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The Nazia Elahi Khan controversy and the normalisation of hate

By Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan 
The registration of two FIRs in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region against BJP Minority Morcha leader and social media influencer Nazia Elahi Khan for allegedly making derogatory remarks about Prophet Muhammad is not merely another isolated controversy. It is a disturbing reminder of how hate speech and communal provocation have become increasingly normalised in contemporary India.
The 41-year-old BJP leader, popularly known online as "Nazia Sanatani," now faces legal action after an Instagram podcast reel allegedly contained offensive remarks about the Prophet that deeply hurt the sentiments of Muslims. One FIR was lodged at the Shanti Nagar Police Station in Bhiwandi following a complaint by local resident Adnan Ansari, while a second "zero FIR" was registered at Mumbai's JJ Marg Police Station. The Raza Academy has also sought legal action, demanding strict punishment.
Beyond the legal proceedings, however, lies a larger and more troubling question: how did such inflammatory rhetoric become so commonplace in public discourse?
A decade ago, openly mocking religious figures of any community would have invited widespread condemnation across the political spectrum. Today, controversial and provocative statements often serve as pathways to social media fame and political relevance.
During the tenure of the present ruling dispensation, a new ecosystem has emerged in which communal rhetoric generates followers, television appearances, and political patronage. Hate has become profitable. Provocative statements are clipped into short videos, amplified by social media algorithms, and consumed by millions as entertainment and political commentary. Individuals such as Nazia Elahi Khan have used this model to gain visibility and attract attention, often through inflammatory remarks designed to provoke outrage. This dangerous trend has blurred the line between free speech and deliberate incitement.
The controversy surrounding Nazia Elahi Khan also highlights another troubling aspect of contemporary India: selective outrage. There is often a swift and justified response when offensive remarks are directed against certain faiths or communities. However, when minorities, particularly Muslims, become the targets of derogatory comments, hate speech is frequently dismissed as "freedom of expression," "political commentary," or merely a matter of opinion.
This selective application of moral and legal standards sends a dangerous message—that some communities deserve protection from hate while others are expected to endure humiliation and insults in silence.
Critics argue that the BJP remained largely silent while figures such as Nazia repeatedly targeted Muslims through provocative rhetoric. The party's tolerance of such voices, they contend, contributed to an environment in which hostility towards a minority community became politically acceptable. It was only when remarks were allegedly made about Prophet Muhammad and his revered wife Ayesha Siddiqua that widespread anger within the Muslim community erupted and demands for legal action intensified.
What makes the present moment particularly alarming is that hate speech is no longer confined to anonymous social media trolls or fringe elements. Individuals accused of making inflammatory remarks increasingly enjoy political legitimacy, hold party positions, and command substantial online followings.
The fact that a person associated with a major political party can repeatedly attract controversy over communal statements points to a deeper societal problem. It suggests that inflammatory rhetoric is no longer politically costly; in many cases, it has become politically rewarding. This normalisation emboldens others to test the boundaries of acceptable discourse, gradually shifting public standards and making extreme views appear ordinary.
Platforms such as Instagram, YouTube, and X have become fertile grounds for the rapid spread of divisive content. Their algorithms often reward sensationalism and outrage because such content generates engagement and advertising revenue. Critics of the ruling establishment argue that organised online networks have become highly effective at shaping narratives and amplifying content that portrays Muslims negatively. As a result, videos that insult religious beliefs, ridicule communities, or reinforce stereotypes often travel faster than messages promoting harmony and coexistence.
The Nazia Elahi Khan episode once again demonstrates how a few minutes of online content can inflame sentiments and generate widespread anger across communities. It also raises questions about the willingness of political parties to distance themselves from divisive rhetoric when it serves broader political objectives.
The normalisation of hate speech does not remain confined to the digital world. Words have consequences. Repeated demonisation of communities creates an atmosphere of suspicion and hostility. It deepens social divisions, legitimises prejudice, and gradually erodes the constitutional values of equality and fraternity.
India's strength has always been its diversity and its ability to accommodate multiple faiths, cultures, and identities. When hate speech becomes routine and insults against religious figures become a means of gaining attention and influence, the very fabric of this pluralistic society is threatened.
The FIRs registered against Nazia Elahi Khan are important because they reaffirm a fundamental principle: no individual, regardless of political affiliation or social media influence, should enjoy impunity for deliberately hurting religious sentiments and promoting communal discord.
However, accountability cannot be selective. The law must act uniformly against all forms of hate speech, irrespective of the religion of the victim or the political identity of the accused.
The real challenge before India today is not merely prosecuting one individual for one controversial statement. It is confronting the larger culture that has allowed hate speech to become normal, profitable, and politically acceptable.
Unless this trend is reversed, India risks becoming a society where outrage is manufactured for attention, communal divisions are deepened for political gain, and the constitutional promise of fraternity remains only on paper.
This is not just about one FIR, one leader, or one offensive reel. It is about the moral direction of a nation. When hate is rewarded with visibility, when insult is mistaken for courage, and when communal provocation is treated as political strategy, democracy itself begins to rot from within.
India cannot afford to become a country where citizens are trained to hate before they are taught to think. It cannot afford a public sphere where religious insult is normalised, where outrage is monetised, and where silence in the face of bigotry is mistaken for maturity. Every time hate speech is excused, the republic grows weaker; every time it is challenged, the idea of India grows stronger.
The choice before the country is stark: either defend the constitutional promise of dignity, equality, and fraternity for all, or surrender to a politics that feeds on division and survives on contempt. History will not remember those who shouted the loudest. It will remember whether India had the courage to stand up when hatred tried to pass itself off as normal.
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Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan is a freelance content writer and editor based in Nagpur. He is also an activist and social entrepreneur, and co-founder of TruthScape, a collective of digital activists working to combat disinformation on social media

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