The contemporary Indian political landscape is not merely shifting—it is being deliberately distorted by a cabal masquerading as the secular opposition. Beneath the veneer of democratic dissent lies a festering ideological malevolence—a conspiratorial amalgam of political desperation, theological appeasement, and wilful subversion of national unity. The recent spasms of orchestrated violence in West Bengal are not isolated expressions of communal discord, but symptomatic of a larger, more sinister plot—an attempt to ignite sectarian flames to camouflage legislative failures and revive a waning political relevance.
The epicentre of this perfidious scheme is the uproar surrounding the Waqf Board Bill. What should have been a legitimate, constitutional discourse in Parliament descended into a theatre of manufactured outrage, courtesy of a coterie of opposition figures determined to communalise a secular legal proposition. Their parliamentary impotence morphed rapidly into street-level arson. Blood spilled on Bengal’s roads became a grotesque substitute for lost debates in the House.
This is not politics. This is a macabre ballet of anti-national orchestration. In the shadow of Mamata Banerjee’s governance, West Bengal has degenerated into a cauldron of lawlessness where the rule of law lies in tatters and the state apparatus either remains complicit or cowardly silent. Temples are desecrated, homes set ablaze, and businesses belonging to Hindus systematically targeted—and all while social media platforms groan under the weight of open calls to violence circulating with impunity. The government, far from being a neutral arbiter of justice, has chosen a path of perilous one-sidedness, shielding perpetrators and criminalising victims with breathtaking audacity.
This political theatre is not spontaneous. It is calibrated chaos. To describe the opposition’s conduct as merely irresponsible would be a grotesque understatement. What we are witnessing is a calculated demolition of constitutional ethics. The timing of the riots—in precise synchrony with parliamentary debates—renders moot any claim of coincidence. This is narrative warfare, where the secular fabric of India is being slashed to pieces in pursuit of a theological vote-bank calculus. The opposition’s current trajectory betrays a dangerous aspiration: to convert India, not into a pluralistic republic, but into a chaotic theocratic experiment where violence becomes the vernacular of power. West Bengal has been transformed into a laboratory of Islamist radicalism, where communal appeasement masquerades as minority welfare, and where Hindu citizens—despite being the majority—are rendered stateless within their own homeland. Festivals such as Ram Navami and Hanuman Janmotsav are no longer symbols of joy but flashpoints for coordinated assaults. The State’s response? The deafening silence and a nauseating tendency to label the assaulted as aggressors.
This, ladies and gentlemen, is not governance. It is a grotesque abdication of duty. The opposition’s invocation of “secularism” is a fig leaf to conceal its dalliance with jihadist ideology. Realising that their empty promises have exhausted the electorate’s patience, these political actors have turned to the dark arts of incitement, hoping to engineer bloodshed that can then be paraded as evidence of governmental collapse. But the Indian citizen is not a pawn in their Machiavellian chessboard. They see through the veil. They recognize these orchestrated riots as desperate attempts to remain politically relevant by manufacturing communal crises. Is it not peculiar that the same opposition which screams about saving the Constitution in Parliament now allies itself with street-level anarchists and radical clerics? They straddle the line between legislative disruption and riotous provocation with the deftness of a seasoned saboteur. Meanwhile, the state police stand inert, FIRs are ignored, and if the victim happens to be Hindu, he is summarily villainized.
This is not democracy—it is dystopia. Today, the charred remnants of homes, the wailing of widowed women, and the desecrated sanctity of temples in Bengal are not just symbols of administrative failure. They are reflections of a perverse political vision—a vision where power is pursued not through progress, but through pogroms. A vision where communal hatred is a currency, and appeasement is policy. The Waqf Board Bill—entirely constitutional in spirit and letter—was maliciously communalised by those who failed to thwart it legislatively. Their recourse? Mobilise mobs, ignite riots, and then use a complicit media to invert the narrative, painting arsonists as victims and patriots as aggressors. This is not just disinformation. It is sedition masquerading as secularism. The media too, or at least a pliable segment of it, has joined this danse macabre. Instead of amplifying the cries of the victims, it wrings its collective hands over the “human rights” of those torching communities. This is not journalism. It is ideological treachery. This grand project, dear readers, is what I call the Vote-Bank Jihad”—an elaborate electoral stratagem wherein Hindus are systematically terrorized, lawlessness is permitted to fester, and national unity is sacrificed on the altar of identity politics. The goal? To construct a narrative of state failure, delegitimize democratic mandates, and portray India as a nation in peril to both domestic voters and international watchdogs.
The Indian electorate is awakened, enlightened, and enraged. They now recognize that Bengal’s inferno is not an accident—it is arson, with the opposition holding the matchstick. Hindus are being browbeaten even in areas where they constitute the majority, subjected to institutional apathy and mobocratic terror. From loudspeakers issuing threats from mosques to jihadist propaganda videos saturating digital spaces—why is the opposition silent? Because they are the ideological patrons of this pathology. This is a redux of Muzaffarnagar 2013, Delhi 2020, and now Bengal 2024–25. The opposition no longer venerates the Constitution—it vandalizes it. It no longer values Indian culture—it vilifies it. Power is all that matters, even if it is built on a pyre of communal hatred.
The opposition’s recent parliamentary defeat was not the end of their campaign—it was the beginning of a bloodier one. A campaign to desecrate temples, disrupt festivals, torch livelihoods, and provoke retaliatory violence—only to then cry “Sanghi terror” and malign India globally. But this time, their Machiavellian gambit shall fail. The Indian consciousness has evolved. The public now sees through the diabolical farce. The opposition stands exposed—not as dissenters, but as disruptors of national harmony. Their so-called secularism is but a smokescreen for jihadist pandering. Their empathy for minorities is not compassion—it is cunning vote-bank arithmetic. In this diabolical schema, neither Hindus nor Muslims are served—only thrones are secured. India today stands at a crossroads: Will it remain the cradle of a timeless civilization or devolve into a jihadist laboratory? The choice is existential. Bengal burns not due to administrative ineptitude alone—but because a malevolent ideology has set it ablaze. This is not the politics of governance. This is the politics of genocide. And history shall remember those who lit the match—not as leaders, but as traitors to the Indian soul.
Comments