Staff

Staff

Background

Throughout its modern history, India has dealt with the issue of sectarianism. Since partition, when the British colony of India was divided into India and Pakistan as independent nations, Hindus and Muslims in the Indian subcontinent have endured a fractious relationship. Recently, the rise of right-wing religious nationalism in Indian politics has created a hierarchical society in which anti-Muslim bias and discrimination is commonplace. Bias against Muslims has been informally built into society through the rise of radical Hindu vigilante mobs, and codified into law by India’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The ruling BJP has pursued Hindu nationalist policies and ostracized Indian Muslims in the process. As a result, Muslims in India today face significant discrimination and are often treated as second-class citizens.

India’s Sectarian History

In the latter stages of and following World War II, the Indian independence movement gained substantial momentum. Hindus and Muslims alike sought to end British rule in India, although they had disagreements on precisely how to do so. Hindu leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru began the “Quit India Movement” and engaged in a series of civil obedience demonstrations designed to handicap the British war effort in India. On the other side, the leader of India’s Muslim League, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, sought to work with the British colonists to secure a homeland for Muslims in South Asia. Due to the overwhelming ratio of Hindus compared to Muslims in India, Jinnah painted himself as a defender of Muslim rights against Hindu dominance and lobbied the British to accept the division of India into two states. Ultimately, Jinnah was successful, although the hasty division of the Indian colony only served to create future problems between Hindus and Muslims in the region.

When a British judge divided the Indian colony into two countries, widespread sectarian violence between Hindus and Muslims ensued. Due to the rash division of India on ideological lines, hundreds of thousands of people were suddenly disenfranchised. At the time of partition, Karachi and New Delhi, the respective capitals of the newly independent nations, were home to scores of both Hindus and Muslims. It is estimated that Karachi was roughly 47% Hindu, and Delhi was roughly 33% Muslim. The demographics in each capital were representative of each country as a whole, and illustrates the integration of Hindus and Muslims prior to partition. After partition, religious mobs on both sides targeted members of the opposite group to horrific effect. Communal riots were common, and it is estimated that between 200,000 and 2 million people died in the months following the division of India and Pakistan.

As a consequence of partition, animosity between Hindus and Muslims in the Indian subcontinent has been detectable since the British ended their colonization. While India and Pakistan remain at odds, the mistrust between Hindus and Muslims in India itself remains equally as strong. This mistrust has been exacerbated recently with the rise of right-wing nationalism in India. Current Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party have pursued Hindu nationalist policies and risked ostracizing Muslims since coming to power in 2014.

The Rise of Religious Nationalism in Indian Politics

The Bharatiya Janata Party rose to power partly on the back of the concept of “Hindutva.” Hindutva is an ideology that seeks to tie Indian culture to Hindu values. It is espoused by Hindu nationalists who view Hindus in India as sons of the soil, due to their holy lands being located within India. Conversely, religious minorities such as Muslims are viewed suspiciously as outsiders and descendants of foreign invaders. This ideology is highly critical of the secularism that was a tenet of Indian government until the late 1980s, and believes India should be governed on Hindu values. Since its creation in 1980, the BJP has frequently pursued Hindu nationalist policies in accordance with the principle of Hindutva. In fact, the party was originally formed as the political wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a Hindu nationalist paramilitary group that is long suspected of being involved in the plot to assassinate Mahatma Gandhi.

The rise of Hindu nationalism into mainstream Indian politics is a fairly new phenomenon, with the country being governed in accordance with secular values for the large majority of its history as an independent state. Indeed, the founders of modern India, Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, both advocated for a secular state under which all religious and ethnic minorities had equal rights. Gandhi himself was assassinated by a Hindu nationalist who was enraged by his attempts to reconcile Hindus and Muslims in India. Beginning in the 1980s, India’s political leaders began to use politics of religious identity to divide the population. This tradition has carried through to the present day, with the modern BJP being responsible for pushing religious nationalist policies that have ostracized India’s religious minorities.

Since coming to power, the BJP has ruled in a manner befitting of its religious nationalism platform. Prior to winning a majority in India’s lower legislative chamber in 2014, the party published an election manifesto that described its electoral goals. Among these goals was a desire to scale back protections of religious minorities, redraft school textbooks to illustrate Hinduism as a superior religion, and repeal Article 370 of the constitution which grants limited autonomy to Jammu and Kashmir, India’s largest states by Muslim population. Additionally, the BJP has sought to codify Hindu beliefs into law at the expense of the well-being of religious minority groups. For example, many Hindus are vegetarian, and cows are viewed as sacred in Hinduism. The BJP has sought to outlaw the slaughter and consumption of cows, despite beef making up a significant part of Muslim and Christian diets in India. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has also sought to destroy Muslim holy sites and replace them with Hindu temples, claiming that the sites had originally held shrines to various Hindu deities and been razed.

Informal Discrimination Against Muslims

In India today, the BJP has created an environment where discrimination against Muslims is common. The principle of Hindutva has pushed the BJP toward discriminatory policies, and informal discrimination and violence against Muslims is equally as frequent. In fact, informal violence against Muslims has become commonplace in India, where vigilante Hindu mobs often incite violence with no punishment. One famous example of this occurred in 2002, during riots in the state of Gujarat. A group of Muslims were accused of setting fire to a train carrying Hindu religious pilgrims, resulting in 59 deaths. Despite the accused denying responsibility, vigilante Hindu mobs set out to exact revenge. Hundreds of Muslims were killed, thousands more displaced, and Muslim homes throughout the state were razed. Afterward, the investigation and prosecution into the perpetrators stalled amid witness intimidation and bias among Gujarat’s judiciary.

Another example of informal discrimination against Muslims in India is the issue of “cow vigilantism.” Cows are sacred in Hinduism, and vigilante mobs, primarily in rural areas, have formed to intimidate and prevent Muslims and other religious minorities from killing and consuming them. Since coming to power in 2014, members of the BJP have used incendiary language to spur on vigilante mobs, which are often emboldened by local police being sympathetic to their cause. Mob violence is illegal under federal law in India, but local law enforcement and the judiciary, particularly in rural areas, often lack the tools and desire to enforce the law. While dozens of people are killed each year by vigilantes protecting cows, there has been a marked increase since the BJP came to power in 2014.

A major contemporary problem for Muslims in India has been the coronavirus pandemic. Several Indian politicians have alleged that Muslims are responsible for the spread of the virus throughout the country. As a result, Muslims have faced additional discrimination, particularly after a BJP lawmaker baselessly accused Muslim street vendors of infecting vegetables with saliva during India’s national lockdown. Certain neighborhoods in cities across India also erected posters and signs forbidding Muslims to enter. Additionally, small groups of Hindus have threatened mosques, including attacking several throughout the country. There were also calls to close mosques entirely at the beginning of the pandemic during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

In 2019, an independent report authored by the nongovernmental organization Common Cause found that discrimination against Muslims in India was less likely to be punished due to police and judicial indifference. This report built upon a study ordered by the opposition Congress Party in 2006 that found rampant inequality between Hindus and Muslims in Indian society. The landmark report ordered by the Congress Party, known as the Sachar Committee Report, identified several areas of society where Hindus had advantages over Muslims, but the recommendations made by the report were never implemented. Muslims in India were found to be at a disadvantage in the education system and work force among other sectors, and Muslim communities were found to have the poorest infrastructure among minority communities in India. Additionally, it was determined that Muslims are underrepresented in Indian government, both in elected office and the bureaucracy. Because of all these factors combined, the report argued, Muslims are at a significant disadvantage in India. The Sachar Committee Report also served to underline the extent to which anti-Muslim bias has been informally built into Indian society.

Discrimination Against Muslims Under the BJP

Since winning a majority in the Lok Sabha, India’s lower body of Parliament, the BJP has used its platform to drive a Hindu nationalist agenda that has been discriminatory toward Muslims. Two of the primary ways it has done this is through the controversial Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB) and National Registry of Citizens (NRC). The CAB fast tracks citizenship for undocumented immigrants coming from Muslim-majority nations in Southeast Asia, but only if they are a religious minority. Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, and Christians are among those who benefit from migrating from countries such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and others, to India. However, Muslims are specifically excluded from the bill. The legislation makes religion a basis for citizenship in India for the first time, and Muslims have been specifically exempted from the benefits of the bill. After passing the legislation, Prime Minister Modi said the CAB would make India a safe haven for people facing persecution in neighboring countries. However, the CAB has only served to exacerbate discrimination against Muslims, partly because of its correlation to the National Registry of Citizens.

The NRC was first implemented in India’s Assam state, near the border with Bangladesh. As a result of Assam’s location, it is home to thousands of refugees from Bangladesh that have migrated over the course of several generations. A large portion of these refugees are both undocumented and Muslim. The NRC was first implemented to identify documented citizens in Assam in order to protect their rights. However, despite many Muslim immigrants having lived in Assam for generations, they did not have the required paperwork to prove their citizenship. As a result, these individuals were left off of the NRC, and therefore deprived of rights they had previously enjoyed, such as the ability to own property or vote. As a result, the NRC has turned into a mechanism of discrimination against Muslims. Currently, it has only been utilized in Assam, but India’s powerful BJP Home Minister, Amit Shah, has plans to implement it across the country before 2024. The NRC, in tandem with the CAB, has significantly undermined Muslims’ rights in India because they impede the ability of Muslims to secure Indian citizenship, while making it easier for other religious groups. As a result, Muslims are underrepresented in the Indian political process, which puts them at a further disadvantage.

Another example of the BJP pursuing incendiary anti-Muslim policies is the government’s drive to build a Hindu temple in the city of Ayodhya. In 1992, violent Hindu mobs destroyed a 16th century mosque in Ayodhya, claiming that it had been erected on the ruins of a Hindu temple to the deity Ram. Hindus and Muslims have been arguing over the true history of the area for generations, and India’s Supreme Court ruled in favor of Hindus earlier this year, giving them the license to build a temple on the ruins of the destroyed mosque. The BJP had made a campaign promise to erect a temple on the site, and used the debate surrounding the topic to incite their religious nationalist political base.

Recently, Muslims in India have been accused of “love jihad” by radical Hindus. This is the idea that Muslim men trick Hindu women into marriage in order to convert them to Islam. Allegations of this have been proven to be baseless and rooted in bigotry. Indeed, of several cases brought to court, there has been no legal basis to convict a person based on this concept. However, the local government in Uttar Pradesh state passed a law carrying a jail sentence of up to 10 years for anyone found guilty of the practice. Muslims accused of “love jihad” have been victimized by radical Hindu mobs in several states throughout India and dozens have been killed. Critics have noted that the law is an attack on India’s secularism, and that people’s religion should be out of the government’s purview.

United States’ Response to Discrimination in India

Despite discrimination against Muslims significantly increasing in recent years, the United States has been reluctant to seriously penalize India. In 2005, Narendra Modi, then the Chief Minister of Gujarat, was denied a visa to the United States for his role in the 2002 Gujarat riots. It was determined that the Modi-led government of Gujarat had sought to impede various investigations into the sectarian clashes, including intimidating whistleblowers and applying improper pressure on legal officials. Modi’s visa application being rejected has been the largest and most formal rebuke offered by the United States on India’s discrimination against Muslims. President Trump himself declined to criticize Modi over the Citizenship Amendment Bill during a state visit earlier this year.

In Congress, aggressive lobbying on behalf of the BJP has prevented significant legislation from advancing that seeks to censure India. A bipartisan bill from Reps. Jayapal and Watkins in the House of Representatives was pulled from the Foreign Affairs Committee after Chairman Rep. Eliot Engel met with representatives from the Indian government. One significant reason why the United States’ government has been reluctant to condemn India’s anti-Muslim bias is the strategic partnership between the countries. India is regarded among many policymakers as an “indispensable partner” in Southeast Asia, partially because of its ability to offset China’s dominance in the region. American lawmakers are willing to overlook violations of Muslim rights in India because of the economic benefits enjoyed by the United States. Bilateral trade between India and the United States has grown exponentially in recent years, with the flow of goods and services between the countries reaching upward of $130 billion annually. Because of this lucrative partnership, American lawmakers who seek to legitimately criticize India’s Islamophobia face significant impediments.

Conclusion

Today, India can be characterized by the discrimination that Muslims face in all aspects of society. Whether it be extrajudicial Hindu mobs seeking revenge for the slaughter of cows, or the Bharatiya Janata Party impeding Muslims’ ability to secure Indian citizenship, the discrimination faced by Muslims is evident. The sectarian divisions drawn by partition have only been exacerbated in recent years, aided in part by the rise of the religious nationalist BJP. Ultimately, Muslims in India have come to be treated as second-class citizens through a mixture of the BJP’s policies and societal bias against them.

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What is geoengineering?
Some climate scientists are coming to believe it's humanity's only hope for slowing or stopping disastrous changes in the climate. As runaway carbon dioxide emissions contribute to melting ice caps, widespread flooding, prolonged heat waves and droughts, apocalyptic wildfires, and devastating hurricanes, researchers are exploring planetary-scale interventions in Earth's natural systems as a way of counteracting climate change. Geoengineering has been debated since the 1960s, when U.S. scientists suggested floating billions of white, golf ball–like objects in the oceans to reflect sunlight. Interfering in natural processes was widely considered naïve and dangerous until recently, but as the window to curb global warming shrinks, proposals to reflect sunlight, shade Earth's surface, accelerate carbon absorption in the oceans, and remove CO2 from the air are being taken more seriously. In October, SilverLining, a nonprofit, gave $3 million toward climate-engineering research. "I liken geoengineering to chemotherapy," said Michael Gerrard, a professor of environmental and climate law at Columbia University. "If all else is failing, you try it."

What are the most plausible proposals?
SilverLining's grant recipients are researching whether humans can blast sunlight-reflecting aerosol particles into the stratosphere, mimicking the cooling effect of volcanic ash clouds. In 1991, Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted, spewing sulphate particles into the atmosphere that caused global temperatures to drop 0.6 degrees Celsius over the next two years. Solar-radiation management would involve sending fleets of airplanes up about 65,000 feet, where they'd spray sulfate aerosols into the upper atmosphere, or perhaps even diamond dust. A research team at Harvard University projects that if high-altitude tankers had the capacity to make 60,000 particle dumps by 2035, it would shave off 0.3 degrees Celsius of warming.

 

What else is being explored?
Another idea is to pump salt water from oceans into the air, forming water droplets that would make marine clouds brighter and thus more reflective. Australia is funding research, hoping enhanced clouds could cool water temperatures enough to save the already damaged Great Barrier Reef. Cambridge University researchers are studying whether ships can pump salt particles into low-lying polar clouds to help refreeze polar ice caps. Other researchers wonder whether seeding oceans with iron could stimulate the growth of marine algae, which soaks up CO2 from the air. For now, solar-radiation management is thought to be scientifically the sturdiest candidate. "We know with 100 percent certainty that we can cool the planet," said Dr. Douglas MacMartin, a Cornell University engineer.

So why not do it now?
Meddling with Mother Nature is risky. Earth's weather systems are interconnected in extremely complex ways, which is why climate change is believed to impact everything from how long hurricanes linger over coastlines to how fast wildfires accelerate. Tinkering with one aspect of weather could have dangerous, unforeseen ripple effects: Two years ago, Nature called geoengineering "outlandish and unsettling." Could blocking sunlight, for example, impact the Asian monsoon, which 2 billion people depend on for food crops, or alter the oceans' acidity? For geoengineering to be politically feasible, scientists would have to convince ordinary people that it's worth the calculated risk. Last year, Harvard sought to send a balloon into the stratosphere over Tucson in order to release small amounts of calcium carbonate (chalk) to test whether the reflective particles could block some sunlight, but public outcry forced the experiment to be postponed.

Is safety the only concern?
No. Some climate activists argue that geoengineering serves as a get-out-of-jail-free panacea that would allow carbon-emitting corporations to conduct business as usual. They argue that no technological breakthrough would eliminate the long-term need to abandon fossil fuels. Raymond Pierrehumbert, a Nobel Prize–winning professor at Oxford University, compares relying on geoengineering without cutting emissions to "jumping off the Washington Monument and hoping somebody invents anti-gravity before you hit the ground."

Where do most scientists stand?
The global failure to make major emissions cuts is causing many experts to reconsider geoengineering. Compared with the massive financial consequences of global warming, the estimated $2 billion annual price tag to develop solar engineering over 15 years is quite inexpensive. In March, an Australian team conducted one of the world's first geoengineering trials, using 100 nozzles to enhance existing clouds by blasting salt water into the air. In theory, it would take about 1,000 nozzles to save the entire Great Barrier Reef from dying off. "People are right to fear overreliance on techno-fixes," says Harvard professor David Keith. "But there's another nightmare: We realize in hindsight that early use of geoengineering could have saved millions of lives lost in heat waves and helped preserve some of the natural world."

Sucking carbon out of the air
The United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says the world must remove 1 trillion tons of carbon by 2100 to have any hope of avoiding more than 1.5 degrees Celsius of global warming. A proposed solution, carbon capture, takes two forms: removing CO2 directly from the emissions of power plants and other industrial facilities or scrubbing it from the atmosphere. At least 19 large-scale projects worldwide are working to capture CO2 from smokestacks at coal or natural gas plants; such a system was created in 2017 at a Texas coal plant but shut down this May because it captured just 17 percent of emissions, not the targeted 33 percent. The more ambitious plan for carbon capture involves installing pipes to suck carbon from the sky, then store it deep underground. Several companies have developed technology to do just that, but the process remains very expensive. Stripe, a startup company, enables companies and individuals to contribute money to fund carbon removal, as a means of getting the technology off the ground. "This is a hardware problem; it's an infrastructure problem; it's a science problem," Nan Ransohoff, the head of Stripe Climate, told The Atlantic. "It takes a long time to develop carbon removal. This is not Snapchat."/ The Week

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Thousands of demonstrators marched in the Belarus capital Minsk and elsewhere on Sunday as weekly protests demanding the resignation of veteran President Alexander Lukashenko continued, prompting police to detain more than 300 people.

Belarus, a country of 9.5 million that Russia sees as a security buffer against NATO, has been rocked by mass protests since an Aug. 9 presidential election which Lukashenko said he won. His opponents claim the vote was rigged and want him to quit.

Most protesters marched in remote residential areas of the capital, clapping hands, shouting "long live Belarus" and waving white flags with a red stripe in the middle, a symbol of the opposition.

 

"This (protest) does work as it is impossible to rule the country when the majority does not accept you. With protests we are showing that we are the majority," said one of the protesters Alisa, 21.

Lukashenko, who has been in power for 26 years, has shrugged off the scale of protests, saying they are sponsored by the West, and shown little signs of willingness to start a dialogue with the opposition.

Military vehicles and water cannon were seen on Minsk streets on Sunday, while uniformed men, many in helmets, grabbed people in civilian clothes, a witness aid and videos posted on social media showed.

In Minsk alone, the police detained more than 300 people accused of "violating the law on mass events", Russia's TASS news agency quoted the Belarus interior ministry as saying.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has urged political forces in Belarus to try to resolve differences through dialogue, and also said the ex-Soviet republic, a close Moscow ally, was facing unprecedented meddling by external forces.

Russia's backing is seen as vital for Lukashenko's chances of staying in power and its statements are closely scrutinised for changes in tone or any sign that Moscow could be pushing for some kind of managed power transition.

The US has canceled five cultural exchange programs with China because Beijing uses them as propaganda tools.

"While other programs funded under the auspices of the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act (MECEA) are mutually beneficial, the five programs in question are fully funded and operated by China's government as soft power propaganda tools," the US State Department said Friday.

"They provide carefully curated access to Chinese Communist Party officials, not to the Chinese people, who do not enjoy freedoms of speech and assembly," it said.

The programs include the Policymakers Educational China Trip Program, US-China Friendship Program, US-China Leadership Exchange Program, US-China Transpacific Exchange Program and the Hong Kong Educational and Cultural Program./aa

Kuwait's electoral committees announced on Sunday winners of 2020 parliamentary elections in five electoral districts held yesterday, according to the Kuwaiti News Agency.

The results of the 50-member unicameral National Assembly, which is directly elected every four years, were surprising as it led to all-male parliament and several previous lawmakers lost their seats.

None of the women candidates could make it to the assembly, while only 19 former members were reelected. As many as 326 candidates competed in the polls.

Strict anti-coronavirus measures were in place at the polling stations. The voting process started at 8 a.m (0500 GMT), and continued until 8 p.m. (1700 GMT).

Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah congratulated the winners, and issued a decree to hold the first regular session of the parliament's 16th legislative term on Dec. 15.

Meanwhile, as per protocol, Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Sabah tendered resignation along with his Cabinet.

The polls were the first since the new emir took office in September following the death of his half-brother, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, at age 91.

Political parties are banned in Kuwait, which adopted a parliamentary system in 1962.

Power remains concentrated in the royal family, and the emir chooses the prime minister and 15 of the 16 ministerial posts./aa

The Istanbul Airport saw the highest number of flights in Europe from Nov. 28 to Dec. 4, according to the European Organization for Air Navigation Safety (EUROCONTROL) on Sunday.

The airport saw 471 flights on Nov. 28, 542 flights on Nov. 29, and 496 flights on Nov. 30, according to EUROCONTROL.

It recorded 423 flights on Dec. 1, 498 flights on Dec. 2, 483 flights on Dec. 3, while 570 flights were registered on Friday.

“Leader of the week again!,” Istanbul Airport's operator IGA posted on Twitter.

“According to @eurocontrol data between November 28 to December 4, we have become the busiest airport. We wish everyone plenty more healthy and safe flights!” it added./aa

The first train carrying goods from Turkey to China arrived in the northwestern Kocaeli province on Sunday.

It stayed in Kocaeli for a while and then set off again.

The train, which will reach China in 12 days, is scheduled to leave Turkey on Dec. 8 by following the Ankara-Sivas-Kars route.

It will make a stop at the Akhalkalaki Station in Georgia, and then travel across Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan before entering China’s Xi'an province.

Operated in collaboration with the Turkish State Railways and Pacific Eurasia, the train will pass through two continents, two seas and five countries.

The 8,693-kilometer journey includes 2,323 kms in Turkey, 220 in Georgia, 430 in Azerbaijan, 420 in the Caspian Sea, 3,200 in Kazakhstan and 2,100 in China./aa

At least nine YPG/PKK terrorists were "neutralized "in northern Syria, the Turkish Ministry of National Defense said on Sunday.

In a statement, the ministry said that Turkish commandos conducted a successful operation in the Operation Peace Spring area and "neutralized" the terrorists, who attempted to disrupt the peace and security environment in the region.

Turkish authorities often use the word "neutralized" to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.

Since 2016, Turkey has launched a trio of successful anti-terror operations in northern Syria to prevent the formation of a terror corridor and to enable the peaceful settlement of residents: Euphrates Shield (2016), Olive Branch (2018), and Peace Spring (2019).

Terrorist groups – especially the YPG/PKK – sometimes try to infiltrate and attack these areas to disturb the peace and stability established by Turkey.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US, and the EU – has been responsible for the deaths of 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants.

The YPG is the PKK's Syrian offshoot./aa

India’s most recognized Muslim politician and President of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen Asaduddin Owaisi on Sunday asked people to "never forget" about the demolition of Babri Masjid. 

On Dec. 6, 1992, the 16th century mosque in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh was torn down by Hindu hardliners, who claimed the site was the birthplace of their God, Lord Ram.

"Remember & teach the next generation to remember: For 400+ years our Babri Masjid stood in Ayodhya. Our ancestors prayed in its hall, broke their fasts together in its courtyard & when they died, they were buried in the adjoining graveyard. Never forget this injustice," the lawmaker from Hyderabad tweeted.

"On the night of December 22-23, 1949, our Babri Masjid was desecrated & illegally occupied for 42 years. On this date in 1992, our masjid was demolished before the whole world. The men responsible for this did not see even a day's punishment. Never forget this injustice."

Last November, the Indian Supreme Court handed over the historic site to Hindus for the construction of a temple. It said that Muslims should be given alternate piece of land to build a mosque.

While Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Aug. 5 laid the foundation stone for a “grand” temple at the site, in September, a special court acquitted all the 32-surviving accused in the case, saying the demolition "was not pre-planned."

Meanwhile, Pakistan urged India to "ensure safety, security and protection" of minorities, particularly Muslims and their places of worship.

In a statement, the Foreign Ministry said the painful scenes of the demolition still remain fresh in the minds of not only Muslims but all conscionable persons in the world.

"Today is a sad reminder of the demolition of the historic Babri Masjid in India. On this day, 28 years ago, Hindu zealots of the RSS-inspired BJP, backed by the state apparatus, demolished the centuries-old Mosque in Ayodhya in an abominable act of anti-Muslim frenzy and blatant violation of religious and international norms," it said.

Islamabad called upon the international community, the UN and relevant international organizations to play their role in preserving the Islamic heritage sites in India from the "extremist ‘Hindutva’ regime and ensure protection of minorities in India."/aa

Over 100 people have been detained in Greece’s capital who gathered to mark the 12th anniversary of police killing of a 15-year-old boy on Sunday, local media reported.

Tension rose as police tried to disperse demonstrators that gathered in central Athens where the shooting took place, according to Athens-Macedonian News Agency.

The government had announced a ban on public gatherings of more than three people as a measure to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Some protesters tried to hold banners, but where stopped by the police.

Meanwhile, the Greek police said five policemen were injured following a mob attack outside the police station of Kolonos, a northwest suburb of Athens, on Saturday.

Nearly 80 people had been arrested, they said.

"Yesterday, on December 5, 2020 afternoon, nearly 80 people, with covered faces, wearing helmets and full-face hoods, tried to approach and attack the Kolonos police station," the police said.

"They cursed and attacked policemen of the DIAS unit who tried to block them. During the attack, which lasted approximately 10 minutes, they used wooden sticks, knives, penknives, fire extinguishers, teargas, and other objects,” they added.

Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15-year-old boy, was shot dead by police officer Epaminondas Korkoneas on Dec. 6, 2008 after officers approached a group of teens and allegedly provoked them. A verbal exchange ensued which led to the boy’s murder.

Grigoropoulos’ death triggered the worst riots seen in Athens since the fall of the Greek dictatorship in 1974.​​​​​​​/aa

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