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Der aaye, durust aaye.
Finally, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has broken his silence on cow vigilantes.
The PM has spoken out against Hindu radical groups carrying out violent attacks on people suspected of slaughtering cows, targeting Muslims, and lately, low-caste Dalits, in what clearly seem to be coordinated and well planned assaults.
Ironically, on the same day that PM Modi, at a town hall meeting in New Delhi, said state agencies need to act against the self-styled activists who are actually criminal elements, Bajrang Dal activists reportedly sought to justify such acts, saying they would go to any extent to protect the holy cow, which is like a mother to them, and cited Dadri lynching as an example of such backlash.
And to top it off, a top VHP leader, according to news reports, said that when the law and the constitution are not protected by those in power and there is laxity, “such incidents will happen”.
It’s precisely since PM Modi has spoken out so late, while the communal cauldron has been burning for quite some time now, that such forces have been emboldened to hold no fear in taking the law into their hands, while those tasked with upholding the law of the land have kept looking the other way.
You have rightly pointed out, Mr Prime Minister, that demanding answers from a PM for everything is not good governance.
True indeed. We cannot hold the PM accountable for anything and everything that happens under the sun, across the length and breadth of the country. And, of course, there is a need to make our democracy more participatory. But the problem, here, is of the nuance. It’s about sending – or not sending at all – the right signals.
Immediately after the Dadri lynching incident, when the focus should have been on the ghastly murder and bringing the culprits to book, the cops were seen more prompt in probing what the victim had consumed, beef or mutton. That such an approach sends shivers down the spines of so many citizens, one can easily confirm.
We have also seen how such groups have sprouted all around, systematically and ruthlessly giving the law of the land a complete go-by.
Through all of this, these groups seem to have been a law unto themselves. Free of any noticeable intervention, their diktat seems to have been running unhindered.
But now that you have spoken and asked state agencies to act against these “self-styled activists, who are actually criminal elements,” there is a renewed hope all around, Mr Modi.
We believe the law enforcement agencies will take cues.
We want to believe every word of yours when you say, “I get so angry at some people who have opened shops in the name of Gau Raksha. They are into anti-social activities at night but wear the garb of cow protectors during the day.”
We are further emboldened when you say, “I request state governments to prepare a dossier of such self-styled cow protectors. Seventy to 80 per cent of them will turn out to be anti-social elements who do this to mask their bad deeds.”
Very recently, one such esteemed member, from Bihar, was heard cajoling his community members – we do not know the authenticity of the tape but he has not denied its veracity thus far – into embracing violence, arguing they were not manly enough.
It is this group, Mr PM, that needs your undiluted attention now.
You have rightly lashed out at those “setting up shops in the name of cow protection.” We wait with bated breath for these shops to be demolished.
A big thank you Mr PM, for calling a spade a spade.
( Mehre Alam is a Doha-based Indian journalist and a former deputy editor of The Times of Oman. This is a personal blog and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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