News Topical, Digital Desk : Following the entry of SP chief Akhilesh Yadav into the controversy surrounding the famous Aryan Yadav tea seller in Fatehpur district, politics has heated up in Barabanki. Wasim Rain, state vice president of the All India Pasmanda Muslim Mahaz, launched a scathing attack on Akhilesh Yadav on Monday. Rain labeled him anti-Muslim and alleged that Akhilesh Yadav's love is only for Yadavs, while he has always betrayed Muslims.
Wasim Rain said that when an incident occurs at the house of a Yadav tea seller in Fatehpur, Akhilesh Yadav calls him to the party headquarters and gifts him brass utensils, but when any Muslim is oppressed in the state, he remains silent.
Citing an example, Rain said that so much happened to Azam Khan and his family, but Akhilesh Yadav never strongly spoke out in their favor. Rain sarcastically said that since the party's inception, 36 Yadavs have been sent to the Rajya Sabha, but no Pasmanda Muslim has been given the opportunity to reach the House.
Akhilesh does not like Muslims
Citing statistics, the state vice president said that Yadavs constitute 8 percent of the state, while Pasmanda Muslims alone comprise 16 percent. The SP forms the government with 20 percent of the Muslim vote, but after coming to power, the benefits are distributed only to its own people. He alleged that whether it's ticket distribution, the organization, or the cabinet, only Yadavs are given priority. Wasim Rain also cited an old statement by the late leader Mulayam Singh Yadav, in which he said that Akhilesh dislikes Muslims.
Speaking on the Women's Reservation Bill, Wasim Rain called the Samajwadi Party and Congress "traitors." He said that these parties deliberately sought to stall the bill by demanding Muslim women's reservation . They knew that Pasmanda Muslims belonged to the OBC category, yet they resorted to appeasement and Hindu-Muslim politics. He stated unequivocally that the Pasmanda community would oust these "traitors" in the 2027 elections, and that Muslims had now begun to consider their own interests.
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