Rally against state violence held outside Indian Visa and Passport office in Surrey  

The participants raised slogans against the police violence against protesting farmers, ongoing attacks on minorities and incarceration of political activists
farmers protestImage courtesy: Our Avaaz/Instagram
 
On the death anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar- the architect of the Indian constitution, South Asian activists came together to raise their voices against growing repression of religious minorities and political dissidents in the world’s so called largest democracy.  

Organised by the Indians Abroad for Pluralist India (IAPI) on Sunday, December 6, the rally was called in response to the recent incident of police violence, involving protesting farmers in New Delhi.  

IAPI believes that the currently ruling right wing Hindutva nationalist BJP government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is trampling the Constitution that guarantees democracy and religious freedom.  

It was on December 6, that the BJP supporters had demolished an ancient Muslim mosque in 1992 and only recently allowed the police to assault the farmers agitating peacefully in the Indian capital. Both these acts years apart reflect the BJP’s disregard for the constitution and Dr. Ambedkar.  

The participants assembled outside the Indian Visa and Passport Application Center in Surrey and raised slogans against the ongoing attacks on minorities and incarceration of political activists, including Dr. Ambedkar’s grand son-in-law Anand Teltumbde.  

Teltumbde is an established scholar who was thrown in jail early this year on trumped up charges for merely questioning the power and speaking out for the poor and marginalised. Some of those present also held signs carrying the pictures of both Teltumbde and Ambedkar, besides the ones showing solidarity with farmers.  

The speakers were unanimous in their criticism of the BJP’s agenda to turn India into Hindutva theocracy by diluting the Constitution and threatening minority rights and muzzling any voice of dissent. They expressed their outrage over the way Sikh farmers are being labelled as extremists and separatists by the right wing media owing allegiance to Modi.  

The event was started with a poem dedicated to Dr. Ambedkar by an IAPI member and a poet Amrit Diwana. Others who spoke on the occasion included IAPI members Harbir Rathi and Gurpreet Singh, besides Sikh activists Bhupinder Singh Hothi, Gian Singh Gill and Kulwinder Singh. 

 
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