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Zafarul-Islam Khan, chairman of
Indian government-backed Delhi Minorities Commission, says the BJP
government under Modi has been on a witch-hunt for its critics. PETALING JAYA: The head of an Indian government agency tasked with
protecting religious minorities agrees that Dr Zakir Naik’s speeches
could be offensive to Hindus and questions his methods, but adds that
the preacher has reasonable grounds to fear persecution and unfair trial
under the Narendra Modi government.
Zafarul-Islam Khan, a prominent activist who chairs the
federal-backed Delhi Minorities Commission – an agency which safeguards
the rights of Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Parsis – also
believes the recent money laundering charges are part of a larger
campaign by extremist Hindu forces to silence Naik.
“The Hindutva forces have had unbridled power since Modi came to
power in May 2014. They are misusing it against their opponents, real or
imaginary,” Khan, who is the son of one of contemporary India’s most
illustrious Muslim voices, told FMT.
Khan’s father is Wahiduddin Khan, who advocates Gandhian non-violence
and has been bestowed with the Padma Bhushan, India’s third highest
civilian honour.
Wahiduddin had in the past criticised Naik’s Islamic missionary methods, a view Khan also holds to.
But he said while Naik’s approach has been combative, he would not accuse him of abusing other beliefs, particularly Hinduism.
“I think Zakir Naik may be blunt and offensive at times but he does not abuse other religions,” said Khan.
“I think he should be more cautious. He used to hold huge open-air
televised conferences in parks and stadiums where Hindu leaders were
invited and ‘insulted’ in their view.
More offence was taken over Hindus
standing up after his lectures and announcing their conversion to
Islam. This offended Hindus,” he added.
Malaysian police are investigating Zakir Naik regarding accusations of inciting racial sentiments.
Naik came under investigation in Malaysia following speeches critical
of the non-Muslim communities here. He reportedly described ethnic
Chinese as “guests” when responding to growing calls for him to be
deported.
However, he has denied stoking racial sentiments, saying he is a victim of a vilification campaign by Modi’s supporters.
He previously said he would not return to India, believing he would not be accorded a fair trial under the BJP government.
Khan said Naik was probably naive about India’s commitment to free
speech and “took for real the constitutional guarantees of freedom of
expression and right to profess and propagate any faith”.
“In fact, these rights exist more on paper than in reality. Any
conversion from Hinduism to another religion is considered a threat to
Hindus and the country,” he added.
He said the problem is compounded by what he called the current
leadership’s double standards when it comes to hurling accusations of
threatening communal harmony.
“In addition, there are umpteen Hindu militias which take the law
into their hands while the state apparatus looks the other way, to
enforce these Hindutva objectives professed by RSS and supported by its
political wing, the BJP which is now ruling India,” he said, referring
to Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a right-wing organisation linked to the
ruling party that has been blamed for communal riots over the decades.
Credit : freemalaysiatoday.com
Source Link : https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2019/08/19/head-of-indian-govts-minorities-body-says-naiks-fears-of-unfair-trial-well-grounded/
Khan said he does not consider Naik part of India’s who’s who of Muslim scholars.
“He is influential and has a huge following due to his televised
debates and Peace TV appearances, but he is not a scholar as such,” he
said, adding that Naik appeared to have followed the approach of the
late South African missionary Ahmad Deedat, who famously debated with
Christian theologians in the early 80s.
Despite his reservations about Naik’s approach to propagating Islam,
Khan believes that Naik will not get justice under the “circumstances of
witch-hunting and official vilification”.
“This is true. The Indian judiciary has been quite compromised under
the current government which believes in bulldozing its decisions,” he
said, adding that Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad has a point in his
criticism of the Indian judiciary in Naik’s context.
“I think Malaysia did the right thing. Naik will not get justice under the current Indian dispensation.”
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