 Thousands of people hit the streets all across India on Wednesday the 28th of June in protests against the increasing incidents of lynching of minorities by communal mobs. The campaign that led to the protests was launched in the backdrop of the murder of 15-year-old Junaid in a Delhi-Madhura local train on the 22nd of June. Indian citizens whose lives have increasingly come under the shadow of criminal mobs participated in the not-in-my-name protests that took place across India while their anguish resonated in protests held in London, Toronto and Boston as well. We believe in democracy and we believe in the Indian constitution. The campaign has been signed and it is for that reason that we are here. So that is the strategy to scare everybody, to create an environment where people forget protesting. My name is Mohamad in it, for that matter, Ahmed in it or Khan in Khan for that matter. They're coming up to me and they're just trying to lynch me. That's the whole point of me coming here. They're saying, yes, we are doing wrong. We have to become IAS and IPS. We can't become IAS in this environment. We can't go to service. We can't do our work in this environment. I used to live in Delhi. But I don't attack murder. People are killing people. But for the betterment of the village, they are alive and happy. You're not doing anything for them. Yes, we are target Muslims today. But the people who think they will be saved won't be saved. The more people will understand that there is no murder of a Junaid. This is the murder of our rights to speak and to live. It is only for the Prime Minister to go abroad. If they don't want to work, they will give a fine. There are many who are going to run the government. And for this, the Prime Minister must come and say openly that what is his stand, whether he is there with the lynching mob or for the citizens of this country. We had very high hopes from our Prime Minister and we were hoping that the moment he takes a position on this there will be very immediate impact on this. He did speak about this issue, by the way. He called these people, the Gaurakshaks, goons as well at some point. But what we have seen is that there has been no response. And this is now a kind of a separate situation. If people don't leave this situation on the streets, then the situation... I mean, even after leaving, will the situation get better or not? We can't say anything about this. But at least we have to leave. And this is a small gesture. Very important. But this will not suffice. We have to go beyond this.