Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Gudiya’s classmates reeling under trauma

- Gaurav Bisht

SHIMLA: Amid the public outrage, children of Government Senior Secondary School at Mahasu are struggling to overcome the trauma after the body of the 16-year-old girl student was found in the woods barely 500 metres from the school.

It has taken teachers two weeks to counsel the schoolchil­dren after the girl’s gangrape and murder. The girl went missing on July 4 and was found dead on July 6.

The school, which caters to Halalia and Mahasu villages, has 94 students and 12 teachers.

“It’s been a challenge for us. Initially, children were reluctant to attend school,” principal Anil Kumar said. “Attendance dropped after the murder. Children were shocked by the police presence at the rest house near the school,” he said.

The police’s special investigat­ion team stayed at the village for over a week and questioned 84 people.

The victim had joined the school on May 6. “She attended classes for 41 days,” the principal said.

Students of Classes 9 to 12 did not attend school for two days in solidarity. The children and staff attended a prayer meeting on Sunday at the crime spot in the jungle, said a teacher. KOTKHAI (SHIMLA) The protests sparked off by the gangrape and murder of a Kotkhai schoolgirl followed by the custodial death of a Nepalese rape accused have turned out to be the biggest in the apple heartland since the 1990 violent agitation by the fruit growers against the low support price.

It was in 1990 that the apple belt of Shimla, Kullu and Mandi rallied together to seek a better support price from the then Shanta Kumar-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in the state.

The orchardist­s were demanding that the support price be raised from Rs 2.25 per kg to Rs 5.

Interestin­gly, that time too the protest started from Theog and Kotkhai. “I still remember the protest, which was touted as the apple agitation, began from Kotkhai and Theogh before spreading across the entire apple belt,” says Sanjay Chauhan, general secretary of Himachal Pradesh Fruit And Vegetable Growers Confederat­ion,aconglomer­ateof various farmers’ associatio­ns.

The farmers laid siege to the town of Shimla after the agitation turned violent following the death of three farmers in Kotgarh. The apple-growing region spans Shimla, Kinnaur and Kullu districts comprising 13 assembly segments. Apples are also grown in parts of Mandi and Sirmour district, but the above three districts form the traditiona­l apple belt.

Seeing the situation getting out of hand, the then government had called in the army that marched through the streets. The agitation also widened the regional divide between the upper Himachal comprising the apple belt and the hilly areas, and the lower Himachal consisting of plains.

Unlike the past, this time the social media galvanised the protests. Kotkhai erupted after videos of the murdered girl went viral on the social media. The pictures of the alleged accused were also circulated widely.

The protest is bound to impact the political contours of the apple growing regions. Until the late 1970s, this belt used to produce mixed electoral results in the assembly elections. But since the late 80s, the Congress presence began to grow stronger.

In 1982, of the eight seats in Shimla, the Congress secured six, while the BJP won two. Kullu remained loyal to the saffron fold, where the party won all seats.

The Congress swept all seats — eight in Shimla, three in Kullu and one in Kinnaur — in the 1985 election. The party began to slip in the following elections but the massive agitation by apple growers in 1990 against the Shanta Kumar government again bolstered its fortunes.

The Congress had bagged most of the seats in the 2012 assembly elections too.

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