Thiruvananthapuram (Kerala):Breaking his silence on the issue, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Wednesday cited figures to show that a statement made by a Catholic bishop that it was one particular community which was behind 'love and narcotic jihad' in the state was not true. "It was an unfortunate remark which has raked up an unfortunate controversy. Love and narcotics (jihad) cannot be attributed to one particular religion. And using that to create issues in our state by vested interests will not happen.
"This has now become a debating issue here, but facts and figures prove that conversion and narcotics issue is totally wrong... when one looks into the numbers, one fails to see it is linked to any minority community," he told media persons.
Furnishing figures, Vijayan said as per 4,941 drug abuse cases registered in 2020, there are 5,422 people accused of which 2,700 are Hindus, 1,869 are Muslims and 853 are Christians. On the issue of the presence of Keralites in Islamic State (IS), he said, according to the figures until 2019, there were about 100 Malayalees, of which 72 of them reached foreign countries and were attracted to IS philosophy there.
Read: Kerala Muslim groups seek Bishop withdraw 'jihad' remarks