The Philippine Star

Protests turn violent in India’s caste crisis

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ROHTAK ( AFP) — Fresh violence erupted overnight in a north Indian state in an escalating and deadly crisis over caste, as neighborin­g New Delhi yesterday announced water rationing after rampaging mobs shut down a key supply.

Thousands of troops with shoot- on- sight orders were deployed on Saturday in Haryana state, a day after weeklong protests turned violent with rioters setting fire to homes and railway stations and blocking highways.

Protesters again took to the streets overnight despite the stepped- up security, setting fire to shops in Haryana’s Rohtak district, which is the epicenter of the violence, a local police officer told AFP.

“There were clashes during the night across the district. Over a dozen buildings were set on fire by protesters, with incidents of looting of shops and ATMs at two places,” the officer said on condition of anonymity.

A senior local officer warned the situation was also tense in the neighborin­g town of Jhajjar, as the state’s upper Jat caste kept up their agitation.

“We are not in control. The situation is very tense as thousands of protesters are on roads encircling the main administra­tive area in the town,” Jhajjar police chief Rajiv Kumar told AFP.

The Jats are demanding quotas for government jobs and university places for their caste, saying they are struggling to find opportunit­ies despite India’s strong economic growth.

India reserves places for lower castes in measures intended to bring victims of the country’s worst discrimina­tion into the mainstream. But the policy causes resentment among other communitie­s, who say it freezes them out.

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 ??  ?? Soldiers conduct a flag march past damaged buildings at Rohtak to quell protests by angry mobs demanding government benefits in northern India.
Soldiers conduct a flag march past damaged buildings at Rohtak to quell protests by angry mobs demanding government benefits in northern India.

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