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We are in the dark about what the police and the other government agencies are doing about the Hanglalmuan’s murder, says father of the youth Manipur’s horror accounts are piling up as bereaved citizens summon the courage to speak up. Hanglalmuan Vaiphei, 21, was picked up for sharing a Facebook post in Manipur by police who got his incarceration extended by producing back-to-back FIRs. The youth was then beaten to death by a mob who snatched him from custody, his relatives told The Telegraph on Monday. Hanglalmuan, son of a daily wage earner, was picked up from his home in Thingkangphai village in Churachandpur district on the night of April 30. The young man bled to death on the roads of Imphal, around 60km from his home, on May 4, a day after clashes broke out in Manipur. “No one from the police got in touch with us

Modi is a master of denial, but more alarmingly, he mobilises and leads a violent mob, attacking those who seek justice and merely want to discuss the issues. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, once again, revealed the vileness of the politics he represents and has become synonymous with. It would be incorrect to say that he broke his silence on the majoritarian violence in Manipur. In fact, in his dog-whistle style, he instigated his supporters to target opposition-ruled states, accusing them of not acting against sexual violence cases. He conveyed to his followers that they need not recognise the violence faced by the people of Manipur or feel guilty; instead, they should go on the offensive against the opposition. Following his statement, BJP leaders and his social media army began attacking Congress leaders, questioning why they weren’t speaking out against violence towards women in Congress-ruled states. This, when the world was shocked by the images of mass brutality that the Kuki women were subjected to. The issue of nearly three months of majoritarian violence faced by Manipur’s Kuki people was overshadowed and reduced to a matter of violence against women. Such violence is an everyday reality for women across all states in India and

New Delhi: The United States on Sunday said it was deeply concerned about reports of sexual violence coming out of Manipur, including the viral video that made headlines across the world and forced the local authorities into action. A US State Department spokesperson called the incident “brutal” and “terrible” and said the United States conveyed its sympathies to the victims, Reuters reported. The incident in question occurred on May 4. Three Kuki women were paraded naked and sexually assaulted allegedly by a mob of Meitei men. An FIR was filed on May 18, but the police and state government jumped into action only after the video of the incident went viral last week. Six arrests have now been made. Multiple incidents of sexual violence have now been reported from strife-torn Manipur, which has been seeing ethnic violence since May 3. About 150 people have been killed and tens of thousands displaced since the violence began. Earlier, US Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti had said that the US was willing to help India deal with the violence “if asked”. “When you ask us about the concern of the United States, I don’t think it’s a strategic concern. I think it’s about human concern… You don’t have

The Prime Minister cannot criticise or sack the Manipur Chief Minister, for the latter is pursuing the anti-minority model that the former had invented 21 years ago The nation must thank Prime Minister Narendra Modi not only for belatedly breaking his silence on Manipur, but also for the language he used to condemn the parading of two Kuki women stripped naked in public there, with one of them brutally gang-raped. Modi said his heart was filled with “anger and sorrow” at the barbaric act captured in a video that went viral. His remark is in sharp contrast to the regret he expressed, in 2013, over the 2002 Gujarat riots. If “someone else is driving a car and we’re sitting behind, even then if a puppy comes under the wheel, will it be painful or not? Of course, it is. If I’m a chief minister or not, I’m a human being. If something bad happens anywhere, it is natural to be sad,” Modi told the Reuters news agency. Modi’s sensitivity seems to have deepened ever since he became the Prime Minister in 2014. But he had as the Gujarat Chief Minister provided a model of politics that other chief ministers could follow to enhance

I am on a two-year sabbatical; that is a privilege considering the shortage of priests in the Archdiocese of Mumbai. It would seem that every hand should be on the deck and here I am, away in Goa. While my compulsions of health and ideological issues have forced me to take time off, the “fire within me” does not seem to burn out. God, it seems, won’t let me go even though my Archbishop so kindly did. So, it is with fear and trepidation I write my thoughts while entrusting my life to being HIS disciple who spoke his mind. Everything within me tells me to shut up and sit back and take my sabbatical easy but then there is this ‘Jeremiah moment’ that I seem to be experiencing all of this week. What is that you ask? I echo the sentiments of the prophet Jeremiah, not that I am even a far cry to who or what he was but that ‘Jeremiah moment’ resounds loudly. Jeremiah 20:9 says, “If I say, “I will not mention him (God), or speak any more in his name, then within me there is something like a burning fire shut up in my bones; I

'The police were there with the mob which was attacking our village. The police picked us up from near home, and took us a little away from the village and left us on the road with the mob. We were given to them by police.' A day after a video of two women from the Kuki-Zomi community being paraded naked and sexually assaulted in Manipur surfaced, one of the victims told The Indian Express that they had been “left to the mob by the police”. Two women, one in her 20s and the other in her 40s, can be seen being made to walk naked down a road and towards a field by a mob of men. Some of the men can be seen dragging the two women towards a field and forcibly groping them. In a police complaint that was filed on May 18, the victims had also alleged that the younger woman was “brutally gang raped in the broad daylight”. In the complaint, they had said that they had fled to a forest for shelter after their village in Kangpokpi district, was attacked by a mob and that they were later rescued by Thoubal police and were being taken to the

washington — Religious discrimination in India, the world's largest democracy, has reached a "frightening" level, and some experts warn that the country must change its course or face targeted sanctions from the U.S. government. "India has done better in the past and has to change course because the cycle of downward spiral in a country of that importance and the number of people who are involved. It is quite frightening," Rabbi Abraham Cooper, chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, or USCIRF, told lawmakers on Tuesday. "Religious discrimination should not be a matter of national pride," he said. The USCIRF has recommended that India, along with Afghanistan, Syria, Nigeria and Vietnam, be added to the U.S. government's list of Countries of Particular Concern, or CPC, because of the worsening limits on religious freedom in these countries. It also has called for targeted economic and travel sanctions against Indian government agencies and officials that are allegedly involved in violation of religious freedom. The scathing criticism comes only weeks after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the White House and addressed a joint session of Congress. In 2005, the U.S. State Department revoked Modi's tourist/business visa because of his alleged role in religious and communal violence in

Police in a northern Indian state have arrested a Christian man for allegedly converting 230 families of Dalits (former untouchables). Uttar Pradesh state's police arrested Bajrang Rawat on July 17. He was accused of converting the Dalit families to Christianity by promising to cure their ailments, said a report by Press Trust of India (PTI) news agency. Rawat has been illegally living on railway land in Barabanki, 27 kilometers from the state capital Lucknow, along with other poor families since the past year, Akhilesh Narayan Singh, an additional superintendent of police, told the media. Copies of the Bible and other Christian books were recovered from Rawat’s house while a probe was on to ascertain the involvement of other people in helping him, Singh said. “We have been in contact with Singh, who is investigating the case, and it is too early to comment,” Christian activist Minakshi Singh told UCA News on July 19. “There are several unanswered questions," said Minakshi Singh, general secretary of the charity Unity in Compassion based in Uttar Pradesh. There are questions like "why Rawat, who is from Lucknow, was staying in Barabanki on railway land?  Who are the Dalits? Are they Hindus or from other faiths?" She also expressed doubts if "the religious conversion had taken place" or if "it was just propaganda by some group?" All this will

Jhabua (MP), Jul 19 (PTI) A court in Madhya Pradesh's Jhabua district on Wednesday sentenced a Christian priest and two others to two years' rigorous imprisonment for converting members of a tribal community by offering allurement. District judge Lakhanlal Garg also imposed a fine of Rs 50,000 each on Father Jamsingh, pastor Ansingh and their assistant Mangu. The three were convicted under section 5 of the Madhya Pradesh Religious Freedom Act, public prosecutor Mansingh Bhuria said. The article is published on www.ptinews.com/

While freedom of religion is integral to our American pluralist life, many countries experience religious oppression through anti-conversion laws. These laws intend to elevate the state-endorsed religion; codified laws forbid individuals from changing from the majority religion to a minority one, particularly Christianity and Islam.   India, Nepal, Myanmar, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan have anti-conversion laws. Recently, there has been growing concern about officials enacting new, more restrictive, and discriminatory laws in India.    India is the birthplace of many world religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, and Jainism. In 1950, the nation adopted a Western-style secular democracy. The country is home to thousands of ethnic groups and nearly two dozen official languages. Out of this diversity, one would expect ethnic and religious tolerance to reign. Recently, Hindu nationalism has become a growing force politically. Hindu nationalists subscribe to the Hindutva, or ideology that only Hindus are true Indians and that all other religions, especially Christians and Muslims, are foreigners who must be expelled. India’s People’s Party (BJP) won the national election in 2014. Known Hindu nationalists, including Prime Minister Modi, lead the party. At a conference in 2021, Hindu Mahasabha political party leader Pooja Shakun Pandey and other Hindu leaders made hate-filled remarks about

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