[Of course, that's too much to expect when one very well knows that the one
installed as the Chief Minister of the state is himself the founder and
chieftain of one of the largest "goonda brigade" - the 'Hindu Yuva Vahini',
of the state.
Not only that: 'Yogi Adityanath's Men (with Adityanath Himself Sharing the
Stage) Telling Hindus To Rape Dead Muslim Women Is Beyond Shocking' at <
https://www.indiatimes.com/news/india/yogi-adityanaths-men-telling-hindus-to-rape-dead-muslim-women-is-beyond-shocking-230679.html
>.
Nevertheless.

<<I think Indira Gandhi was a dreadful person who imposed an undemocratic
Emergency on India. I also view Veer Savarkar as a terrible person who
preached a Hindutva vision of India that is very divisive and
violence-provoking. Does that entitle me to assault any Congress or BJP
office and demand that portraits of these people be taken down? Not at all.
The main point here again is not the merits or demerits of Indira Gandhi
and Savarkar, but my obligations as a law-abiding citizen.
It is entirely legal to put up any portrait you like. By contrast, it is
clearly illegal to physically attack an institution and beat up its
members. The key issue is not Jinnah’s portrait, but whether the state
government will take strong action against the goonda brigade, or let off
the thugs with a slap on the wrist and a smile.
...
Columnist Aakar Patel has argued that Partition was caused less by Jinnah
than by Congress unwillingness to share power with the Muslim League
through a separate list of Muslim seats reserved for Muslim voters. Another
columnist, Ajay Kumar, says Jinnah was a bona fide Independence movement
leader, who successfully defended Bal Gangadhar Tilak in court. Kumar adds
that Jinnah’s portrait hangs along with those of Gandhiji and Ambedkar in
the Bombay High Court Museum, which was inaugurated by none other than
Narendra Modi, without incident.>>]

https://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Swaminomics/get-tough-with-goonda-brigade-in-aligarh/

Get tough with goonda brigade in Aligarh

May 13, 2018, 1:00 AM IST

SA Aiyar in Swaminomics | India | TOI

The attack on May 2 by the Hindu Yuva Vahini on Aligarh Muslim University —
for having a photo of Mohammed Ali Jinnah in the students’ union hall — has
provoked much debate in the wrong direction.  The core issue is not whether
Jinnah was horrible or acceptable, but whether any person can violently
force an institution to take down a portrait he dislikes.
Forget the merits and demerits of the Jinnah portrait. Whatever your view
on that, it cannot override the right of every citizen to display any
portrait he likes in his institution or home. You may agree or disagree
with that citizen, but his action is completely legal.

I regard Lenin, Stalin and Mao as terrible mass murderers, deserving the
utmost condemnation. Does that entitle me to assault the offices of any
communist party and demand that it take down the portraits of these
killers? Not at all. I have the right to protest peacefully, but not to use
violence. The issue is not whether Stalin or Mao were terrible or
acceptable, but whether I am honouring the civil rights of my fellow
citizens.

I think Indira Gandhi was a dreadful person who imposed an undemocratic
Emergency on India. I also view Veer Savarkar as a terrible person who
preached a Hindutva vision of India that is very divisive and
violence-provoking. Does that entitle me to assault any Congress or BJP
office and demand that portraits of these people be taken down? Not at all.
The main point here again is not the merits or demerits of Indira Gandhi
and Savarkar, but my obligations as a law-abiding citizen.

It is entirely legal to put up any portrait you like. By contrast, it is
clearly illegal to physically attack an institution and beat up its
members. The key issue is not Jinnah’s portrait, but whether the state
government will take strong action against the goonda brigade, or let off
the thugs with a slap on the wrist and a smile.

After the attack, students of AMU marched to the police station to lodge an
FIR and demand the arrest of the culprits. The police lathi-charged the
students, of whom 28 were taken to the hospital with injuries. Sadly, the
police appeared to side more with the attackers than those who were
attacked. Two Hindutva activists were indeed arrested, and that is a good
thing. But there has been no follow-up action against others, so the danger
remains that those arrested will eventually be seen as patriotic BJP heroes
rather than criminals.

AMU students are still on protest, demanding action against the attackers
and a judicial inquiry. The top priority of the AMU authorities and local
administration is, quite rightly, to calm tempers. The student agitation
has remained peaceful but determined. Almost one-third of AMU students are
Hindus, many of whom have joined the agitation. They should refuse at this
point to even discuss the desirability of keeping Jinnah’s portrait — they
should focus on the core issue of thuggery alone.

Columnist Aakar Patel has argued that Partition was caused less by Jinnah
than by Congress unwillingness to share power with the Muslim League
through a separate list of Muslim seats reserved for Muslim voters. Another
columnist, Ajay Kumar, says Jinnah was a bona fide Independence movement
leader, who successfully defended Bal Gangadhar Tilak in court. Kumar adds
that Jinnah’s portrait hangs along with those of Gandhiji and Ambedkar in
the Bombay High Court Museum, which was inaugurated by none other than
Narendra Modi, without incident.

Social media is full of BJP voices blasting Jinnah. BJP president Amit Shah
has castigated Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar for calling Jinnah
“Qaid-e-Azam”. Mani has responded by providing a lengthy list of occasions
on which Gandhiji referred to Jinnah as Qaid-e-Azam, and a list of
Gandhiji’s letters to Jinnah starting “Dear Qaid-e-Azam.” Did this cause
anybody to call Gandhiji anti-national? No, political discourse was civil
those days, even among political and ideological foes.

All this makes for an interesting debate. Yet it also tends to divert
attention from the fundamental point that goondas must speedily be
prosecuted and convicted, even if they are affiliated with one party or
another.

The BJP is not alone in using goons. Other parties have used goons too. But
as the ruling party in Delhi and Lucknow, the BJP has a special
responsibility. Modi could never have come to power on the basis of
Hindutva alone. He promised good governance, the very opposite of thuggery.
The more he is seen as a godfather of thuggery, the faster he will lose his
Midas touch.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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