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India under the grip of religious nationalism – Southasia Weekly #36

India under the grip of religious nationalism – Southasia Weekly #36

This week at Himal

For our Podcast of the Week, host of the Southasia Review of Books podcast, Shwetha Srikanthan interviews Geethanjali Shree and Daisy Rockwell on “Our city that year” which tells the story of a city under siege, loosely based on the communal violence leading up to the demolition of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya and its aftermath. The book’s call to bear witness to rising religious nationalism is timelier than ever.

This coming Monday, the host of the State of Southasia podcast, Nayantara Narayanan, will be chatting with Jyoti Rahman, a macroeconomist and political commentator, on how Muhammad Yunus and the interim government in Bangladesh is working to rebuild the country's institutions and democracy after the fall of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina's regime. 

We’re also excited to announce that Film Southasia 2024 will be held in Kathmandu from 21 to 24 November at Yala Maya Kendra, Patan Dhoka! Check out the 47 chosen documentaries from over 2,000 entries here, follow Film Southasia on Instagram for updates and make sure to drop in and support independent Southasian non-fiction film if you’re in the area! 

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Also read: The quiet but resolute politics of ‘All We Imagine as Light'

Also read: Farmers in Multan bear the brunt of extreme heat in a warming Punjab

Also read: Southasia Review of Books podcast #09: Geetanjali Shree and Daisy Rockwell on ‘Our City That Year’ and India’s invisible partitions

This week in Southasia

India and Canada expel each other's diplomats over Sikh separatist murder 

Relations between India and Canada have hit new lows after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expelled the Indian high commissioner and five other diplomats after Canadian police officials claimed they had uncovered evidence that senior Indian diplomats and consular officials were involved in a “criminal network” that targeted Canadian Sikhs. “We will never tolerate the involvement of a foreign government threatening and killing Canadian citizens on Canadian soil,” Trudeau said. India retaliated by expelling six senior Canadian diplomats, calling the allegations “preposterous” and accusing Trudeau of pandering to Canada’s large Sikh community for political gains.

Trudeau said India’s top diplomat in Canada, Sanjay Kumar Verma, was identified as a person of interest in the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a pro-Khalistan activist who was shot dead outside a temple in 2023. India has previously denied links to the killing, adding that Nijjar was involved in “terrorism”. Outside of Canada, Sikh activists and US officials said that evidence increasingly points to the Modi government carrying out a campaign of transnational repression, at times attempting to influence politics in other countries. In 2023, the US thwarted an assassination attempt targeting a Sikh activist, also claiming Indian government involvement. This could have significant geopolitical implications as India has become an important security and economic ally for Western countries. US President Joe Biden recently making pointed comments about India’s “xenophobic policies", reflecting growing tensions. 

Elsewhere in Southasia 📡

We’ve been following the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, currently being played in Dubai and Sharjah from 3-20 October. Here’s a roundup of how Southasia performed:

Only in Southasia

A daring security breach at Haridwar’s high security Roshnabad jail resulted in the escape of two prisoners, including a murder convict last week, during a Ram Leela performance on the prison premises. The inmates, who were playing the role of monkeys in the interpretation of the Hindu epic Ramayana escaped at a point when they were searching for Sita as per the script. They seized the opportunity to slip away instead, using a ladder that had been left on the premises due to the ongoing construction of a high security barracks. Their disappearance was only discovered in the evening during a routine headcount. Certainly a great (or epic) escape!

@Ksravishankar2

Got a meme or satirical post you'd like to share? Send us a meme that made you laugh from the past week here.

From the archive

Satellites and South Asia (December 2000)

This week, news broke that David Page, senior fellow of the Institute for Commonwealth Studies and former editor and manager in the BBC South Asian Services has died aged 80. Page followed Southasia closely and had extensive professional and personal connections across the region. In light of this, his 2000 cover story, an edited excerpt from the book “Satellites in South Asia”, written with longtime friend William Crawley is worth revisiting. Page and Crawley write  that the rapid spread of satellite television across Southasia opened windows to a world previously inaccessible to those who were not well-to-do, provoking lively debate on its impact on communities and cultures around the world.

Raisa Wickrematunge

Raisa Wickrematunge is a Senior Editor at Himal Southasian.

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