Hyderabad: The first-time Trinamool Congress MP, Mahua Moitra outshone in her maiden speech at the Indian Parliament as she opposed to the Motion of Thanks on Tuesday.
Moitra began by saying that 'early signs of fascism' are visible in the country and the Indian Constitution is now 'under threat'.
Referring to a poster on fascism at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in the US, Moitra went on to explain it in today's Indian context.
Taking a jibe at the ruling party, Moitra said that the country is now being 'torn apart' and there is only the 'lust to divide'.
Accusing the ruling bench of missing cues or signs, Moitra said, "Open your eyes, and you'd see signs everywhere that this country is being torn apart. Let me list out these dangerous signs."
In her 10-minute long speech, Moitra spoke about a number of issues from dissent, religious freedom, national security to mass media control and overpowering nationalism.
The TMC MP, not only readily presented an array of facts but quoted a number of poets to criticise the ruling government. She quoted lines from Maulana Azad, and poets Ramdhari Singh Dinkar and Rahat Indori too.
"It is the very nature of the overwhelmingness of this mandate, of the totality of this mandate, that makes it necessary for us to be heard today, for the voice of dissent to be heard today," she said.
Take a look at the seven signs that Moitra spoke about at the Parliament:
1. Extreme Nationalism:
Overpowering nationalism is searing into the national fabric, Moitra said which is 'superficial, xenophobic and narrow'. She said that there is a want to divide and not unite by the ruling party.
Moitra referred to the much controversial NRC and the Citizenship Amendment Bill saying that people living in India for 50 years or more are being asked to produce a paper to prove their citizenship while the ruling party leaders are unable to produce their college degrees.
She said, "There is no one symbol or there is no one slogan that can show any Indian that he is a patriot."
2. Disdain for human rights and lynchings over religion
Mentioning about Pehlu Khan in 2017 to another lynching incident in Jharkhand last week, Moitra said that the lynchings are 'not stopping'. She also said that there has been a 10-fold increase in the number of hate crimes in the country especially figures from the years 2014 to 2019 have increased manifolds.
Moitra also alleged that the country has a number of powerful forces, only pushing these numbers upwards.
3. Mass media control
Moitra claimed that all five giant media conglomerates are closely related to the ruling government. She said that these media houses spend time propagating messages for the ruling government.