Hindu group linked to India's ruling BJP praises British colonialism

The right-wing group Hindu Sena commemorated Queen Victoria on the 118th anniversary of her death, saying the queen had won India its first independence.

Hindu Sena activists took selfies while commemorating Queen Victoria's death anniversary.
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Hindu Sena activists took selfies while commemorating Queen Victoria's death anniversary.

India's founding fathers, from Mahatma Gandhi to Jawaharlal Nehru, are known the world over for fighting British colonialism and winning freedom for India. 

But not every Indian thinks like that. Ever since the rise of Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Nehru bashing has become all too common, and even Gandhi's killer, Nathuram Godse, is being hailed as a hero. 

On Tuesday, a Hindu nationalist group called Hindu Sena, which is affiliated to the BJP, staged a demonstration in Delhi to commemorate Queen Victoria on the 118th anniversary of her death.

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Hindu Sena chief Vishnu Gupta lit a lamp in front of the portrait of Queen Victoria on the 118th anniversary of her death.

Hindu Sena also declared that Queen Victoria was the first soldier to free India from the 'tyranny' of the Mughal Sultanate. 

“Britishers contributed for our first independence from foreign terrorists, tyrants, and ended hundreds of years of Islamic rule, that was our first independence in true sense," said 33-year-old Hindu Sena founder Vishnu Gupta.

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Seema Bohra, a member of Hindu Sena, claims that had it not been for the queen, women would have been subjugated by Mughals.

The leader said British colonial rule controlled Mughal-era princely states by combining them into one entity, arguing: "How we can call the rule of Britishers as slavery?”

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A Muslim man passes by the gathering and says this is what stokes fear among the minorities in India.

The outfit was recently in the news for celebrating US President Donald Trump’s birthday.

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A lamp in front of the queen’s portrait. The lamp is, in most Indian languages, called as “Jyoti.”

A huge portrait of the queen was carried in the parade and then set up at the entrance of the Indian parliament. The activists praised British colonialism by chanting slogans such as: “Long live Queen Victoria.” 

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At the end, a homeless man took away the portrait to make a shelter.

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