




While many in the BJP are known to believe in the “all Muslims may not be terrorists, but all terrorists are invariably Muslims” dictum, the former BJP president said: “Muslims opted for India out of their love for this land during Partition. Arguments like these don’t do justice to them at all.”
It is a rare instance when a mainline BJP leader has questioned the stereotypes in the discourse on terror. BJP president Rajnath Singh, for instance, reiterated on Sunday the need for a stringent anti-terror law. In his recent interventions, party general secretary Arun Jaitley, on the other hand, has expressed concern over the new phenomenon of “home-grown terror” besides the relatively “well-off, educated youth” taking to terror.
Asked about this sudden shift in the BJP’s well-known stance on the issue, Venkaiah said: “Terrorists have no religion. Ninety-five per cent of the arrested Naxalites happen to be Hindus. Do we ever call them Hindu terrorists? Some parties have tried hard to link terror with certain religions so as to use certain communities as vote banks. We must not fall into their trap. At the same time, however, we must not be blind to the danger posed by international terrorist organisations feeding on religion.”
On why shouldn’t the same logic be applied to Jamia Millia Islamia whose vice-chancellor Prof Mushirul Hasan has come under a scathing attack from the BJP for offering legal help to a couple of students alleged to have a hand in the Delhi blasts, Venkaiah said: “Is this the responsibility of a public-funded university? Would they have taken the...


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