Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Holds its breath for a day

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

Dalit groups bring life to a standstill, calls off stir in the evening

India’s financial capital ground to a halt on Wednesday as Dalit groups damaged buses, blocked roads, railway lines and Metro services to protest against the death of a 28-year-old man and violence at the venue of the bicentenni­al celebratio­ns of a British-era war.

Daily life also came to a standstill in the suburbs of Thane, Dombivali, Navi Mumbai and across Maharashtr­a in cities such as Nagpur, Pune and Aurangabad because of a statewide bandh.

“Inquiry will be conducted in the incidents of violence that took place across Maharashtr­a. We are monitoring the CCTV footage of the violence,” chief minister Devendra Fadnavis said in the evening.

Echoes of the protest also reached Parliament in Delhi where the Congress disrupted Lok Sabha to accuse the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its ideologica­l mentor the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh of fuelling violence against Dalits.

“We demand that the prime minister, who shows sympathy for Dalits during polls, should clarify his position inside Parliament on violence against Dalits,” Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad told reporters.

The bandh, called by BR Ambedkar’s grandson Prakash Ambedkar and supported by 250 groups, was against violence that broke out near Bhima Koregaon, 40 kilometres from Pune, on January 1 that left one man dead and 40 vehicles charred or damaged.

Hundreds of thousands of Dalits had gathered to commemorat­e the 200th anniversar­y of a battle between the Peshwa, the erstwhile rulers of the state, and the British.

Many believe the Dalit soldiers in the British army defeated the much larger army of the Peshwa, who is said to have instituted oppressive caste practices.

“Barring a couple of incidents, the bandh was observed in peaceful manner. Like minded groups and left parties participat­ed in the bandh,” said Prakash Ambedkar, calling off the bandh around 4.15pm. He also demanded the arrest of two Hindu right-wing

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI:

leaders – against whom FIR has been registered for allegedly inciting the January 1 violence – and warned the state government. “If the government fails to act, it will have to bear the consequenc­es,” he said.

The two accused are Sambhaji Bhide of Shiv Pratisthan from Sangli and Milind Ekbote of the Hindu Ekta Aghadi from Pune. “These two should face similar action to that of Yakub Memon in the Mumbai blasts. They are also terrorists,” Ambedkar added.

Response to the bandh was lukewarm in the morning but picked up by afternoon when protesters started targeting railway stations. Train services on the Western, Central and Harbour line were crippled by afternoon as protestors sat on tracks at Dadar, Thane, Kurla, Ghatkopar, Goregaon, Virar, Andheri, Kalyan, Kanjurmarg railway stations.

“Registrati­on of FIRs is going on at different places. More than 150 miscreants detained at different places,” says Mumbai police spokespers­on Sachin Patil in the evening.

 ?? PTI ?? Dalit protestors stop a train during a Rail Roko protest at Dadar station in Mumbai on Wednesday over Monday’s Bhima Koregaon violence.
PTI Dalit protestors stop a train during a Rail Roko protest at Dadar station in Mumbai on Wednesday over Monday’s Bhima Koregaon violence.
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