Gulf News

Victims talk about how police inaction let mobs go on rampage

CRITICISM OF POLICE GROWS AFTER MOB VIOLENCE KILLS 43 IN DELHI

-

Rahis Mohammad’s voice shook as he described how a mob of 200 people arrived in his neighbourh­ood intent on destructio­n while calls to police went unanswered. Standing on a deserted road dotted with charred vehicles Wednesday, he watched as a police car passed. “After 48 hours they have come,” Mohammad, 40, said bitterly. “They left us to die.”

As India’s capital reels from an outbreak of communal violence that has left 43 people dead and 200 injured, criticism of the response by law enforcemen­t authoritie­s is growing.

Witnesses say police were unwilling or unable to control the mobs and, in some instances, may have participat­ed in the worst riots in Delhi in decades.

At least one police officer is among those killed in the violence. The Delhi Police have rejected accusation­s that their response was slow or inadequate and denied allegation­s that officers encouraged rioters and beat residents. Others accused the police of shooting indiscrimi­nately.

By Thursday, the violence in northeaste­rn Delhi had subsided. TV channels showed a senior police officer walking the streets of one riot-hit area wearing riot gear, urging people to come out of their homes and return to daily life.

The violence came after months of protests over a controvers­ial citizenshi­p law enacted by the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Interferen­ce by BJP

Clashes broke out late Sunday and devolved into deadly violence throughout Monday and Tuesday, including during President Donald Trump’s visit to the city. It is not clear whether Trump’s presence in Delhi and the attendant security demands impacted the police’s ability to respond to the riots. One news report suggested that the police had informed the government that they were short of personnel to control the violence. India’s Ministry of Home Affairs denied the report, saying that adequate forces were in place.

The police force in India’s capital is controlled by the central government.

Vikram Singh, a former senior police official in India’s largest state, Uttar Pradesh, said the fact that authoritie­s had not arrested the politician who helped spur the violence spoke of interferen­ce by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. The law should be “unsparing,” he said, not dictated by political whims.

The Delhi Police was already facing accusation­s of brutality

and partisansh­ip before this week’s violence. In December, police stormed a university, beating unarmed students and firing tear gas into a library during a protest against the citizenshi­p law.

This week’s failures are far more grave. Naresh Gujral, a member of parliament, wrote a letter to the home ministry castigatin­g the police for inaction, reported New Delhi Television. Gujral said that he had called police asking them to help 16 Muslims trapped in a house Wednesday night as a mob tried to break in. No police came. Instead, those trapped were ultimately rescued by their Hindu neighbours, he said.

At Delhi’s Guru Teg Bahadur hospital, bereaved families waited to claim the bodies of their relatives killed in the violence. Muslims sat in one corner while Hindu families sat at a distance in an unspo ken religious divide. Relatives wept and accused the police of complicity.

 ?? AP ?? ■ A senior Delhi police officer speaks to a group of Muslims as they returned yesterday to the battle-torn streets of northeaste­rn New Delhi for weekly prayers at mosques.
AP ■ A senior Delhi police officer speaks to a group of Muslims as they returned yesterday to the battle-torn streets of northeaste­rn New Delhi for weekly prayers at mosques.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates