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AIMIM leader warns Hindus of Aligarh’s Nurpur, ‘No Hindu procession can go without our permission’

While news of exodus of Hindu families from Nurpur village in Uttar Pradesh’s Aligarh district was barely over, an All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) leader named Syed Nazim Ali has sown new seeds of communal discontent. . Speaking to media reporters, Syed Nazim Ali, president of Owaisi Youth Brigade in Uttar Pradesh, vowed that no procession would be allowed in the village and Muslims would continue to offer prayers. “There will be prayer. And yes, we will not let you (Hindus) take out the procession without permission. If you take out a procession without permission, we will not allow you to do so. Do whatever you want, we won’t let you do it.” said the radical leader. “If they (Hindu villagers) do not take permission then they or any BJP leader can come to the village and try to take out the procession, We will show them.” AIMIM leader added. After the news of exodus of hundreds of Hindu families surfaced, as previously reported by TFI, the Yogi Adityanath administration took immediate action and filed a complaint against 11 criminals who were on the run. According to a report in Amar Ujala, the minority community also tried to lodge a complaint, but could not reach the authorities.

Read more: The Yogi government has started hunting down radical Muslims who have driven out Hindus from Nurpur village. On May 26, two communities came when the procession of a villager named Omprakash and his daughters was stopped while passing through the village near the mosque. According to Omprakash’s statements, some miscreants from the Muslim community started pelting stones at the procession – sabotaging the entire festival in the process. Read more: Nurpur was a Hindu majority village in Aligarh. Now it is 80% Muslim and Hindus are fleeing “We were stopped by the minority community; opposed the procession. Our community has faced harassment on several occasions – they try to stop our procession. When we tried to reason, they attacked us. It was humiliating to face it on my daughter’s wedding day. I got hurt too Omprakash had said. Villagers claim that whenever a procession passes through the village, Muslim men get involved in violence and theft.

Some media reports quoted villagers as saying that people from the Muslim community also pressurize Hindus to change their religion. It is this conversion that has made the traditionally Hindu majority village more populated by the Muslim community. There are three mosques and a big madrasa in a village which has come into existence recently. Reportedly, there are over 800 Muslim families in the village, while the number of Hindu families is only around 100. Upset by the goons of the ‘minority’ community, Hindus, including Dalits, have been forced to put up ‘House for Sale’ boards in front of their homes, as they want to sell the property quickly and move to safer pastures.

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