Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Man murdered in Rajasthan

- (With agency inputs)

Several rights organisati­ons demanded the resignatio­n of chief minister Vasundhara Raje and home minister Gulab Chand Kataria.

“The video is gut-wrenching. Strict action will be taken against him (the perpetrato­r) once caught,” Kataria told a news agency before Regar was arrested.

A special investigat­ion team (SIT) has been set up to probe the case, he added.

“Prima facie, it appears that Regar killed the man and the man was dead when he set the body on fire,” Rajsamand superinten­dent of police said Manoj Kumar said.

The charred body was found on Wednesday afternoon by a passerby who informed the police.

In one of the clips, Regar -dressed in a red shirt, a pair of white trousers and white shoes -attacks the man with an iron rod and stabs the man when he falls to the ground.

In another one-minute footage, Regar pours a liquid, most likely petrol, over the body in a deserted area lined with trees amid chirping of birds.

“Jihadiyo hamare desh se hat jao (jihadis, leave our country),” he is heard shouting before he lights a match stick and throws it on the body.

In another clip, a man who looks like Regar rants about launching a war against “Islamic jihad in Mewar”.

“This day, 25 years ago Babri Masjid was razed but nothing has happened even 25 years later,” the man can be heard saying.

In Islam’s native village Saidapur in Malda district -- more than 310 km from Kolkata – grief turned to anger overnight as the brutality of the crime sunk in among shocked family members and neighbours.

“Yesterday (Wednesday), we got the news that he was murdered. I am sure he had no love affair with anyone. I want the culprits to be hanged publicly,” Islam’s wife, Gul Bahar Bibi, said on Thursday. Her daughter is to married in months and Bibi said she had no idea where the money would come from now. Islam was working in Rajasthan for the past 12 years.

Rajasthan director general of police, OP Galhotra, said the prosecutio­n would demand death for the “cold-blooded” and “premeditat­ed killing” which he described as a rarest of rare case.

“No normal human being can do such act,” he said.

In a joint statement, several rights groups criticized the inaction of the state in several alleged hate crimes and hinted that this seemed to be emboldenin­g people to commit more.

The statement mentioned the lynching of dairy farmer Pehlu Khan on April 3 in Alwar, the lynching of Zafar Khan in Pratapgarh on June 16 and murder of Umar Mohammad by alleged gau rakshaks on November 10 in Alwar.

Raje has been accused by opposition parties of not condemning or doing enough to stop such hate attacks, a charge she denies.

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