India's PM launches contentious new temple

The controversial construction of a new Hindu temple on the site of a destroyed mosque has been launched by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Modi laid the foundation stone of the Rama Temple in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, months after India's Supreme Court ruled that the site should be given to Hindus.

Modi laid the foundation stone of the Rama Temple in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, months after India's Supreme Court ruled that the site should be given to Hindus. Source: EPA

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi took centre stage Wednesday at a ceremony laying the foundations for a temple at a flashpoint holy site exactly a year after imposing direct rule on Muslim-majority Kashmir.

The groundbreaking followed a ruling by India's Supreme Court that favoured the building of a Hindu temple on the location in the northern city of Ayodhya after a protracted legal dispute with Muslims over the land.

Hindus believe their god Ram was born at the site and Muslim invaders built a mosque on top of a temple there in 1528.

"India is creating a golden chapter in Ayodhya ... India is emotional and overjoyed as centuries of wait comes to an end today. Millions won't believe that they have seen this day in our lifetime," said Modi, whose Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party has had the construction of the temple as a long-standing campaign promise.

"For years, Our Ram Lalla (infant god Ram) lived beneath a tent, now he will reside in a grand temple that is being built by his devotees," Modi told a gathering of spiritual leaders that chanted 'Glory to Lord Ram' during his speech.

The site at Ayodhya, and divided Kashmir, have been two of the most divisive communal issues of the past 30 years in India, and Modi has attempted to draw a line under both.
For his fans, both steps confirm Mr Modi, elected to a second-straight term in a landslide last year, as a decisive, visionary and heroic leader, and India's most important in decades.

His critics see him as remoulding the officially secular country of 1.3 billion as a Hindu nation at the expense of India's 200 million Muslims, and taking it an authoritarian direction.

"Modi has certainly been India's most transformative leader in recent memory," Micheal Kugelman, from the Wilson Center, told AFP, making him "wildly popular, but also highly controversial and quite divisive".

The holy city of Ayodhya in northern India has long been a religious tinderbox, providing the spark for some of its worst sectarian violence.

In 1992, a Hindu mob destroyed a centuries-old mosque there that they believed had been built on the birthplace of Ram, an important deity.
Hindu devotees celebrate the laying of the foundation stone of the Rama temple in Ayodhya.
Hindu devotees celebrate the laying of the foundation stone of the Rama temple in Ayodhya. Source: EPA
This triggered religious riots that killed 2,000 people, most of them Muslims.

A lengthy legal battle ensued, but in November, India's top court awarded the site to Hindus, allowing a temple "touching the sky" to be built.

Wednesday's elaborate religious ceremony was shown live on television and was reportedly set to be beamed in Times Square in New York.

Small celebrations also took place across India.

A masked Modi, 69, shared the stage with the head of the RSS, the militaristic hardline Hindu group that is parent to the BJP and which Modi joined as a young man.

"Not only mankind, but the entire universe, all the birds and animals, are enthralled by this golden moment," chanted the main priest.

"(Modi) is going to make his position permanently in history purely on the strength of this temple," his biographer Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay told AFP.

Righting wrongs

Further cementing Mr Modi's place in his country's annals is Kashmir, divided between India and Pakistan since 1947 and the spark for two wars and the source of much bloodshed.

The BJP had long seen the special status enjoyed by the part of Kashmir controlled by India as a historical wrong, and on August 5 last year, Modi abolished it.

An accompanying security operation turned the region into a fortress for weeks, with all telecommunications cut and thousands taken into custody.

Even now, India has "maintained stifling restraints on Kashmiris in violation of their basic rights", according to Human Rights Watch.
People from outside Kashmir are now being granted the right to buy land for the first time.

This has ignited fears that Modi wants to change Kashmir's demographic makeup with an Israel-style "settler" project.

Fearing protests ahead of the anniversary, on Tuesday thousands of Indian troops imposed a tight curfew in Kashmir. The streets were all but deserted the following morning.

In Pakistan-administered Kashmir, Prime Minister Imran Khan, who on Tuesday released a new map showing all of Kashmir as part of Pakistan, was due to lead a protest march.

"We will never accept, and neither will the Kashmiris, the illegal Indian actions and oppression of the Kashmiri people," said Khan in a statement released on Wednesday.

Full steam ahead

Other actions have also alarmed Mr Modi's critics and delighted his fans.

Last year, a new law made it easier for millions of illegal immigrants from three neighbouring countries to get citizenship, but not if they are Muslims.

More may be in the pipeline, including a mooted nationwide register obliging people to prove they are Indian, and a uniform civil code doing away with Islamic rules in areas such as marriage.

"Clearly, it's full speed ahead with the Hindu nationalist agenda," Mr Kugelman said. 


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5 min read
Published 5 August 2020 9:56pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:22pm
Source: AAP, AFP, SBS


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