Global Alert on Manufactured Gen Z Unrest in India as BJP Leader Urges PM Modi & HM Amit Shah to Act Decisively: Sukhminderpal Singh Grewal Bhukhri Kalan
Ludhiana, 12 January 2026: National BJP leader, Advocate Sukhminderpal Singh Grewal Bhukhri Kalan today issued a heartfelt, sincere and deeply concerned appeal to the nation, urging Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi, Hon’ble Home Minister Shri Amit Shah and the Government of India, along with all Central and State agencies and intelligence institutions, to remain fully vigilant and to take advance, preventive steps to safeguard India from any attempt to manufacture unrest by misusing the emotions of the country’s youth.
Grewal stated through his official social media platforms including Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, YouTube, Instagram, Threads and especially X that India is blessed with one of the world’s largest and most digitally connected Gen Z populations. These young Indians are intelligent, compassionate, socially aware and deeply invested in issues such as climate change, pollution, social justice and employment. Their concerns are genuine and deserve to be heard with respect and sensitivity. However, he cautioned that history across the world shows how these same emotions can also be manipulated, oversimplified and weaponised by powerful forces to create instability.
He said that over the past two decades, social media has transformed political mobilisation globally. From the Arab Spring to political upheavals in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal, digital platforms were not only used to express public sentiment but were also exploited to shape narratives, provoke anger, mobilise crowds and destabilise governments. What often began as genuine public frustration soon turned into chaos when hidden interests and organised networks entered the picture.
Grewal told that India today, under the strong and stable leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, stands politically stable, economically resilient and globally respected. Large-scale infrastructure development, digital governance, welfare delivery and consistent electoral mandates have created continuity and confidence in the system. Such stability, he said, makes India difficult to destabilise through conventional political means, which is why some forces may now be attempting to engineer unrest by emotionally mobilising the youth.
He further stated that recent Gen Z–driven protests in neighbouring countries have led to political churn, instability and economic damage. At the same time, within India, a sudden and aggressive focus on Gen Z by certain political voices and sections of the media, combined with emotionally charged campaigns on issues like air pollution, climate change and mining, raises serious questions. While these are important and real issues, Grewal cautioned that they are increasingly being framed in a way that promotes outrage over awareness and agitation over constructive dialogue.
Grewal said that when anger replaces understanding, it becomes dangerous for a nation as large, diverse and sensitive as India. He stressed that India’s youth must never be turned into tools for destabilisation, misinformation or psychological warfare.
He appealed with humility and patriotism to the Prime Minister, the Home Minister, the Cabinet Secretariat, the Department of Personnel and Training and the entire Central and State bureaucracy, including the Indian Administrative Service, Indian Police Service and Indian Foreign Service, to ensure that India’s youth are protected from manipulation and disinformation. Their energy, he said, must be channelled into nation-building, innovation and democratic participation, not into chaos designed by unseen hands.
Grewal said that India’s future is bright and India’s Gen Z is its greatest strength. “Let no one be allowed to turn that strength into a weapon against Bharat. Our youth must remain the builders of a stronger, safer and more prosperous India,” he asserted.