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Oppositions, freedom fighters decry India’s ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural

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Oppositions, freedom fighters decry India’s ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural​

Ahammad Foyez | Published: 23:26, Jun 03,2023


203330_151.jpg

Photo shows ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural placed in new parliament building of India that triggers huge criticisms in Neighbouring countries. — Photo courtesy News9

Opposition parties and decorated freedom fighters have reacted sharply to the ‘Akhand Bharat’ map of the Indian subcontinent depicted in a mural on the newly inaugurated parliament building of India.

On May 28, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the mural with the concept of Akhand Bharat, meaning ‘Undivided India,’ which refers to the idea of a undivided Indian subcontinent, encompassing present-day India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

The Pakistani government and Nepalese politicians separately expressed their grievances over the idea of ‘Undivided India’ incorporating their countries into the scheme.

The government of Bangladesh has yet to come out with any reaction, while the ruling Awami League’s international affairs secretary has refused to comment on the issue.

Talking to New Age on Saturday, freedom fighters and politicians said that such an action by India was a threat to sovereignty and would create controversy in regional politics.

When approached, AL international affairs secretary Shammi Ahmed denied making any comment.

Bangladesh’s foreign ministry also did not make a statement on the issue until Saturday evening, while the foreign minister, the state minister for foreign affairs, and the foreign secretary could not be reached for comments.

State minister Md Shahriar Alam even did not respond to the text message seeking the government’s reaction on the matter.

In 2015, Indian right-wing organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leader Ram Madhav, when asked about a map that showed Pakistan and Bangladesh as part of India, told Al Jazeera, ‘The RSS still believes that one day these parts, which have historical reasons separated only 60 years ago, will again, through popular goodwill, come together and Akhand Bharat will be created.’

India’s ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, is one of several organisations through which the RSS promotes the idea of a Hindu nation.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, said that it was a serious intervention in the independence of Bangladesh.

‘This is a shameful move by India for Bangladesh and other neighbouring countries. Bangladesh government should have protested the incident immediately,’ Fakhrul said.

Decorated freedom fighter and Krishak Sramik Janata League president Abdul Kader Siddique said that it was a bad decision by India.

‘I think that the intention of India behind the incident was bad, and it created a bad example in regional politics,’ he said.

Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon said that it was a wrongdoing by the Indian government.

‘It would create a new political controversy on this subcontinent,’ he said.

Jatiya Party chairman Golam Mohammad Kader said that he was not aware of the matter.

‘The government has not reacted to the matter, has it? I am not aware of it,’ he said.

Freedom fighter Shahjahan Omar said that the issue was a matter of the country’s sovereignty.

‘So, the government should protest the move of India,’ he said.

Political alliance Ganatantra Mancha coordinator Saiful Haque said that the move by India was provocative and would highly undermine the independence of neighbouring countries, including Bangladesh.

‘This is a part of the BJP’s intention to create unrest in the subcontinent on the basis of religious and nationalist extremism,’ he said.

He urged the government to clear Bangladesh’s position on the matter immediately.

In a statement, Rastra Sanskar Andolan condemned India’s move.

‘We very clearly call on the government, on behalf of the people of Bangladesh from all walks of life, to immediately express strong protest against such heinous actions of the Indian ruling party,’ the statement said.

Since the inauguration of the map, it has triggered protests in Nepal and Pakistan.

‘The controversial mural of ‘Akhand Bharat’ in the recently inaugurated new parliament building of India may stoke unnecessary and harmful diplomatic row in the neighbourhood, including Nepal. It has the potential of further aggravating the trust deficit already vitiating the bilateral relations between most of the immediate neighbours of India,’ former Nepali prime minister Baburam Bhattarai said in a statement, the Hindu reported.

It reported that the mural had drawn attention when prime minister Modi inaugurated the new parliament building and dedicated it to the nation on May 28. India’s parliamentary affairs minister, Pralhad Joshi, was among the first to describe the mural as ‘Akhand Bharat’.

The issue dominated Nepalese media even though Nepali prime minister Prachanda started his four-day visit to India and held official talks with Modi.

Besides, a report in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn on June 2 said that Pakistan had expressed grave concern over the idea of Akhand Bharat (Greater India), which was being increasingly peddled by the ruling Indian dispensation.

Speaking at a weekly press briefing Thursday, Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, regretted the installation of a mural at the new parliament building in New Delhi.

The mural depicts so-called ‘ancient India’, including areas that now constitute parts of Pakistan and other countries.

‘We are appalled by the statements made by some BJP politicians, including a union minister, linking the mural with ‘Akhand Bharat,’ she said.

The Pakistan foreign office spokesperson said that the gratuitous assertion of Akhand Bharat was a manifestation of a revisionist and expansionist mindset that seeks to subjugate the identity and culture of not only India’s neighbouring countries but also its own religious minorities.

The issue also created controversy in the domestic politics of India.

The new parliament building inauguration event was boycotted by 20 opposition parties, who said that Modi had violated protocol to inaugurate the new complex and grab the spotlight when it should have been done by the president, the highest executive of the country.

‘To open a new parliament building without the opposition, it does not mean there is a democracy in the country. It’s an incomplete event,’ Supriya Sule, an opposition leader, told news agency ANI.

According to a Times of India article, the Sangh Parivar has long imagined an Indian nation that existed from the time of the Ramayana, covering the landmass stretching from today’s Afghanistan to Myanmar and Tibet to Sri Lanka.

A map titled ‘Punyabhoomi Bharat’ published by the RSS-run Suruchi Prakashan, labels Afghanistan as ‘Upganathan’, Kabul as ‘Kubha Nagar’, Peshawar as ‘Purushpur’, Multan as ‘Moolsthan’, Tibet as ‘Trivishtap,’ Sri Lanka as ‘Singhaldweep’, and Myanmar as ‘Brahmadesh’.

Back in 1944, as the Muslim League pressed for a separate Pakistan, the historian Radha Kumud Mookerji first articulated the idea of Akhand Bharat in his presidential address delivered at an ‘Akhand Bharat Conference.’
 
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Oppositions, freedom fighters decry India’s ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural​

Ahammad Foyez | Published: 23:26, Jun 03,2023


203330_151.jpg

Photo shows ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural placed in new parliament building of India that triggers huge criticisms in Neighbouring countries. — Photo courtesy News9

Opposition parties and decorated freedom fighters have reacted sharply to the ‘Akhand Bharat’ map of the Indian subcontinent depicted in a mural on the newly inaugurated parliament building of India.

On May 28, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the mural with the concept of Akhand Bharat, meaning ‘Undivided India,’ which refers to the idea of a undivided Indian subcontinent, encompassing present-day India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

The Pakistani government and Nepalese politicians separately expressed their grievances over the idea of ‘Undivided India’ incorporating their countries into the scheme.

The government of Bangladesh has yet to come out with any reaction, while the ruling Awami League’s international affairs secretary has refused to comment on the issue.

Talking to New Age on Saturday, freedom fighters and politicians said that such an action by India was a threat to sovereignty and would create controversy in regional politics.

When approached, AL international affairs secretary Shammi Ahmed denied making any comment.

Bangladesh’s foreign ministry also did not make a statement on the issue until Saturday evening, while the foreign minister, the state minister for foreign affairs, and the foreign secretary could not be reached for comments.

State minister Md Shahriar Alam even did not respond to the text message seeking the government’s reaction on the matter.

In 2015, Indian right-wing organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leader Ram Madhav, when asked about a map that showed Pakistan and Bangladesh as part of India, told Al Jazeera, ‘The RSS still believes that one day these parts, which have historical reasons separated only 60 years ago, will again, through popular goodwill, come together and Akhand Bharat will be created.’

India’s ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, is one of several organisations through which the RSS promotes the idea of a Hindu nation.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, said that it was a serious intervention in the independence of Bangladesh.

‘This is a shameful move by India for Bangladesh and other neighbouring countries. Bangladesh government should have protested the incident immediately,’ Fakhrul said.

Decorated freedom fighter and Krishak Sramik Janata League president Abdul Kader Siddique said that it was a bad decision by India.

‘I think that the intention of India behind the incident was bad, and it created a bad example in regional politics,’ he said.

Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon said that it was a wrongdoing by the Indian government.

‘It would create a new political controversy on this subcontinent,’ he said.

Jatiya Party chairman Golam Mohammad Kader said that he was not aware of the matter.

‘The government has not reacted to the matter, has it? I am not aware of it,’ he said.

Freedom fighter Shahjahan Omar said that the issue was a matter of the country’s sovereignty.

‘So, the government should protest the move of India,’ he said.

Political alliance Ganatantra Mancha coordinator Saiful Haque said that the move by India was provocative and would highly undermine the independence of neighbouring countries, including Bangladesh.

‘This is a part of the BJP’s intention to create unrest in the subcontinent on the basis of religious and nationalist extremism,’ he said.

He urged the government to clear Bangladesh’s position on the matter immediately.

In a statement, Rastra Sanskar Andolan condemned India’s move.

‘We very clearly call on the government, on behalf of the people of Bangladesh from all walks of life, to immediately express strong protest against such heinous actions of the Indian ruling party,’ the statement said.

Since the inauguration of the map, it has triggered protests in Nepal and Pakistan.

‘The controversial mural of ‘Akhand Bharat’ in the recently inaugurated new parliament building of India may stoke unnecessary and harmful diplomatic row in the neighbourhood, including Nepal. It has the potential of further aggravating the trust deficit already vitiating the bilateral relations between most of the immediate neighbours of India,’ former Nepali prime minister Baburam Bhattarai said in a statement, the Hindu reported.

It reported that the mural had drawn attention when prime minister Modi inaugurated the new parliament building and dedicated it to the nation on May 28. India’s parliamentary affairs minister, Pralhad Joshi, was among the first to describe the mural as ‘Akhand Bharat’.

The issue dominated Nepalese media even though Nepali prime minister Prachanda started his four-day visit to India and held official talks with Modi.

Besides, a report in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn on June 2 said that Pakistan had expressed grave concern over the idea of Akhand Bharat (Greater India), which was being increasingly peddled by the ruling Indian dispensation.

Speaking at a weekly press briefing Thursday, Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, regretted the installation of a mural at the new parliament building in New Delhi.

The mural depicts so-called ‘ancient India’, including areas that now constitute parts of Pakistan and other countries.

‘We are appalled by the statements made by some BJP politicians, including a union minister, linking the mural with ‘Akhand Bharat,’ she said.

The Pakistan foreign office spokesperson said that the gratuitous assertion of Akhand Bharat was a manifestation of a revisionist and expansionist mindset that seeks to subjugate the identity and culture of not only India’s neighbouring countries but also its own religious minorities.

The issue also created controversy in the domestic politics of India.

The new parliament building inauguration event was boycotted by 20 opposition parties, who said that Modi had violated protocol to inaugurate the new complex and grab the spotlight when it should have been done by the president, the highest executive of the country.

‘To open a new parliament building without the opposition, it does not mean there is a democracy in the country. It’s an incomplete event,’ Supriya Sule, an opposition leader, told news agency ANI.

According to a Times of India article, the Sangh Parivar has long imagined an Indian nation that existed from the time of the Ramayana, covering the landmass stretching from today’s Afghanistan to Myanmar and Tibet to Sri Lanka.

A map titled ‘Punyabhoomi Bharat’ published by the RSS-run Suruchi Prakashan, labels Afghanistan as ‘Upganathan’, Kabul as ‘Kubha Nagar’, Peshawar as ‘Purushpur’, Multan as ‘Moolsthan’, Tibet as ‘Trivishtap,’ Sri Lanka as ‘Singhaldweep’, and Myanmar as ‘Brahmadesh’.

Back in 1944, as the Muslim League pressed for a separate Pakistan, the historian Radha Kumud Mookerji first articulated the idea of Akhand Bharat in his presidential address delivered at an ‘Akhand Bharat Conference.’
I have been saying this for more than 30 years that India's final plan is to take over all her neighbors to form Akhand Bharat. To stop India from implementing her Akhand Bharat plan all of the India's neighbors need to form a military alliance with China.
 
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Angry reaction in Dhaka over 'Akhand Bharat' map​

Special Representative Dhaka
Published: 04 Jun 2023, 01:59

Various political parties in Dhaka condemned and protested the inclusion of Bangladesh in the 'Akhand Bharat' map in the Parliament of India.

This map of 'Union India' has been installed in the new Parliament building of India

In the new parliament building of India, there has been a reaction and controversy in the political arena of Bangladesh regarding the map of integral India which has been drawn through the mural of the countries of this region including Bangladesh. Various political parties in Dhaka have expressed their anger over the inclusion of Bangladesh in such a map. These groups condemned and protested and demanded the removal of the map.

BNP, one of the main parties in the country, has condemned and protested against such map making in India. The party said, this is an insult to independent-sovereign Bangladesh.

However, another major party, the ruling Awami League, did not respond to the issue. The leaders of the party said that they will try to know what is meant by such a map in the Parliament of India. When contacted, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Bangladesh did not receive an immediate statement in this regard.

Many political analysts think that the government of Bangladesh should seek an explanation from India in this regard.

The map of integral India drawn through the mural in the Parliament building of India includes Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. Nepal has already reacted to this. Now there is a reaction in Bangladesh too.

Opposition BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir told Prothom Alo that adding Bangladesh to the integral map of another country (India) is not acceptable. He condemned and protested it.

Explaining this, Mirza Fakhrul said, 'Bangladesh is an independent-sovereign country. This country became independent through the liberation war. As a result, showing Bangladesh on the integral map of any other country is a threat to the country's independence-sovereignty.'

The Secretary General of BNP thinks that this is an insult to Bangladesh.


Some left-wing groups have condemned and protested the creation of such maps in India yesterday in a statement on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB) President Mohammad Shah Alam and General Secretary Ruhin Hossain (Prince) said in a statement that the Indian government has installed this mural of offensive and misleading maps for nefarious political purposes. CPB leaders demanded its immediate removal.

The CPB leaders also said that India's ruling ultra-communal BJP government has installed this mural of the map of integral India to advance its plan to establish so-called Hindutvaism.

CPB leaders believe that this mural of integral India will deteriorate India's relations with neighboring countries. Their statement said the mural could incite sectarian violence, which is very worrying for the peace, stability and security of the region.


A group called Rashtra Sanskar Andolan issued a statement protesting against such mapping of India. The party said, 'It is objectionable to show Bangladesh as a part of integral India on the imaginary map of India's rulers.'

The party's statement also said that India's behavior is dishonorable and disrespectful to the citizens of Bangladesh as a neighboring country.

Saiful Haque, general secretary of Revolutionary Workers Party, expressed his anger over the creation of this map in a statement yesterday.

He said that the Ankhand Bharat map shows the countries of this region including Bangladesh as a part, which is a threat to the independence-sovereignty and national security of these countries.

These political parties have demanded that the Bangladesh government should immediately protest to India regarding the incident.

Meanwhile, Prothom Alo spoke to three senior Awami League leaders and two senior ministers. They did not want to give any response. They said that they have no idea about the integral map through the mural in the Parliament of India. They will try to know what India meant by such a map.

Many political analysts also say that India's intentions in this matter are not clear to them.
Writer and researcher Mohiuddin Ahmad told Prothom Alo, 'Many of the country's politicians did not accept the partition of India in 1947.

They may have a desire for an integral India.' However, he thinks that the government of Bangladesh should ask India for an explanation about what India is actually trying to do by drawing such a map.

 
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I have been saying this for more than 30 years that India's final plan is to take over all her neighbors to form Akhand Bharat. To stop India from implementing her Akhand Bharat plan all of the India's neighbors need to form a military alliance with China.
Its just a Mauryan era map, not some "Akhand Bharat" fetish. Calm down.
 
. . .
Good.. This will give us and other neighbours pretext to be united under and We will have to eventually go into this filthy and sort it out
 
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Oppositions, freedom fighters decry India’s ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural​

Ahammad Foyez | Published: 23:26, Jun 03,2023


203330_151.jpg

Photo shows ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural placed in new parliament building of India that triggers huge criticisms in Neighbouring countries. — Photo courtesy News9

Opposition parties and decorated freedom fighters have reacted sharply to the ‘Akhand Bharat’ map of the Indian subcontinent depicted in a mural on the newly inaugurated parliament building of India.

On May 28, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the mural with the concept of Akhand Bharat, meaning ‘Undivided India,’ which refers to the idea of a undivided Indian subcontinent, encompassing present-day India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

The Pakistani government and Nepalese politicians separately expressed their grievances over the idea of ‘Undivided India’ incorporating their countries into the scheme.

The government of Bangladesh has yet to come out with any reaction, while the ruling Awami League’s international affairs secretary has refused to comment on the issue.

Talking to New Age on Saturday, freedom fighters and politicians said that such an action by India was a threat to sovereignty and would create controversy in regional politics.

When approached, AL international affairs secretary Shammi Ahmed denied making any comment.

Bangladesh’s foreign ministry also did not make a statement on the issue until Saturday evening, while the foreign minister, the state minister for foreign affairs, and the foreign secretary could not be reached for comments.

State minister Md Shahriar Alam even did not respond to the text message seeking the government’s reaction on the matter.

In 2015, Indian right-wing organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leader Ram Madhav, when asked about a map that showed Pakistan and Bangladesh as part of India, told Al Jazeera, ‘The RSS still believes that one day these parts, which have historical reasons separated only 60 years ago, will again, through popular goodwill, come together and Akhand Bharat will be created.’

India’s ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, is one of several organisations through which the RSS promotes the idea of a Hindu nation.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, said that it was a serious intervention in the independence of Bangladesh.

‘This is a shameful move by India for Bangladesh and other neighbouring countries. Bangladesh government should have protested the incident immediately,’ Fakhrul said.

Decorated freedom fighter and Krishak Sramik Janata League president Abdul Kader Siddique said that it was a bad decision by India.

‘I think that the intention of India behind the incident was bad, and it created a bad example in regional politics,’ he said.

Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon said that it was a wrongdoing by the Indian government.

‘It would create a new political controversy on this subcontinent,’ he said.

Jatiya Party chairman Golam Mohammad Kader said that he was not aware of the matter.

‘The government has not reacted to the matter, has it? I am not aware of it,’ he said.

Freedom fighter Shahjahan Omar said that the issue was a matter of the country’s sovereignty.

‘So, the government should protest the move of India,’ he said.

Political alliance Ganatantra Mancha coordinator Saiful Haque said that the move by India was provocative and would highly undermine the independence of neighbouring countries, including Bangladesh.

‘This is a part of the BJP’s intention to create unrest in the subcontinent on the basis of religious and nationalist extremism,’ he said.

He urged the government to clear Bangladesh’s position on the matter immediately.

In a statement, Rastra Sanskar Andolan condemned India’s move.

‘We very clearly call on the government, on behalf of the people of Bangladesh from all walks of life, to immediately express strong protest against such heinous actions of the Indian ruling party,’ the statement said.

Since the inauguration of the map, it has triggered protests in Nepal and Pakistan.

‘The controversial mural of ‘Akhand Bharat’ in the recently inaugurated new parliament building of India may stoke unnecessary and harmful diplomatic row in the neighbourhood, including Nepal. It has the potential of further aggravating the trust deficit already vitiating the bilateral relations between most of the immediate neighbours of India,’ former Nepali prime minister Baburam Bhattarai said in a statement, the Hindu reported.

It reported that the mural had drawn attention when prime minister Modi inaugurated the new parliament building and dedicated it to the nation on May 28. India’s parliamentary affairs minister, Pralhad Joshi, was among the first to describe the mural as ‘Akhand Bharat’.

The issue dominated Nepalese media even though Nepali prime minister Prachanda started his four-day visit to India and held official talks with Modi.

Besides, a report in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn on June 2 said that Pakistan had expressed grave concern over the idea of Akhand Bharat (Greater India), which was being increasingly peddled by the ruling Indian dispensation.

Speaking at a weekly press briefing Thursday, Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, regretted the installation of a mural at the new parliament building in New Delhi.

The mural depicts so-called ‘ancient India’, including areas that now constitute parts of Pakistan and other countries.

‘We are appalled by the statements made by some BJP politicians, including a union minister, linking the mural with ‘Akhand Bharat,’ she said.

The Pakistan foreign office spokesperson said that the gratuitous assertion of Akhand Bharat was a manifestation of a revisionist and expansionist mindset that seeks to subjugate the identity and culture of not only India’s neighbouring countries but also its own religious minorities.

The issue also created controversy in the domestic politics of India.

The new parliament building inauguration event was boycotted by 20 opposition parties, who said that Modi had violated protocol to inaugurate the new complex and grab the spotlight when it should have been done by the president, the highest executive of the country.

‘To open a new parliament building without the opposition, it does not mean there is a democracy in the country. It’s an incomplete event,’ Supriya Sule, an opposition leader, told news agency ANI.

According to a Times of India article, the Sangh Parivar has long imagined an Indian nation that existed from the time of the Ramayana, covering the landmass stretching from today’s Afghanistan to Myanmar and Tibet to Sri Lanka.

A map titled ‘Punyabhoomi Bharat’ published by the RSS-run Suruchi Prakashan, labels Afghanistan as ‘Upganathan’, Kabul as ‘Kubha Nagar’, Peshawar as ‘Purushpur’, Multan as ‘Moolsthan’, Tibet as ‘Trivishtap,’ Sri Lanka as ‘Singhaldweep’, and Myanmar as ‘Brahmadesh’.

Back in 1944, as the Muslim League pressed for a separate Pakistan, the historian Radha Kumud Mookerji first articulated the idea of Akhand Bharat in his presidential address delivered at an ‘Akhand Bharat Conference.’
Why is anyone surprised? This has been the ultimate goal of India since partition.

They believe they're the rightful rulers of the subcontinent, and that its only a matter of when (not if) India is united again.
 
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Bangladesh has no issue with it. It's already a client state of Akhan Bharat.
 
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Bangladesh will be the first country to join India under "Akhan Bharat".

Bangladesh has no defence ability against an Indian Invasion/occupation at all ...
 
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Oppositions, freedom fighters decry India’s ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural​

Ahammad Foyez | Published: 23:26, Jun 03,2023


203330_151.jpg

Photo shows ‘Akhand Bharat’ mural placed in new parliament building of India that triggers huge criticisms in Neighbouring countries. — Photo courtesy News9

Opposition parties and decorated freedom fighters have reacted sharply to the ‘Akhand Bharat’ map of the Indian subcontinent depicted in a mural on the newly inaugurated parliament building of India.

On May 28, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the mural with the concept of Akhand Bharat, meaning ‘Undivided India,’ which refers to the idea of a undivided Indian subcontinent, encompassing present-day India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

The Pakistani government and Nepalese politicians separately expressed their grievances over the idea of ‘Undivided India’ incorporating their countries into the scheme.

The government of Bangladesh has yet to come out with any reaction, while the ruling Awami League’s international affairs secretary has refused to comment on the issue.

Talking to New Age on Saturday, freedom fighters and politicians said that such an action by India was a threat to sovereignty and would create controversy in regional politics.

When approached, AL international affairs secretary Shammi Ahmed denied making any comment.

Bangladesh’s foreign ministry also did not make a statement on the issue until Saturday evening, while the foreign minister, the state minister for foreign affairs, and the foreign secretary could not be reached for comments.

State minister Md Shahriar Alam even did not respond to the text message seeking the government’s reaction on the matter.

In 2015, Indian right-wing organisation Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh leader Ram Madhav, when asked about a map that showed Pakistan and Bangladesh as part of India, told Al Jazeera, ‘The RSS still believes that one day these parts, which have historical reasons separated only 60 years ago, will again, through popular goodwill, come together and Akhand Bharat will be created.’

India’s ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, is one of several organisations through which the RSS promotes the idea of a Hindu nation.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general, Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, said that it was a serious intervention in the independence of Bangladesh.

‘This is a shameful move by India for Bangladesh and other neighbouring countries. Bangladesh government should have protested the incident immediately,’ Fakhrul said.

Decorated freedom fighter and Krishak Sramik Janata League president Abdul Kader Siddique said that it was a bad decision by India.

‘I think that the intention of India behind the incident was bad, and it created a bad example in regional politics,’ he said.

Workers Party of Bangladesh president Rashed Khan Menon said that it was a wrongdoing by the Indian government.

‘It would create a new political controversy on this subcontinent,’ he said.

Jatiya Party chairman Golam Mohammad Kader said that he was not aware of the matter.

‘The government has not reacted to the matter, has it? I am not aware of it,’ he said.

Freedom fighter Shahjahan Omar said that the issue was a matter of the country’s sovereignty.

‘So, the government should protest the move of India,’ he said.

Political alliance Ganatantra Mancha coordinator Saiful Haque said that the move by India was provocative and would highly undermine the independence of neighbouring countries, including Bangladesh.

‘This is a part of the BJP’s intention to create unrest in the subcontinent on the basis of religious and nationalist extremism,’ he said.

He urged the government to clear Bangladesh’s position on the matter immediately.

In a statement, Rastra Sanskar Andolan condemned India’s move.

‘We very clearly call on the government, on behalf of the people of Bangladesh from all walks of life, to immediately express strong protest against such heinous actions of the Indian ruling party,’ the statement said.

Since the inauguration of the map, it has triggered protests in Nepal and Pakistan.

‘The controversial mural of ‘Akhand Bharat’ in the recently inaugurated new parliament building of India may stoke unnecessary and harmful diplomatic row in the neighbourhood, including Nepal. It has the potential of further aggravating the trust deficit already vitiating the bilateral relations between most of the immediate neighbours of India,’ former Nepali prime minister Baburam Bhattarai said in a statement, the Hindu reported.

It reported that the mural had drawn attention when prime minister Modi inaugurated the new parliament building and dedicated it to the nation on May 28. India’s parliamentary affairs minister, Pralhad Joshi, was among the first to describe the mural as ‘Akhand Bharat’.

The issue dominated Nepalese media even though Nepali prime minister Prachanda started his four-day visit to India and held official talks with Modi.

Besides, a report in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn on June 2 said that Pakistan had expressed grave concern over the idea of Akhand Bharat (Greater India), which was being increasingly peddled by the ruling Indian dispensation.

Speaking at a weekly press briefing Thursday, Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, regretted the installation of a mural at the new parliament building in New Delhi.

The mural depicts so-called ‘ancient India’, including areas that now constitute parts of Pakistan and other countries.

‘We are appalled by the statements made by some BJP politicians, including a union minister, linking the mural with ‘Akhand Bharat,’ she said.

The Pakistan foreign office spokesperson said that the gratuitous assertion of Akhand Bharat was a manifestation of a revisionist and expansionist mindset that seeks to subjugate the identity and culture of not only India’s neighbouring countries but also its own religious minorities.

The issue also created controversy in the domestic politics of India.

The new parliament building inauguration event was boycotted by 20 opposition parties, who said that Modi had violated protocol to inaugurate the new complex and grab the spotlight when it should have been done by the president, the highest executive of the country.

‘To open a new parliament building without the opposition, it does not mean there is a democracy in the country. It’s an incomplete event,’ Supriya Sule, an opposition leader, told news agency ANI.

According to a Times of India article, the Sangh Parivar has long imagined an Indian nation that existed from the time of the Ramayana, covering the landmass stretching from today’s Afghanistan to Myanmar and Tibet to Sri Lanka.

A map titled ‘Punyabhoomi Bharat’ published by the RSS-run Suruchi Prakashan, labels Afghanistan as ‘Upganathan’, Kabul as ‘Kubha Nagar’, Peshawar as ‘Purushpur’, Multan as ‘Moolsthan’, Tibet as ‘Trivishtap,’ Sri Lanka as ‘Singhaldweep’, and Myanmar as ‘Brahmadesh’.

Back in 1944, as the Muslim League pressed for a separate Pakistan, the historian Radha Kumud Mookerji first articulated the idea of Akhand Bharat in his presidential address delivered at an ‘Akhand Bharat Conference.’

This is a reason enough for BAL to be kicked out of the power. Pathetic spineless creatures.
 
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