Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

I want justice: Hapur lynching survivor’s son

- ▪ letters@hindustant­imes.com

HAPUR: Nineteen-year-old Anas, whose father survived a mob attack two months ago in which another man died, is still trying to find his bearings and resume a normal life.

At his home in Madapur village, a little over 50 km from the national capital, Anas looks at his mother and then at the firewood ‘chulha’. It’s half past 6 in the evening and no words are exchanged.

“The power supply here is inconsiste­nt. There is electricit­y for two hours and then it trips for the next four hours,” he says, as he looks at a bulb flickering in the courtyard of the house.His 65-year-old father, Samiuddin survived the brutal attack on him by the mob from adjoining Bajheda Khurd village on June 18.

The mob lynched another man, Qasim, 45, from nearby Pilakhua, on the pretext that the two were involved in cow slaughter.The lynching incident was captured on mobile phone cameras, and the videos went viral across the country.

Samiuddin, a father of two boys and five girls, lived off his income from farming. He is now admitted in a hospital in Ghaziabad, where his elder brother Mehruddin lives.

His younger brother Yaseen, meanwhile, is handling all legalities for the family, running to and fro the national capi- tal, where the Supreme Court is hearing their case.

Anas is in a fix: whether to continue with his labourer’s work or look after the farms and be with the family.

“I was at work in another village that day when I received a phone call from someone who informed me what had happened to my father,” he says, hesitantly explaining his work -- as a constructi­on labourer.Asked what he hopes now, Anas, clueless about the legal proceeding­s in the case, says, “The court will do justice. I want justice to be done.”

When asked justice in what form, he says, “I don’t know, my uncle knows it better. Whatever it is, there should be justice.”

Pointing toward a heap of jowar (used as fodder) kept supported to a wall in front of the wooden main door of the house, a young man said the 65-yearold Samiuddin had gone to the farms on June 18 to fetch fodder for his cattle.“We have a buffalo and two calves at home,” Anas says, adding that the milk is consumed by the family only. “Once in a while if someone comes to ask for it, we give them.”

Neighbours say they are morally supporting the family, but cannot say with precision what is happening at the moment.

“The entire village has expressed sympathies to the family. We are supporting them morally, in a village no one is isolated,” says a man, in his forties.

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