
Tension prevailed in Safilguda, Secunderabad on January 11 following the arrest of a 26-year-old man, identified as Altaf, for alleged unlawful entry, indecent behaviour of urinating and defecating inside Katta Maisamma Temple premises. The incident triggered protests by local Hindus and cadres of the Bharatiya Janata Party and several Hindu organisations, who described the act as a hate crime reflecting religious intolerance.
Police sources said Altaf was taken into custody after complaints from devotees regarding suspicious and objectionable conduct in the vicinity of the temple premises. He was produced before a magistrate and remanded to 14 days of judicial custody.
Desecration of a sacred Hindu temple is not a “law & order issue” it is an attack on faith.
When temples are defiled, silence from those in power and pseudo-secular voices is complicity.
BJP in Telangana will not remain a mute spectator. We will stand, fight, and act on the… pic.twitter.com/qCvwWHGzGl
— N Ramchander Rao (@N_RamchanderRao) January 11, 2026
Authorities confirmed the constitution of a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to examine whether there was any conspiracy angle behind the incident. Officials also stated that the accused’s mental health is being verified as part of the probe.
Senior BJP leaders joined the protest at Safilguda, demanding stringent punishment for the accused.
Telangana BJP president N Ramchander Rao criticised the state government and questioned the police response, alleging a recurring pattern of attacks, vandalism and desecration targeting Hindu temples.
He asserted that repeated incidents near places of worship were creating fear among devotees and called for exemplary action to deter such offences.
In response to the protests, police imposed heavy bandobast in and around Safilguda to prevent any escalation.
Pattern of Temple Vandalism in Hyderabad
The Safilguda incident has once again brought focus on earlier cases of vandalism and desecration of temples reported across Secunderabad and Hyderabad in recent years. These include incidents of temple property damage, defacement of murtis, and unauthorised entry into sanctum areas in different localities in twin cities, often triggering protests and demands for stricter security at places of worship.
Hindu groups argue that the current Congress government is reluctant to take concrete action; instead, it often attempts to label the accused as mentally unsound or offers other excuses. They allege that this creates an impression that the State government is protecting the accused, and that the silence of political leaders reflects a reluctance to speak out due to the religion of the accused.
Local residents further claim that responses to hate crimes are measured and weighed through the prism of religion. They allege that when the accused is Hindu, the incident is amplified with loud public outrage, whereas when the accused is Muslim or Christian, the same voices and ecosystem attempt to silence the issue or dismiss it as an act of a misguided or mentally unsound individual. According to them, this has become a standard template of response, and people are no longer willing to accept what they describe as blatant whitewashing.
Credit : Organiser Weekly
Matribhumi Samachar English

