Sam Pitroda, Chairman of the Indian  Overseas Congress,  
                    calls for ending violence in Manipur.                
                    
                 
                                      Los Angeles, California, May 08, 2023 
                  NRIpress.com/ Ramesh/ Gary Singh                   
                  “IOC leadership is concerned about the  alarming situation in Manipur where our Christian community has suddenly  suffered due to the burning of 25 churches and 500 homes. In addition, 50  innocent people have been killed in the violence. This must stop immediately.  Peace must prevail to assure the safety, security, and well-being of all the  people in the area,” said Sam Pitroda, Chairman of the Indian Overseas  Congress.  
                     
   “In India, community harmony and respect for  our diversity of religion, race, caste, and customs are the bedrock of our  democracy. It is unfortunate that the very foundation of our great civilization  is being attacked with polarized / divisive propaganda and politics by a  limited group of vested interests. Our sympathies are with the people of  Manipur and the families and friends of the people affected by this violence  and tragedy,” added Mr. Pitroda. 
   
  “We express our strongest condemnation  of all forms of violence which can have no place in a civilized society,” said  George Abraham, Vice-Chair of the Indian Overseas Congress, USA. It is the  repeat of the same BJP strategy of exploiting differences targeting minority  communities to gain political advantage, and it is carried out recklessly to  the detriment of the constitution and the secular fabric of the nation,” Mr.  Abraham added. 
   
                    Manipur borders Myanmar and is home to  a diverse range of ethnic groups, including Meiteis, who are a numerical  majority in the state and are predominantly Hindu, and various tribal  communities, who are largely Christian.
                    While area leaders believe that the  violence was largely a reaction to certain political decisions as regards  reservation, they see its viciousness and severity, particularly the attack on  churches, as the growth of the influence of   Radical Hindutva ideology which has struggled to find a foothold in  Manipur because of its mix of tribal, Hindu, Christian, and Muslim communities.  Christian leaders from the area believed this violence was religiously  motivated. 
                     
                  On April 11,  as per press reports, three Christian  churches were also bulldozed by the BJP-ruled government in Manipur, where  forty-one percent of the population is Christian. Unfortunately, prime minister  Modi who paid a visit to the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Delhi on Easter  Sunday, has, so far, not commented on the reports of Hindutva organizations  targeting churches and pastors in various parts of the country.  
  
  
  
  
                   
                   
                    
                    
                    
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