Asking Modi’s India to help peace in Palestine shows the UN’s incredible lack of judgement

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by Nasim Ahmed

06 Mar 2020; MEMO: The UN decision to seek India’s assistance in resolving the Palestine-Israel conflict is not only inexplicable, but also shows an incredible lack of judgement.

Injecting some new blood into the so-called peace process — which, let’s be honest, has been a spectacular failure — may well be a good idea, but surely there are better candidates than a country led by a Prime Minister with hands covered in Muslim blood and pushing an ideology built upon Hindu supremacy.

The context of the proposal could not be worse. Only a matter of days separated the UN delegation to New Delhi and the deadly sectarian violence targeting Muslims in the Indian capital. The violence over three days and nights killed 46 people, mainly Muslims, as mobs of Hindu supremacists rampaged through the streets in what looked distinctly like a murderous pogrom.

“The brutal and unchecked violence growing across Delhi cannot continue,” said the head of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), Anurima Bhargava. The commission was founded in 1998 to keep a check on religious freedom across the globe. Bhargava called on the Indian government to take “swift action to ensure the safety of all of its citizens,” and expressed concern at reports that the Indian police stood by as mobs attacked their Muslim neighbours. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government was accused of “failing in its duty to protect its citizens.”

The USCIRF also raised wider concerns over what it described as attempts by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government to “disenfranchise Muslims across the country, in clear violation of international human rights standards.”

This appeared not to unsettle the UN delegation, which stressed India’s long tradition of supporting the Palestinians. During their two-day visit, the UN delegation led by Senegal’s permanent representative to the UN, Cheik Niang, met with senior ministers in the Modi government. Speaking to journalists on Tuesday, Niang said that there was no weakening of India’s support for the Palestinian cause.

At the same press conference, Palestinian diplomat Majed Bamya dismissed claims that India had changed its position on Palestine in favour of Israel. He explained that Israel wanted to give the impression that there would be a “major shift” in India’s policy but that was not the case. “We have to acknowledge as reality that it has not happened,” he is reported as saying.

Such sanguine remarks are actually a world away from reality. India, enthralled as it is by Hindu supremacism, has discovered political, economic and, more importantly, ideological affinity with Israel that make any claims about its ability to play a neutral role in the conflict preposterous. Some have even suggested that India’s relations with Israel are such that it is now deeply “complicit in Israel’s regime of military occupation, settler colonialism and apartheid.”

Calling on India to mediate between Israel and Palestine in the aftermath of such riots undermines everything the UN claims to stand for. India under Modi is not the same India that joined 72 other nations to vote in favour of the 1975 UN Resolution denouncing Zionism as “a form of racism and racial discrimination”. At the time, India was part of the Non-Aligned Movement during the Cold War and played a trailblazing role in the isolation of Israel’s close collaborator, Apartheid South Africa.

Nor is today’s India the same as that of the country’s founding father, Mahatma Gandhi. The revered leader had opposed the Zionist state believing it to be a colonial enterprise. He considered the idea of a Jewish national home in Palestine, as espoused by Zionism, to be an expression of ethno-nationalism, inimical to the values of secular liberal democracy.

The inspiration for the extremist who assassinated Gandhi in 1948, just a few months after India achieved its independence from Britain, was the same as that now espoused by Modi: the Hindu supremacism of Hindutva. “The roots of Hindutva and Hindu Rashtra,” as explained here, “lie in an attempt to create a Hindu nation modelled on the European nation-state through the enforced cultural homogenisation of the entire population, especially religious minorities.”

Echoing Nazism, Hindutva devotees deplore India’s diversity and seek to create a nation out of a common race, a homogenous culture and civilisation. Just as the Nazis believed that Jews could not belong to the German people, Hindu supremacists reject Muslims and Christians as outsiders.

Highlighting the extent to which India has turned its back on the universalist vision of Gandhi is its solidarity with extreme versions of Zionism represented by Benjamin Netanyahu who, with a coalition of far-right parties, has become the longest serving Prime Minister of Israel.

Zionism and Hindutva are cousins, as I argued in a previous article. Both are political ideologies and subscribe to the same concept of a far-right ethno-nationalist movement that uses religion to achieve its aims. Furthermore, both misrepresent history to justify atrocities against minorities in pursuit of an exclusivist and discriminatory political vision.

 

This article was originally published in Middle East Monitor on March 06, 2020.

*Opinions expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect the views of UMMnews.