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The Islamophobic roots of population control efforts in India

waz

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Mumbai, India - Across northern and central India, a campaign advocating for a population control law is gaining momentum.

The movement ostensibly seeks to raise awareness over the need to restrain India's population of 1.34 billion, second only to China's 1.39 billion.

But its subtext reflects a core belief of right-wing Hindu organisations: that Muslims are trying to "overtake" Hindus.

The campaign, underpinned by Islamophobia, is being promoted in the real and online worlds.

Facebook posts spread the conspiracy theory that the number of India's Muslims - currently about 200 million - will at some point surpass the 966 million-strong Hindu population, as WhatsApp groups share messages stirring fear and hatred.

And offline, public meetings are being held, blaming Muslims for India's population explosion.

The Jansankhya Samadhan Foundation (or Population Resolution Foundation) NGO, for instance, is travelling across northern India, gathering support for a two-day march to New Delhi, planned for October.

"If we don't bring in a law now, India will see a civil war very soon," said Chaudhary, the head the NGO, in an interview with Al Jazeera.

The Jansankhya Samadhan Foundation supports a two-child norm, with punishment including jail terms for offenders.

Chaudhary claims the group has held 150,000 protests and meetings across nearly half of India's 725 administrative districts, runs more than 400 WhatsApp groups, and is connected with 100,000 people.

"When we travel across the country, 95 percent of the people say that Muslims are driving India's population explosion. Hindus tell me, 'there is no point in telling us to control the population, you should tell the Muslims.' The thing is, this is the fact."

Chaudhary's meetings have been attended by a government minister, Giriraj Singh, andleaders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a paramilitary volunteer organisation understood to be the ideological parent of the ruling right-wing Hindu nationalist BJP party.

Last year, Singh said that "only one community" was responsible for India's population explosion, referring to Muslims.



b039fb4218c9489897f236d3d10be319_18.jpg



Chaudhary insisted that his organisation is non-political.

"Initially, we tried to advocate this with the [Muslim] community. But we were reportedly told by them that for religious reasons, the community will never accept such a law," he said.

After the October march, his team intends to travel to southern Indian states to mobilise support for a population control bill.

Dr Al Sharada, director of Population First, a Mumbai-based NGO that works on health and population issues, slammed these calls as dangerous and unadvisable.

"Calling for such a law is an entitled, privileged position and is always aimed at the poor and the disenfranchised," she told Al Jazeera.

In another example of the online success of the movement, Amit Pandey, a 36-year-old pharmaceutical trader from Lucknow, has amassed over 30,000 followers in just two months on his Facebook page, Jansankhya Niyantran Kanoon (Population Control Law).

He sets aside an hour a day to work on his "cause", calling on people to write to Prime Minister Narendra Modi of the BJP party, and ask him to legislate population control.

His efforts, he claims, have seen 150,000 letters being sent to Modi on the issue.

Pandey has long believed that Muslims are conspiring against the country.

"In Muslims, there is no humanity. Each of them is a jihadi in his or her own way. With a growing population, they will become huge vote banks and their votes will start mattering more than Hindu votes," he told Al Jazeera.


He posts several times every day, often misinformation. His page is replete with photos, gifs and videos - one featuring a right-wing Hindu activist recommending a modern-day crusade against Muslims in Europe, another calling Muslims "Arabic slaves".

He thinks government data indicating a slowing Muslim population growth rate is fake and manipulated.

877b1d1d4c8c489cbd47b5651fc73a13_18.jpg


"The government does not want to tell citizens the real extent of the problem," he said, dismissing news reports of hate crimes against Muslims as a "fake narrative set by the media".

His experiences with Muslims, he said, have shown him that they can't be trusted.

"They don't think of themselves as Indians; they don't have the right intentions. Each Muslim thinks of how to defeat Hindus and wage a Ghazwa-e-Hind (Holy War against India)," he said, referring to a term used by Pakistan-based armed groups to justify attacks.


"Every day, I do small meetings of 20 to 30 people and convince them of the urgent need to bring the law in," he said. "Days after I made this page, national leaders started speaking of such a law," he says, referring to a statement in May by popular Yoga guru Yoga Ramdev, that the government should deny voting rights to a third child.

Another group on Facebook, Ab Ek hi Maang - Jansankhya Niyantra Kanoon (A single aim - The Population Control Law) boasts more than 14,000 followers. In the northern city of Kanpur, a Facebook page entitled Jansankhya Niyantran Kanoon (Population Control Law) has over 9,400 followers.

Meanwhile, WhatsApp groups run by supporters of the BJP, are awash with xenophobic messages about Muslims, while pitching a population control law as the solution.


The Politics of Population Control
A large section of the Indian right-wing has long held a belief that Muslims have conspired to accelerate their population, in a bid to overtake the country's Hindus.

Led by the RSS, organisations affiliated with the BJP such as Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad have stoked fears around the country's Muslim population, asked for curbs on Muslim population growth, and pushed for Hindus to produce more children.

The RSS has previously claimed that European nations, including Germany and France, are on their way to becoming "Islamic states" as a result of fast-growing Muslim communities.

The last Indian census, held in 2011, showed that Hindus comprise 79.8 percent of the population while Muslims make up less than a fifth, at 14.2 percent.

The proportion of Hindus relative to the country's population declined by 0.7 percent, according to that census, while the proportion of Muslims grew by 0.8 percent.

Islam was also the country's fastest-growing religion between 2001 and 2011 with a growth rate of 24.6 percent while the Hindu growth rate was 16.8 percent in the same period.

Hindu nationalists have used these figures to buttress their argument.

Experts, however, say the data is incomplete and misleading.

"Data also show that the Muslim fertility rate has come down more than the Hindu fertility rate. Despite this, there is a sense of paranoia that the Muslim population is increasing, which is driving the revival of the population [control] agenda," said Sharada of Population First.

Sharada pointed to recently released government data showing a sharp decline in India's population growth.

MP calls for 'religious balance' to be maintained
In July, a BJP member of parliament, Rakesh Sinha, proposed a private member's bill - the Population Regulation Bill, 2019 - in the Indian Parliament.

It is yet to be discussed in parliament and the government could reject it, but the move represents growing support for legislating population control.

Sinha told Al Jazeera that India's growing population has made the country restive and, while he stopped short at outrightly blaming Muslims, he advocated for "religious balance".

"There are three repercussions [of population growth] - regional imbalance within the country, where some regions have higher population than others; resource shortage and thereby, lack of equitable distribution and lastly, the religious balance that needs to be maintained," he said.

"We are a multi-faith, multi-caste people so there should be total harmony between all these faiths."

When asked to elaborate on the cause of "religious imbalance", Sinha said he was busy and could not answer any further queries.

In May, another BJP leader, Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay, filed public interest litigation in the Delhi High Court, asking for a similar law, alleging that the population size was the "root cause of all crimes" in India.

Sharada, meanwhile, advised viewing the issue from an economic perspective.

"There is a flawed understanding that our problems emanate from a scarcity of resources," she told Al Jazeera, "whereas they emanate from a flawed distribution of resources."

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/f...on-control-efforts-india-190808085219969.html
 
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This sanghi propaganda is so easily rubbished with anyone with a working brain between his shoulders

I mean at one instant they celebrate celibacy amongst their ranks and on the other hand are worried about the muslim population overtaking. For God's sake get married and have children while you are still ahead. Who is stopping you marrying and having kids? Or is it that you don't find your own woman attractive? Or is the real reason that they harbour a disturbing fetish regarding Muslim woman. A Muslim woman is possibly the only woman a sanghi wants to marry. The only time he is encouraged to end his vows of celibacy to RSS is when he is marrying a Muslim preferably a Kashmiri Muslim girl or if his darkest desires come to life he is violating her in a 2002 Gujrat style pogrom
 
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Population control IS needed for South Asia.
It is one of the most crowded places on the planet with finite resources.
The problem is everyone has to be on it... you can't have one or two communities that "commit" while the others do not. This is where part of the problem lies.
The other is education. Generally the more educated people are, the less likely they are to have large families.
 
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Scare muslims of Hindus, scare Hindus of muslims, scare dogs of cats.. as long as people get to one child policy for atleast 20 years , dont care how you achieve this. India desperately needs to reduce the population growth.
 
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Scare muslims of Hindus, scare Hindus of muslims, scare dogs of cats.. as long as people get to one child policy for atleast 20 years , dont care how you achieve this. India desperately needs to reduce the population growth.

One child policy will turn india into a raging monster of incel dom. Currently , Gangadesh is suffering from shortage of millions of women leading to everyday rapes and other criminality against women.
One child policy will probably make the ratio worst , further exacerbating the rape culture and creepiness of Indian men.
Bob and vegana will go to all new levels.
 
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The only way Indian Muslims can protect themselves from rape, jayshreeram attacks, beef lynchings, pogroms and ultimate genocide by Hindus is by overtaking them in population or at least reaching a critical mass of 30-40% and then again partitioning the b(%ard neonazi nation of India.

All civilised countries should support population control measures routinely. However, in India, Muslims truly risk being genocided under the guise of "integration" and a supposed "war on terror" etc therefore I make an exception and reverse my position on population control completely in that particular case.

Please remember how Hindustan justified their military build up and security lockdown by selling the simple lie of a "terror threat". They can do this at will, lock up peaceful members of civil society including educated elites and politically elected individuals AT WILL. This is fascism, Stalinism and despotism somehow rolled into one.

Regarding Kashmir, I cringe at Modi's statements about saffron and shawls, a lie sold to westerners that all Kashmiris "really" want is money and development. Modi is simply covering his desire for genocide as he knows full well Kashmiris don't need development and money when they are at risk of beef lynchings, jayshreeram attacks, pogroms, military lockdowns, false encounters, blinding by pellet guns, gang rapes and genocide. India is not China, because India is run by Hindutva psychopaths who want Hindus to dominate over Muslims.

Enough of this forced abusive marriage that has been going on since 1947 with regular bouts of honour crimes and abuse every time the Kashmiris try to be free of Delhi. The autonomous status provided some relief during this forced and abusive marriage but now that has gone and the lies are exposed. Even Delhi's stooges in Kashmir now openly resist them.

This will end in a very ugly way for Hindustan.

Modi mentioned a historic wrong has been righted. In actual fact, a historic wrong has been further wronged.
 
. .
Mumbai, India - Across northern and central India, a campaign advocating for a population control law is gaining momentum.

The movement ostensibly seeks to raise awareness over the need to restrain India's population of 1.34 billion, second only to China's 1.39 billion.

But its subtext reflects a core belief of right-wing Hindu organisations: that Muslims are trying to "overtake" Hindus.

The campaign, underpinned by Islamophobia, is being promoted in the real and online worlds.

Facebook posts spread the conspiracy theory that the number of India's Muslims - currently about 200 million - will at some point surpass the 966 million-strong Hindu population, as WhatsApp groups share messages stirring fear and hatred.

And offline, public meetings are being held, blaming Muslims for India's population explosion.

The Jansankhya Samadhan Foundation (or Population Resolution Foundation) NGO, for instance, is travelling across northern India, gathering support for a two-day march to New Delhi, planned for October.

"If we don't bring in a law now, India will see a civil war very soon," said Chaudhary, the head the NGO, in an interview with Al Jazeera.

The Jansankhya Samadhan Foundation supports a two-child norm, with punishment including jail terms for offenders.

Chaudhary claims the group has held 150,000 protests and meetings across nearly half of India's 725 administrative districts, runs more than 400 WhatsApp groups, and is connected with 100,000 people.

"When we travel across the country, 95 percent of the people say that Muslims are driving India's population explosion. Hindus tell me, 'there is no point in telling us to control the population, you should tell the Muslims.' The thing is, this is the fact."

Chaudhary's meetings have been attended by a government minister, Giriraj Singh, andleaders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a paramilitary volunteer organisation understood to be the ideological parent of the ruling right-wing Hindu nationalist BJP party.

Last year, Singh said that "only one community" was responsible for India's population explosion, referring to Muslims.



b039fb4218c9489897f236d3d10be319_18.jpg



Chaudhary insisted that his organisation is non-political.

"Initially, we tried to advocate this with the [Muslim] community. But we were reportedly told by them that for religious reasons, the community will never accept such a law," he said.

After the October march, his team intends to travel to southern Indian states to mobilise support for a population control bill.

Dr Al Sharada, director of Population First, a Mumbai-based NGO that works on health and population issues, slammed these calls as dangerous and unadvisable.

"Calling for such a law is an entitled, privileged position and is always aimed at the poor and the disenfranchised," she told Al Jazeera.

In another example of the online success of the movement, Amit Pandey, a 36-year-old pharmaceutical trader from Lucknow, has amassed over 30,000 followers in just two months on his Facebook page, Jansankhya Niyantran Kanoon (Population Control Law).

He sets aside an hour a day to work on his "cause", calling on people to write to Prime Minister Narendra Modi of the BJP party, and ask him to legislate population control.

His efforts, he claims, have seen 150,000 letters being sent to Modi on the issue.

Pandey has long believed that Muslims are conspiring against the country.

"In Muslims, there is no humanity. Each of them is a jihadi in his or her own way. With a growing population, they will become huge vote banks and their votes will start mattering more than Hindu votes," he told Al Jazeera.


He posts several times every day, often misinformation. His page is replete with photos, gifs and videos - one featuring a right-wing Hindu activist recommending a modern-day crusade against Muslims in Europe, another calling Muslims "Arabic slaves".

He thinks government data indicating a slowing Muslim population growth rate is fake and manipulated.

877b1d1d4c8c489cbd47b5651fc73a13_18.jpg


"The government does not want to tell citizens the real extent of the problem," he said, dismissing news reports of hate crimes against Muslims as a "fake narrative set by the media".

His experiences with Muslims, he said, have shown him that they can't be trusted.

"They don't think of themselves as Indians; they don't have the right intentions. Each Muslim thinks of how to defeat Hindus and wage a Ghazwa-e-Hind (Holy War against India)," he said, referring to a term used by Pakistan-based armed groups to justify attacks.


"Every day, I do small meetings of 20 to 30 people and convince them of the urgent need to bring the law in," he said. "Days after I made this page, national leaders started speaking of such a law," he says, referring to a statement in May by popular Yoga guru Yoga Ramdev, that the government should deny voting rights to a third child.

Another group on Facebook, Ab Ek hi Maang - Jansankhya Niyantra Kanoon (A single aim - The Population Control Law) boasts more than 14,000 followers. In the northern city of Kanpur, a Facebook page entitled Jansankhya Niyantran Kanoon (Population Control Law) has over 9,400 followers.

Meanwhile, WhatsApp groups run by supporters of the BJP, are awash with xenophobic messages about Muslims, while pitching a population control law as the solution.


The Politics of Population Control
A large section of the Indian right-wing has long held a belief that Muslims have conspired to accelerate their population, in a bid to overtake the country's Hindus.

Led by the RSS, organisations affiliated with the BJP such as Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad have stoked fears around the country's Muslim population, asked for curbs on Muslim population growth, and pushed for Hindus to produce more children.

The RSS has previously claimed that European nations, including Germany and France, are on their way to becoming "Islamic states" as a result of fast-growing Muslim communities.

The last Indian census, held in 2011, showed that Hindus comprise 79.8 percent of the population while Muslims make up less than a fifth, at 14.2 percent.

The proportion of Hindus relative to the country's population declined by 0.7 percent, according to that census, while the proportion of Muslims grew by 0.8 percent.

Islam was also the country's fastest-growing religion between 2001 and 2011 with a growth rate of 24.6 percent while the Hindu growth rate was 16.8 percent in the same period.

Hindu nationalists have used these figures to buttress their argument.

Experts, however, say the data is incomplete and misleading.

"Data also show that the Muslim fertility rate has come down more than the Hindu fertility rate. Despite this, there is a sense of paranoia that the Muslim population is increasing, which is driving the revival of the population [control] agenda," said Sharada of Population First.

Sharada pointed to recently released government data showing a sharp decline in India's population growth.

MP calls for 'religious balance' to be maintained
In July, a BJP member of parliament, Rakesh Sinha, proposed a private member's bill - the Population Regulation Bill, 2019 - in the Indian Parliament.

It is yet to be discussed in parliament and the government could reject it, but the move represents growing support for legislating population control.

Sinha told Al Jazeera that India's growing population has made the country restive and, while he stopped short at outrightly blaming Muslims, he advocated for "religious balance".

"There are three repercussions [of population growth] - regional imbalance within the country, where some regions have higher population than others; resource shortage and thereby, lack of equitable distribution and lastly, the religious balance that needs to be maintained," he said.

"We are a multi-faith, multi-caste people so there should be total harmony between all these faiths."

When asked to elaborate on the cause of "religious imbalance", Sinha said he was busy and could not answer any further queries.

In May, another BJP leader, Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay, filed public interest litigation in the Delhi High Court, asking for a similar law, alleging that the population size was the "root cause of all crimes" in India.

Sharada, meanwhile, advised viewing the issue from an economic perspective.

"There is a flawed understanding that our problems emanate from a scarcity of resources," she told Al Jazeera, "whereas they emanate from a flawed distribution of resources."

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/f...on-control-efforts-india-190808085219969.html


In the context of Jammu and Kashmir is concerned, tbh in my opinion, they have messed it up a bit. As far as I'm concerned "Freedom" is freedom, just plain and simple. But when some people start equating it with religion chanting the slogan "Azadi ka matlab kya la ilaha illallah". I guess it will be easy for the religious fanatics on the opposite side to build a narrative and rally popular support among the like minded people.

FYI, these are my personal views, and no offenses meant whatsoever. :)
 
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One child policy will turn india into a raging monster of incel dom. Currently , Gangadesh is suffering from shortage of millions of women leading to everyday rapes and other criminality against women.
One child policy will probably make the ratio worst , further exacerbating the rape culture and creepiness of Indian men.
Bob and vegana will go to all new levels.
Don't care. Shoot all people who rape and molest. Provide more insentives for female child. Some way or other need to reduce population to manageable levels.
If people don't like the idea, throw them in reeducation camps.
 
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