Why world cannot ignore rising hate and violence in India
When a senior Indian leader aligned with ruling party invokes Gaza-style violence, it is not fringe talk, but a warning sign that demands urgent global attention
By Shabana Ayaz
The world must take urgent note of what is unfolding in India today, where a senior, mainstream political leader recently publicly invoked the destruction of Gaza as a “lesson” to be applied not only to Bangladesh but, by clear implication, to Muslims within India itself.
This is not a stray provocation from the margins. It is a signal of how far extreme rhetoric has traveled into the heart of Indian politics and why international silence is no longer an option.
At the center of this moment is Suvendu Adhikari, a prominent figure in the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ecosystem and the current Leader of the Opposition in the West Bengal State Assembly.
Speaking on December 26, 2025, outside the Bangladesh Deputy High Commission in Kolkata, Adhikari declared that Bangladesh should be taught “the same lesson that Israel taught Gaza.” The remark was delivered in the context of protests over reported attacks on Hindus in Bangladesh. But its meaning cannot be confined to cross-border anger alone.
By invoking Gaza, Adhikari referenced one of the most devastating military campaigns of recent times, marked by mass civilian deaths, large-scale destruction, famine, and widespread displacement.
International human rights organizations, UN experts, and global civil society have deplored the Gaza war in the strongest possible terms, with many calling it genocidal in nature. To cite such devastation as a model or “lesson” is not mere hyperbole. It is an endorsement of collective punishment and mass violence.
Crucially, Adhikari did not speak as an isolated radical. He is a mainstream politician with a serious claim to power. He is openly aspiring to become the chief minister of West Bengal in the April 2026 assembly elections.
His political biography itself underlines this point. He is not a lifelong fringe ideologue. His father was a senior Congress leader. Adhikari himself has been associated in the past with the Congress and later the Trinamool Congress before joining the BJP. His rise reflects a broader normalization of hardline rhetoric within India’s political mainstream.
That is why his words carry a deeper and more dangerous resonance. While the sentence explicitly mentioned Bangladesh, critics across India have pointed out that the subtext extends inward, primarily targeting Muslims, a minority of more than 230 million people.
When a senior leader uses Gaza as a metaphor for how to “teach a lesson,” it inevitably echoes as a threat against India’s own Muslim population, which numbers more than 220 million. In a political climate already saturated with anti-Muslim narratives, such language lands not as abstraction but as menace.
This is the reality Indian Muslims face in 2025. They live in a country where a leading political figure can publicly reference a war marked by mass civilian death and face no immediate political or legal consequences. News emanating from the country on an everyday basis substantiates such claims. This is not an accident. It reflects a broader shift in which dehumanizing language toward minorities has become normalized under the umbrella of Hindutva ideology.
Deterioration of minority rights
The deterioration of minority rights in India over the past year has been well documented. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have repeatedly warned of systemic discrimination, the use of collective punishment, and the erosion of religious freedom.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has again flagged India as a country of particular concern, citing rising hostility toward Muslims and Christians and the failure of authorities to hold perpetrators accountable.
Practices such as so-called bulldozer justice have become emblematic of this trend. Muslim homes, shops, and places of worship have been demolished under the guise of law enforcement, often following protests or allegations of unrest.
Courts have questioned the legality of these demolitions, yet the practice continues, reinforcing a message of collective punishment. Alongside this, laws such as the Citizenship Amendment Act deepen fears of disenfranchisement by explicitly excluding Muslims from fast-tracked citizenship pathways.
Christians, too, have faced an alarming surge in violence. The Christmas season of 2025 was marked not by peace but by intimidation and attacks across several Indian states. Monitoring groups recorded hundreds of incidents, ranging from vandalism of churches to assaults on worshippers and disruption of carol singing.
Organizations linked to the Hindutva movement, including the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, Vishva Hindu Parishad, and Bajrang Dal, were repeatedly named in reports by civil society groups. In many cases, anti-conversion laws were misused, and police action targeted victims rather than attackers.
Muslim women have been subjected to a parallel campaign of humiliation and control. Incidents of mobs attempting to forcibly remove hijabs or harass women in educational institutions, workplaces, and public spaces increased through 2025.
These acts are not isolated. They form part of a wider effort to police Muslim identity and visibility in public life. Recently, even the Chief Minister of Bihar, Nitish Kumar, pulled the hijab off of a Muslim doctor while handing over an appointment letter from the podium.
Seen against this backdrop, Suvendu Adhikari’s Gaza remark is not an aberration. It is a crystallization of an ideology that increasingly frames Muslims as a collective threat to be subdued. When a leader at his level speaks this way, it legitimizes extreme views among supporters and lowers the threshold for violence on the ground.
There are also serious regional implications. Relations between India and its neighbors are already strained. Bangladesh has accused India of interference in its internal affairs following political upheaval there in 2024. Protests and counter-protests in late 2025 disrupted consular services and hardened diplomatic positions.
Pakistan continues to accuse India of destabilizing activities, while India raises concerns about minorities beyond its borders. In this volatile environment, incendiary language from senior politicians adds fuel to already smoldering tensions.
India’s constitutional framework tells a different story from its current reality. The Constitution guarantees equality before the law and freedom of religion. For decades, India was celebrated globally as a pluralistic democracy capable of managing extraordinary diversity. But that reputation is now under strain. When mainstream leaders invoke violence associated with Gaza as a “lesson,” it signals a departure from constitutional morality toward majoritarian dominance.
This is why the international community must not look away. The United Nations Human Rights Council should intensify scrutiny of minority rights in India and consider independent investigations into patterns of incitement and violence.
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation, the European Union, and the United States should raise these concerns directly and consistently in diplomatic engagements. Silence or vague statements of concern only embolden those who believe there will be no cost for hate.
Global media, human rights defenders, and civil society also have a role. Raising awareness is not interference. It is a defense of universal human rights. India’s minorities do not ask for special treatment. They ask for the protection promised by the Constitution and by international law.
If the world fails to respond, the consequences will not be limited to India’s Muslims or Christians. Normalizing genocidal metaphors in mainstream politics corrodes democracy itself and threatens regional stability. History shows that mass violence rarely begins with weapons alone. It begins with words, metaphors, and the steady erosion of moral boundaries.
Suvendu Adhikari’s statement should therefore be understood as a warning. It tells us where Indian political discourse is heading if left unchecked. The world must take note, speak clearly, and act with urgency. The cost of silence, this time, will be far too high.
Shabana Ayaz is a Pakistani journalist and writer based in Türkiye.