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Hindu and Muslim anger at Valentine's

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Tuesday, 11 February, 2003, 16:50 GMT

Hindu and Muslim anger at Valentine's

 

 

Shiv Sena sees the day as commercial exploitation

 

Religious activists in India and Pakistan have begun separate

protests against Valentine's Day celebrations, saying they are an

insult to Hinduism and Islam.

In Bombay, members of the right-wing Shiv Sena group raided shops and

burned Valentine's Day cards.

 

Police nationwide boosted security to head off the violent protests

that have occurred in recent years.

 

In Pakistan, fundamentalist students condemned Valentine's Day as a

day of shame and lust.

 

Bombay protest

 

Both sets of activists regard the festivities as running counter to

the cultural ethos of their societies.

 

 

Shiv Sena - part of India's ruling coalition government - has been

behind repeated attempts to ban celebrations.

 

 

"[Valentine's Day] is nothing but a Western onslaught on India's

culture to attract youth for commercial purposes," said senior Shiv

Sena leader Uddhav Thackeray, son of group leader Bal Thackeray.

 

 

This is a shameful day. The people in the West are just fulfilling

and satisfying their sex thirst

 

 

 

Khalid Waqas Chamkani, Pakistani student leader

 

 

Last week, Bal Thackeray said anyone wanting to avoid violence on

Valentine's Day should not celebrate it.

 

 

On Tuesday, 20 Shiv Sena activists stole cards from a shop in central

Bombay.

 

Shouting "long live Shiv Sena", they burned the cards on the pavement

outside.

 

Bombay police would be on full alert to ensure Friday passed

peacefully, a senior police official, Himanshu Roy, told the BBC.

 

Other Hindu fundamentalist parties like the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and

Bajrang Dal have also said they will oppose Valentine's Day

celebrations.

 

 

Hotel balls

 

In Pakistan, the student wing of the fundamentalist Islamic party

Jamaat-e-Islami also called for a ban on Valentine's Day

celebrations.

 

Khalid Waqas Chamkani, a leader of the wing in North-West Frontier

Province, said: "This is a shameful day. The people in the West are

just fulfilling and satisfying their sex thirst."

 

 

Valentine's is increasingly popular in both nations

 

He condemned "moderate elements" for allowing Western festivities.

 

"They are following the West just to show that they are modern

people," Mr Chamkani said in the provincial capital, Peshawar.

 

However, celebrating Valentine's Day, named after the Christian

patron saint of lovers, has become increasingly popular in both India

and Pakistan.

 

Many hotels in both nations put on Valentine's dinners and balls,

while the media allow lovers radio and newspaper slots to broadcast

messages.

 

One card stockist in Bombay said couples would celebrate the day

despite the protests.

 

"It is just sad for poor shop owners who are the unlucky targets," he

said.

 

Lucknow student Latika Arora went further.

 

 

"No one has the right to work as the morals police," she said.

 

"We should be able to celebrate Valentine's Day as we wish."

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