Houston Chronicle

India court looks to curb mob violence

Government asked for law to deal with increased lynchings

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NEW DELHI — India’s highest court on Tuesday asked the federal government to consider enacting a law to deal with an increase in lynchings and mob violence fueled mostly by rumors that the victims either belonged to members of child kidnapping gangs or were beef eaters and cow slaughtere­rs.

The Supreme Court said that “horrendous acts of mobocracy” cannot be allowed to become a new norm, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

The court said the menace needs to be “curbed with iron hands,” the news agency reported. The judges asked the legislatur­e to consider a law that specifical­ly deals with lynchings and cow vigilante groups and provides punishment to offenders.

India has seen a series of mob attacks on minority groups since the Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party won national elections in 2014. The victims have been accused of either smuggling cows for slaughter or carrying beef. Last month, two Muslims were lynched in eastern Jharkhand state on charges of cattle theft. In such mob attacks, at least 20 people have been killed by cow vigilante groups mostly believed to be tied to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party.

Most of the attacks waged by socalled cow vigilantes from Hindu groups have targeted Muslims. Cows are considered sacred by many members of India’s Hindu majority, and slaughteri­ng cows or eating beef is illegal or restricted across much of the country.

However, most of the mob attacks this year have been fueled mainly by rumors ignited by messages circulated through social media that child-lifting gangs were active in villages and towns. At least 25 people have been lynched and dozens wounded in the attacks. The victims were nonlocals, mostly targeted because they looked different or didn’t speak the local language.

Although Indian authoritie­s have clarified that there was no truth to the child-lifting rumors and that the targeted people were innocent, the deadly and brutal attacks, often captured on cellphones and shared on social media, have spread across the country.

While Tuesday’s ruling calls for stringent measures by both the central and state government­s, Indian government has looked somewhere else. It recently blamed the Facebook-owned messaging service WhatsApp for failing to stop false informatio­n and called on it to take “immediate action” to prevent the social media platform from being misused to spread rumors and irresponsi­ble statements leading to mob violence.

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