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'This Seat Is Not For Pakistanis Like You', Youths Humiliate Elderly Muslim Man In Delhi Metro

lol "Go back to Pakistan". It makes sense to say this to an immigrant in a foreign country, telling him to go back to the region he came from but wtf is the point of saying this to Indian Muslims? What do they have to do with Pakistan? :crazy:
 
Is there any other source or we are just going by what Kavita Krishnan shared on her facebook page?
me and you don't have a "source" of our birth, doesn't mean we both are bots.
 
I dunno the chap nor kavitha Krishnan. but the point they were making is absolutely true.
or do you think that the whole "episode" is fabricated to demean some party ?

Why not ?

Kavita Krishnan is not particularly known for her honesty. She is a propagandist for the communist.

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Nobody in their right mind would take her seriously.

me and you don't have a "source" of our birth, doesn't mean we both are bots.

Which is why personal details of people posting on anonymous internet forums are suspect.

However you are insisting that we all take kavita krishana at face value, when it is established that she has a history of propaganda.

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Majority of Indians are racist by nature especially when it comes to muslims. I guess the underpinning reason behind this mentality is the strange and unjust caste system that they have been following from centuries.
Majority of Pakistani on this forum are hindu bashers and hate hindus to the core. Why do you expect roses in return when you are full of thorns?
 
This Seat Is Not For Pakistanis Like You', Youths Allegedly Humiliate Elderly Muslim Man In Delhi Metro
"Go back to Pakistan."
25/04/2017 9:37 AM IST | Updated 1 hour ago
  • ANI
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GETTY IMAGES
NEW DELHI -- In yet another shocking case of religious discrimination, an aged Muslim man was denied a seat in Delhi metro by a group of youth, who hurled slurs and abuses at him over his appearance.

The incident took place in the violet line of Delhi Metro, where the young men turned down the request of a senior citizen of vacating a seat and told him to go to Pakistan if he wishes to get a seat in the coach.






Kavita Krishnan
23 April at 14:10 ·
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A Citizen Stands With Victim Of Communal Bullying

Last week, Comrade Santosh Roy, National Secretary of AICCTU and a long-standing leader of the DTC Workers’ Unity Centre, was traveling on the violet line of the Delhi metro. Opposite him, two young men were seated on the senior citizens’ seats. A senior citizen (who appeared to be Muslim because he had a beard and no moustache) came up to the young men and asked one of them to allow him to sit. The young men refused. When the senior citizen asked them again, the young men told him, “This seat is for Hindustanis not for Pakistanis like you. If you want a seat go to Pakistan and get it there.” Comrade Roy got up promptly and told the young men to apologize for their hate speech, and also to give the seat to the senior citizen. Some other young men came to the support of the two abusive young men, one of whom caught Comrade Roy by the collar and told him also to “Go to Pakistan.” Comrade Roy stood his ground, and several other passengers in the metro came to his support. When the metro stopped at Khan Market station, a guard entered the compartment. As the guard,

accompanied by Comrade Roy and the elderly Muslim gentleman, took the two young men to the police chowki at Pandara Road, the young men’s other ‘supporters’ promptly deserted them. A complaint was filed at the police station, though the two young men kept threatening ‘Hamare log aa rahe hain’ (Our supporters will come). The police offered to escort the elderly Muslim gentleman home, but he went home on his own. The next day onwards, Comrade Roy got calls from the police saying the young men wanted to apologize. He responded that he was not interested in an apology, and in any case the apology was not due to him in the first place, but to the elderly gentleman. Some days later Comrade Roy visited the police chowki. There, the elderly gentleman had given a written statement that he accepted the apology from the two young men and that he had forgiven them keeping in mind their young age. The young men were contrite and made many apologies to Comrade Roy also, while their parents, who were also present, said that their sons had done a shameful and wrong thing.
The elderly gentleman was generous enough not to pursue the complaint against the two young men. Perhaps, also, he did not want to pursue tedious and long-drawn out legal proceedings. But the most important thing is that a communal remark by two men did not go unchallenged by bystanders, ensuring that the men who made the remark had to withdraw it and apologize to their victim. Those men had been emboldened by the prevailing communal climate to think they could get away with abusing a Muslim person. Certainly, Comrade Roy’s intervention ensured that they will feel less bold in future and will think twice before doing such a thing. Perhaps they will also reflect on the immorality of their own behaviour – since it met with public opposition rather than public support.

In times when a communal climate is being manufactured all around us, it is important for every Indian to show active support for minorities when they are subjected to abuse, indignities or violence.

In 2014, after a gunman held people hostage at a café in Sydney, Australia, Muslims in Australian feared an Islamophobic backlash. Australians then used social media messages with the hashtag #illridewithyou (I’ll ride with you) offering to accompany Muslims on public transport. After a Muslim imam was shot dead in Queens in the USA in 2016, people in the US offered to walk Muslims to the mosque to ensure their safety, using the hashtag #IllWalkWithYou (I’ll walk with you).

With Muslims being lynched all over India in the name of cow protection, anti-Romeo squads and various other pretexts, Muslims in India are insecure in public spaces and even inside their own homes. Following a minor quarrel between children in a Meerut park, Muslim women were thrashed by women of the Valmiki community whose husbands shouted ‘Aa gaya hai tera baap Yogi’ (beware, you ‘father’ Yogi is here now). Every day, in public spaces, Muslims are subjected to hate speech, threats and violence. Kashmiri students and youth in various Indian campuses too are facing hate speech, threats and violence. Africans in India are frequently subjected to racist abuse and violence. Poor people are lynched in the name of being 'pickpockets' or thieves. We need to intervene to stop, prevent and resist such incidents.
It’s time for Indians to tell vulnerable Muslim people around them#IStandWithYou – and speak up against every incident of communal abuse, bullying, lynching, rumour-mongering.
Let us all be public spirited human beings like Comrade Santosh Roy and let Muslims, Kashmiris, Africans and people from other vulnerable communities that we are there for them. Let us stand with them and speak up for them when we hear them abused, threatened or attacked. Let us do what we can to prevent lynch mobs from forming around us on any pretext. Each of us can make a difference. Let us share and publicise such experiences so that we can encourage all Indians to stand up for the rights and dignity of vulnerable people.


The incident came to light after women's right activist Kavita Krishnan unfolded this shameful incident in her Facebook post.

According to the post, the National Secretary of AICCTU, Santosh Roy, intervened and came forward in support of the old man.

When Roy asked the young men to apologise to the man, they refused and also held Roy by his collar and allegedly told him to "Go to Pakistan".

Finally, when a guard entered the compartment at the Khan Market station. A complaint was filed at the Pandara Road police station where they were taken.

A few days later, when Roy visited the police station he came to know that the elderly man had decided not to pursue the complaint.

"The elderly gentleman had given a written statement that he accepted the apology from the two young men and that he had forgiven them keeping in mind their young age," Krishnan added.

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2017/0...s-and-not-for-pakistanis-like-you_a_22054170/


Senior Citizen With Beard And No Moustache Denied Seat On Delhi Metro, Told 'Go To Pakistan'


http://www.indiatimes.com/news/indi...old-go-to-pakistan-on-delhi-metro-276366.html


Seats for ‘Hindustanis not Pakistanis’: Young men humiliate elderly man in Delhi Metro

http://indianexpress.com/article/tr...delhi-metro-who-requested-for-a-seat-4626580/
In the mean time: https://tribune.com.pk/story/1393041/china-bans-religious-names-muslim-babies-xinjiang/
 
Neither do you guys for that matter.

Does not prevent the superiority complex many of you suffer from.

With the cliched "we ruled you for a thousand years" line.

Need to call a spade a spade Jana ji.

SO How Indian Muslims are responsible for cliche used by Pakistanis?
 
Majority of Pakistani on this forum are hindu bashers and hate hindus to the core. Why do you expect roses in return when you are full of thorns?

Is there any difference between Hindus and Hindutvas???

They are not.

That is completely 100% your own talent for hot air.

Credit where credit is due.

Then why Hindutvas are subjecting Indian Muslims to Hindutva hot air farts?
 
Then why Hindutvas are subjecting Indian Muslims to Hindutva hot air farts?

Those farts are completely 100% our own.

Again, credit where credit is due.

My suggestion, wholly voluntary, is that you should control your farts and we should try and control ours.

Would make this part of the world a better smelling place.
 

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