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India faces uproar after ruling BJP officials insult Prophet Muhammad

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Muslim countries including Qatar, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia condemn remarks about Prophet Muhammad made by top officials in India’s Bharatiya Janata Party, as calls grow on social media for boycott of Indian goods in Muslim countries.

India’s ruling right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has faced diplomatic backlash after Qatar, Kuwait and Iran summoned the country’s envoys over insulting remarks on Islam’s Prophet Muhammad by two of its officials, with several other Muslim countries also voicing outrage and condemning the statements.

In a statement on Sunday, the Qatari Foreign Ministry said it summoned the Indian envoy to voice “disappointment of Qatar and its total rejection and condemnation to the controversial remarks.”

Qatari Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Soltan bin Saad Al Muraikhi handed a note to the Indian envoy, according to the ministry statement.

The note asserted that “these insulting remarks would lead to incitement of religious hatred, and offend more than two billion Muslims around the world.” Doha is expecting “a public apology and immediate condemnation of these remarks,” from the Indian government, it added.

Nupur Sharma, the spokesperson of the BJP, now suspended, had made insulting remarks against the Prophet and his wife Ayesha in a TV debate, triggering a wave of condemnation at home and from the Islamic world.

Another BJP spokesperson and the party’s Delhi media head Naveen Kumal Jindal was expelled from the right-wing party over comments he made about Prophet Muhammad on Twitter.

Reacting to Indian ruling party official Nupur’s remark’s, Grand Mufti of Oman said, “the insolent and obscene rudeness of the official spokesman for the ruling extremist party in India against the Messenger of Islam and his pure wife Aisha is a war against every Muslim in the east and west of the earth, and it is a matter that calls for all Muslims to rise as one nation.”

Sheikh Al-Khalili also called for boycott of Indian products in the Arab country.

READ MORE: US says some Indian officials ‘supporting’ religious attacks

Doha seeks public apology

The remarks by a spokesperson for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party last week were blamed for clashes in an Indian state and prompted demands for her arrest, with anger spreading overseas to Muslim countries.

BJP distanced itself from their remarks, saying it has suspended Sharma and expelled Jindal. In response to Doha’s “public apology” demand, India said the remarks on Prophet Muhammad were made by “fringe elements” and that they did not reflect the views of the government.

Modi’s party, which has frequently been accused of acting against the country’s Muslim minority, said it “respects all religions”.

The Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) also condemned the remarks, without specifying the insult, saying they came in a “context of intensifying hatred and abuse towards Islam in India and systematic practices against Muslims”.

Pakistan said in a statement it condemns in the “strongest possible terms” the highly derogatory remarks. “Pakistan once again calls on the international community to take immediate cognisance of the grievously aggravating situation of Islamophobia in India,” it said.

READ MORE: Indian court orders Muslims to limit gathering at Gyanvapi Mosque

Iran, Kuwait summon Indian envoy

Meanwhile, Iran’s Foreign Ministry’s South Asia department also said that the Indian ambassador in Tehran was summoned to register Iran’s protest over the insulting remarks.

Earlier, Kuwait’s Foreign Ministry said it summoned the Indian ambassador and handed over a memorandum of protest, expressing “categorical rejection and denunciation” of the insulting comments.

Afghanistan became the latest country to condemn the insulting comments.

“The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan strongly condemns the use of derogatory words against the Holy Prophet of Islam by an official of the ruling party in India,” Afghan Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said.

“We urge the Indian government not to allow such fanatics to insult the holy religion of Islam and provoke the feelings of Muslims.”

Niyaz Farooqui, secretary of Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind, India’s largest socio-religious Muslim organisation, urged the Indian government to take legal action over the insulting remarks.

“We have requested the government of India to take legal action, arrest them and penalise them, only then it would be considered right action has been taken”, he said.

Tasleem Rehmani, president of the Muslim Political Council of India, called the suspension of the BJP spokesperson “a drama.”

“Expel her permanently and send her to Jail. Nothing short of this can be accepted,” Rehmani said on Twitter.

The BJP officials’ remarks also sparked a Twitter trend in the Arab world calling for a boycott of Indian products.

READ MORE: India court puts on hold colonial-era sedition law used to muzzle dissent

Muslims under harsh BJP rule

Since Modi came to power in 2014, Hindu mobs have lynched scores of people — mainly Muslims and Dalit Hindus — suspected of illegally transporting cows or consuming beef.

Hindu far-right groups have also targeted Muslims over “love jihad”, the conspiracy theory that Muslims are luring Hindu women with the aim of conversion and eventually national domination.

Muslims were also accused of spreading Covid-19. In recent years, Hindu mobs have targeted Muslims praying on Fridays in northern India.

BJP recently banned wearing the hijab in classrooms in Karnataka state. Hardline Hindu groups later demanded such restrictions in more Indian states. Muslim mutton sellers and fruit vendors have also become the target of the far-right Hindu groups.

During a Hindu festival earlier in April, Hindu mobs pelted stones on mosques in several areas while DJs played loud music outside the mosques as worshippers prayed.

Hindu monks known for their incendiary anti-Muslim rhetoric have been calling for Rohingya-type ethnic cleansing of Indian Muslims.

READ MORE: India’s Muslims mark ‘most painful’ Eid after series of far-right attacks

Source: TRTWorld

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Developmental projects of Maldives progressing substantially

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India’s Minister of External Affairs Dr. S. Jaishankar has affirmed that the developmental projects of the Maldives carried out with the assistance of India have been progressing considerably. The remarks were made by the minister during the Confederation of Indian Industry (CIIs) Annual Business Summit.

Speaking at the summit, Minister Jaishankar stated that some developmental projects were slightly politically influenced, hindering the progress. However, he assured that the progress of the projects have propelled at a notable rate.

Following the Minister of Foreign Affairs Moosa Zameer’s official visit to India at the invitation of Minister Jaishankar, discussions were held highlighting the spectrum of initiatives across the nation has been kickstarted through loans and grants from the Government of India during the previous administration. He emphasised the current government’s commitment to prioritising the resumption and completion of these projects.

Meanwhile, the Government of India has reaffirmed its commitment to the development and prosperity of the Maldives by extending a budgetary support of USD 50 million to be repaid within a term of one year.

Source(s): PsmNews

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Police officers complete training to prevent maritime terrorism acts

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A team of 22 police officers has successfully completed a specialised training programme focused on thwarting maritime terrorism activities.

Entitled “Training on Strengthening Capabilities to Disrupt Maritime Crimes as Related to Terrorist Threats,” the program was conducted through a collaborative effort between the Maldives Police Service (MPS) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). Running from May 13 to 15, the intensive training equipped participants with essential skills and knowledge crucial for combating threats in maritime environments.

The concluding ceremony, graced by the presence of Chief Superintendent of Police Ibrahim Adnan Anees, Head of Marine Police, along with senior officials from the Marine Police Department, UNODC’s Head of Office Enrico Boninsegna, and course instructor Kenneth Alferdo Pennington, highlighted the significance of such initiatives in enhancing national security.

Addressing the gathering, Adnan underscored the importance of ongoing education and skill development, urging participants to actively apply the knowledge garnered from the program in their professional endeavors.

The training, conducted at Dhoonidhoo, Kaafu Atoll, imparted vital insights into the prevention and detection of maritime terrorism activities, emphasizing protocols for safe navigation in high-risk areas. Furthermore, officers received guidance on investigative procedures essential for effectively addressing such crimes, thereby bolstering the nation’s capabilities in combating maritime threats.

Source(s): PsmNews

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President reverts land act amendment to parliament

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President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu has reverted the Ninth Amendment Bill to the Maldives Land Act to Parliament for further consideration.

This bill, which seeks to establish criteria for recipients of residential land and mandates that land be allocated within three months of the publication of the permanent list of recipients in the gazette, was initially passed during the twenty-second sitting of Parliament’s first session this year and sent to the President’s Office for ratification on May 2.

In returning the bill, President Muizzu invoked Article 91(a) of the Constitution, which grants the President the authority to return legislation to Parliament for reconsideration.

The President’s Office has confirmed this, indicating the need for further review and potential revisions to the proposed amendment.

Source(s): PsmNews

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