Iran calls for an end to 'massacre of Muslims' in India
Hearts of Muslims all over world are grieving over massacre of Muslims in India, tweets supreme leader
TEHRAN:
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged India on Thursday to “confront extremist Hindus” and “stop the massacre of Muslims”, adding to the international fallout over deadly anti-Muslim violence in New Delhi.
Dozens of people were killed and hundreds injured, while at least two mosques were attacked in the worst communal riots in the Indian capital in decades, triggered by clashes between supporters of a new citizenship law and those against it.
“The hearts of Muslims all over the world are grieving over the massacre of Muslims in India,” Khamenei said in a tweet in English, just days after New Delhi rebuked Iran’s foreign minister for commenting on the same issue.
“Iran condemns the wave of organised violence against Indian Muslims,” Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted on Monday, in response to which New Delhi summoned the Iran’s ambassador and lodged a protest.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani also expressed concern about the plight of Muslims in the South Asian nation, and urged the Indian government to prevent sectarian violence in the country. Larijani said that the new law was a contravention of Muslim rights.
The Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) passed by the Indian parliament in December last year has sparked protests and riots across the country. It grants citizenship to non-Muslim migrants from three neighbouring countries.
Riots in northeast Delhi after clashes between protesters for and against a controversial law turned violent, killing at least 47 people.
The violence mainly centred around Muslim-majority neighbourhoods with hundreds of shops and homes being burnt.
Independent analysts say the law discriminates against Muslims and violates the spirit of India’s secular constitution.
Earlier this week, the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights approached India’s Supreme Court about the citizenship law.
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged India on Thursday to “confront extremist Hindus” and “stop the massacre of Muslims”, adding to the international fallout over deadly anti-Muslim violence in New Delhi.
Dozens of people were killed and hundreds injured, while at least two mosques were attacked in the worst communal riots in the Indian capital in decades, triggered by clashes between supporters of a new citizenship law and those against it.
“The hearts of Muslims all over the world are grieving over the massacre of Muslims in India,” Khamenei said in a tweet in English, just days after New Delhi rebuked Iran’s foreign minister for commenting on the same issue.
“Iran condemns the wave of organised violence against Indian Muslims,” Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted on Monday, in response to which New Delhi summoned the Iran’s ambassador and lodged a protest.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani also expressed concern about the plight of Muslims in the South Asian nation, and urged the Indian government to prevent sectarian violence in the country. Larijani said that the new law was a contravention of Muslim rights.
The Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) passed by the Indian parliament in December last year has sparked protests and riots across the country. It grants citizenship to non-Muslim migrants from three neighbouring countries.
Riots in northeast Delhi after clashes between protesters for and against a controversial law turned violent, killing at least 47 people.
The violence mainly centred around Muslim-majority neighbourhoods with hundreds of shops and homes being burnt.
Independent analysts say the law discriminates against Muslims and violates the spirit of India’s secular constitution.
Earlier this week, the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights approached India’s Supreme Court about the citizenship law.