People’s Alliance for Democracy and Secularism (PADS) Press statement Addressed to the African Media and Civil Society Information Networks

People’s Alliance for Democracy and Secularism (PADS)

Press statement Addressed to the African Media and Civil Society Information Networks

March 31, 2017

We, representing  concerned citizens of India,  are extremely disturbed  by the assault on 4 Nigerian students in Greater Noida in the state of Uttar Pradesh, adjoining Delhi. We condemn in the
strongest possible terms  these attacks  carried out by a mob which chose to take law into its own hands on mere suspicion which has also since turned out, as confirmed by the local police,  to have been without foundation. That these assaults were made on foreigners who have come to India in friendship and goodwill makes these even more reprehensible.

We are relieved that the four African students who were injured in these attacks are now reportedly safe and out of danger.

The incident nevertheless requires deep introspection on the part of the authorities and our polity and society as a whole.  We find that a  number of troubling tendencies that have recently come to the fore in our country appear to have converged in the Greater Noida incidents.



First, discriminatory, restrictive and  narrow-minded attitudes towards many of  those who are seen by some of us as being different from  ourselves whether in terms of colour, origin, opinions, mannerisms, lifestyle or in the degree of power, resources and influence they may or may not command,  have  strengthened over the years.

Second, not only some foreigners but also some of our own people have in recent times been targeted as a consequence of the growth of a  mob mentality among sections of our people  in recent years.

Third, there is an increasing tendency on the part of a section of our people to arrive at  conclusions on the basis of unverified assumptions and, under cover of these, to take law into their own hands.

It is urgently necessary to call a halt to such brutality and  to bring the miscreants responsible for such criminal conduct to book.

As concerned citizens we  express our  profound regret and deep sympathies to the families of victims of such fiendish behaviour which is shameful enough even without its racial overtone and compounded several times because of that reprehensible aspect. We would like to stress that mobs consisting of our fellow citizens which act in the way they did in Greater Noida are a disgrace to our society and do not represent our country or people. 

Our governments have made umpteen assurances in similar cases in the past  but we earnestly  expect that they will ensure exemplary punishment to  the perpetrators. We expect our government also to  meet all costs of treatment of victims and to provide protection to students and visitors from abroad and, more especially, those who come to our land from  African countries. We are cognizant of the close interaction of the peoples of Africa and India in their struggle against colonial rule. We recall also the many historical connections that Indian and African peoples have had over the  centuries both over land and sea. 

Our country has been host to many persons of African origin over the centuries who have become a living part of us. Likewise, we are cognizant of the many Indians who have found their home in Africa and have become a part of that great continent’s life and struggles. We are truly ashamed of what has happened and will strive to change the mindset that appears to  lead to such acts.

Battini Rao, Convenor PADS (95339 75195, 
battini.rao@gmail.com



Popular posts from this blog

Third degree torture used on Maruti workers: Rights body

Haruki Murakami: On seeing the 100% perfect girl one beautiful April morning

Albert Camus's lecture 'The Human Crisis', New York, March 1946. 'No cause justifies the murder of innocents'

The Almond Trees by Albert Camus (1940)

Etel Adnan - To Be In A Time Of War

After the Truth Shower

James Gilligan on Shame, Guilt and Violence