Hijab row: AIMIM MP from Maharashtra urges non-Muslim ladies to put on it as protest

By means of PTI

AURANGABAD: All India Majlise-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) activists post banners in Maharashtra’s Beed town in toughen of Hijab’hijab’ for feminine Muslim scholars, and stated the Indian Charter provides the best to voters to practice their spiritual tradition.

The banners, conveying the message ‘pehle hijab fir kitaab’ (hijab first, guide later), had been displayed on Monday in Bashirganj and Karanja spaces of Beed and had been got rid of on Tuesday.

In the meantime, the state unit president of the birthday party and Lok Sabha member Imtiaz Jaleel appealed to non-Muslim ladies to put on ‘hijab’ as a mark of protest.

Beed town police station’s inspector Ravi Sanap informed PTI on Wednesday, “The location in Beed is non violent. We informed them (MIM activists) that that they had post the banners with out permission. They understood and got rid of the banners.”

Protests for and in opposition to the ‘hijab’ had intensified in portions of neighbouring Karnataka and became violent in some puts on Tuesday, after the state govt ultimate week issued an order making uniforms prescribed through it or control of personal establishments obligatory for its scholars in colleges and pre-university faculties.

Luqman Farooqui, a member of the All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) scholars’ wing in Beed, stated the Indian Charter provides the best to each particular person to practice his/her spiritual tradition, and the ones opposing the ‘hijab’ will have to learn the Charter.

“Therefore, to put across this message, we had post banners in toughen of the ‘hijab’ in Beed for at some point,” he stated.

Taking to Twitter on Wednesday, Jaleel, who represents Aurangabad Lok Sabha constituency, stated, “(I) request my non-Muslim sisters to return in combination and put on hijab to check in their protest. This might be a decent slap on the ones parts who wish to create a divide amongst pals in colleges and faculties. The wonderful thing about India is its cohesion in variety.”