There is so much of fear and dread of police arrest among Muslim residents of Nuh that all the youth have fled the town and taken shelter in nearby forests and villages, observes Syed Khalique Ahmed. He also records that a woman delivered a premature baby due to police raid at her house around midnight.
Muslim residents of Nuh, a prominent town in the backward region of Mewat in South Haryana, are living in awe and terror for the last two weeks after the violence between local Muslims and members of Braj Mandal Yatra organised by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and its youth wing Bajrang Dal on July 31. Yatris were mostly outsiders and had come from all over the state.
If one visits the town, one will hardly find a single Muslim youth in the town. The only people left in this Muslim-concentrated town are women, old people and children below 12 or 10 years of age.
The Muslim residents are so terrified that they are not willing to reveal their identity while talking to mediapersons about the police action.
The residents say the youth have fled the town and taken shelter in nearby jungles in the foothills of Aravalli ranges and with their relatives in villages in Haryana and neighbouring Rajasthan.
Many locals alleged that the police entered their houses all of a sudden and looked for male members. When they did not find any male member, they would ask for the number of family members, including children and their age. A pregnant woman is reported to have delivered a premature baby due to the fear of police raid at her house in the middle of night.
A Muslim government official, on condition of anonymity, said a Muslim youth who had hidden himself in a farm in Malav village was bitten by a snake and he died instantly. This indicates the level of fear among the Muslim population owing to random arrest by the police.
The police registered as many as 57 FIRs till the writing of this story, including 11 against people who shared news and videos about the communal clashes on social media. The police arrested 188 people, almost all of them Muslims, by August 9 when we visited the town and nearby areas. Many Muslims said that policemen randomly checked their mobile phones and deleted videos pertaining to the violence. However, some videos of the violence went viral before the internet ban. Internet ban is still on in entire Nuh district.
WHY NO ARREST OF BRAJ MANDAL YATRIS?
The police had not arrested any of the participants in the yatra or its organisers till the writing of this story. This puts a question mark on the impartiality of the police and prosecution agencies.
As Nuh Superintendnet of Police Narendra Birjani could not be contacted despite several efforts, Public Relations Officer (PRO) of Nuh police Krishna Kumar, when questioned about the police not arresting the yatris who were armed and shouted provocative slogans against Muslims, said: “Police are trying to identify who exactly from among the yatris were involved in the violence so that they can be arrested.”
However, he was non-plussed when questioned about why the same yardstick was not applied in connection with arrest of Muslim youth. On repeated questioning, he said, “I understand what you want to say. But I can assure you that police officials are not biased. Mr. Narendra Birjania is a highly honest and upright official.”
But he avoided replying to the basic question why the Muslim boys were being arrested randomly without establishing their complicity in the violence. The silence of the police to this and many such questions suggests that police and investigative agencies need to be more transparent to make Muslims feel that police are not taking one-sided action.
Police must find out who were the yatris, from where they all came, what is their background and if they had any criminal antecedents and why were they carrying arms in a religious yatra? And why did the police allow weapons in a religious programme?
WHY NO ACTION AGAINST YATRA ORGANISERS?
It is highly disappointing that the police on security duty along with the yatra did not do anything to prevent the yatris from carrying weapons and raising anti-Muslim slogans. And why did the organisers of the yatra allow the participants to carry weapons and raise slogans against another religion? Was it not the responsibility of the organisers to ensure that yatra participants did not raise slogans insulting to other communities? Why are the police and investigative agencies silent on these questions? Why have the police not arrested the yatra organisers who permitted the participants to carry weapons and shout anti-Muslim slogans? If some criminals with weapons had infiltrated the yatra, why did the organisers not inform the police about them? Why is the state not bulldozing the houses of the yatris involved in the Nuh communal violence? Why this soft corner towards organisers of the yatra and its participants whose irresponsible action resulted in violence in Nuh which never witnessed communal clashes after 1992? And the violence did not remain confined to Nuh only! It spread to nearby towns like Sohna, Taoru, and even Gurugram (formerly Gurgaon), a hub of multinational corporations, including Google.
MUSLIMS OFFERED FOOD AND WATER TO YATRIS
The yatra started from Nalhar temple in the foothills of Aravalli ranges, about four kilometres from the Nuh town. The temple is the main centre of organising the yatra that began just four years ago. There are no Hindu houses on the route from the temple to the Nuh town. As it was very hot on July 31 when the yatra was taken, yatris took a brief rest in Muslim shops outside Nalhar medical college. Muslims offered them water pouches and water bottles free of charge. Hafiz Khalid, imam of the mosque in front of the medical college, said a Muslim family even offered food to some of the yatris.
Zubair Khan of Pakeeza Medical Store (now demolished) said the yatris took a brief rest in Muslim shops before proceeding towards the Nuh town. He said all of them were armed with sharp-edged weapons.
CLASHES TOOK PLACE AT JHANDA CHOWK
Locals say clashes took place when the yatris had reached Jhanda Chowk, the town’s main centre and shouted anti-Muslim slogans. As the entire Braj Yatra route from Nuh onward has Muslim villages on either side of the state highway, the yatris drove back and took shelter in the temple. While Muslim youth pelted stones and chased them up to the temple, none from among the yatris sustained grievous injuries. Nalhar Temple has been now fortified with round the clock guard by ITBP jawans. ITBP jawans did not allow our team who wanted to meet the temple priest and its administrators to know about why the yatra participants were allowed to carry weapons in the religious yatra? Why were the yatris allowed to assemble and stay in the temple with weapons? Why didn’t they inform the police if they knew about the yatris carrying weapons with them?
It is really a tribute to the people of the area that the temple never witnessed any violence from the local Muslims, not even in 1992, when Nuh was rocked with communal clashes following the Babri Masjid demolition.
BULLDOZING MUSLIM HOUSES, BUSINESS PLACES
Before the authorities could identify those behind the violence, they bulldozed more than one thousand Muslim properties, including hundreds of temporary roadside cabins and other outlets, source of livelihood for poor Muslims.
COPYING ISRAEL TO CAUSE ECONOMIC DAMAGE TO MUSLIMS
While authorities say these were encroachments on government land, the timing of the action indicates it was intended as a collective punishment to Muslims for challenging the miscreants who had infiltrated in the yatra and raised anti-Muslim slogans. The action seems to be on the pattern of Israeli government which pulls down houses and properties of the Palestinian Muslims who resist the aggression by illegal Jewish settlers or the illegal police action.
In its zeal to award collective punishment, the local municipality under police protection even demolished buildings that were constructed legally. Among them include a four-storeyed Sahara Hotel that was owned by Aqeel Meo of Palwal district. One Jamshed Meo, who ran the hotel, went into depression after demolition of the hotel and is currently under treatment in a hospital. The estimated loss of the hotel owner is said to be `2 crore.
Likewise, a pucca ground plus one house of a Muslim on Jhanda Road was bulldozed while a marble shop belonging to a Hindu adjoining the Muslim house, was not touched at all.
The municipality and the police also bulldozed the ground floor of Kajaria Tiles and Home Décor near Jhanda Park. Its owner Liaqat Ali Meo said he had constructed the showroom on his own land and had been doing business for the last three years. He said his entire four-storeyed building would have been demolished had the Punjab and Haryana High Court not ordered stay against demolitions. Liaqat Ali said he had provided shelter for four Bajrang Dal activists who were fleeing after clashes on the main road on July 31. His estimated loss is `30 lakh.
The ground floor and basement of the building housing the offices of Anees Transporters, next to Kajaraia Town, was also badly damaged in bulldozer action. His estimated loss is `5 lakh approximately.
In fact, the entire Nuh town gives the look of a place devastated by war. More than 100 shops, including medical stores and X-ray and sonography centres were pulled down in front of the Nalhar Medical College and Hospital, all owned by Muslims. In their zeal, the authorities also caused damage to bathrooms, toilets and other properties belonging to the mosque opposite the medical college, resulting in disconnection of electric supply to the mosque. The mosque management said it will take several days to repair the damage and restore power supply to the masjid.
Hafiz Khalid, masjid’s imam, said many Hindu patients coming to the medical college used toilet and bathrooms of the mosque because bathrooms in medical college are not maintained properly.
Ziaul Meo, who ran sample collection centre for Dr. Lal’s Pathology Laboratory, said he suffered a loss of about `50 lakh because his entire lab was razed to the ground, without giving a chance to remove the equipment.