday.

Besides 47 fatalities, shops, schools and homes were burnt as thugs terrorized northeast Delhi residents for four days before Delhi Police, criticized for their slow reaction, managed to get things under control.

The riots, which occurred during a two-day visit by U.S. President Donald Trump, have triggered mass condemnation.

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation has called on the Indian government to stop “anti-Muslim violence” and the desecration of Islamic places of worship in the country.

The trigger to the violence was allegedly a hate speech by a local politician of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party against peaceful protesters disapproving India’s new citizenship law.

The controversial legislation grants citizenship to non-Muslim migrants from three neighboring countries.

https://twitter.com/IndianEra24x7/status/1234787306818588672

Read more: Mobocracy in Largest Democracy: Army takes over Delhi

India’s new citizenship law has triggered months of demonstrations between anti-government demonstrators and police. At least 47 people died in protest violence last year, mainly in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

While fresh Delhi riots took 46 lives mainly Muslims. Mosques were also burnt during the riots.

Many of the country’s 200 million-strong Muslim minority fear the law — combined with a mooted citizens’ register — will leave them stateless.

Anadolu with inputs from GVS News Desk