This time, more than two hundred organizations including the Hindutva Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh (RSS) have announced the program of encirclement of the Bangladesh High Commission in Delhi. They said that they will besiege the High Commission on December 10.
Yesterday Friday (December 6) in a report of the Indian media The Indian Express, this information is known.
Although the program of encirclement of Bangladesh High Commission was taken under the banner of Delhi Citizen Society, the initiative was mainly of RSS. Rajneesh Jindal, deputy head of media management of the Delhi wing of the RSS, announced the program at a press conference in Delhi.
On the same day that Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Mishri's visit to Bangladesh was announced, the RSS announced the program of laying siege to the Bangladesh High Commission in Delhi, alleging 'Hindu oppression'.
Rajneesh said, this program of civil society will be held on December 10. That day is celebrated as International Human Rights Day. He complained and said that the whole of India is angry about the atrocities on all minorities including Hindus in Bangladesh. Representatives of more than 200 social, cultural and religious organizations of the country will participate in that program. They will submit a memorandum to Bangladesh High Commission.
Memorandums will also be submitted to the United Nations, the United Nations Human Rights Commission, the World Health Organization, Amnesty International and the Asian Development Bank. Everyone will be told to take measures to stop the persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh.
According to the organizers, all Delhi market committees, residential area residents' organizations, doctors, lawyers, student organizations and organizers of Durga Puja, Chat Puja, Ramlila and Sikh Dharmasthan Gurdwara management committee members have been asked to participate in the campaign.
The announcement of the program is sure to cast a shadow over the Indian Foreign Secretary's visit. According to a source in the Ministry of External Affairs, though Vikram Mishri's visit to Dhaka is 'structured', the main objective of the visit is to normalize relations and ensure the interests of minorities and their security. So India would not want anything to happen, which makes the situation confusing. New excitement spreads.
