Sign in

Muzaffarnagar: fresh killings bleed peace efforts

After the September riots, an understanding had been reached for displaced Muslim families to return to their houses. But with Wednesday’s killing of three youth in a Muzaffarnagar village, peaceniks have lost another round to communal tension.

Updated on: Nov 1, 2013, 08:53:15 IST
Hindustan Times | By , Muzaffarnagar
Share
Share via
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • whatsapp
Copy link
  • copy link

With Wednesday’s killing of three youth — Afroz, 20, Meherban, 21, and Ajmal, 22, of Mohammadpurraisingh village of Muzaffarnagar peaceniks have lost another round to communal tension that has engulfed the western Uttar Pradesh district for the last two months.

Villagers-participate-in-a-panchayat-after-violence-at-Hasanpur-village-in-Muzaffarnagar-PTI-Photo
Villagers-participate-in-a-panchayat-after-violence-at-Hasanpur-village-in-Muzaffarnagar-PTI-Photo

Many Muslim families of Mohammadpurraisingh, a Jat-dominated village, took shelter in the nearby Muslim-majority village Hussainpur after the September violence.

“These families wanted to return to their village and a peace committee had been formed with Chaudhry Feru of Mohammadpurraisingh and Shahnawaz Khan, husband of village Pradhan or chief of Hussainpur as members. An understanding was reached that after Diwali the displaced Muslim families of Mohammadpurraisingh will go back to their houses. But on Wednesday three youths from Hussainpur were killed and whole process now looks impossible as of now,” says district magistrate Kaushal Raj Sharma.

READ:DG admits to lapses; 8 held, cases against 15

READ:SC concerned over fresh violence in Muzaffarnagar

READ:PM, Sonia warn against communal forces

“When my husband Rajendra Fauzi, a resident of Mohammadpurraisingh, had gone to water his fields in the evening, he was beaten up. When other villagers saw the condition of my husband they went back looking for those responsible for it but they were fired upon and in the clash that followed the three boys of Hussainpur were killed,” says Kavita Rani, wife of Rajendra Fauzi, who is now in police custody.

Rajanth blames state

BJP president Rajnath Singh said violence wouldn’t have returned to Muzaffarnagar had the authorities taken “severe and unbiased” action against those responsible for the earlier riots.

“The trouble begins when such sad incidents are politicised. It only exacerbates the issue. I think if severe action was taken against those responsible for violence earlier....if just and fair action was taken, the violence would not have been repeated.”

  • Rajesh Ahuja
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Rajesh Ahuja

    Rajesh Ahuja covers internal security and also follows investigation agencies such as the CBI and the Enforcement Directorate.

Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.