From Margins to Silence: The State and Minority Rights in India
India’s self-image as the world’s largest democracy rests on the foundation of pluralism, secularism, and constitutional guarantees for all citizens. However, over the past decade, the lived reality...
India’s self-image as the world’s largest democracy rests on the foundation of pluralism, secularism, and constitutional guarantees for all citizens. However, over the past decade, the lived reality for many religious and ethnic minorities has shifted dramatically. The rise of majoritarian nationalism, institutional complicity, and the erosion of secular safeguards has created an atmosphere where minorities- particularly Muslims, Christians, and Sikhs- face growing exclusion, violence, and surveillance. This ideological transformation undermines the very ethos of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees equality before the law, freedom of religion, and protection of cultural rights.
These constitutional promises now stand in sharp contrast to the political realities on the ground. Muslims, who comprise over 14% of the population, remain severely underrepresented in Parliament, the civil services, and mainstream political discourse. The implementation of laws such as the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC) are not merely administrative tools; they are widely perceived as instruments to redefine Indian citizenship along religious lines. The selective exclusion of Muslims from the CAA’s protections directly violates secular principles and sows fear of disenfranchisement across entire communities.
This fear is compounded by the aggressive use of laws like the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), which disproportionately target minority activists, scholars, and journalists. Voices of dissent- especially those from Muslim or Sikh backgrounds- are increasingly labelled as “anti-national” or “terrorist.” The arrest of critics without trial, along with surveillance of religious institutions and diaspora communities, reflects a growing pattern of preemptive state repression. The extraterritorial assassination of Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada in 2023, allegedly linked to Indian intelligence, underscores how this repression has now extended beyond borders, raising serious international concerns.
Simultaneously, everyday life for minorities has become more precarious. The normalization of hate crimes- such as mob lynchings in the name of cow protection or bulldozer demolitions of Muslim homes- has created a climate of fear and vulnerability. The 2020 Delhi riots, in which police were accused of aiding violent mobs, revealed the extent to which law enforcement may act in a partisan manner. The use of legal mechanisms like the Karnataka hijab ban or anti-conversion laws has further restricted religious freedoms under the guise of secular uniformity, creating a hostile legal landscape for Muslims and Christians alike.
Media narratives have played a critical role in legitimizing this shift. In much of India’s mainstream media, minorities are frequently portrayed as threats- whether through fabricated concepts like “love jihad,” “land jihad,” or “Corona jihad.” These disinformation campaigns, often amplified by social media algorithms and state-aligned outlets, shape public opinion and justify discriminatory policies. International investigations, such as those by EU DisinfoLab, have exposed how Indian propaganda networks operate globally to malign dissenters, particularly from Sikh and Muslim backgrounds.
Yet, in the face of repression, resistance endures. The Shaheen Bagh protests, led by Muslim women against the CAA, stood as a powerful symbol of democratic resilience. Dalit and Adivasi mobilizations continue to challenge caste and class hierarchies, while Christian and Sikh communities advocate for religious freedoms through legal and international forums. Globally, diaspora groups have intensified advocacy efforts, engaging with foreign governments, filing legal cases, and using digital platforms to spotlight abuses in India.
Despite international concern- such as repeated USCIRF recommendations to designate India a “Country of Particular Concern”- India’s government continues to dismiss criticism as foreign interference. However, the consequences are becoming harder to ignore. As India positions itself as a rising global power, its treatment of minorities increasingly challenges its democratic credentials.
The marginalization of minorities is not a peripheral issue but a central challenge to India’s democratic future. The exclusion and silencing of entire communities signal a deeper unraveling of the social contract. Defending the rights of India’s minorities is essential- not only to protect specific groups from discrimination and violence, but to uphold the pluralist foundation of the Republic itself. Without urgent course correction, India risks trading its secular democracy for a majoritarian state built on fear, silence, and repression.


