Watch: Solitary woman in London protests against mob lynchings in India
Dressed in a salwar kameez, her head covered, a middle-aged, bespectacled woman stood in protest alone outside Bharat Bhavan in London.
Hats off to this lady who had so much guts to protest alone in central London against Mob lynchings.. pic.twitter.com/i5isxoXXik
— Dr Irfan N (@drirfan1978) June 30, 2019
How many voices make a protest?
Even one is enough.
Those passing by Bharat Bhavan, the Indian centre for arts in central London on Monday, would have witnessed an unusual sight. Dressed in a salwar kameez, her head covered, a middle-aged bespectacled woman stood poised to protest – all alone.
A square placard in her hand bore an image of Tabrez Ansari, the 22-year-old who died after being assaulted by a mob on suspicion of theft in Jharkhand. “Please stop mob lynching in India,” she said, as the camera panned to her. “Please stop it!”
Her voice cracks a little.
“Muslims are 30 crore in India – if you don’t stop then India will become Bosnia and Chechniya,” she warned, citing the social unrest that several European countries have seen over the past five years.
The woman’s impassioned plea against mob violence was posted online by London-based orthopaedician N Irfan, who tweeted, “Hats off to this lady who had so much guts to protest alone in central London against mob lynchings.”
Within hours the video attracted praise for the woman’s courage.
Malegaon saw country’s biggest protest against mob lynching today.Over 1 lakh turnout. Thought of this line by Urdu poet Sahir Ludhyanvi:tum ne jis ḳhuun ko maqtal meñ dabānā chāhā / aaj vo kūcha o bāzār meñ aa niklā hai #MobLynching#IndiaAgainstLynchTerror #Malegaon pic.twitter.com/lFuXsVakxI
— مبشر مشتاق Mubasshir Mushtaq (@MubasshirM) July 1, 2019
In India, over one lakh people from the Muslim community came out onto the roads of Malegaon in Maharashtra to protest against lynchings in India. The rally, which culminated at Malegaon’s Shahidon ki Yaadgaar or martyrs’ memorial – where seven freedom fighters were hanged by the British in 1922 – saw fiery speeches and a demand that the government make a national anti-lynching law.
Malegaon politician Mufti Mohammed Ismail Qasmi evoked the words of the poet Fayaz as he said, “Aaj agar nishane mein hum hain, toh doosre logon ko khush nahi hona chahiye [If today we are being targeted others should not be happy about it],” reported The Indian Express.
A similar protest against lynchings in Jharkhand turned violent in Agra’s Sadar Bhatti area on Monday, leading to stone-pelting.
A mob engaged in stone pelting after forcing local shopkeepers to shut down market to observe death of 22-year-old Tabrez Ansari, victim of Jharkhand mob lynching. According to eye witness, after offering prayer, the men head toward sensitive communal area of Sadar Bhatti 1/2 pic.twitter.com/VOi48Yvwbh
— TOIWestUP (@TOIWestUP) July 1, 2019