Muscat Daily

Modi cleared of complicity in deadly communal riots

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Ahmedabad, India - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was not complicit in deadly religious riots that broke out in 2002 in one of the bloodiest episodes in independen­t India, according to a judge-led commission report released on Wednesday.

Modi was the chief minister of the western state of Gujarat when nearly 1,000 people - the majority of them Muslims - were killed in riots triggered by a fire on a train which killed 59 Hindu activists.

The riots have long dogged Modi, who was accused by human rights groups of turning a blind eye to the violence.

The Nanavati Commission found that the riots were spontaneou­s, sparked by the train burning deaths, rather than preplanned attacks.

‘There is no evidence to show that these attacks were either inspired or instigated or abated by any minister of the state’, the Nanavati Commission said in its nine-volume report of more than 2,500 pages.

The report - which included 44,445 affidavits from witnesses and 488 government officials - was tabled in the Gujarat state assembly on Wednesday, five years after it was submitted to the government following a 12year probe.

While the commission’s terms of reference did not require the government to make the findings public, it said in September the report would be released after a petition for its publicatio­n was filed in the High Court.

The commission also cleared the police force of negligence, finding that police were unable to control mobs as they had inadequate numbers or were not properly armed.

In 2008, it had concluded that the train incident was a preplanned conspiracy, with 31 people later convicted of criminal conspiracy and murder by a special court. More than 100 people have already been convicted over the riots.

Modi - who set up the inquiry in 2002 - was cleared in 2012 by a Supreme Court-ordered investigat­ion.

 ?? (AFP) ?? India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre, right) during an election campaign rally at Khunti in the eastern state of Jharkhand on December 3
(AFP) India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre, right) during an election campaign rally at Khunti in the eastern state of Jharkhand on December 3

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