The Free Press Journal

FOUR DEAD AS PARTS OF DELHI BURN

Frenzied clashes between pro and anti-CAA elements

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Hours before Donald Trump arrived in the national capital, frenzied clashes erupted in multiple pockets in northeast Delhi for the second consecutiv­e day between pro and anti-CAA supporters.

At least four people, including a civilian and a head constable, were killed and a deputy commission­er injured. The two feuding sides threw stones, set vehicles and shops ablaze and transforme­d parts of the national capital into a minefield littered with bricks and glass shards.

In a belated response, the help of paramilita­ry forces was requisitio­ned and large gatherings banned in affected areas. Government sources said the violence seemed to be orchestrat­ed. All private and government schools will remain closed in north-east Delhi on Tuesday.

In distressin­g footage of the clashes, vehicles, shops and buildings can be seen being torched by arsonists. A petrol pump was also set on fire.

A police official on condition of anonymity told a wire agency: "The condition was grim near a petrol pump at Bhajanpura. Many vehicles near the pump were set ablaze by the crowd." According to sources, some shops and houses were also attacked in Gokulpuri and the surroundin­g areas, and vehicles were set afire.As the groups battled each other, in another video, a man in a red shirt can be seen running towards an unarmed Delhi Police officer brandishin­g what appears to be a gun; in the chilling encounter he approaches the cop and confronts him before turning and firing into the air, reported NDTV.

Other videos showed people from both groups breaking off chunks from the concrete divider along the road to throw at each other. A protestor fired multiple rounds in the air as a policeman was seen trying to stop him,.

Journalist­s covering the spot were also targeted by the protesters as they were stopp-ed from recording videos of the clashes and some of the media personnel were even beaten up.Gates of the metro stations of Jaffrabad and MaujpurBab­arpur were shut down and there was heavy police deployment in the area. Tension had prevailed since Sunday after BJP leader Kapil Mishra led a mob that clashed with the antiCAA protesters holding a peaceful demonstrat­ion.The anti-CAA protesters on Monday formed a human chain to prevent people from their side from engaging in further clashes, even as the pro-CAA demonstrat­ors raised slogans in support of the police.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal called the violence "very distressin­g" and urged Union Home Minister Amit Shah to "restore law and order.’’

In the evening, Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla said the situation was "under control". The ministry said it is continuing to "monitor the situation". Curbs on gatherings were imposed outside Delhi Police Headquarte­rs after there were calls for protest marches by the JNU Students Union against the "Sanghi police's brutal suppressio­n of peaceful protests.’’

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