Another front: Hyderabad’s Muslims to bet on anyone but BJP frontrunner

Jama Masjid Imam says vote against divisive forces.


Aditi Phadnis April 25, 2014
BJP prime ministerial candidate and chief minister of Gujarat Narendra Modi waves to his supporters. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

HYDERABAD:


Wary of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Narendra Modi’s right-wing credentials, Hyderabad’s Muslim community would prefer casting their ballot for any candidate but the BJP frontrunner.


This Friday, ensconced amidst the historic 400-year old Jama Masjid adjoining the symbolic Charminar monument, the 38-year-old custodian of the mosque, Syed Shah Obeidullah Qadri, sent out a discrete but unmistakable message to his 1,000 strong audience of worshippers.

“I’m not telling you whom to vote for. But we have to prevent the country from being divided on religious lines. You have to select the candidate accordingly,” he said.



Shy of voicing open opposition to Modi, the custodian said, “I don’t want it to be binding on anyone. But you should think about how you can defeat divisive forces before you cast your vote.”

Recounting the preacher’s message, Syed Mohammad Ibrahim, 40, owner of a jewelry shop adjoining the Jama Masjid said the Old City would vote as it had always done – for the Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM), a local religious party.

The Muslims here are feeling really empowered. This is our day in the sun, said Khan in his office.

The choice is voting for Modi or voting to defeat him. So we have decided to vote against those candidates who will enable Modi to come to power, he said.

Interestingly, this time the difference is that MIM has a good chance of being more than just a kingmaker in the Assembly and an ally of the Congress in the centre; it is expected to get more than 20 per cent of the seats in the 119 member Telangana Assembly.



In recent weeks, the BJP has been in an overdrive, trying to win over states with a sizeable Muslim population.

According to the last census in Andhra Pradesh, there are about 12.5 per cent Muslims in the state. Similarly, in Telangana they are between 14 and 18 per cent.  The community is known to be deeply sensitive to the humiliation of watching the destruction of the Babri Masjid and arbitrary arrests that followed.

Hyderabad, the capital of Andhra Pradesh, was part of the empire of the Nizam of Hyderabad with a huge Muslim population. In the intervening period, the Muslim community has moved out of the city to settle elsewhere in the state, but a large population still lives in the old city, clustered tightly around the symbolic Charminar.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 26th, 2014.

COMMENTS (10)

Rahul Hari | 9 years ago | Reply

Total rubbish but then what else can you expect from a pakistani news site. Muslims form only 7% of the state population and 60% of whom live in Hyderabad. Whatever development took place here is because of the Telugu Desam Party supremo Chandrababu Naidu. MIM goondas led by owaisi think that hyderabad is their personal property. In fact the violence and riots stopped only when the army intervened.

G. Din | 9 years ago | Reply

This is good for BJP. Such exhortations generally motivate the opposite party even more.

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