I agree, its a illegitimate state within Palestine that now controls palestine with zoinist leaders. But hey, what is Pakistan? Homeland of Muslims created on Hindu land. A nation created after WW2 for religion. Used as a cold war tool. The similarities, are greater than the differences from a political perspective...it is undeniable. Pakistan in many ways is a mirror image of Israel.
I would rather not. Looking up old pre partition data is hard. But read a book or too man. I can't do all you homework. But regardless of the correct statistics...the current population of hindus should be listed as an endangered species. They aren't exactly safe or relevant in Pak. I find it hard to believe they willingly left during partition or after.
I don't know exactly as the numbers are fudged. Perhaps enemy properties act could shed some light. But that is the point. The demo-crazy of India has been keeping its muslims relatively safe, enough so that they are not leaving India nore are they under threat of extinction even with groups like RSS whom a relativly powerless beyond certain localities.
You should read this of how Muslims are persecuted in India.
HRW: BJP leaders publicly promoting Hindu supremacy
12 hours ago
Hindu activists protest the alleged storing of beef for consumption in Uttar Pradesh [Saurabh Das/AP]
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Members of India's ruling party have publicly promoted Hindu supremacy, which has led to attacks against Muslims and other minorities, Human Rights Watch claims.
Meanwhile, the government failed to prevent or promptly investigate attacks against victims, the group said on Thursday in its report on human rights in 2017.
"The government failed to promptly or credibly investigate the attacks, while many senior BJP leaders publicly promoted Hindu supremacy and ultra-nationalism, which encouraged further violence," the group said.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is India's ruling right-wing party, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi
"Indian authorities have proven themselves unwilling to protect minority religious communities and other vulnerable groups from frequent attack," said Meenakshi Ganguly, HRW's South Asia director, in a statement.
"There needs to be a serious effort to prevent future attacks and to prosecute all those responsible for the violence," she said.
HRW said there were at least 38 attacks against Muslims and other minority communities over the trade or slaughter of cows for beef in 2017. At least 10 people were killed.
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The lynching that changed India
Instead of punishing attackers, police officials often filed complaints against the victims under laws banning cow slaughter, the rights group said.
India's Hindu majority regard the cow as holy, and slaughtering the animal is banned in several states.
Since the BJP came to power in 2014, mob violence and lynchings against Muslims and Dalits have increased.
'Cow vigilantes'
In
May 2017, two Muslim men suspected of stealing cows died after being attacked by villagers in the northeastern state of Assam, according to local police.
In June, about 20 men beat four Muslims on a train in the outskirts of the capital, New Delhi, fatally stabbing a teenager and seriously injuring two others.
WATCH
02:02
India tightens beef-slaughtering laws amid controversy
Mohammed Akhlaque was beaten to death in Uttar Pradesh in September 2015 over rumours that he had slaughtered a cow.
His brother Jan Mohammed is also accused in a cow slaughtering case registered by the state police.
He expressed little optimism over receiving a verdict in the near future, but said "the courts were their last bastion of hope".
"Doesn't look like anything will change in 2018," Mohammed told Al Jazeera.
"My brother was murdered in September 2015, he added. "Charges in that case have not yet been framed."
"At this speed, the verdict will be pronounced in 30 years?"
'Failed the constitution'
Critics accuse far-right Hindu groups, some linked to the BJP, of fomenting violence against Muslims and lower-caste Hindus who eat beef or work in the meat and leather industries.
PM Modi denies the accusation and has publicly criticised so-called cow vigilantes.
Shabnam Hashmi, an activist at Act Now for Harmony and Democracy, a New Delhi-based human rights group, said she agreed with HRW's observations.
"The government has not just failed the minorities, it has failed the Indian constitution," she told Al Jazeera.
"The government is tacitly conniving in the anti-minority acts that's going on in the country today. It's open connivance.
"I have no hopes from this government. One only hopes that the people of this country will rise and defeat them."
Zeenat Saberin contributed to this report from New Delhi: @SaberinZe
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/...romoting-hindu-supremacy-180118095202152.html