Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Accused...

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On Tuesday night, too, Adityanath held an emergency meeting and ordered strict action against those involved in the alleged cow slaughter. He also directed action against rumour mongers and told principal secretary (home) Arvind Kumar, director general of police OP Singh and additional director general of intelligen­ce SB Shiradkar to ensure that all involved in cow slaughter be arrested. “We are not only seeing it as a law and order issue. It was a conspiracy and we are probing why that particular day – December 3 – and place on which the cows were slaughtere­d and their remains spread in the field were selected,” Singh told PTI. He said the place where the cow carcasses were allegedly found, Mahaw village, was 40km from a massive Islamic congregati­on called the Tabligi Ijtema where hundreds of thousands of people had gathered. Police have filed two FIRS – one on the alleged cow slaughter and the other on the mob violence.

The Bajrang Dal, the youth wing of the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), continued to defend Raj, who is one of 28 people named in the FIR for murder and rioting, but asked him to surrender. “Yogesh Raj has got nothing to do with it (the violence). He is our district convenor, we are with him and he is innocent. He will cooperate with the police and come out at the right time,” said Bajrang Dal’s western Uttar Pradesh region co-convenor Praveen Bhati.

In the 1 minute 42 second video that opens with chants of ‘Jai Shri Ram’, Raj blamed the police for portraying him as a history-sheeter and said the Bajrang Dal had merely demanded an FIR be filed over the cow slaughter allegation­s, which was met. About the violence, he said, “I was not present at the spot. I have got nothing to do with it. I am confident that the Almighty will get me justice.”

The police refused to comment on the video. “I have not seen the video because (I am) involved in so many things,” said Bulandshah­r superinten­dent of police Praveen Ranjan Singh.

Trouble began late on Sunday night when groups of local villagers alleged cow carcasses were lying near Mahaw village. Around 11am the next day, protests against the alleged cow slaughter spun out of control and mobs of so-called cow vigilantes went on a three-hour rampage, clashing with security forces and setting vehicles and a police post on fire in Bulandshah­r, just 130 km from Delhi. Five officials were injured in the scuffle.

In the melee, inspector

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