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Call to scrap Muslim voting rights may lead to civil war: Aruna Roy
New Delhi, April 14
Social activist Aruna Roy
on Tuesday called for a public protest against Shiv Sena's demand for
revoking Muslims' voting rights, terming it as an "attack" on the
constitution that could potentially result in a civil war.
Attacking
the Sena mouthpiece "Saamana" that sought withdrawal of voting rights
to Muslims as a measure to end vote bank politics, Roy also hit out at
Hindu Mahasabha leader Sadhvi Deva Thakur who reportedly suggested
Muslims and Christians undergo sterilisation to restrict their growing
population that posed a threat to India.
"How do we allow these
things to be said in this country? There should be a public protest to
say this is something that we don't want. This is an attack on our
constitution, which is fundamental. This is going to fracture the
country and reduce us to a civil war," she said, while delivering the
seventh B.R. Ambedkar Memorial Lecture on "Is unbridled capitalism a
threat to constitutional democracy in India".
Exhorting people to
"protect dissent at all cost", Roy also expressed concern over the
government's move to freeze the accounts of Greenpeace India under the
Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA), saying the move indicated
the regime's intention to suppress dissent and deny constitutional
rights.
"The state is taking an extraordinary position with
respect to free speech. It is the constitution that is the collateral
victim in the case of Priya Pillai (Greenpeace India employee who was
reportedly stopped from going to London) or Greenpeace. We are denying
them constitutional rights," she said.
In the interest of
equality and justice, constitutional guarantees that she said were being
compromised, Roy said the struggle must be kept alive to safeguard the
basic structure of the Indian constitution laid down by Ambedkar.
Exuding
optimism, she noted that the "way to equality and justice is through
demanding and fighting for the dignity of the person. I feel
constitution has been kept alive by the struggles in India".