Indian Prime minister says, Al Qaeda will fail in India
Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi has said al Qaeda will fail if it seeks to spread its
terror network into his country because Muslims there "will die for
India."
Al Qaeda announced plans this month to launch a new branch in the
Indian subcontinent, in a video message featuring al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri.
Al-Zawahiri said that his group would seek support in the
Indian states of Assam and Gujarat, and in Kashmir, the disputed region between
India and Pakistan -- and that he wants to free Muslims from the
"oppression" they face there.
India, a predominantly Hindu nation, has a 13% Muslim
population, according to the country's census.
Inter-religious relations have become tense before. In
2002, Gujarat was wracked with anti-Muslim violence, in which more than 1,000
people, mostly Muslims, were killed.
Most of the world's Muslims live in Asia, with about 1
billion in the Asia-Pacific region and about 322 million in the Middle East and
North Africa, according to the Pew Research Center.
Besides Assam, Gujarat and Kashmir, al-Zawahiri also said
in his message that he would seek to gain support "for the
vulnerable" in Myanmar and Bangladesh.
Peter Bergen, CNN's national security analyst, called the
video "hyperventilation and posturing."
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