8 September 2020 , Headquarters Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha ; Jagat Guru Shankaracharya, Shri Narendra Nand Saraswati, Rajya Sabha MP Hon'ble Shri Anil Agarwal, Founder of Sudarshan television channel Shri Suresh Chauhan, Convener of Population Control Rally, Major General SP Sinha, PIL in a webinar organized by Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha here today. Known as Man of India Advocate Ashwani Upadhyay, Former Commander of Indian Military Academy, Major General VS Karnik, Ashok Jain from Chennai, Advocate SM Krishna from Supreme Court, Former Chief Medical Officer and MP Representative Shri OP Agrawal, Noted Yogacharya Shri Devendra Hitkari described population jihad as a bigger threat to the country than Karona.
National President of Rashtriya Sainik Sanstha, Colonel Tejendra Pal Tyagi, National Convener of Education and Health Wing, Major Sushil Goyal, Secretary of Delhi Unit, Dr. Sapna Bansal jointly conducted the webinar. Mrs. Pooja Sharma, Mrs. Monika Tyagi and many other women also participated in this webinar and told that the number of Hindus in the world was 33 crores in the 6th century and see the irony that this population was the same in 1947 as well. The summary of all the statements is as follows;
In 2018, the Registrar General and Census Commissioner had told that the largest growing population in the country is of Muslims. In all the five year plans that were run, Hindus considered family planning as a Veda sentence, but Muslims refused family planning by citing Shariat. Population imbalance is a matter of more concern than population control. According to the ground information, more than 70% of all jails in India are Muslim and about half of the hospitals are Muslim, meaning they are at the fore in availing facilities and committing crimes. From above, the intentional settlement of Rohingios of Mayamar in Jammu, getting them voter cards and Aadhar cards has also become a threat to the security of the country. In such a situation, population imbalance has become a serious threat, so the population control law and the Uniform Civil Code must be enacted in the coming session.