Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

String of lynchings points to a national dysfunctio­n

IN THE NAME OF JUSTICE Experts interpret the recent trend as an expression of majoritari­anism as most victims are Muslims or Dalits

- Snigdha Poonam letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: “Jab raja apna kaam nahin karega, toh praja ko karna padega” (When the ruler fails to do his duty, then the public will have to step in), Acharya Yogendra Arya, the head of Haryana’s Gau Raksha Dal, said on Friday.

His remark, a day after a Muslim man was lynched in Jharkhand on the suspicion of carrying beef, betrayed regret but little remorse. “It is unfortunat­e that people are being killed by mobs in the name of cows. But what can people do when the government, police and administra­tion don’t do their jobs? “

“No one has the right to kill. Hindus are a tolerant people by nature, but you tell me: when soldiers are killed on the border, doesn’t the public react with anger? Why should it be different for the murder of cows?” he asked. Arya’s justificat­ion for mob justice — lynchings in particular — is what is fuelling cow vigilantis­m across states despite Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s condemnati­on of killings in the name of cow protection.

A week before the incident in Jharkhard, a Muslim boy was stabbed to death on a Mathurabou­nd train for being a ‘beef eater’. There were several such incidents even earlier, including the murder of Pehlu Khan, a cattle trader, at the hands of vigilantes in Rajasthan’s Alwar.

Cows are only one of a range of triggers for the rising mob violence. People have also been lynched for being “suspected” thieves, rapists, and child lifters. But sociologis­ts and political commentato­rs interpret the recent trend as an expression of majoritari­anism as most of the victims are Muslims or Dalits.

“For centuries, emotional or ideologica­l issues have acted as a vehicle for violent behaviour that individual­s won’t resort to themselves,” says Nimesh Desai, psychiatri­st and director of the Institute of Human Behavior and Allied Sciences in Delhi, who insists his analysis should be seen as sociologic­al and not political. Acts of lynching, he says, are neither new nor exclusive to India.

“Conflict between majorities and minorities or tension between social groups have historical­ly been the ground for most mob violence across the globe.”

Experts say lynchings are not new to India. As many as 482 incidents of mob lynching were reported from the CPI(M)-ruled West Bengal between 1982 and 1984.

Neither is it the first time that minorities find themselves a target. In 2006, a family of Dalits in Maharashtr­a’s Kherlanji was killed by an upper-caste mob in one of most brutal acts of caste violence.

However, according to sociologis­t Shiv Vishwanath­an, there is something particular­ly worrying about the current spate of lynchings. According to him, the reason they should be seen as different from riots is that the crowd inflicting the violence sees itself as “restoring law and order instead of disrupting it”.

“There is something wrong about the Indian society itself, a result of social mobility without any social cohesion. People are living in cities, but without any sense of community.”

The silence of the state, says Vishwanath­an, makes it worse. “You will notice there is never any investigat­ion, no follow up. Silence is bought with monetary compensati­on. The only people who remember a lynching after 15 days are the family members of the victim. State silence becomes a chorus for the mob.”

 ?? PARWAZ KHAN/HT FILE PHOTO ?? Mariyam Khatoon (centre in green saree), widow of Alimuddin who was lynched by a mob for carrying beef in Ramgarh, Jharkhand, on June 30.
PARWAZ KHAN/HT FILE PHOTO Mariyam Khatoon (centre in green saree), widow of Alimuddin who was lynched by a mob for carrying beef in Ramgarh, Jharkhand, on June 30.

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