Screengrabs from uploads from the accounts of right-wing trolls Sandeep Acharya (top left), Suresh Rajput (top right), Harish Ramkali (bottom left) and Jeet Vashisth (bottom right),

By Pooja Chaudhuri

On December 23, 2021, Harish Ramkali, a member of the Bajrang Dal in Haryana, posted on Facebook that any school that dresses its students as Santa Claus without prior permission from parents would have a case filed against them and be closed.

Screengrab from Harish Ramkali’s now-defunct Facebook page. Photo: Alt News.

This was one of the several threats that Ramkali had made on his Facebook page in the lead up to Christmas last year that saw a spate of violence against the minority Christian community.

On December 12, Ramkali uploaded a video where he could be seen mobilising people against a Christian pastor whom he accused of religious conversion in Haryana. “The Valmiki community of Jind is standing up against them (the Christian community),” Ramkali could be heard saying amid chants hailing the Valmiki god and slogans of ‘Jai Shri Ram’ and ‘Bharat Mata ki Jai’.

Screengrab from Harish Ramkali’s now-defunct Facebook page. Photo: Alt News.

Harish Ramkali, aka Harish Saini, is a resident of Jind, Haryana and a leader of the Bajrang Dal. Starting out as a district president of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), Ramkali has slowly risen up the ranks in the Sangh. He was the student head of the Haryana wing of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) before his appointment in the Bajrang Dal.

Last year, a group of protestors comprising of scheduled castes, backward classes and lawyers assembled at Rani Talab in Jind for a protest march against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). When the Muslim protestors decided to offer namaz as per their daily routine, they were stopped by members of the Bajrang Dal and the Gau Seva Dal. Ramkali threatened the Muslim protestors of “dire consequences” if they offered namaz at the site.

In a video that he uploaded on Facebook in July, he accused the Muslim community of ‘land jihad’ and took responsibility for demolishing ‘illegal’ Mazars (shrines). “Whether you go to Delhi, Haryana or Rajasthan, [‘land jihad’] is rapidly increasing. It is the greatest threat to Hindus after ‘love jihad’. Bajrang Dal has removed several ‘illegal’ Mazars with the administration’s permission,” he says. The video had over four lakh views.

Screengrab from Harish Ramkali’s now-defunct Facebook page. Photo: Alt News.

A few days later, he uploaded another video that showed a man atop a Mazar, demolishing it with an axe. The video had 5.3 million views. This structure too was deemed ‘illegal’ by Ramkali.

While it may be possible that prior permission was not sought to build these shrines, no action seemed to have been taken against a civilian taking the law into his own hands.

Alt News contacted Saffidon, Jind police station and the police claimed to be unaware of Ramkali.

The declaration of police ignorance was made even as Ramkali uploaded pictures and videos showing him working alongside policemen. “Not just Gurugram, but we will not allow you (Muslims) to offer namaz or carry out ‘land jihad’ anywhere in Haryana. Bajrang Dal has informed the government in Haryana to bring the administration to its senses,” he wrote in a Facebook post last month, amid growing attacks on Muslims offering namaz in Gurgaon.

Alt News’s efforts in deplatforming dangerous accounts

Alt News reached out to Facebook via emails and Harish Ramkali’s account was subsequently taken down. We wrote multiple emails to the social media company and highlighted its failure to suspend Ramkali despite repeated violations. Our first email was sent on December 6, 2021. Ramkali’s account was taken down in the first week of January, 2022.

Alt News has written to Facebook and YouTube about several other individuals who post hate speech and violent content on the platforms.

Jeet Vashisth

Jeet Vashisth, a member of the Hindu Jagran Manch (HJM), had uploaded a video in November, 2021 where he entered a dargah along with his accomplices, alleging that it is an ‘illegal’ property built on government land carrying out religious conversions using black magic. He also accused the dargah committee of having ties with Pakistan.

By the evening, a large group of far-right Hindu ‘activists’ assembled near the dargah and called for its demolition. The group directed the police to file an FIR in the case and arrest individuals associated with the dargah.