Gloves off
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling Hindu nationalist party has been turning up the heat on some controversial and potentially highly divisive religious issues in recent days, with crucial state elections only weeks away and a general election due by next May.
Top officials from his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have sided with some Hindus defying a court order that scrapped a ban on women of menstruating age from visiting a famous temple in southern India.
At the same time, they and leaders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the Hindu-first group from which the BJP was born, are for the first time demanding an urgent executive order that would bypass the Supreme Court, to build a Hindu temple at the site of a mosque in the north of the country. The destruction of the mosque by a frenzied Hindu mob in 1992 sparked deadly riots across the country.
"There should not even be any debate over it. There's not even any need to involve the courts here," BJP's Giriraj Singh, a federal minister, said on Monday after the top court delayed a hearing on whether the disputed site should be handed to Hindus or Muslims until at least January.
Officially, the BJP says it represents all Indians, irrespective of religion. But while Modi has adopted economic development as his driving philosophy since being elected prime minister in 2014, the BJP has not shied away from openly endorsing causes of its mainly Hindu support base.
BJP spokesman Gopal Krishna Agarwal said a decree on building the temple was indeed one of the options before the government as "justice delayed is justice denied" and "emotions are running high".
A BJP minister in one state that goes to the polls soon, Rajasthan, called on Friday on all Hindus to vote along religious lines, for the BJP, in what may be a breach of election rules.
Religion is a deeply political issue in the world's biggest democracy, which has seen a number of deadly communal riots between the majority Hindu and minority Muslim communities, including days of violence when Modi was chief minister of the western state of Gujarat.
The BJP denies it has a bias against Muslims, but says it is opposed to giving unfair advantage to any community, a practice it describes as "appeasement" and alleges the opposition Congress party of long following to win votes.
Five states elect their assemblies this year, starting next month, ahead of the general election in which the BJP is projected to lose seats in parliament but still emerge as the single biggest party.
Hitting out at the government of the state of Kerala, which has arrested more than 3,000 people who demonstrated against the Supreme Court's lifting of a centuries-old bar on women or girls aged 10 to 50 from entering the hill temple of Sabarimala, BJP President Amit Shah said on Saturday that the party would stand with the protesters "like a rock".
The comments drew criticism from political analysts and opposition parties including Kerala's ruling Communist party, which accused Shah of attacking the top court and constitution for political gains.
“He will divide, polarise, and fan anger, hatred, violence —anything to win elections," Ramachandra Guha, a historian, said in a tweet. "He is the most dangerous and divisive politician in the history of independent India."
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