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Wednesday 26 February 2020

7 Influential Quotes from Black Muslims Who Made History


In celebration and recognition of Black History Month in the United States……
 7 Influential Quotes from Black Muslims Who Made History
 The Muslim Vibe
 23 February 2020

In celebration and recognition of Black History Month in the United States, here are just some of the greatest and most influential quotes by Black Muslims who have made history and continue to make history in our world today. Remembering that systematic and community-level realities of racism are still deeply embedded in our society, it remains imperative on all our parts to acknowledge the powerful legacy Black Muslims have left and continue to pave within Muslim communities across the globe.

 1)   Muhammad Ali
 Nicknamed “the Greatest”, Muhammad Ali was an American professional boxer and human rights activist, known for his quick wit (and quick punch), as well as his public devotion and faith in Islam. Converting to Islam in 1960, Muhammad Ali left behind a powerful legacy of activism and charity. When asked why he refused to serve in the United States Army during the Vietnam War, he famously answered in 1966:
 Why should they ask me to put on a uniform and go ten thousand miles from home and drop bombs and bullets on brown people in Vietnam while so-called Negro people in Louisville are treated like dogs and denied simple human rights?”
 2)   Malcolm X
Malcolm X was a revolutionary Black civil rights activist in the United States, and was an integral part of the civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s. A courageous advocate for the right of Blacks in America during a time of immense suppression, Malcolm X converted to Islam in the early 1950s after first being introduced to the Nation of Islam. Changing his last name to “X”, he dropped his previous last name of Little because he believed it represented a slave name.
 “Time is on the side of the oppressed today, it’s against the oppressor. Truth is on the side of the oppressed today, it’s against the oppressor. You don’t need anything else.”
 3)   Nana Asma
 Asma’u was a princess, a revered poet, a teacher, and was the daughter of the founder of the Sokoto Caliphate. Born in the early 19th Century, she was named after Asma bint Abu Bakr, a female companion of the Prophet Muhammad. She was well educated in Quranic studies, knew four languages, and had a reputation as a leading female scholar. Her works emphasise on women’s rights under Sunnah of the Prophet and Islamic law.
 How can educated men allow their wives, daughters and female dependents to remain prisoners of ignorance, while they themselves share their knowledge with students every day?”
 4)   Bilal Al-Habashi
 Bilal, one of the great companions of the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh), began his life as a persecuted slave in Arabia. He went on to become one of the Holy Prophet’s greatest companions. At a time where racism was rife in Arabia and many Arabs owned slaves, the Prophet personally appointed Bilal to be the first Muslim to climb the Ka’ba and recite the call to prayer for the Muslims, showing that piety, not colour, elevates the status of a person in the eyes of Allah. The Prophet is even reported to have said to Bilal:
 If we should want to take one particular person as the shining example of good behaviour and adab, then you [Bilal] would be the clear and obvious example.”
 5)   Ilhan Omar
 Ilhan Omar is an American politician, serving as the US Representative for Minnesota’s 5th congressional district since being elected in 2019. Making history, she is the first Somali-American, the first naturalized citizen from the continent of Africa, and the first non-white woman elected from Minnesota. Omar is also one of the first two Muslim women, along with Rashida Tlaib, to serve in the US Congress. Not afraid of making controversial remarks on US lobbying and Israel’s influence in the US, Omar was recently attacked for her ‘controversial’ but truthful remarks:
 “But it’s almost as if, every single time we say something regardless of what it is we say that is supposed to be about foreign policy or engagement or advocacy about ending oppression or the freeing of every human life and wanting dignity, we get to be labeled something, and that ends the discussion. Because we end up defending that and nobody ever gets to have the broader debate of what is happening with Palestine. So for me, I want to talk about the political influence in this country that says it is okay for people to push for allegiance to a foreign country.”
 6) Abu Uthman Amr (Al-Jahiz)
 Abu Uthman Amr, also known as Al-Jahiz, was a renowned theologian and one of the most important writers in Islamic history. Born in Basra in modern day Iraq in the 9th century, Al-Jahiz wrote some 200 books over the course of his life, on subjects that included Arabic grammar, zoology, poetry, lexicography and rhetoric. He also wrote a famous book on Black Africans, praising their courage, generosity, nobility and cheerfulness, while also discussing how the colour of skin was simply a natural outcome of environmental circumstance, dispelling racist myths on why Africans had darker skin.
 “Ikhlaas is to forget the vision of the creation by constantly looking at the Creator.”
 7)   Ibtihaj Muhammad
 An American sabre fencer and member of the United States fencing team, Muhammad is celebrated for being the first Muslim American woman to wear a hijab while competing for the United States in the Olympics – winning the Bronze medal as well. The first female Muslim American athlete to win an Olympic medal, she remains a powerful source of inspiration for not only women but for Muslim women who wear the hijab as well. In her memoir Proud, Muhammad stated:
 “I’ve had to fight for every win, every place at the table, every ounce of respect on my path to world-class athlete. And I will continue to fight because the prize this time – an America that truly respects all of its citizens – is worth more than any medal. Inshallah: so, may it be.”
 Let us hope that we not only recognize the powerful importance of diversity and multi-culturalism during months like Black History Month, but in our everyday lives in the continued movement towards living a life of God-consciousness and humanitarian activism.


Sunday 23 February 2020

P Chidambaram writes: The magic words ‘national interest’ do not signal correctness but finality

February 23, 2020
P Chidambaram writes: The magic words ‘national interest’ do not signal correctness but finality

The magic words are ‘national interest’. They do not signal correctness, they signal finality. Because the PM has declared that the decisions were taken in national interest, he expects that all criticism should cease and all debate should end.


Written by P Chidambaram Updated: February 23, 2020 10:38:52 am

Tavleen Singh writes: Dissent is not sedition, it is truly the ‘safety valve’ of democratic countries

February 23, 2020
Tavleen Singh writes: Dissent is not sedition, it is truly the ‘safety valve’ of democratic countries

Tavleen Singh's Fifth Column: If there has been dissidence against the amendment to the citizenship law, it is because of this kind of ugly nationalism.


Written by Tavleen Singh Updated: February 23, 2020 10:32:23 am

Sedition: SC’s shown the way, but govts have refused to see

February 17, 2016
Sedition: SC’s shown the way, but govts have refused to see

The arrest of JNU Students Union president Kanhaiya Kumar last week for committing an offence under Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code, better known as ‘sedition’, has once again brought into focus this highly controversial clause in our criminal laws. The sedition law is a legacy of the Raj, which used it to stifle […]


Written by Maneesh Chhibber Updated: February 17, 2016 7:43:57 am

Amulya Leona to Azamgarh, sedition law used without questions, Supreme Court guidelines ignored

 
February 23, 2020
Amulya Leona to Azamgarh, sedition law used without questions, Supreme Court guidelines ignored

In its judgments, the Supreme Court has underlined that while ordering arrest of the accused, a magistrate must satisfy herself that the arrest is justified, and that prima facie the FIR has the ingredients that make the offence of sedition.


Written by Apurva Vishwanath | New Delhi | Updated: February 23, 2020 12:19:26 pm

Washington Post story on the storming of AMU

Sunday 9 February 2020

Slovenia's first mosque opens after 50 years

Adam I. Seedat
Slovenia's first mosque opens after 50 years
 AFP
 Arab News, 3 February 2020

Ljubljana -  Slovenia's first mosque opened in the capital Ljubljana on

Monday after surmounting financial hurdles and right-wing opposition, 50 years after the initial request to build was made.
 Opponents of the project -- including those who criticised its Qatari financing -- have repeatedly tried to halt it, and pig heads and blood have also been left on the site.
 Islamic community head Mufti Nedzad Grabus said the mosque's opening was "a turning point in our lives".

"Slovenia is the last former Yugoslav state to get a mosque, making Ljubljana a capital rather than a provincial town on the edge of the world," he told a press conference.
 Muslims in the predominantly Catholic Alpine country first filed a request to build a mosque in the late 1960s while Slovenia was still part of the former Communist Yugoslavia.
 The community finally received permission 15 years ago, but ran int
o opposition from right-wing politicians and groups, as well as financial troubles.
 Construction, which began in 2013, cost some 34 million euros ($39 million), out of which 28 million euros were Qatari donations, according to Grabus.
 Situated in a semi-industrial area of Ljubljana, the mosque, which can hold up to 1,400 people, constitutes the core of the six-building Islamic Cultural Centre.
 The centre also comprises the community's offices; an education centre, which includes a library; a restaurant; a basketball court; housing for the Muslim clerisy; and a 40-metre (131 feet) high minaret.
 All the buildings are made from white concrete combined with steel, glass and wood. A large blue textile-made dome dominates the mosque's interior, referring to heaven and reminiscent of famous mosques like Istanbul's Blue Mosque.
 "We wanted to link traditional Islamic architecture values with contemporary architecture," architect Matej Bevk told AFP adding the centre's glass facades were meant to show its transparency and openness.
 Until now, Muslims have been worshipping and holding ceremonies in rented sports halls or buildings.
 They make up 2.5 percent of the country's two million people, constituting the second biggest religious group, according to the last 2002 census. Grabus estimated there were around 80,000 Muslims currently.
 Opponents of the project have twice tried to halt it, once in 2004 and again in 2009, by asking for a referendum. The constitutional court denied the requests both times.
Critics claim Qatar is one of the main financiers of terrorism.
Pig heads and blood were also tossed on the site in two incidents in 2016. Pigs are considered to be unclean and pork and its by-products forbidden under Islam.

Ljubljana's long-time mayor Zoran Jankovic has supported the project.
 Azra Lekovic, a Slovenian Muslim in her late 40s, described the mosque as "crucial", saying her children, 22 and 24, had distanced themselves from the religion over the years.
 "I hope it will allow my children to get in touch with the Islamic community again, to meet progressive people and find friends that share their religion," the entrepreneur from Sezana in western Slovenia told AFP.
 Image: Mufti of the Islamic Community of Slovenia Nedzad Grabus addresses the media on February 3, 2020, in Slovenia's first mosque, designed by the Bevk Perovic Arhitekti architecture firm, in Ljubljana.(AFP)

UP government to send notices to 58 AMU students for participating in anti-CAA stir


UP government to send notices to 58 AMU students for participating in anti-CAA stir
The university was to reopen on January 6 but the vacation was extended owing to persisting tension over the changes in the citizenship law.
https://www.newindianexpress.com/nation/2020/feb/07/up-government-to-send-notices-to-58-amu-students-for-participating-in-anti-caa-stir-2100375.html
Published: 07th February 2020 06:47 PM |   Last Updated: 07th February 2020 06:47 PM  |  A+A A-

No normalcy


February 8, 2020
No normalcy

Continued detention of leaders, slapping of draconian law, pose serious questions about Centre’s policy and intent in J&K


By: Editorial | Updated: February 8, 2020 12:51:07 pm

Friday 7 February 2020

Sound Vision

Sound Vision
Assalamu Alaikum:
“O people of the world, We created you all from a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes so that you may know one another. Verily the noblest of you in the sight of God is the most God-fearing of you. Surely God is All-Knowing, All-Aware” (Quran 49:13).
February is Black History Month, and as much as it is a time for celebration, it is even more so a time to seek knowledge. Knowledge about the contributions and achievements of African-Americans and Africans in the United States and around the world.
For Muslims who are not African-American or who do not have roots in Africa, it is imperative to remind ourselves of Allah’s statement that humanity must “know one another”, not just on a superficial level, but through bonds of brother- and sisterhood.
That includes doing our best to understand the perspectives and experiences of Black Americans, as well as addressing and correcting persistent prejudice against Africa, Africans, and Blackness. Some places to start doing this can be through the following hashtags on Twitter: #BlackMuslimReads, #MuslimShelfSpace, and #BlackhistoryMonth
We must also never forget the continent and Africans’ role in the development of Islam from the beginning of the mission of Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him. Consider these facts and acts which we encourage you to share and implement with family, friends, as well as in Islamic school lessons and Khutbas this month:
Talking points
These points can be used for a Khutba, a social media post, a blog, a call to a talk show, or in discussions with family and friends:
• Africans and Muslims of African origin have been instrumental in the development of Islam since the beginning of the Prophet’s mission. From modern-day Ethiopia to America, they have shaped and molded the Muslim Ummah
• It was a Black woman, Barakah or Umm Ayman, who the Prophet described as my "mother after my own mother. She is the rest of my family." She was the only one who knew him from birth to death, and he said that she is a woman of Paradise
• An African nation, Abyssinia, and its king, Najashi, gave the Muslim community its first refuge from torture and persecution. At one point, 80% of all Muslims sought and were granted asylum there
• Notwithstanding personal and cultural prejudices throughout Islamic history, Africans have risen to positions of power and influence in scholarship, politics, and more
• Thinking points
• God created human beings as one people as He tells us in the Quran (4:1) and it is human beings who divided humanity (Quran 2:213)
• Am I a racist? It’s a question every Muslim must ask, answer, and seek forgiveness for. Given the Islamic emphasis on brother- and sisterhood regardless of race or color, there is no room for racism or prejudice
• How can I wage Jihad against racism and prejudice in my community? Start with these ideas
• What can I do to highlight the contributions of Africans and African-Americans during Black History Month in my Masjid, my MSA, my Islamic weekend or full-time school?
• This Black History Month, we call for a greater knowledge, appreciation of, and respect for Barakah, Bilal, and Black history, as well as a willingness to challenge anything that undermines Islam’s message of humanity’s unity in diversity.
Peace,
Sound Vision Team
1
9 The Havens of the First Hijra: an African nation is the Mulsims's first refuge
By Najib Mohammed
History has shown that the first migration to Ethiopia and the second migration to Madinah have indeed laid down the foundation on which Islam, as a universal religion, was built. Ever since that experience, the Muslim community, wherever they settled, shifted from the positive of minority to majority, from weakness to permanent strength, from tribalism to universal brotherhood that knows no defined political boundaries.
Umm Ayman: the African Muslim woman promised Paradise
By Samana Siddiqui
2
The Prophet described Umm Ayman as his "mother after my own mother. She is the rest of my family." She was the first person to hold him in her arms when he was born and the only person who knew him from that point until his death. She was one of the few Muslims who the Prophet assured would be in Paradise.
3
Islam's Manifesto of Universal Brother-and Sisterhood
By Abdul Malik Mujahid
Our Prophet was a mercy to all human beings, regardless of their religious, racial, cultural, or ethnic background. We, as his followers, must live and spread this message.
4
SoundVisions's Page on Black History Month
A unique page on Black History Month, offering articles, perspectives, tips, and ideas about the month devoted to African and African-American history from a Muslim perspective.
For just a dollar a day you can support Sound Vision. Please help us continue to be able to bring these wonderful projects to you
________________________________________
© 2020 Sound Vision Foundation. All rights reserved.
Sound Vision Team
Abdul Malik Mujahid, President; Khaled Al-Sadi, Director Finance; Samana Siddiqui, Content Manager;Dr. Ahmed Murad, Web & IT; Dr. Abdul Waheed, Outreach Coordinator; Wahaj khan,Youth Coordinator:
Sound Vision Board
Dr. Khalid Riaz, Secretary; Taufiq Ahmed, Treasurer; Hannah El-Ameen;
Dr. Khursheed Mallick; Dr. Amin Nadeem; Dr. Altaf Kaiseruddin
Sound Vision Board
27 E. Monroe St., Suite 700 Chicago, IL. 60603, USA
Sound Vision is a not for profit tax exempt 501 (C) 3 organization

Election Mein BJP Ki Deshbhakti Ke Peeche Ka Sach..!

Palestinians have only one option left: Stay and fight

https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/palestinians-have-only-one-option-left-stay-and-fight

February 7, 2020 Azamgarh: Minor among 19 arrested for sedition, cops say he is rioter

February 7, 2020
Azamgarh: Minor among 19 arrested for sedition, cops say he is rioter
Police alleged that the accused raised anti-national slogans and indulged in rioting during a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens (NRC) at Jauhar Ali park under Bilariyaganj police station.
https://indianexpress.com/article/india/azamgarh-minor-among-19-arrested-for-sedition-cops-say-he-is-rioter-6255127/
Written by Asad Rehman | Azamgarh | Published: February 7, 2020 3:47:24 am

Tonight | Indian Muslims Fundraising Dinner @ 6:30 pm


Tuesday 4 February 2020

The Anti-CAA/NRC/NPR Movement: Hope and Prospects




in India — by Dr Prem Singh — January 30, 2020

1.
The government’s decisions on the Kashmir-problem, the temple-mosque dispute, the Assam-problem (National Register of Citizens) and the Citizenship Amendment Act highlight four things: (1) That the decisions are motivated with an intention of communal polarization. (2) That the role of democratic institutions and processes has been merely perfunctory in these decisions. (3) These decisions are not characteristic of a responsible government. (4) These decisions have resulted in more confusion than clarity. (5) The decisions also act as a distraction from the failures of the economy. The job of a government is to maintain peace and prosperity in national life by following the Constitution. The current government has a majority, and also a declared agenda. This government is using its majority to fuel the forces of majoritarianism. As a result the penetration of bigotry is making inroads into majority Hindu society, whose mainstream had been liberal. This anti-constitutional posture of the government is causing irreparable damage to the Indian nation-state and national life.
It would have been better if the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which entered into a joint government with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Jammu and Kashmir, would have introduced the bill on the solution of the Kashmir problem in the state assembly for an open and wide discussion; it would have been better had the government decided to build a temple at the disputed site in Ayodhya by making laws in Parliament on the strength of the majority instead of using the Supreme Court to make the judicial process meaningless; it would have been better had the implementation of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) been restricted to Assam only as before; it would have been better had the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) not have made a reference to the religious communities and would also have included refugees coming from Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar and China. Whether or not to grant citizenship to refugees of any country or religion is always a prerogative of any government. If the current government was desirous of granting citizenship only to Hindus who are victims of persecution in Pakistan and Bangladesh, it could have done so without tampering with the constitutional secular character of the country. With this step of the government, the image of India as an anti-constitutional and communal country is being created in democratic countries abroad. The government should take a serious note of this international criticism and make necessary changes at least in the Citizenship Amendment Act at the earliest.
It’s a known fact that a large number of Bangladeshi people illegally come to India in search of livelihood and then continue to live here. It is the job of government and administration to identify them. However on this pretext, it is not appropriate in any way to create a ruckus about the citizenship identity of the entire population of the country. I have a suggestion to make here. The Government of India should identify Bangladeshis and arrange to give them work permits for a certain period of time. The permits of those whose conduct and work are good can be extended further. There is no question of giving citizenship in this. They are all poor labourers working in unorganised sector. Harassment is not just religious or political. India can also suggest the inclusion of perpetual poverty in the category of persecution by the United Nations and governments.
2.
The communal and secular camps in India should be grateful to Gandhi for at least one of his contribution i.e. he withheld the Muslims in India at the time of Partition. They are of use for both the camps. Had it not been for Muslims in India in such a large number, most probably Modi would not have been the Prime Minister of India and his lieutenant Shah Home Minister. If there were no Muslims, the business of secular intellectuals would have been diluted. The Muslims are also necessary for the leaders of social justice politics. After their castes, the Muslims compensate for votes which enable them to rule. The Muslims are also cultivating votes for Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which has come straight from the womb of neo-liberalism. It is not always appropriate to blame the ulema for the problems of Muslims. It was the responsibility of the country’s leaders, intellectuals and the conscious civil society that the hard working Muslim population should not remain in the grip of the ulema and become independent citizens. At the most, it can be said that as much as the ulema want a Muslim devoid of civic consciousness, so does the communal and secular camps.
It has been over a month now. The Muslims are the axis of the voice against the CAA/NRC/NPR in the entire country. This movement is spontaneous to a large extent. The participation of young people and the women has made this movement unique. Shaheen Bagh’s dharna in Delhi, despite many allegations and counter-allegations, has become a symbol of the spontaneous movement which has had an impact on other cities of the country. This indicates that at least a large part of the Muslim population is becoming essential to themselves as citizens for the first time. The Prime Minister’s attention has also gone to this side. He had earlier taunted the dress of those opposing CAA/NRC/NPR. Then he expressed satisfaction that it is a good thing that Muslims have started carrying tricolor. However, the agitators need to keep in mind that as the neo-imperialist slavery has been tightened, the waving of the tricolor has become much faster. The tricolor is no longer the flag of India’s pride and sovereignty, as much as the flag of corporate politics.
Some such voices are also heard that new leaders will come out of the anti-CAA/NRC/NPR movement. Hope and possibilities should always be welcomed. But in view of the crisis, there is a need for new political understanding and ideology against the new imperialist system, not the new leaders. New leaders are coming out constantly. Among them are the children of established leaders and children of the Ford Foundation (those who are funded by various foundations through big NGOs), as well as community/caste based leaders. One would soon come to know that the community/caste based leaders are either sponsored by big parties like BJP-Congress or regional parties or they become leaders due to some public resistance, and sit in the lap of established parties. If this is the achievement of the thirty years of anti-imperialist struggle in India, then it is a matter of serious concern. All the youth, including the Muslims, who understand the meaning and function of the national independence, should consider it to be a little stagnant.
Due to the upcoming assembly elections in Delhi, the political parties have a particular interest in the anti-CAA/NRC/NPR movement. The BJP is trying to make it in its favor by propagating that it is a movement of the Muslims only. It sees the movement of Shaheen Bagh as beneficial for polarization of Hindu votes in its favour. The ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Delhi state has not categorically opposed the CAA/NRC/NPR saying that Hindus are also involved in the movement. It has made this strategy to confuse both Hindus and Muslims. Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has already spoken of ‘Hindu-interest’ by calling the Supreme Court’s decision to build a temple in Ayodhya in place of a mosque as historical. Although the Communists have no popular support base in Delhi, they have decided to support AAP. The Congress has already been labeled as a ‘party of Muslims’. It has undoubtedly taken a risk by openly opposing CAA/NRC/NPR. Any way, it will be interesting to see what shape/form the politics of the new leadership takes which is being projected by the movement. Movements are also a game of possibilities!

(The writer is a teacher of Hindi at Delhi University)

Gov’t became enemy of the people: Indian activist at US Congressional briefing

Gov’t became enemy of the people: Indian activist at US Congressional briefing
Dr Sandeep Pandey makes a powerful statement revealing excesses committed against anti-CAA protesters and dissenters in India, allegedly will full blessings of the regime.
 Sabrangindia                                                                                                          30 Jan 2020

On Wednesday, renowned human rights activist Dr Sandeep Pandey spoke at a Congressional Briefing in Washington D.C, where he recounted not only his own experience with being persecuted and harassed by a vindictive regime, but also how many other Indians who dared to speak up against the government were made to suffer.
Dr Pandey has been a highly respected member of civil society and has raised his voice for a multitude of cause over the last 27 years. But just last year, he was placed under house arrest thrice! He recounted this saying, “I was put under house arrest in Lucknow, the capital of the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, on 11 and 16 August and 19 December 2019. The first two times on the issue of Kashmir and on the third occasion on the issue of the Citizenship Amendment Act and National Register of Citizens.” He added, “On 17 and 19 August 2019 and 15 January 2020 I was prevented from visiting Ayodhya. The ruling Bhartiya Janata Party government doesn’t want any alternative view on Kashmir, Ayodhya or CAA-NRC to be expressed.”

Brutality inflicted upon protesting students
He then went on to narrate how the police and security forces inflicted brutality on university students, saying, “The Government became the enemy of people who participated in protests against the CAA and NRC after the Act was promulgated in December 2019. The crackdown started with Jamia Millia University in New Delhi and Aligarh Muslim University in UP. The police used tear gas shells and stun grenades to attack students. Mohammad Tariq, a PhD student at AMU, had to get one hand amputated, Nasir lost one thumb and both hands of Tanzim were fractured. First Information Reports against 57 named and 1,200 unnamed were lodged and 26 students were detained on 15 December 2019, and were released after local protests and road blockades by people. Ahamad Raza Khan, a student of Khwaja Moinuddin Chisti Urdu Arabi Farsi University in Lucknow was rusticated for merely giving a call for a demonstration.”

Persecution of activists
He also went on to narrate the plight of activists who were tortured in custody by the UP police. Pandey said, “On 19 December, when the call for nationwide protests was given, masked young men appeared from nowhere and indulged in arson and rioting during the peaceful protests in Lucknow. The police didn’t stop them in spite of activist Sadaf Zafar pleading with them, of which there is recorded evidence. Later activists like Sadaf Zafar and Pawan Rao Ambedkar were arrested along with a number of common people, some of whom participated in protests and some were just passers-by. Activist Deepak Kabir was arrested when he went to see Sadaf Zafar at the Hazratganj Police Station in Lucknow. Activist Robin Verma and ‘The Hindu,’ a prominent Indian newspaper, correspondent Omar Rashid were arrested by police on the evening of 19 December. Sadaf Zafar, Pawan Rao Ambedkar, Deepak Kabir and Robin Verma were subjected to torture inside the Hazratganj police station before being sent to jail and Omar Rashid was abused because of his Kashmiri background and then let off after some senior journalists were able to put pressure on the Chief Minister’s Office.” He also narrated how even the elderly weren’t spared saying, “Septuagenarians Advocate Mohammad Shoaib and retired Dalit Inspector General of Police S.R. Darapuri were arrested, even though they were detained at their homes on the day protests and violence took place and sent to jail. The time and place of the arrest of Advocate Shoaib and Darapuri were wrongly shown. Advocate Shoaib was not produced before any Magistrate nor did he sign any arrest memo.”

Targeting Muslims
Pandey then went on to reveal the regime’s insidious ploy to use the protests as an excuse to target Muslims in Uttar Pradesh and how all this transpired allegedly with Chief Minister Adityanath’s blessings. Pandey said, “The CM Yogi Adityanath in a meeting on the evening of 19 December with senior administrative and police officials spoke of taking revenge on people who had indulged in violence and later also said the cost of damage to public property will be recovered from the rioters. After this, police went berserk and indulged in brutal repression. They vandalized homes of well to do Muslims in Muzaffarnagar like Hamid Hasan, Intezar and Farooq in Sarwat and Naseem Ahmed and Ishtekhar in Khalapar, lathi-charged gatherings of Muslims coming out after performing Friday Namaz on 20 December in Meerut and even opened fire.” He added, “When the injured were taken to government hospitals, they refused to entertain them saying that there were instructions from the administration not to treat people with bullet injuries. A number of people injured in police firing did not go to any doctor for the fear of their names being included in the FIRs making them liable to pay for damage to public property caused due to rioting.”   
Pandey also said that the anti-Muslim narrative was spun with full support and willing participation from those in the highest echelons of power. He said, “Even though common citizens including non-Muslims participated in protests almost everywhere, the police and administration targeted only Muslims to create an impression that it was Muslims who created trouble. Prime Minister Narendra Modi even said that miscreants can be recognized from their dress. The ruling BJP was clearly indulging in politics of polarization and communalization by doing this.”
He concluded by saying, “It is a politics of divisiveness, polarization and communalization for political gains. The government has become an enemy to a segment of the population, Muslims and people who don’t agree with its views.”