Last update:
The discourse of the Prime Minister at the Summit of Bharat 2025 of CNN-News18, delivered to possible protests in Muslim groups and opposition parties with respect to the law of the WAQF amendment, seemed directly to address the Government Challenge Museum …Read more
Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Rising Bharat 2025 Summit. (Photo: News18)
In the growing Bharat summit of CNN-News18, Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed on Tuesday the idea of India’s partition, stating that he did not originate from common Muslim families, but “some fundamentalists, who are not you are theheos Theos The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The Bared by, by it is Deyed by the Bealth.” “.” “.” “.” “.” “.” This also marked the first time that Prime Minister Modi discussed the WAQF issue from parliamentary approval and the presidential notification of the amendment law.
“The appeasement policy has a great challenge in the growth of India. Recently, the law related to WAQF was amended in Parliament. Its network has also discussed this. Prime Core main.
The discourse of Prime Minister Modi, pronounced in the face of possible protests in Muslim groups and opposition parties with respect to the WAQF amendment law, seemed directly to address the Muslim community and describe the government’s position against legal challenges to the new law. He affirmed that the appeasement and fundamentalist thinking supported by Congress led to the partition, negatively impacting many poor and backward Muslims, including women.
Drawing a parallel to the partition of India, the prime minister said: “This appeasement policy is not new. His seed sowed our struggle for freedom itself. Just think, before India, together with India, then. Who is the condition of independence how many broke with independence?
He emphasizes that the concept of a separate nation was not supported by common Muslim families. “Rather, it was some fundamentalists, who were fed by some leaders of the Congress so that they could become the only demanding power,” said Modi.
The prime minister argued that Congress and certain fundamentalist leaders won power and wealth through appeasement policy, but questioned the benefits for common Muslims. “What did the common Muslim obtain? What do Muslims from Pasmanda get? They denied illiteracy. They obtained unemployment. And what did Muslim women do?
Modi criticized appeasement as contrary to the principles of social justice of India, accusing Congress of using it for the policy of the voting bank. “The amendment carried out in the WAQF Law in 2013 was an attempt to please Muslim fundamentalists and land mafias. This law received such a way that it created an illusion of remaining above the Constitution. The Constitution, which opened the paths of justice, those same paths were reduced by the Waqf law. And what were its sick effects?
He cited Waqf claims over lands belonging to Christian villagers in Kerala, played lands from Gurdwara in Haryana, claims on the land of farmers in Karnataka and villages in several states, highlighting that thousands of hectares are entangled. “They are already temples, churches, gurdwaras, farms, government lands, no one was sure that their lands would continue to be his. Only a warning would come, and people would continue to look for documents for what Arirs and the farm, alone, to be fair, bewame, bec, bec or adice, be cust, or adice, for just osed the law was this?”
Modi confirmed the Parliament for enacting a “wonderful law” in the interest of the society and the Muslim community. “Now the sacred spirit of Waqf will be protected, and the rights of the poor, the Muslims, women and children of Pasmanda will also be protected,” he said.
The prime minister highlighted the debate of the WAQF bill as the second longest in the 75 -year -old parliamentary history of India. “Both houses discussed this bill for 16 hours. 38 JPC meetings were held, the discussions were heroes for 128 hours. Around an online suggestion of millions of rupees arrived throughout the country. This shows that today, democracy is not limited to competition. With public participation,” said Prime Minister.