Voices against Nitish Kumar grow louder in Kashmir: Hijab row finds mention in Mirwaiz sermon, Iltija complaint
Comments come days after Chief Minister Omar Abdullah described the incident as ‘deeply distressing’
Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar (left) and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq (File photos) Condemnation of an incident in Bihar, where Chief Minister Nitish Kumar pulled the veil off a woman’s face during an official ceremony, grew louder in Kashmir, with political and religious leaders weighing in on the episode.
Addressing the Friday congregation at Srinagar’s Jamia Masjid, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq called it a “grave violation” of personal dignity and moral boundaries.
He said no position of authority, power or office grants the right to interfere with another person’s self-respect, and emphasised that when dignity is violated in public — particularly by someone in authority — “it sends a deeply troubling message that power can override ethics and basic human values.”
He expressed regret that instead of apologising for his actions, certain political parties and sections of the media are attempting to justify the act by mischaracterising it as an issue of “women’s empowerment”, deliberately dragging the debate into the question of the hijab.
“Such diversions are mischievous and further expose the bigoted mindset of those indulging in it and their limited understanding of Islam,” Mirwaiz said.
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) leader and former CM Mehbooba Mufti’s daughter, Iltija Mufti, filed a complaint at Srinagar’s Kothi Bagh police station seeking an FIR against Nitish for “violating the dignity of a Muslim woman by forcibly removing her niqab”.
Terming the incident “vile”, in her complaint to the police, Iltija wrote: “We watched with shock, horror and worry as Bihar’s CM Nitish Kumar pulled down the niqab of a young Muslim doctor in full public glare at a government function. What made matters worse was the unsettling reaction of the people around, including Bihar’s Deputy CM, who chuckled and watched with glee.”
She said the “forceful stripping” of her niqab isn’t just a “brutal assault” on a Muslim woman but on the autonomy, identity and dignity of every Indian woman. Pointing out that it transpired at a time of “deliberate othering” and political and economic disempowerment of Muslims across India, she said this was even more disconcerting.
Speaking at the Express Adda event on Wednesday, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah had also described the incident as “deeply distressing.” He said, “All of us should worry about what this sort of thing means in India, where an elected chief minister can pull off the face-covering of a young woman on a whim and not face any blowback. It is deeply distressing… The fact that an entire population feels disempowered because they have no representation at all in the treasury benches, much less in the government of India, is something that concerns us.”
Nitish’s party, the JD(U), has described the incident as a “flash” and insisted the CM should instead of judged for all he has done for the benefit of women and Muslims.