Waterloo Region Record

Indian guru faces up to life in prison in rape case

- Ashok Sharma

NEW DELHI — Thousands of supporters of an Indian quasirelig­ious sect leader left his headquarte­rs in northern India on Sunday as authoritie­s relaxed a curfew a day ahead of his sentencing for rape.

They responded to an appeal by authoritie­s to go home after thousands of followers protested the guru’s rape conviction with violence that left at least 38 people dead in Panchkula and Sirsa towns in Haryana state on Friday. The guru faces seven years to life in prison.

Police spokespers­on Surjeet Singh said the curfew imposed in Sirsa, where the headquarte­rs is located, was relaxed for five hours on Sunday to help people buy food and other essential items and outsiders to return home.

Singh said nearly 20,000 people had left the guru’s headquarte­rs since Saturday.

However, the presence of another 10,000 or so there has raised fears that they may turn violent again after their leader is sentenced on Monday.

The judge will hold the proceeding­s in a prison in Rohtak town, where the guru, who calls himself Saint Dr. Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Ji Insaan, has been detained since Friday amid tight security.

The guru had denied the charges of raping two women at his ashram in 2002.

Singh said hundreds of government forces, including the army, have been posted outside the sect’s headquarte­rs since Friday’s violence, when mobs set fire to government buildings, vandalized bus stations and government vehicles and attacked police and journalist­s in Panchkula.

B.S. Sandhu, Haryana state’s director-general of police, told reporters on Sunday that 32 people died in Panchkula and another six in Sirsa, while 926 people were arrested for rioting.

All but 17 of the 264 people injured in Friday’s violence have been discharged from hospitals in Panchkula.

On Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his concern over violence and said it was not acceptable to the nation in any form.

“I want to assure my countrymen that people who take the law into their own hands and are on the path of violent suppressio­n — whether it is a person or a group — neither this country nor any government will tolerate it,” Modi said in his monthly radio address, adding that the guilty would unquestion­ably be punished.

The sect claims to have about 50 million followers and campaigns for vegetarian­ism and against drug addiction. It has also taken up social causes such as organizing the weddings of poor couples.

Such sects have huge followings in India and their leaders often maintain private militias for protection.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hundreds of security forces marched through Sirsa Saturday to maintain calm after supporters of a quasi-religious sect protested the rape conviction of their leader with violence.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hundreds of security forces marched through Sirsa Saturday to maintain calm after supporters of a quasi-religious sect protested the rape conviction of their leader with violence.

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