RSS leader Sunil Ambekar said Hindu society must be strengthened so the world becomes free of conspiracies and distress. Speaking ahead of RSS centenary celebrations, he also reacted to Nepal’s Gen Z protests and US tariffs on Indian exports, stressing that India should emerge stronger globally.
Representational Image. File Pic
Amid the recent 'Gen Z' protests in Nepal and high US tariffs on Indian exports, RSS leader Sunil Ambekar said that the Hindu society should be strengthened so that the world becomes free of conspiracies going on across the globe on Monday.
RSS Leader Sunil Ambekar, while talking to the media on Monday, stated that the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh's objective is that the entire world should be free of distress, as per PTI.
Ambekar was addressing a press conference to inform about the centenary celebrations of RSS, which will begin from Vijayadashmi on October 2 in Nagpur.
The recent 'Gen Z' protests against alleged corruption and a ban on social media in Nepal, in which at least 72 persons were killed, led to the toppling of the K. P. Sharma Oli government.
Asked about the RSS assessment of what happened in Nepal and whether India should introspect its foreign policy amid the US government's decisions, Ambekar in reply said that, "The entire India, including RSS, is working towards the progress and strengthening of the country, and certainly India should become so strong that no society in the world should face such distress," as cited by news agency PTI.
He further said that, "It is the objective of RSS that the entire world should be free of distress. The Hindu society should be strengthened so that the world gets free from the conspiracies going on across the globe and the distress faced by the world."
Ambekar further stated that the RSS intends to organise a 'Hindu Sammelan' in around 103,000 places across the country as part of its centenary celebrations.
Earlier during the Nepal Gen-Z protest, the former Prime Minister K. P. Sharma Oli claimed that the use of automatic weapons during the Nepal Gen-Z protests on September 8, which led to the deaths of at least 19 people on the first day, must be investigated, as these weapons were “not in the possession of police authorities”, the IANS reported.
Oli, who resigned on September 9 amid a nationwide outcry over his handling of the crisis, further stated that no order was given by his government to open fire on protesters.
(With inputs from PTI and IANS)
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