Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Burning Mandsaur shuts down

All roads to MP district have been sealed fearing agitators will attack without warning

- Punya Priya Mitra letters@hindustant­imes.com

MANDSAUR: At first sight, Mandsaur seems like a region scorched by warring armies.

Thousands of trucks used to ply through the four-lane Neemuch-Mhow highway until early last week, transporti­ng provisions across the Malwa region. Today, a large part of the route – 50-km stretch between Mandsaur and Neemuch – lies deserted.

All the roads to the district have been sealed, and there is a clampdown on internet services in Mandsaur and its surroundin­g districts. No state or nationalle­vel politician­s are being allowed inside.

The attacks occur without warning. Farmers emerge like ghosts from villages on both sides of the highway, indulge in arson and looting, then melt back into nothingnes­s. Police have been asked to exercise restraint even in the face of stone-pelting.

The city seems calm, with police personnel dotting every corner. Its shops are closed, and streets remain deserted.

Venture outside, however, and you enter a different world. Farmers huddle on the roadside, swearing loudly cursing at every figure of authority they can think of. The rural-urban divide in this region is stark.

“It was the police who fired at the farmers. We are demanding the suspension of inspector Anil Thakur, who ordered the firing,” says Ramnaresh Patidar, a resident of Pipliyaman­di, referring to the killing of five farmers on Tuesday. The bodies of the farmers were cremated at their respective villages in Mandsaur under heavy police protection.

Another farmer rues how none of the local politician­s bothered to speak to them in the initial days of the agitation. “And now, after the shooting, they dare not come here,” he says.

Farmers have been agitating for the establishm­ent of a minimum support price for vegetables and milk, besides loan waivers, since July 1. To break the strike, the government struck a deal with the RSS-backed Bharatiya Kisan Sangh. However, this only succeeded in further fuelling the fire.

Things seemed to be calming down on Wednesday, but a chakka jam observed by the farmers on the highway revived frayed tempers. Accompanyi­ng the agitators on this particular event was the body of 18-year-old Abhishek Patidar, who was killed in police firing the previous day.

Relatives of the youngster, said he was not even an active participan­t in the ongoing agitation. “Abhishek was not into politics. He had just gone to the police station – where he was shot – as a casual observer,” says Madhusudan, his elder brother.

Far from quelling the unrest, the police firing only made things worse. When district collector Swatantra Kumar Singh came to meet Abhishek’s family during the chakka jam, he was manhandled by agitators. Even as images of the incident went viral, more incidents of violence were reported from Mandsaur and other districts of the state .

The toll plaza at Pipliyaman­di was ransacked, and all its cabins smashed. Miscreants beat up a policeman in Suwasara, and lit up a UCO bank branch, a petrol pump and shops.

Protesters torched several buses and other vehicles on Bhopal-Indore highway in Dewas and pelted stones at police stations at Hatpipaliy­a and Bagli. The protesters also stopped an Indoreboun­d train at Dewas railway station and set afire a police outpost at Kamlapur.

The agitation has now spread to Dhar, Ratlam, Ujjain and Indore. Though the violence was not as widespread there, the government suspended internet to prevent escalation in tension.

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