Zakir Naik in Qatar

Zakir Naik Is A Disposable Tool For Elitist Islamic Leaders

Ghulam Rasool Dehlvi, a scholar of Islamic studies, says Qatar is the new supporter and sponsorer of Wahabism and Zakir Naik is merely a puppet

I don’t know if Zakir Naik was officially invited to the FIFA world cup by Qatar. But even if he has been unofficially invited to this event, it clearly shows the risk of an ideological crisis in Qatar. After Saudi Arabia has wiped out Wahhabism from its land, it is Qatar which is breeding this radical thought. Since Zakir Naik is a preacher of Wahhabism, it should not surprise anyone that he was invited. It does not matter whether official or not.

Naik does not preach Islam as a religion of peace, love and harmony. He is preaching Wahhabi ideology in the name of Islam. You know that Qatar and Saudi Arabia are going through a lot of ideological and strategic disagreements. So, on the one hand, Saudi Arabia is giving up its adherence to Wahhabism and on the other hand, Qatar is taking the lead to support and sponsor it.

If you look at the geopolitical developments in the Middle East, you will come to know that there has been a conflict between the two blocks within the Middle East.  There are two ideological blocks in the Islamic world. On the one hand, you have Saudi Arabia, UAE, Jordan and Egypt. These countries are trying to introduce a progressive, tolerant and accommodative Islam, and sometimes Sufi Islam also.

On another side, you have Qatar, Iran, Turkey, Pakistan, as well as Afghanistan. These countries are now championing the other side of Islam. Who was to support the Taliban first? It was Qatar. Qatar invited them. Qatar invited Talibani clerics as their honourable guests.  They started the Doha dialogue. And basically, the Doha dialogue was a tool to legitimise the relevance of Taliban. Now Taliban has formed the government in Afghanistan, we could see that it would not have been possible without the support of Qatar.

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Recently there was a report that says that “The Taliban invested heavily in the World Cup construction and the tournament was a golden duck. They were paid millions.” Yes, of course, it was the US which came into the fray but Qatar is the facilitator. Qatar is playing the role of a facilitator of this Wahhabism, an extremist ideology that promotes political Islam.

Today if you look at what Erdogan has done in Turkey, if you ask any progressive Muslim in Turkey, he will tell you that Erdogan behaves like a despot. He is trying to be the supreme Islamic leader in the world. Zakir Naik is a tool in the hands of these elitist leaders in the Muslim world. This is all about power. Religion is being used as a tool.

In the FIFA episode, I would term it religious entertainment. Qatar has a newfound love for Wahhabism and Salafism. So if it needed some religious entertainment during FIFA, who would have been the obvious choice? Zakir Naik! And see the irony! Zakir Naik is strongly against entertainment. He calls films, culture, and new goods ‘Haraam’, which means completely forbidden in Islam. Even the sport in eyes of Zakir Naik is haraam. Then who invited him and why?

As told to Nityanand Gayen

News Wrap

Five Things That Happened Last Week (And What to Make of Them)

Modi tops approval ratings of global leaders

Indiaäs Prime Minister Narendra Modi has topped a survey by Morning Consult Political Intelligence, a global decision intelligence company headquartered in the US, which tracks approval ratings of leaders in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States. With a 77% approval rating, Modi topped the latest list of ratings based on a survey conducted during November 16-22, 2022. 

Modi was followed in the second spot by the Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, and in the third spot by Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese. 

The Bharatiya JanataParty (BJP) is predictably chuffed about Modi topping Morning Consult’s list. The survey also reiterates what could be called the TINA (There Is No Alternative) factor that serves to benefit Modi. There is no leader with a national stature that could be considered as an alternative to Modi really. The Congress, which is the only other national party, is in shambles and needs a complete overhaul under the newly elected party boss, Mallikarjun Kharge; the other national parties are too small to matter; and although regional leaders such as Arvind Kejriwal of the Aam Aadmi Party and Mamata Banerjee of the Trinamool Congress may have emerged as BJP’s challengers in some state elections, neither has the heft yet to challenge Modi on the national arena.

Surveys such as Morning Consult’s come accompanied by the usual caveats. It is a moving average of a continuous survey and the sample size is typically small. The company’s website does not specify what the sample size for India is but states that it could range between 500 to 5,000, which is pretty vague, and that for India, the sample is representative of the literate population. For a country with a population of nearly 1.4 billion and an estimated literate population of over a billion (if we assume the literacy rate is more than 77%), a sample size of even 5000 would seem minuscule.

Yet there is another aspect of the Morning Consult survey. Since it is a dynamic survey, it is interesting to note that Modi’s approval rating has remained consistently high. In early May 2021, it was 63% but since then it has been climbing steadily and now stands at 77%.

Morning Consult also tracks what it calls “Country Trajectories” where it asks respondents whether they would say that things in their country are going in the right direction or have gone off on the wrong track. In that survey, India scores well with the latest results showing that 75% of respondents saying that things are going well. 

Kejriwal plays the “good guy” card in Gujarat campaign

He may not have the national stature required to challenge Narendra Modi or the BJP at the national level but Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, who heads AAP and is helming his party’s campaign in the forthcoming Gujarat state assembly elections, has always pitched development and policies aimed at bettering the lives of common citizens in his electoral strategies.

Even as he faced an attack by the BJP’s star campaigner in Gujarat, chief minister of Uttar Pradesh Yogi Adityanath, who labelled Kejriwal as a “sympathiser of terrorism”, the Delhi chief minister chose to go high when others went low. He emphasised that he and his party stood for development against the BJP’s  “politics of abuses and hooliganism”. 

Kejriwal, whose party won a stunning victory over the BJP, the Congress and the Akali Dal in Punjab recently and runs the government there as well as in Delhi, used social media to state in Hindi: “If you want dirty abuses, hooliganism, corruption, or dirty politics, then vote for them. If you want schools, hospitals, electricity, water, roads, then vote for me.” 

The Gujarat elections are scheduled for December 1-5. The BJP, which has been in power in the state for decades, has pulled out all stops in its campaign aimed at retaining power in the state where Prime Minister Modi was the chief minister for more than 12 years. But political analysts are watching how it will all pan out, especially with the gutsy, development-focused campaigning of AAP.

Protests at Apple’s biggest iPhone factory in China

The Covid virus’ resurgence in China has led to many instances of protests across the country. The protests are ostensibly against the strict lockdown measures that various cities are adopting. But one of the biggest protests has erupted in Zhengzhou, a city in central China with a population of 12.6 million. The protests are at the world’s biggest iPhone factory there. 

The factory is run by Foxconn, which makes the iPhones for Apple Inc. and the protests broke out when the company locked down its factories preventing workers from leaving the premises. Videos circulating show hundreds of workers demonstrating and being confronted by guards and riot police in hazmat suits. It is alleged that workers were beaten by the police. Allegations have been flying about Foxconn not honouring the terms of its contract with workers after the outbreak of a fresh wave of Covid casesand that many new recruits were being forced to share dormitories with workers who were tested positive. 

Foxconn has denied the allegations and said that it has taken all the necessary precautions to protect workers. Last month when Covid cases in the factory rose,the company locked down the facilities and that led to many workers breaking out and returning home. Foxconn is then believed to have recruited new workers offering them lucrative bonuses. Butworkers allege that Foxconn has not honoured terms of its contracts such as provision of food and other facilities.

Whatever the facts, it is a terrible PR disaster for Apple and the tech giant’s next moves in response will be watched closely.

Ire over Indian Islamic preacher in Qatar

Qatar, which is hosting the FIFA World Cup, has been in the eye of a storm after LGBTQ+ protests across the world broke out because of the country’s strict laws against homosexuality. Other controversies surrounding Qatar’s hosting of the World Cup included a global corruption scandal, the massive cost of building the necessary facilities, and serious human rights concerns about the country’s treatment of migrant workers. 

But there is another controversy that dogs the country. Apparently, the controversial Islamic preacher Zakir Naik has been invited by Qatar to preach in the country. Naik is an Indian Islamic televangelist and public orator. In 2018, Naik was outlawed by India and accused of money laundering and hate speech that incited communal violence. Naik fled India and is based in Malaysia.

The Qatari government has denied that it had invited Naik but the Indian government is quite peeved that he is in Qatar to preach during the World Cup games.

Football follies in Kerala

The southern state of Kerala is probably one of the few states in India where football (and not cricket) rules. Kerala is football crazy and people there take the sport very seriously. So even as World Cup fever grips the world, there was a kerfuffle in Kerala when a man, Deepak Elangode, tore down a Portuguese flag that had been hoisted by fans of Cristiano Ronaldo, superstar footballer and captain of Portugal’s football team.

Elangode apparently mistook the flag for the emblem of a controversial Islamic group. He was arrested after enraged fans confronted him.

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