Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Pictures of bloodied victim begging for life reveal brutality

- B Vijay Murty n letters@hindustant­imes.com

In the last photograph­s taken of him, Mohammed Naeem is pleading to a group of villagers as blood trickles down from his head. Half of his body is soaked in red. His shirt presumably ripped away, and dirt marks on his pants suggest he was kicked repeatedly.

Hands folded, the father of three struggles to convince the people surroundin­g him that he is innocent. But they lynch him anyway. Naeem was the last of four people to be beaten to death on Thursday by villagers in Sobhapur, less than an hour’s drive from Jamshedpur, Jharkhand’s most populous city.

Another group of three was lynched less than 20 kilometres away.

Naeem’s last moments became the face of a string of attacks in the state triggered by rumours spread on WhatsApp that child abduction gangs are on the prowl.

Villagers, mostly tribal people, along the borders of SeraikelaK­harsawan, East Singhbhum and West Singhbhum districts picked up weapons such as sticks and bats, and were attacking strangers. Sobhapur falls under Seraikela-Kharsawan district.

Two people were killed over similar suspicions earlier in the week. None of the victims were involved in kidnapping.

Naeem’s last moments bring back memories of Gujarat tailor Qutubuddin Ansari, whose image of pleading to a rioting mob in Gujarat in 2002 became the face of one of India’s worst communal violence.

An sari was rescued but Nae em was not as fortunate.

A resident of Ghatsila in East Singhbhum district, Naeem and his cattle trader companions were passing through Sobhapur early in the morning on Thursday. Villagers along the TataChaiba­sa road stopped their SUV, dragged the four people out and tortured them for four hours before killing them.

Naeem was the last to die, even though the police had reached the spot before the last of fatal blows landed on him.

Outnumbere­d, the police did not intervene.

Jalauddin said Naeem, his brother-in-law, was an affable man. He took good care of his ageing parents and groomed his children well. Naeem’s wife is a deputy village head. The family refused to accept a compensati­on of ₹2 lakh offered by the district administra­tion. They, and people in their villagers, demanded that the chief minister meet them and promise justice.

NAEEM AND HIS CATTLE TRADER COMPANIONS WERE DRAGGED OUT OF THEIR SUV & TORTURED FOR 4 HOURS BEFORE THEY WERE KILLED

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Naeem’s last photograph where he’s seen begging the crowd for mercy.
HT PHOTO Naeem’s last photograph where he’s seen begging the crowd for mercy.

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