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Amid protests against the Supreme Court order opening the Sabarimala temple in Kerala to women of all ages, Union Textile Minister Smriti Irani on Tuesday, 23 October, said the right to pray did not mean the right to desecrate, reported PTI.
Speaking at the Young Thinkers’ Conference organised by British High Commission and the Observer Research Foundation in Mumbai, Irani said:
The Union minister added that she can’t comment on the SC verdict being a cabinet minister, but what she said was her personal opinion.
On 28 September, a five-judge bench of the Supreme Court, headed by the then Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra, lifted the ban on the entry of woman of menstrual age into the Sabarimala temple.
However, ever since the doors of the shrine openned on 17 October, women have been stopped by Ayyappa devotees from climbing up to the temple.
According to a report in The Indian Express, Irani was also questioned about the protests at the base camp of the temple in Kerala, to which she replied by drawing a parallel from her own life.
Soon after Irani made this statement in Mumbai, Michael Safi, a journalist with The Guardian, tweeted Irani’s statement along with a news article.
Irani was quick to respond to the tweet, calling it fake news. She also posted a video of her interaction at the ‘Young Thinkers’ conference and clarified her statement.
Irani also said her statement was being used as a bait against her, and that she hasn’t found any person who “takes a blood-soaked napkin to ‘offer’ to any one let alone a friend”.
Activist and Politburo Member of the CPIML, Kavita Krishnan questioned Irani’s statement about women wanting to carry “blood-soaked pads to desecrate Sabarimala” when the issue is that of them entering the temple.
Earlier, similar rumours were doing the rounds on social media when Rehana Fatima, an activist who almost made it to the top at the Sabarimala temple, was accused of carrying sanitary napkins in her irumudi.
However, speaking to The Quint, Fatima had clarified, “People were using my Muslim name and tactics like spreading the idea that I was there to create trouble, that I carried sanitary napkins – all to misguide people. When people are already questioning if I am a devotee or not, planting this idea that I was a lady who had gone there to only create trouble, would aggravate them. So no one would anyway believe what I say.”
(With inpust from PTI and The Indian Express)
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