Kota Conversion Racket: 40,000 Obscene Videos Recovered

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The arrest of Moin Khan in Rajasthan’s Kota has brought to light allegations that go far beyond the actions of one individual.

According to the police, the arrest followed a complaint filed by Bajrang Dal alleging that an online network was targeting Hindu women through social media platforms for religious conversion and the creation of explicit content. The investigation is ongoing, and authorities are examining digital evidence recovered during the operation.

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Among the most shocking claims is the alleged recovery of more than 40,000 obscene videos from the accused’s devices. Investigators are also probing allegations that platforms such as Telegram, WhatsApp, Snapchat and Discord were used to contact and target Hindu women.

The complainants have further alleged that online groups promoted what they described as “Love Jihad” and “Rape Jihad” while attempting to lure women into relationships, blackmail them and facilitate religious conversion. Police are investigating these allegations, including the reported recovery of audio recordings and the accused’s alleged links with individuals based in Pakistan.

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If these allegations are proven, they point towards a highly organised operation rather than isolated criminal behaviour.

Then this makes the issue much larger.

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It is a question of organised online grooming.

Modern technology has made such operations easier than ever before. Encrypted messaging applications, anonymous online communities and social media platforms allow individuals to build relationships, manipulate victims and operate across state or even national boundaries.

The internet has become the primary battleground.

This is why awareness has become just as important as law enforcement.

[Targeting Hindu Girls] ──> [Media Harvesting & Blackmail] ──> [Weaponized Coercion] ──> [Forced Religious Conversion]

Confronting the Reality of Targeted Jihad

The sheer volume of the recovered data, 40,000 explicit files along with audio recordings explicitly planning the exploitation of Hindu girls while defiling sacred religious symbols like sindoor and mangalsutra, makes one reality undeniable: this is a structural manifestation of Jihad.

For too long, mainstream discourse has sheltered behind a forced “peaceful narrative,” downplaying organized grooming as random, individual crimes. The Kota case completely shatters that illusion. The operation relied on specific sub-strategies like “Jihad al Akbar,” where the emotional vulnerabilities and trusting nature of Hindu girls were systematically weaponized against them.

When an online ecosystem creates spaces dedicated entirely to the digital auction and degradation of women of a specific community, treating it as ordinary crime is fatal.

The Civilisational Need

Considering the staggering scale of these operations, Hindus can no longer rely on reactive, case-by-case law enforcement. The community requires an aggressive, systematic campaign to expose the mechanics of this Jihad across every section of society, dismantling the predatory networks before they can compromise another life.

The Kota investigation proves that the threat has evolved from local streets to highly sophisticated, encrypted digital frontlines. Countering an adversarial apparatus of this magnitude demands an uncompromised societal awakening—one that looks at the danger directly, calls it by its true name, and constructs a permanent defense against it.

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