Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Kerala: Muslim group urge for law against Islamophobia

A statewide Youth Caravan by Solidarity Youth Movement Kerala, a Muslim organisation affiliated with Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, urged for a law to prevent Islamophobia. The Caravan that began on 5 May, traveled across the southern state and completed its journey on 15 May in the state capital Thiruvananthapuram.

A statewide Youth Caravan by Solidarity Youth Movement Kerala, a Muslim organisation affiliated with Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, urged for a law to prevent Islamophobia. The Caravan that began on 5 May, traveled across the southern state and completed its journey on 15 May in the state capital Thiruvananthapuram.

Inaugurating the concluding event, Jamaat-e-Islami national secretary Malik Motasim Khan demanded legal protection for Muslims from hate crimes.

“Islamophobic campaigns are barring Muslims from economic rights, political rights, and democratic rights,” he added.

“A Muslim’s crisis should be addressed as a national crisis,” Khan said.

“Kerala legislative assembly should initiate an ordinance against Islamophobia,” demanded Nahas AH, president of Solidarity Youth Movement Kerala.

“The recent anti-Muslim hate speech event in Thiruvananthapuram needs to be probed and strict action needs to be taken against the organizers,” the leader of the Caravan said at the concluding ceremony.

The Caravan is part of the organisation’s months-long campaign titled “proud testimony of faith, a legacy of emancipation”.

Solidarity Youth Movement Kerala’s Youth Caravan against Islamophobia protests against the demolition drive in New Delhi’s Shaheen Bagh, the center of the historic anti-CAA movement in 2019.

Multiple events highlighting the sufferings linked to Islamophobia were organised in various districts. The Caravan visited families of undertrial prisoners who were charged with India’s stringent terror laws.

The team met Beeyummah, mother of UAPA accused Zakaria, and Raihana Kappan, wife of journalist Siddique Kappan.

The Caravan members also met the families of Faisal Kodinji and Yasir Tirur. The duo was killed by Hindutva groups after they converted to Islam.

Leaders of the Indian National Congress, the Muslim Youth League, and the Welfare Party of India participated in the events related to the Caravan, backing the group’s demand to criminalise Islamophobia.

“It is high time Indian authorities acknowledge the phenomenon. The threshold of violence is intensifying,” Nahas told Maktoob.

The campaign will conclude on 22 May with a public conference in Kochi.

Shaheen Abdulla
Shaheen Abdulla
Shaheen Abdulla, an award-winning journalist, is the Deputy Editor of Maktoob.
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