Modi says terror has no boundaries, calls for global unity

Let's protect Sitas of our home: Modi on saving girl child

Update: 2016-10-11 19:20 GMT
Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (Photo: PTI)

Lucknow:  Breaking from tradition, Prime  Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday attended the historic Ramlila  celebrations here where he launched a veiled attack on  Pakistan, saying those who help and provide shelter to  terrorists cannot be spared, but made no reference to the  surgical strikes.     

Making terrorism the centrepoint of his over 20-minute  speech, he said terror was the worst enemy of humanity and  called upon the world community to speak in one voice against  the menace to put an end to it.   "Terrorism does not have any boundaries. It is bound to destroy all...a need has arisen to root out those who spread  terrorism. Those who help terrorists and provide shelter to  them can no longer be spared," he said in an obvious reference  to Pakistan without taking its name.      

"The forces of humanism should unite globally to end the  menace," he said.  Modi became the first Prime Minister to attend a Ramlila  event outside Delhi and his participation at the Aishbagh  celebrations assumes significance in the context of assembly  elections in Uttar Pradesh early next year. The theme of this year's Dussehra here was 'destruction  of terrorism'.

In significant gestures, Modi was presented a Sudarshan  Chakra, bow and arrow and a mace at the event, symbolising  valour.  At the Delhi event at Ramlila Maidan, as usual,  President Pranab Mukherjee, Vice President Hamid Ansari,  former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president  Sonia Gandhi were present.

Mythological bird Jatayu was first to fight terror, says Modi
The Prime Minister said Lord Ram represented  humanity and its rich values and traditions. He said the first person to fight terror was neither a  soldier nor a politician, but the mythological bird Jatayu who  fought against Ravana to protect a helpless Sita, whom he was  trying to kidnap.   

Noting that war at times becomes inevitable due to  prevailing circumstances, he said India is a country which  follows the principles of peace as taught by Lord Buddha.   “We balance between the Mohan of the Sudarshan Chakra,  and the Mohan of the Charkha (Mahatma Gandhi)...we are the  people who have seen yudhh (war) and Buddha. We can go from  yudh to Buddha. Buddha’s path (of peace) should be our final  path,” he said.  “No one should have this misunderstanding that they are safe from terrorism as terrorism has no boundary, no morality, it can go anywhere,” Modi said

Terming casteism, communalism and nepotism as the forms  of social evils present inside people, he said and there  is a need to get rid of these Ravanas.  Modi said on side the country was celebrating Vijaya Dashami and on the other the world was observing the day of the  girl child and called upon people to end the menace of  female infanticide and foeticide.      

“We have pledged to burn Ravana’s effigy every year for  abducting Sita. But we continue to discriminate between the  male and female child. It should end. Who will end the Ravana  inside us that kills many Sitas inside a mother’s womb? We  should stop killing Sitas in this 21st century,” he said.  He said women athletes brought laurels to the country in  the recently-held Rio Olympics and they are a fine example of  what girls can achieve.  

Modi also used his speech to drive home the importance of  sanitation and called for a fight against the social evil of  manual scavenging which continues to exist despite efforts. Using the occasion, Modi said just as we burn Ravan every  year, people should draw lessons from the tradition by taking  a pledge to end all evils from our lives.      

Highlighting the significance of Uttar Pradesh, which  goes to polls early next year, Modi said this land has given us Ram and Krishna.  

Modi began and concluded his speech with chants of “Jai  Shri Ram; Jai, Jai Shri Ram”, the slogan often heard at the  height of Ram temple movement. BJP has in recent elections desisted from making the Ram temple issue an  electoral plank.

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