Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Two more held over Udaipur tailor’s murder

- Sachin Saini sachin.saini@htlive.com

JAIPUR: Rajasthan Police on Friday arrested two more people for allegedly conspiring to kill a 47-year-old Hindu tailor in Udaipur earlier this week. Three more people have been detained for interrogat­ion in connection with the murder, said police.

On June 28, Riyaz Akhtari and Gaus Mohammed murdered Kanhaiya Lal with sharp knives because the latter had backed controvers­ial comments by BJP member Nupur Sharma on Prophet Mohammed. The two also posted online a grisly video of the crime claiming responsibi­lity for the murder. Both the accused have since been arrested and shifted to the high-security Ajmer Central Jail.

The case is being investigat­ed by the NIA with the support of the Anti-terrorist Squad (ATS) and Special Operations Group (SOG) of Rajasthan Police.

The two persons arrested on Friday were identified as Mohsin and Asif. “They were co-conspirato­rs of the murder of Kanhaiya and are being interrogat­ed,” said Udaipur IGP Praful Kumar, adding that a court in Udaipur later granted NIA their transit remand.

Public prosecutor Kapil Todawat said Akhtari and Mohammed will be produced before an NIA court in Jaipur on Saturday, as per the orders of a District and Sessions Court. The court also directed the Rajasthan Police to hand over the case diary to NIA.

The police on Friday revealed that Akhtari paid extra money to get a number plate for his motorcycle that read RJ 27-AS-2611. Police are linking it to the date Mumbai faced its worst terror attack, on November 26, 2008, that left 166 people dead.

After killing Lal, the two murderers escaped on this bike that is now lying in a police station in Udaipur. Regional transport officer (Udaipur) Prabhu Lal Bamaniya said Akhtari deliberate­ly asked for the number 2611 and paid a sum of ₹1,000 through demand draft.

UDAIPUR: Udaipur tailor Kanhaiya Lal, who was brutally murdered by two Muslim men for a social media post earlier this week, had received police protection on June 16 after complainin­g of threats, but the cover was withdrawn in three days, his family alleged on Friday.

On June 9, Lal – who had a tailoring shop in Udaipur’s Bhoot Mahal for about two decades – shared a Facebook post backing suspended Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokespers­on Nupur Sharma, whose controvers­ial comments on Prophet Mohammed caused an internatio­nal storm.

On June 11, Lal was told that a first informatio­n report (FIR) was filed at Dhanmandi police station by a neighbouri­ng shopkeeper Nazim against him for allegedly hurting religious sentiments. He was arrested the same day and released on bail the next day. But he told his family that he started receiving threats from unidentifi­ed men, who conducted a recce of his shop and asked him to shut it down. Scared, he went to the Dhamandi police station with a complaint, accompanie­d by other businessme­n in the locality, on June 15. He also shut down the shop temporaril­y on June 15.

Two police constables were deployed outside his shop the next day, said eyewitness­es and members of the Bhoot Mahal business community. But they were gone on June 18 even as Lal kept the shop closed.

“When my father requested that the security be extended, the local police officers said it wasn’t possible for them to spare security personnel indefinite­ly. Instead, they told us to gauge if it was safe before opening our shop,” said Lal’s 20-year-old son, Yash. Rajkumar Sharma, who was Lal’s employee and one of two eyewitness­es to his gruesome murder on June 28, corroborat­ed this. “The two policemen were called off on the third day,” said Sharma. Yash said that when his father told the police about the threat to his life, police said that he had to gauge his own risk and safety.

Govind Singh, the former station house officer of Dhanmandi police station, and Bhanwarlal Paneri, the ex-investigat­ing officer in this case – both of them are now suspended – refused to comment on the subject. But a local police officer, who did not want to be identified, said the decision was taken because Lal had not opened his shop despite the security. “Since Lal’s shop had remained closed and no attack on the shop had taken place, there didn’t appear a need to spare policemen for security job,” said this police officer, requesting anonymity. Manoj Kumar Chaudhary, Udaipur’s superinten­dent of police who was shunted out on Friday, said, “The decision to deploy policemen or take them off was taken at the local level. I cannot comment much on it”.

He finally opened his shop on June 22. Six days later, two men – Riyaz Akhtari and Gaus Mohammed – walked into his shop on the pretext of getting clothes stitched, and hacked him to death with sharp knives.

Members of the local business community said they remembered Lal feeling unsafe in the second week of June. “Not only did Lal feel unsafe, him closing his business was also impacting some other local garments businesses that relied on him,” said Jayesh Champawat, a furniture shop owner in the market.

Many of these other shop owners accompanie­d Lal to the Dhanmandi police station on June 15. One of them was Gaurav Acharya, who worked in a neighbouri­ng chemical shop for a decade before taking up a delivery gig a month ago. “Instead of assuring him of security, the police asked him to call a meeting with the Muslim community members for a compromise and apologise to them,” said Acharya, who had submitted ₹10,000 as Lal’s bail bond to get him released on June 12. The police got the two parties at a table, brokered a peace between them and they decided to withdraw their complaints against each other.

Lal, however, felt unsafe and decided to stay away from the shop. But the next day, local residents told the family that police had deployed two constables outside. “The market people called my father to inform him that two policemen were standing guard outside the shop. The police later told us that they were worried about the shop being burnt down,” Yash said.

Once the constables were gone on June 18, the threats began again. Lal told his family that unidentifi­ed motorcycli­sts were conducting a recce of his closed shop. He was also desperate as income had dried up, and he again approached the police on June 20. The police again brokered peace between the two parties. On June 22, Lal reopened his shop. But there was a constant sense of fear. Yash said that his father, who would usually return home from work after 10pm, began leaving his shop by 6pm, taking different routes home daily. “I wish the police had at least redeployed the security when my father opened his shop,” Yash said.

 ?? ANI ?? Markets remained shut in Bikaner, as a mark of protest against the tailor’s killing in Udaipur, on Friday.
ANI Markets remained shut in Bikaner, as a mark of protest against the tailor’s killing in Udaipur, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India