Hindutva groups from Uttar Pradesh have urged the NDA government to formulate a common birth control law.
Earlier BJP MP Sakshi Maharaj stirred up a storm by asking Hindu women to produce four kids each to protect Hinduism.
On Sunday at the Dasna Devi temple in Ghaziabad, a panchayat was held were a section of sadhus, and leaders of 36 Hindu castes of western UP declared to pressurize the NDA government to pass a law restraining both Muslims and Hindus to a common maximum limit.
These sadhus and caste groups as per reports in MailToday, claimed to be BJP supporters alleged that one community was allowed to have many kids whereas Hindus were always reminded to have only two children.
“There should be a strict law to control population. However, every Hindu family should have at least four children till this law is enacted,” as per a resolution which was passed in the panchayat.
“Besides sadhus, the caste groups of Tyagi, Yadav, Gujjar, Brahmin, Jat, Rajput, Vaishya, Saini, Harijan, Khatik, Valmiki, Garadiya, Kori, Mohiyal, Galav and Jaiswal of 100 villages of western Uttar Pradesh participated in the panchayat. It was unanimously decided that we would raise a massive movement against the Centre for the delay in making a law for population control and mounting pressure to expedite the process,” as said by Yati Narsinghanand Saraswati, Mahanth of the temple.
These sadhus also wrote blood stained letters to VHP leader Ashok Singhal and RSS Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat, to either support them in their campaign or get ready to be disliked by the Hindu community.
“We have also decided to hold a Hindu parliament in Haridwar on April 25 and 26 and requested Bhagwat and Singhal to attend it. The BJP-led NDA government seems to be an extension of the Congressled UPA government for which minority appeasement was the only agenda. This has left many BJP supporters disillusioned”, added Narsinghanand.
It was also decided in the panchayat to write a letter to BJP president Amit Shah to organize a meeting of sadhus and members of the Hindu castes to understand expectations from the party.