With BJP rule, beef grows more political - Arab Times...rally” for female empowerment. Driven by...

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World News Roundup ARAB TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015 16 INTERNATIONAL Myanmar Subcontinent Island ban Opposition ‘faults’ poll YANGON, Oct 11, (Agencies): A sparsely populated cluster of Indian Ocean islands has become the unlikely focus of allegations that Myanmar’s government is spiking the chances of democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi’s opposition party in next month’s landmark general election. Both the rul- ing Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) and the Nobel peace laureate’s National League for Democracy (NLD) have fielded candi- dates on the Coco Islands, an archipelago off Myanmar’s west coast and the country’s smallest parliamentary constituency. But NLD parliamentary nominee Win Min has been prevented from going to the Coco Islands, where the main installation is a naval base, making it almost impossible for him to canvas for votes in the Nov 8 poll. The allegations undermine the semi-civilian government’s insis- tence that the election will be Myanmar’s first free and fair poll for 25 years, a milestone in its tran- sition from military dictatorship to democracy that will be closely watched by the international com- munity. Restricted “I believe if they let me go there, I will win,” said Win Min during an interview in Yangon, where he has recently been racking up a large mobile phone bill making calls to voters on the islands about 300 km (190 miles) away. The Coco Islands are a restricted area and transport links are sparse. A military plane flies every two weeks from Yangon, while a navy ship and a state-owned boat also make occasional trips. Win Min said he made plans three times to visit the islands since the campaign started on Sept. 8, once by boat and twice by plane. His scheduled boat trip was abrupt- ly canceled while he was waiting to board. He was told there was no space on two subsequent flights to the island. Win Min told Reuters that he rented a boat and had planned to set sail on his own on Sunday to the islands, a 36-hour journey from Yangon, but the government with- drew permission for the trip. Win Min’s USDP rival, Thet Swe, who until August served as commander-in-chief of the navy, has been able to campaign freely on the island. Although there are no reliable opinion polls, the USDP — which includes many members of Myanmar’s former junta — is expected to be beaten in many parts of the country by the NLD. However, the Coco Islands seat is considered to be a relatively easy win for the ruling party because of the development projects it has rolled out there and because many of the voters are military personnel or government officials. Western diplomats say the party has used a variety of tactics to trip up NLD candidates, but most overt- ly in seats where it wants to ensure a victory for its prominent leaders. Three senior USDP officials at party headquarters in the capital, Naypyitaw, declined to comment on why only their candidate was allowed access to the Coco Islands. Decision Thet Swe could not be reached for comment. The election commission says it has no say over whether the NLD candidate can visit the islands, and the decision is up to the Yangon regional government. Officials in the govern- ment of the country’s main city could not be reached for comment. “It is quite clear they don’t want us campaigning there,” said Win Htein, a senior NLD official, who accused authorities of “playing vol- leyball” with complaints filed by his party. Win Min sent campaign materi- als, notebooks emblazoned with Suu Kyi’s image and NLD head- bands, on a cargo ship bound for the islands last month. Hla Tun, a retired navy surgeon, and his wife have set up an NLD branch on Great Coco, the only inhab- ited island in the group. They have been quietly distributing the materi- als, but face also face challenges. “USDP members on the island are carrying out a whisper cam- paign, saying that those who vote for the NLD will get in trouble,” Hla Tun told Reuters by phone. The island’s population is around 1,900, according to census data. Most are military families, civil ser- vants and workers brought to the island to construct an airport. All require permission from authorities to come and go, a regulation that Win Min says he would abolish. Supporters of Pakistani cricketer-turned-opposition leader Imran Khan wave flags of the Pakistani Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, or Pakistan Movement for Justice, during a campaign meeting in Lahore ahead of the by-election for NA-122, a constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan, to be held on Oct 11. (Inset): Imran Khan waves to supporters. (AFP) In this photograph received from the Indian Presidential Palace on Oct 10, Indian President Pranab Mukherjee (left), walks with King Abdullah of Jordan ahead of a meeting at the Al Husseinieh Palace in Amman. Indian President Pranab Mukherjee is on an official visit to Jordan. (AFP) Sharif Oli PM pushes new peace talks: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Saturday said he is trying to revive peace talks with the Taleban after the lat- est round was derailed by untimely news of the death of leader Mullah Omar. Islamabad organised the first set of direct peace talks between the Taleban and the Afghan government in July, but another round was abandoned after the announcement of the cleric’s death. Since then the insurgents have unleashed a wave of violence, including seizing the northern Afghan provincial capital Kunduz in their most spectacular victory since being toppled from power in 2001. “We are now trying to resume the (peace) process and pray to God to crown our efforts with success”, Sharif said in televised remarks to the media from the eastern city of Lahore. “The news of Mullah Omar should not have been broken just before the start of the second round of talks”. Pakistan has historically supported the Taleban insurgents and many Afghans accuse it of nurturing militant sanctuaries on its soil in the hope of maintaining influence in Afghanistan. Afghanistan’s deputy army chief this week said Pakistan’s military had helped the Taleban to capture Kunduz and Pakistani generals had escaped the city wearing burqas — a claim they denied. News of Mullah Omar’s death created a rift among the Islamist insurgents, after they admitted that the death of the talis- manic one-eyed group founder had been kept secret for two years. (AFP) Swaraj visits Maldives: India’s India External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj visited the Maldives on Saturday amid signs of reviving relations with the neighboring archipelago state whose leaning toward China had angered the regional giant. Swaraj arrived in the capital Male and will lead the India-Maldives Joint Commission on Sunday, the Maldives for- eign ministry said in a statement. Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlier this year avoided Maldives in his tour of neighboring island states. He didn’t state a specific reason, however it was seen as an attempt to avoid controversy amid politi- cal turmoil in the Maldives following the arrest of a pro-India ex-president and the country’s increasing leaning toward China. Former President Mohamed Nasheed has since been convicted of ordering the military detention of a top judge while in Pakistani women drive pink auto-rickshaws during a rally in Lahore on Oct 10. The streets of the Pakistani city of Lahore were tickled pink when a group of women staged a rose-coloured ‘rickshaw rally’ for female empowerment. Driven by female representatives from local social groups and charities, the bright pink, covered three-wheeled motorcycles zipped through the city in a bid to highlight the challenges faced by Pakistani women. (AFP) Suu Kyi Pakistani ‘rickshaw’ rally call for equality LAHORE, Pakistan, Oct 11, (AFP): The streets of the Pakistani city of Lahore were tickled pink on Saturday, when a group of women staged a rose-coloured “rickshaw rally” for female empowerment. Driven by female representa- tives from local social groups and charities, the bright pink, covered three-wheeled motorcycles zipped through the city in a bid to highlight the challenges faced by Pakistani women. The project is the brain child of Zar Aslam, president of non-prof- it Environment Protection Fund (EPF), who launched the service exclusively for women after years of being harassed by male rick- shaw drivers. office three years ago and sentenced to 13 years in prison. (AP) Oli named new Nepal PM: Veteran KP Sharma Oli was chosen as Nepal’s new prime minister Sunday, charged with unifying the quake-hit nation after the adoption of a new constitution triggered deadly protests and a border blockade. Oli won 338 votes in a parliamentary ballot, easily defeating rival candidate Sushil Koirala who took 249, after he stepped down as premier as required by the constitution adopted on Sept 24. “I announce that respected member KP Sharma Oli has been elected to the post of Nepal’s prime minister”, speaker Subash Chandra Nembang told the parliament to loud cheers and claps. Oli of the Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist Leninist) has vowed to speed up rebuilding after an earthquake hit the impoverished nation in April and claimed nearly 8,900 lives. “Our country has been devastated by the earthquake. I will accelerate the recon- struction process”, he told lawmakers ahead of the vote. The 63-year-old will also have to quell continuing protests over the new constitu- tion and end a blockade which has led to nationwide fuel rationing. The constitution is aimed at bolstering the Himalayan country’s transformation to a peaceful democracy after decades of political instability and a civil war. (AFP) Communalism threatened country’s economic growth: PM With BJP rule, beef grows more political NEW DELHI, Oct 11, (AP): The leg- islator was full of outrage when he arrived in the north Indian village days after the killing of a Muslim farmer who was rumored to have slaughtered cows. A Hindu mob had smashed through the heavy wooden door to the man’s home, then beat him to death with his wife’s sewing machine. The legislator’s anger, though, was not about the killing. Instead, Sangeet Som was furious that men had been arrested in the attack in the village, just 30 miles from New Delhi. Som, a member of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, called the arrests “atroci- ties on innocent villagers.” As for the family of the dead man, he dismissed them as “those cow killers.” A few days later, a half-dozen BJP politicians slapped around a legislator on the floor of a state legislature, angry that he had served beef at a party. In south India, six members of a leftist student political party were sus- pended after their attempt to serve beef curry on campus to protest the farmer’s killing set off a melee. On Friday, violence swept another north- ern village amid rumors that a cow had been slaughtered, with a crowd, who had chased down two Muslim men they suspected of cow-killing, clash- ing with police and burning several cars. Some villagers and police were injured, but no major injuries were reported. Cows have long been sacred to Hindus, worshipped as a mother figure and associated since ancient times with the god Krishna. But increasing- ly, cows are also political. They have become a tool of political parties, an electioneering code word and a rally- ing cry for both Hindu nationalists and their opponents. On Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke his silence on the late September mob killing of Mohammad Akhlaq, saying commu- nalism threatened the country’s eco- nomic growth. “We should decide if Hindus want to fight Muslims or poverty. Muslims must decide if they want to fight Hindus or poverty,” Modi said at a campaign rally in Bihar state, where elections start next week. “It is unity, communal harmony, brotherhood and peace that will take the nation for- ward.” But Modi also rose to power as Hindu nationalist, and since his elec- tion last year hard-line Hindus have been demanding that India ban the sale of beef — a key industry within India’s poor, minority Muslim com- munity. In many Indian states, the slaughtering of cows and selling of beef are already either restricted or banned. Angrily In the past, Modi has spoken out angrily against India’s beef industry. “Brothers and sisters, I don’t know whether this saddens you, but my heart screams out” at the rise of Indian beef exports, Modi said in a 2012 speech. “I am unable to understand why you are silent, why you are taking this lying down.” Since becoming prime minister, though, he has danced delicately between an intense desire to be seen as a tolerant international statesman — the sort of man who is greeted warmly by presidents and jokes around with Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg — and the need to satisfy a political base that is deeply distrustful of Muslims and other minorities. That dance has, his critics say, emboldened extremist Hindus and given rise to everything from a series of church vandalisms to the recent mob killing. Criticism of cow slaugh- ter, some say, is often simply code for anti-Muslim sentiments. India, a country of 1.3 billion, is about 81 percent Hindu and 13 percent Muslim. Strong “I am afraid the hotheads will get busier. They are greatly encouraged and their strength is rather strong,” said Inder Malhotra, a political analyst and former editor of the Times of India newspaper. “One of the reasons this prime minister keeps quiet about it, is that he doesn’t want to lose these Hindus, because they are a very strong proportion of his supporters.” He criticized Modi for not speaking more strongly against the recent mob attack, and for his silence about com- ments like Som’s. “Modi has not said a word against those in his party who have been making the most obnoxious statements,” Malhotra said. Authorities are still investigating after the arrrests of eight villagers for Akhlaq’s death, but announced Friday that the meat found in his home turned out to be mutton — not beef. Meanwhile Som, the Hindu firebrand and avowed strict vegetarian, has denied media reports that he once owned part of a major Indian meat export company. The company exports goat and buffalo meat, but apparently not beef. Amid so much rancor, it is not hard to find people sympathetic to the attack on Akhlaq. “We should drink cow’s milk, not its blood,” Ram Mandal Das, a priest at a Hindu temple in New Delhi that also shelters abandoned cows, said Friday. “If someone attacks mother cow, or eats it, then this sort of reac- tion should happen,” he said of Akhlaq’s killing. “It is justified.” Modi supporters see some oppo- nents as deliberately provoking Hindus. Some “beef parties” — when beef is eaten in defiance of local laws — are clearly intended to invite a backlash and score political points against the BJP. Such actions “have pushed a socie- ty that worships the cow as mother to question the real motives of the secu- lars,” Tarun Vijay, a member of parlia- ment and top BJP official, wrote recently in The Indian Express. He also criticized the killing of Akhlaq, writing: “Lynching a person merely on suspicion is absolutely wrong.” ((Maybe: “Vijay left unsaid if he felt lynching was justified if there is evidence of cow slaughter.”??) The public bitterness on both sides hides the reality of much of Indian life, where Hindus and Muslims can live alongside one another for decades without incident. In Akhlaq’s village, for example, more than 100 Hindu villagers trekked to his family’s home a few days after the attack, to urge his family not to move away. Hindu leaders also pledged to ensure that upcoming Muslim marriages went ahead without incident.

Transcript of With BJP rule, beef grows more political - Arab Times...rally” for female empowerment. Driven by...

Page 1: With BJP rule, beef grows more political - Arab Times...rally” for female empowerment. Driven by female representa-tives from local social groups and charities, the bright pink,

World News Roundup

ARAB TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015

16INTERNATIONAL

Myanmar

Subcontinent

Island ban

Opposition‘faults’ pollYANGON, Oct 11, (Agencies): Asparsely populated cluster of IndianOcean islands has become theunlikely focus of allegations thatMyanmar’s government is spikingthe chances of democracy iconAung San Suu Kyi’s oppositionparty in next month’s landmark

general election.Both the rul-

ing UnionSolidarity andD e v e l o p m e n tParty (USDP)and the Nobelpeace laureate’sNational Leaguefor Democracy(NLD) havefielded candi-dates on the

Coco Islands, an archipelago offMyanmar’s west coast and thecountry’s smallest parliamentaryconstituency.

But NLD parliamentary nomineeWin Min has been prevented fromgoing to the Coco Islands, where themain installation is a naval base,making it almost impossible for himto canvas for votes in the Nov 8 poll.

The allegations undermine thesemi-civilian government’s insis-tence that the election will beMyanmar’s first free and fair pollfor 25 years, a milestone in its tran-sition from military dictatorship todemocracy that will be closelywatched by the international com-munity.

Restricted “I believe if they let me go there,

I will win,” said Win Min during aninterview in Yangon, where he hasrecently been racking up a largemobile phone bill making calls tovoters on the islands about 300 km(190 miles) away.

The Coco Islands are a restrictedarea and transport links are sparse.A military plane flies every twoweeks from Yangon, while a navyship and a state-owned boat alsomake occasional trips.

Win Min said he made plansthree times to visit the islands sincethe campaign started on Sept. 8,once by boat and twice by plane.His scheduled boat trip was abrupt-ly canceled while he was waiting toboard. He was told there was nospace on two subsequent flights tothe island.

Win Min told Reuters that herented a boat and had planned to setsail on his own on Sunday to theislands, a 36-hour journey fromYangon, but the government with-drew permission for the trip.

Win Min’s USDP rival, ThetSwe, who until August served ascommander-in-chief of the navy,has been able to campaign freely onthe island.

Although there are no reliableopinion polls, the USDP — whichincludes many members ofMyanmar’s former junta — isexpected to be beaten in many partsof the country by the NLD.

However, the Coco Islands seatis considered to be a relatively easywin for the ruling party because ofthe development projects it hasrolled out there and because manyof the voters are military personnelor government officials.

Western diplomats say the partyhas used a variety of tactics to tripup NLD candidates, but most overt-ly in seats where it wants to ensurea victory for its prominent leaders.

Three senior USDP officials atparty headquarters in the capital,Naypyitaw, declined to commenton why only their candidate wasallowed access to the Coco Islands.

Decision Thet Swe could not be reached

for comment.The election commission says it

has no say over whether the NLDcandidate can visit the islands, and thedecision is up to the Yangon regionalgovernment. Officials in the govern-ment of the country’s main city couldnot be reached for comment.

“It is quite clear they don’t wantus campaigning there,” said WinHtein, a senior NLD official, whoaccused authorities of “playing vol-leyball” with complaints filed byhis party.

Win Min sent campaign materi-als, notebooks emblazoned withSuu Kyi’s image and NLD head-bands, on a cargo ship bound forthe islands last month.

Hla Tun, a retired navy surgeon,and his wife have set up an NLDbranch on Great Coco, the only inhab-ited island in the group. They havebeen quietly distributing the materi-als, but face also face challenges.

“USDP members on the islandare carrying out a whisper cam-paign, saying that those who votefor the NLD will get in trouble,”Hla Tun told Reuters by phone.

The island’s population is around1,900, according to census data.Most are military families, civil ser-vants and workers brought to theisland to construct an airport. Allrequire permission from authoritiesto come and go, a regulation thatWin Min says he would abolish.

Supporters of Pakistani cricketer-turned-opposition leader Imran Khan wave flags of the Pakistani Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, or Pakistan Movement for Justice, during a campaign meeting in Lahoreahead of the by-election for NA-122, a constituency for the National Assembly of Pakistan, to be held on Oct 11. (Inset): Imran Khan waves to supporters. (AFP)

In this photograph received from theIndian Presidential Palace on Oct 10,Indian President Pranab Mukherjee(left), walks with King Abdullah ofJordan ahead of a meeting at the AlHusseinieh Palace in Amman. IndianPresident Pranab Mukherjee is on an

official visit to Jordan. (AFP)

Sharif Oli

PM pushes new peace talks:Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharifon Saturday said he is trying to revivepeace talks with the Taleban after the lat-est round was derailed by untimely newsof the death of leader Mullah Omar.

Islamabad organised the first set ofdirect peace talks between the Talebanand the Afghan government in July, butanother round was abandoned after theannouncement of the cleric’s death.

Since then the insurgents haveunleashed a wave of violence, includingseizing the northern Afghan provincialcapital Kunduz in their most spectacularvictory since being toppled from power in2001.

“We are now trying to resume the(peace) process and pray to God to crownour efforts with success”, Sharif said intelevised remarks to the media from theeastern city of Lahore.

“The news of Mullah Omar should nothave been broken just before the start ofthe second round of talks”.

Pakistan has historically supported theTaleban insurgents and many Afghansaccuse it of nurturing militant sanctuarieson its soil in the hope of maintaininginfluence in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan’s deputy army chief thisweek said Pakistan’s military had helpedthe Taleban to capture Kunduz andPakistani generals had escaped the citywearing burqas — a claim they denied.

News of Mullah Omar’s death created arift among the Islamist insurgents, afterthey admitted that the death of the talis-manic one-eyed group founder had beenkept secret for two years. (AFP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Swaraj visits Maldives: India’s

India

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swarajvisited the Maldives on Saturday amid signsof reviving relations with the neighboringarchipelago state whose leaning towardChina had angered the regional giant.

Swaraj arrived in the capital Male andwill lead the India-Maldives Joint

Commission on Sunday, the Maldives for-eign ministry said in a statement.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi earlierthis year avoided Maldives in his tour ofneighboring island states. He didn’t state aspecific reason, however it was seen as anattempt to avoid controversy amid politi-

cal turmoil in the Maldives following thearrest of a pro-India ex-president and thecountry’s increasing leaning towardChina.

Former President Mohamed Nasheedhas since been convicted of ordering themilitary detention of a top judge while in

Pakistani women drive pink auto-rickshaws during a rally in Lahore on Oct 10.The streets of the Pakistani city of Lahore were tickled pink when a group ofwomen staged a rose-coloured ‘rickshaw rally’ for female empowerment.Driven by female representatives from local social groups and charities, thebright pink, covered three-wheeled motorcycles zipped through the city in a bid

to highlight the challenges faced by Pakistani women. (AFP)

Suu Kyi

Pakistani ‘rickshaw’rally call for equalityLAHORE, Pakistan, Oct 11,(AFP): The streets of the Pakistanicity of Lahore were tickled pink onSaturday, when a group of womenstaged a rose-coloured “rickshawrally” for female empowerment.

Driven by female representa-tives from local social groups andcharities, the bright pink, coveredthree-wheeled motorcycleszipped through the city in a bid tohighlight the challenges faced byPakistani women.

The project is the brain child ofZar Aslam, president of non-prof-it Environment Protection Fund(EPF), who launched the serviceexclusively for women after yearsof being harassed by male rick-shaw drivers.

office three years ago and sentenced to 13years in prison. (AP)

❑ ❑ ❑

Oli named new Nepal PM: VeteranKP Sharma Oli was chosen as Nepal’snew prime minister Sunday, charged withunifying the quake-hit nation after theadoption of a new constitution triggereddeadly protests and a border blockade.

Oli won 338 votes in a parliamentaryballot, easily defeating rival candidateSushil Koirala who took 249, after hestepped down as premier as required bythe constitution adopted on Sept 24.

“I announce that respected member KPSharma Oli has been elected to the post ofNepal’s prime minister”, speaker SubashChandra Nembang told the parliament toloud cheers and claps.

Oli of the Communist Party of Nepal(Unified Marxist Leninist) has vowed tospeed up rebuilding after an earthquakehit the impoverished nation in April andclaimed nearly 8,900 lives.

“Our country has been devastated bythe earthquake. I will accelerate the recon-struction process”, he told lawmakersahead of the vote.

The 63-year-old will also have to quellcontinuing protests over the new constitu-tion and end a blockade which has led tonationwide fuel rationing.

The constitution is aimed at bolsteringthe Himalayan country’s transformation toa peaceful democracy after decades ofpolitical instability and a civil war. (AFP)

Communalism threatened country’s economic growth: PM

With BJP rule, beef grows more politicalNEW DELHI, Oct 11, (AP): The leg-islator was full of outrage when hearrived in the north Indian village daysafter the killing of a Muslim farmerwho was rumored to have slaughteredcows. A Hindu mob had smashedthrough the heavy wooden door to theman’s home, then beat him to deathwith his wife’s sewing machine.

The legislator’s anger, though, wasnot about the killing. Instead, SangeetSom was furious that men had beenarrested in the attack in the village,just 30 miles from New Delhi. Som, amember of India’s ruling BharatiyaJanata Party, called the arrests “atroci-ties on innocent villagers.” As for thefamily of the dead man, he dismissedthem as “those cow killers.”

A few days later, a half-dozen BJPpoliticians slapped around a legislatoron the floor of a state legislature,angry that he had served beef at aparty. In south India, six members of aleftist student political party were sus-pended after their attempt to servebeef curry on campus to protest thefarmer’s killing set off a melee. OnFriday, violence swept another north-ern village amid rumors that a cow hadbeen slaughtered, with a crowd, whohad chased down two Muslim menthey suspected of cow-killing, clash-ing with police and burning severalcars. Some villagers and police wereinjured, but no major injuries werereported.

Cows have long been sacred toHindus, worshipped as a mother figureand associated since ancient timeswith the god Krishna. But increasing-ly, cows are also political. They havebecome a tool of political parties, anelectioneering code word and a rally-

ing cry for both Hindu nationalists andtheir opponents.

On Thursday, Prime MinisterNarendra Modi broke his silence onthe late September mob killing ofMohammad Akhlaq, saying commu-nalism threatened the country’s eco-nomic growth.

“We should decide if Hindus wantto fight Muslims or poverty. Muslimsmust decide if they want to fightHindus or poverty,” Modi said at acampaign rally in Bihar state, whereelections start next week. “It is unity,communal harmony, brotherhood andpeace that will take the nation for-ward.”

But Modi also rose to power asHindu nationalist, and since his elec-tion last year hard-line Hindus havebeen demanding that India ban the saleof beef — a key industry withinIndia’s poor, minority Muslim com-munity. In many Indian states, theslaughtering of cows and selling ofbeef are already either restricted orbanned.

AngrilyIn the past, Modi has spoken out

angrily against India’s beef industry.“Brothers and sisters, I don’t know

whether this saddens you, but my heartscreams out” at the rise of Indian beefexports, Modi said in a 2012 speech.“I am unable to understand why youare silent, why you are taking thislying down.”

Since becoming prime minister,though, he has danced delicatelybetween an intense desire to be seen asa tolerant international statesman —the sort of man who is greeted warmlyby presidents and jokes around with

Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg — andthe need to satisfy a political base thatis deeply distrustful of Muslims andother minorities.

That dance has, his critics say,emboldened extremist Hindus andgiven rise to everything from a seriesof church vandalisms to the recentmob killing. Criticism of cow slaugh-ter, some say, is often simply code foranti-Muslim sentiments.

India, a country of 1.3 billion, isabout 81 percent Hindu and 13 percentMuslim.

Strong“I am afraid the hotheads will get

busier. They are greatly encouragedand their strength is rather strong,”said Inder Malhotra, a political analystand former editor of the Times of Indianewspaper. “One of the reasons thisprime minister keeps quiet about it, isthat he doesn’t want to lose theseHindus, because they are a very strongproportion of his supporters.”

He criticized Modi for not speakingmore strongly against the recent mobattack, and for his silence about com-ments like Som’s. “Modi has not saida word against those in his party whohave been making the most obnoxiousstatements,” Malhotra said.

Authorities are still investigatingafter the arrrests of eight villagers forAkhlaq’s death, but announced Fridaythat the meat found in his home turnedout to be mutton — not beef.Meanwhile Som, the Hindu firebrandand avowed strict vegetarian, hasdenied media reports that he onceowned part of a major Indian meatexport company. The company exportsgoat and buffalo meat, but apparently

not beef.Amid so much rancor, it is not hard

to find people sympathetic to theattack on Akhlaq.

“We should drink cow’s milk, notits blood,” Ram Mandal Das, a priestat a Hindu temple in New Delhi thatalso shelters abandoned cows, saidFriday. “If someone attacks mothercow, or eats it, then this sort of reac-tion should happen,” he said ofAkhlaq’s killing. “It is justified.”

Modi supporters see some oppo-nents as deliberately provokingHindus. Some “beef parties” — whenbeef is eaten in defiance of local laws— are clearly intended to invite abacklash and score political pointsagainst the BJP.

Such actions “have pushed a socie-ty that worships the cow as mother toquestion the real motives of the secu-lars,” Tarun Vijay, a member of parlia-ment and top BJP official, wroterecently in The Indian Express.

He also criticized the killing ofAkhlaq, writing: “Lynching a personmerely on suspicion is absolutelywrong.” ((Maybe: “Vijay left unsaid ifhe felt lynching was justified if there isevidence of cow slaughter.”??)

The public bitterness on both sideshides the reality of much of Indian life,where Hindus and Muslims can livealongside one another for decadeswithout incident.

In Akhlaq’s village, for example,more than 100 Hindu villagers trekkedto his family’s home a few days afterthe attack, to urge his family not tomove away. Hindu leaders alsopledged to ensure that upcomingMuslim marriages went ahead withoutincident.