Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Cops deny reports of migrants’ detention after meeting Rahul

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Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Saturday interacted with a group of migrant workers on their way from Ambala in Haryana to Uttar Pradesh’s Jhansi near a flyover in Delhi’s Sukhdev Vihar before arranging transporta­tion for them. He sat on a footpath with the migrants and interacted with them for over an hour, the Congress said and alleged the Delhi police later detained the workers citing a direction to do so. The police refuted the claim. “We have not detained any migrant. Rahul Gandhi came and interacted with the migrants. Later, his supporters took the migrants in their vehicles,” said deputy police commission­er (south-east Delhi) R P Meena.

In a video the Congress released, Mahesh Kumar, one of the migrants, said their group of 13 migrants, including a child, was squatting on the footpath when Gandhi met them. “He asked us to speak about our problems. We told him that we do not have enough food and water. We have spent 50 days without much work and have worked for only 4-5 days in between,” he said. Kumar added that Gandhi promised to make arrangemen­ts for their return.

The Congress said that the migrants worked at a factory in Ambala and were waiting for their dues to be paid. It added that the Congress’s Delhi and Uttar Pradesh units have been asked to facilitate their travel to Jhansi, around 500 km away.

On Saturday, Gandhi tweeted about the latest accident involving migrant workers in Uttar Pradesh’s Auraiya.

“I am hurt by the news of the death of 24 labourers and the injuries to many people in UP’S Auraiya. I express my deepest condolence­s to the families of the deceased and hope the injured get well soon,” he tweeted. Migrant workers left jobless by the Covid-19 lockdown imposed in late March have continued to walk and cycle back to their homes even as buses have been arranged for them since late April and trains from May 1 onwards.

A group of men broke into the house of a Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) professor inside the university campus and decamped with cash and jewellery worth around ~12 lakh, police said on Saturday. This is the second burglary case reported from within the campus, which is guarded by over 250 private security guards roundthe-clock, in a fortnight.

Police suspect both the cases to be the handiwork of the same gang. Currently, the entry of outsiders in the campus is restricted because the university are closed.

The first incident, police said, had taken place at the government-allotted residence of an Indian Administra­tive Service (IAS) officer in the first week of May. That incident had come to light when a neighbour of the officer noticed the break-in and informed him.

Two FIRS have been registered at the Vasant Kunj (north) police station in both the incidents, but no breakthrou­gh had been made in either. “We have registered a house breaking and burglary case under Sections 457 and 380 of IPC against unknown people. Multiple teams are working to crack the cases,” said deputy commission­er of police (south-west) Devender Arya.

On the latest break-in, a senior police officer on the condition of anonymity, said that the crime came to their notice on Thursday night after Avijit Pathak, professor in The Centre for the Study of Social Systems (CSSS) of JNU, filed a complaint.

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