A wave of anger erupted on social media platforms in India during the past hours, after circulating a new statement by Interior Minister Amit Shah about one of the massacres that Muslims were subjected to in this country.

Shah said - during one of the electoral conferences of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party - that the government "taught the rioters a lesson" in the Gujarat incident in 2002.

The violence in Gujarat - one of the worst religious riots in India - has killed more than a thousand people, most of them Muslims, and displaced tens of thousands of Muslims, and those unrest erupted after a fire broke out on a train carrying Hindu visitors that killed 60 who are they.

It is noteworthy that in 2011, a former senior officer in the Gujarat police - named Sanjeev Bhatt - filed a lawsuit with the Constitutional Court accusing Modi of being behind the massacre of Muslims that occurred in 2002.

Bhatt said in his lawsuit that Modi said in an official meeting with police chiefs that the Muslim community should be taught a "lesson" because of the train burning incident, which is similar to the statement of the Minister of Interior.

In 2002, when Narendra Modi was the chief minister of Gujarat, a thousand Muslims were butchered to death.

Today Indian home minister Amit Shah said in an election rally that 'anti-social elements' were taught a lesson by Modi in 2002. If the world needs any more proof pic.twitter.com/BQpLcA5w6w

- Rana Ayyub (@RanaAyyub) November 25, 2022

After 20 years, (Amit Shah), the current Home Minister of Modi's government, stood in the same state, to say yesterday, Friday, during one of the electoral conferences of the ruling party, that the government taught the "rioters" a harsh lesson in 2002, and because of that peace has prevailed in the state for the past two decades.

Amit Shah's statements ignited the Indian cyberspace, and a number of activists and bloggers considered it an attack on the Indian Muslim community, and some described it as evidence of the Bharatiya Janata government and Modi's involvement in the Gujarat events.

Indian journalist Rana Ayyub - who wrote a book on the Gujarat events - referred to Amit Shah's statements, and asked: If the world needs more evidence, referring to the ruling party's involvement in that massacre.

Home Minister @AmitShah terms the BJP govt's reaction to the 2002 riots as 'teaching a lesson'.

Fanning communal flames & then polarizing states for electoral gains has been BJP's modus operandi for decades now.

This is Modi-Shah's real Gujarat model.

— Dr.

Shama Mohamed (@drshamamohd) November 25, 2022

Shamma Mohamed, a spokesperson for the opposition National Congress Party, criticized Shah's remarks in a tweet, saying fanning communal flames and fanning polarization for electoral gains has been the BJP's modus operandi for decades now.

Indian lawyer and activist Deepaka Nath sent a message to the prime minister saying, "Instead of pretending to respect the constitution and lecturing us about it, you should sack Amit Shah for delivering hate speech privately admitting to violence in Gujarat" in 2002.

Is the Home Minister suggesting that the State was involved in the Gujarat 2002 violence?

startling statement.

https://t.co/eDHO8VXkcS

- Suhasini Haidar (@suhasinih) November 25, 2022

The journalist, Rana, returned to write in her tweet, saying, "This is a frank public admission by the Home Minister. Amit Shah admits that the Bharatiya Janata Party had a major role in the 2002 riots."