India’s Hindutva Agenda:
Threat to Minorities in India
Dr. Mozammel Haque
Amid
the increasing rise of Hindutva threat
to minorities in India, politicians, academics, religious leaders and national
representatives as well as leading diaspora organisations came together to call
for international intervention to counter the threat posed by Hindutva agenda
in India. A major international conference was held, chaired by Lord Ahmed,
chair of Parliamentarians for National Self-determination (PNSD), at the main
chamber of the Birmingham Council House, Birmingham, on 29 April, 2017. The
Conference unanimously adopted Resolutions (enclosed below).
On
20 June, 2017, a delegation of Sikhs and Kashmiris delivered a Memorandum to the
UK Prime Minister Rt. Honourable Theresa May at 10 Downing Street calling for
intervention to protect religious freedoms and fundamental human rights of
minorities, Christians, Dalits, Muslims and Sikhs alike in India.
In
this connection, I would like to mention the hugely authoritative report issued
recently in February by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom
(USCIRF) entitled “Constitutional and Legal Challenges Faced by Religious
Minorities in India” which details the numerous constitutional and legal
restrictions on minority religious freedoms in India, as well as this week’s
open letter by 65 senior Indian civil servants which condemned the rampant
‘majoritarianism’ of the establishment.
The
followings are the reports on the international conference at Birmingham Council
House and its Resolutions. Draft Memorandum to the UK Prime Minister is also
included along with the report below.
Conference on
India’s Hindutva
Agenda: A Challenge
to International
Law and Civilised Norms
A
major international conference was held on 29 April 2017 in the main Chamber of
the Birmingham Council House, Birmingham attended by politicians, academics,
religious and national representatives as well as leading diaspora
organisations. The conference was chaired by Lord Ahmed, Chair of Parliamentarians
for National Self-determination (PNSD), who had earlier in the week raised
formal questions in the House of Lords seeking the UK government action based
on the recommendations of a report issued last month by the US Commission for
International Religious Freedom.
The
conference was addressed by Dr Mukul Hazarika (Assam Watch), Prof Dr Mohammed
Arif Khan (Kashmir based educationalist and author), Amrik Singh Sahota
(President, Council of Khalistan), Nazir Qureshi (President, All Parties Kashmir
Coordination Committee), Dr Gurnam Singh (academic and TV presenter), Dr
Jeffrey Kitingan and Doris Jones from the Sabah region of Malaysia, Joga Singh
(Babbar Akali Organisation), Raja Amjad Khan (Kashmir Iqbalistan Movement) and
Ranjit Singh Srai (PNSD).
They
came together to call for international intervention to counter the threat
posed by an increasingly rabid extremist Hindutva agenda in India. That agenda
has denied not only the rights of nations to self-determination in their
homelands but even the free practice of other faiths without intimidation and
violence.
After
the conference a press release under the above caption was issued along with
the resolution of the conference. Followings are the details of the press
release:
“The
key, according to the resolutions adopted at the conference was to require
Indian compliance with international legal obligations and, in case of default,
to punish defiance with targeted sanctions, including the banning of fascist
group that are responsible for almost daily attacks on minorities.
Dr
Iqtidar Cheema, who authored that report; US Commission for International
Religious Freedom, presented to the conference the array of legal and
constitutional measures by which religious minorities in India were being targeted,
such as Sikhs Buddists and Jains being deemed to be Hindus for the purposes of
personal laws.
His
namesake, Harpal Singh Cheema, president of Dal Khalsa, participated by video
link from Punjab, along with senior human rights lawyer Amar Singh Chahal. They
castigated the Indian state for the genocide of the Sikhs, the denial of
freedom and the illegal appropriation of Punjab’s river waters in breach of
riparian law. On the anniversary of the 1986 Declaration of Khalistan they said
the Sikh nation will pursue its right of self-determination in a peaceful and
democratic manner, in accordance with international law. There was, they said,
no option other than an independent and sovereign Punjab to bring to an end the
decades-old conflict there.
Professor
Shawl, chairman of Kashmir Concern, said the people of Kashmir alone must
decide their destiny and India’s posting of 800,000 troops in the region will
never alter that fact, despite the atrocities being committed by them. Mehmoob
Makhdoomi, a Kashmiri author and columnist, urged the international policy and
decision makers to facilitate efforts for true conflict resolution in the
troubled region, based on the will of the people. India’s vision, which he
characterised as the “peace of the graveyard” was no solution – the rise of a
new generation of Kashmiri freedom supporters witnessed in recent months has
amply demonstrated that.
Reverend
Joshva Raja John, Church of England Priest and Queens Foundation research
scholar expressed dismay at the rampant minority bashing being tolerated by the
Indian authorities. Christians have been targeted by violence and intimidation
under the guise of the repugnant ‘ghar vapsi’ mantra of Hindu extremists. He
called for the Bajrang Dal and VHP offshoots of the BJP’s RSS mentor to be
internationally banned as terrorist organisations.
Christina
McKelvie, a Member of the Scottish Parliament, said other nations should aspire
to self-determination just as the proud people of Scotland are doing and that
the pursuance of national self determination through peace and democracy is a
noble cause. Phil Bennion, former Member of the European Parliament, of the
Liberal Democrats spoke of the paramount need for the right of self
determination to be respected in disputed territories like Kashmir and called
on India to drop its threat to execute Sikhs prisoners.
John
Burn of the Green Party called on India honour its international obligations
and to show zero tolerance to attacks on minorities. He also called on the UK
government to stand up for human rights and the right of self-determination,
rather than allow trade interests to override those “most basic and important”
vales. Graham Williamson, chair of Nations without States, spoke of the need to
allow self-determinists to operate peaceably within conflict zones, without the
threat of sedition and treason laws, in order to unlock peaceful and democratic
solutions to intractable.”
Resolutions Adopted At The Conference
At
the end of the Conference following resolutions were unanimously adopted at the
Conference:
“This
Conference calls on the international community to fully recognise the role
that self-determination can play as a means of peaceful conflict resolution;
this is a democratic mechanism underpinned by international law. Whilst nations
and peoples must be left to decide their own destiny, the global community must
do what it can to hold non-compliant states to account when they refuse,
overtly or covertly, to respect the right of self-determination. In the case of
India, which officially rejects Articles 1 of the 1966 Covenants on Human
Rights, this non-compliance has led directly to the unresolved and hugely
destructive conflicts in Kashmir, Punjab, Assam and Nagalim over sovereignty,
territory and riparian rights.
“The
denial of religious freedoms, attacks on religious minorities in the name of
chauvinistic ‘majoritarianism’, as being currently witnessed in the Hindutva
extremism sweeping across India, is condemned as a breach of international law
as well as basic moral standards of behaviour adopted by the civilised world.
This Conference fully endorses the recommendations of the recent report of the
US Commission on International Religious Freedom entitled “Constitutional and
Legal Challenges Faced by Religious Minorities in India”.
“This
Conference calls on the international community to identify and impose targeted
sanctions against Hindutva organisations, including the RSS and all its
affiliates across the world, to force a change in the cowardly tactics that are
being adopted to intimidate Dalits, Christians, Muslims, Sikhs and others.
“This
Conference urges all UK based political parties to address the concerns of the
diaspora communities so that UK political representatives, including the UK
Government, responds to the threats caused by blatant breaches of international
law by the Indian state.”
Sikhs and
Kashmiris call on UK Prime Minister
to tackle India’s
Hindutva Agenda
On 20
June 2017 a Memorandum was delivered by a delegation of Sikhs and Kashmiris to
10 Downing Street calling for Intervention
to protect Religious Freedoms and Fundamental Human Rights. A press release was
issued along with the draft Memorandum to the UK Prime Minister Rt. Honourable
Theresa May. Followings are the press release and the Draft Memorandum to the
UK Prime Minister.
Following
press release was issued. A delegation of Sikhs and Kashmiris delivered an
appeal on 20 June 2017 to 10 Downing Street calling for a re-set in the UK’s
foreign policy towards India.
Lord
Nazir Ahmed, Chair of Parliamentarians for National Self-determination, and
Lord Qurban Hussain both endorsed the memorandum and joined Sikh and Kashmiri
representatives in delivering it to the UK Prime Minister’s official residence.
They urged the UK Government to listen to the UK’s massive diaspora communities
which want their political representatives to act on their concerns.
They
characterised the Hindutva surge in India as a fascist threat to Christians,
Dalits, Muslims and Sikhs alike – a threat which breaches India’s international
legal obligations. Compelling India to comply with universally accepted legal
and humanitarian norms was, they said, the key to bringing India back in to
line.
They
cited the hugely authoritative report issued in February by the US Commission on
International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) which details the numerous
constitutional and legal restrictions on minority religious freedoms in India,
as well as this week’s open letter by 65 senior Indian civil servants which
condemned the rampant ‘majoritarianism’ of the establishment.
The
delegation called for the implementation of the USCIRF report’s recommendations
which include changes to the Indian Constitution (such as the removal of
outrageous provisions that deem Sikhs, Buddhists and Jains to be Hindus for the
purposes of personal and religious law) and operationalizing the UN Declaration
on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities.
The
memorandum also heighted the atrocities committed by state and non-state actors
aimed at crushing the self-determination movements in Punjab and Kashmir. It
called for genocide perpetrators to be punished by UN established tribunals and
for peaceable conflict resolution by holding plebiscites so that the people of
those regions could freely determine their own destinies. An unchecked Hindutva
agenda in India makes resolution of those conflicts impossible; hence the
international community must, according to the memorandum, require India to
formally accept and comply with the right of self-determination as enshrined in
Article 1 of the 1966 Covenants on Human Rights. India has formally rejected
that right – something which the UN and leading member states have said is
unacceptable.
The
memorandum was signed by Amar Singh Chahal (official spokesman of Jagtar Singh
Hawara, the Jathedar of the Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat of the
Sikhs), Prof Nazir Shawl (Chair, Kashmir Concern), Amrik Singh Sahota OBE
(President, Council of Khalistan), Gurdev Singh Chohan (President, Akali Dal,
UK) and Joga Singh (Babbar Akali Organisation). Importantly, it was also
countersigned by Dr Iqtidar Cheema, the author of the USCIRF report which was
also formally handed over at the same time.
MEMORANDUM
An International
Law Response to the Hindutva
Majoritarianism
Threat to Minorities in India:
an Appeal to the
new UK Government to hold India to account
The
followings are the Memorandum prepared, signed and delivered on 20 June 2017 to
10 Downing Street calling for intervention to protect Religious Freedoms and
Fundamental Human Rights.
“Rt Honourable Theresa May,
Prime Minister,
10 Downing Street,
London.
20 June 2017
Dear Prime Minister,
“Following
your re-election in this month’s General Election, we write to you in
connection with an aspect of UK foreign policy which is a great concern to
hundreds of thousands of Sikhs, Muslims and Christians from the large diaspora
communities settled here that have roots in India. We believe there is an
urgent need to re-set the UK’s foreign policy toward India so that the mistakes
of the past are not repeated, especially in light of the appalling right wing
Hindutva surge that is alarming those communities.
“The
Manchester and London atrocities over recent weeks have disgusted all
right-thinking people across the world. Apart from the clear
determination to defeat the evil ideology of hate and the cowardly targeting of
innocents and non-combatants, there has though been another remarkable feature
of the response from ordinary people here in the UK. That has been the
impressive show of defiance and unity – whatever peoples’ backgrounds –
grounded on core humanitarian values such as mutual respect for all our fellow
citizens and a sense of common humanity. Those values will ultimately play the
crucial role in defeating the narrative of chauvinism and belligerence being
espoused by cowards who despite their claims, in truth, have no religion at
all.
“During
the month in which Sikhs commemorate the 33rd anniversary of
the infamous Indian army attack on the Golden Temple in Amritsar in 1984, in
which thousands of innocents and non-combatants were deliberately targeted to
quell a legitimate movement for self-determination by the people of Punjab, it
is timely to remind the new UK Government of the clandestine connivance, for
the sake of trade, of the then British and other governments with the
Government of India, and the subsequent genocide of the Sikhs. You will of
course be aware of the need to fully disclose the level of that unfortunate
British involvement and, we hope, the need to redress that wrong by taking
suitable action now to protect the very nation that was then so inhumanely
targeted.
“Even
today, there is a growing threat to minority groups in India who are facing a
right-wing extremist ‘majoritarian’ onslaught. Christians, Sikhs and Muslims
have been covertly targeted by discriminatory laws, sectarian policies as well
as by state and mob violence for decades, but there is now a more overt threat
to them.
“This
week sixty-five (retired) senior Indian civil servants wrote an open letter to
Indian authorities saying: “In the face of a rising authoritarianism and
majoritarianism, which do not allow for reasoned debate, discussion and
dissent, we appeal to all public authorities, public institutions and
constitutional bodies to take heed of these disturbing trends and take
corrective action”. They cited, by way of example, the right-wing extremist
Hindu thugs who roam the streets in the name of ‘cow protection’ - “Gau-rakshaks
function with impunity and seem to be doing so with the tacit complicity or
active encouragement of state machinery”. See:https://thewire.in/146332/open-letter-authoritarianism-india-retired-officials/
“More
significantly, we attach a copy of the recent report issued by the US
Commission on International Religious Freedom which sets out clearly why
international pressure is needed make Indian authorities comply with their
obligations under international law. The report details the ways in which –
quite apart from the thuggery on the ground – the very constitution, laws and
administrative machinery in India formalises discrimination and restrictions on
(minority) religious freedoms. The report sets out how these practices
contravene international law; it also includes recommendations for what India
needs to do in order to comply with those universally agreed basic standards of
conduct. We would draw your attention in particular to the recommendations it
sets out for US Government action – all of which we urge the UK Government to
adopt.
“Apart
from the increasing use of ‘Hindutva’ to crush religious freedoms, there is
(unsurprisingly) a hardening of the stance to deny self-determination and
riparian rights in Punjab, Kashmir and the North East which are non-Hindu
majority regions.
“A
number of us wrote to you last year (memorandum handed in to 10 Downing Street
on 15 August 2016) in connection with the India’s genocidal response to the
Sikh struggle for national self-determination in their homeland in
Indian-controlled Punjab and were disappointed to receive a response (dated 9th September
2016) from Duncan Johns at the South Asia Department of the Foreign Office. The
response characterises the conflict as an internal matter for the Indian
Government which should be resolved through dialogue. It is, with all due
respect, simply not credible for genocide to be viewed as an internal matter
and to expect the perpetrators to engage in ‘dialogue’ willingly. The Foreign
Office will surely have noted that the Ontario Canadian state parliament
passing a resolution in April of this year recognising those systematic mass
killings of Sikhs as genocide – an act which the Indian Government’s spokesman
quickly dismissed. We urge you to raise with the Indians the pressing issues of
Sikh political prisoners, the punishment of the those guilty of genocide at a
UN established tribunal and the need for a democratic solution to the Indo-Sikh
conflict.
“In
Kashmir you will have noted the unrelenting brute force being used by Indian
security forces over recent months to crush mass public protests calling for
the right of self-determination to be exercised in that
region. Kashmir, a disputed territory according to the UN itself,
cannot be left to the brutalities of the Hindutva agenda. The oppression was
epitomised when troops tied an innocent Kashmiri to their jeep as a human
shield to protect them – something that Human Rights Watch has soundly
condemned. See: https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/04/20/no-one-should-defend-use-human-shield-army.
The officer who ordered that obscene action has since been awarded an honour by
the Indian army! Quite apart from the humanitarian need to intervene in
Kashmir, there is a real need to resolve the Kashmir conflict, in accordance
with the wishes of the people, given the increasingly dangerous proximity of
Chinese, Pakistani and Indian forces in the context of the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor which India seems bent on disrupting.
“As
such, we appeal to you to call on the Indian Government to withdraw its
reservation against Article 1 of the 1966 Covenants on Human Rights, pull back
from military occupation of those regions and allow the international community
to oversee free and fair democratic plebiscites to determine the destiny of
those traumatised regions.
“These
concerns were raised by Kashmiri, Sikh and Christian Diaspora communities at a
Conference held at the Council House in Birmingham on 29 April 2017, which was
addressed by UK politicians, academics as well as speakers from those regions.”
The Diaspora communities want the UK government to raise these issues as set
out in the Resolutions adopted at the Conference.” (mentioned above).
Lord
Nazir Ahmed, Chair, Parliamentarians for National Self-Determination; Amar
Singh Chahal, spokesman for Jathedar Sri Akal Takht Sahib, Jagtar Singh
Hawara, Dr. Iqtidar Cheema,
Author of the USCIRF Report; Amrik Singh Sahota OBE, President, Council of Khalistan; Prof Nazir
Shawl, Chair, Kashmir Concern, Ranjit Singh Srai, Admin. Sec. PNSD; Gurdev
Singh Chohan, President, Akali Dal, UK and Joga Singh, Babbar Akali
Organisation.