Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Fury and frayed nerves in Bisada

- Abhishek Anand abhishek.anand@hindustant­imes.com

BISADA: Meat is off the menu in restaurant­s around Uttar Pradesh’s Bisada village following the lynching of Mohammad Ikhlaq for allegedly butchering a cow and eating beef, indicating a climate of fear amid growing communal polarisati­on in the area.

Restaurant owners said they were taking no chances as they were afraid of being persecuted for serving any kind of meat, including chicken and fish, as sectarian tensions simmered in Bisada where local BJP leaders have been stirring up passions with incendiary speeches.

“We can’t take a risk for some money. We have stopped serving any meat. The atmosphere is tense and we can’t talk about it much,” said Sunil Sisodia, owner of Maharana hotel outside Bisada village. He added that the only non-vegetarian item on his menu was eggs.

Bisada has been on edge since a mob lynched 55-year-old Mohammad Ikhlaq a week ago and left his younger son, Danish, critically injured.

The atmosphere was so tense that two carcasses of calves found in the neighbourh­ood triggered panic in the area, prompting the deployment of heavy police to prevent the situation from spinning out of control.

“In the first case, a carcass of a calf was found in a drain at Chithera village late on Sunday night. The villagers gathered and shouted slogans. They were planning to block the road but the police swung into action and controlled the situation. A platoon of provincial armed constabula­ry was deployed immediatel­y. A case was lodged against unidentifi­ed persons for cow slaughter,” said Anurag Singh, deputy superinten­dent of police, Dadri.

In the second case, a group of men stopped a person seen carrying a dead calf on a scooter on Monday. “The person who was carrying the dead calf was detained,” said Singh.

“He said he is the owner of the calf which died due to some ailment. The case is being investigat­ed.”

Rattled by the atmosphere of fear, many roadside shops that used to sell chicken and fish have also closed down for fear of sparking any violence. “It’s hard to find meat in this area. Also, this is not the right time to eat non-veg food,” said Sunil Sisodia.

Small hotels in the nearby village of Piyali, a Jatav-dominated area, have also turned vegetarian to avoid any problems in a communally-charged environmen­t with political leaders seeking to polarise the electorate ahead of this month’s panchayat polls in the state.

“It’s better to avoid non-veg for a while. We have not stopped it forever. We will serve meat when the time is right.

Though the changed menu is inviting less customers, but that’s a very small amount for our security,” said a restaurant owner, Mahesh Kumar. “We did it voluntaril­y.”

One restaurant owner, Iftikhar Ahmad, said he sold all the meat he had to a relative’s restaurant in Dadri. “After the incident in Bisada, we hid all the raw and cooked meat. The next night I stashed all the meat and sold it to one of my relatives who runs a restaurant in Dadri area,” said Iftikhar.

“Some big loafs of meat were rotten but we could not dump it anywhere. I had to carry it to an isolated place to bury it.”

 ?? BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO ?? A policeman redirects a commuter as all entry points to Bisada villlage were barricaded in Dadri.
BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO A policeman redirects a commuter as all entry points to Bisada villlage were barricaded in Dadri.

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