Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Violence continues in Orissa, 2,400 buildings lost
Sporadic violence continue in some villages despite the imposition night curfew 
in the entire district

Bhubaneswar: Communal fires continue to rage in Orissa's Kandhamal district 
with reports of more homes and prayer houses being burnt by those protesting 
last week's murder of a Hindu leader, an official said on Tuesday.

"As per the latest government assessment, at least 2,400 buildings, including 
prayer houses and schools, have been either damaged or burnt," Kandhamal 
district collector Krishan Kumar said.

He said sporadic incidents of violence had been reported from some villages 
under Tikabali police station despite the imposition night curfew in the entire 
district.

Curfew was also clamped in Jaypore town in Koraput district after clashes 
between Christians and Hindus, a police official said.

The communal violence erupted on the evening of Aug 23, when Swami Laxmanananda 
Saraswati, a member of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad's (VHP) central advisory 
committee, and four others were killed by suspected Maoist guerrillas at his 
Jalespata ashram in Kandhamal.

The death toll in the violence has gone up to 16 even as the government 
deployed police and paramilitary forces in 12 of the state's 30 districts and 
imposed curfew in Kandhamal. 

Due to the violence, thousands of villagers in Kandhamal district fled to 
nearby forests. Some of them are now returning and taking shelter in the relief 
camps set up by the administration.

"The district administration has set up at least 10 relief centers and 14,500 
people are being sheltered there. They are being provided food and medicines," 
Krishan Kumar said. 

"Fifty per cent of the people were brought by us, while the others came on 
their own. Today we rescued 20 children from a Christian home at Phulbani since 
they were feeling unsafe. A police party has gone to Raikhola village to rescue 
25 old people who informed us that they want to take shelter in the relief 
centers," he added.

Orissa is not new to communal violence between Hindus and Christians.

On Jan 22, 1999, Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two sons, 
10-year-old Philip and six-year-old Timothy, were burnt alive by a Hindu 
radical mob in their vehicle in Keonjhar district.

Source: Indo-Asian News Service

Comment:
One wonders what more is needed to bring the violence to a halt and restore 
peace. One begins to have the sickening feeling that all this violence is well 
organised and planned. Similar to what happened in Gujarat.First there was a 
bandh. Then the Gujarat govt allowed the RSS cadres to kill, loot, destroy and 
create maximum havoc before bringing some semblance of law and order. Here too 
the BJP-BJD govt is unable to restore peace even after 7 days. At the same time 
it will not permit central forces into the state.Preveen Togadia is allowed 
free entry into the disturbed areas but the Union Minister of Home Affairs as 
well as a Congress delegation are turned back from the airport on the pretext 
that their presence would divert the attention of the police.

Regards,

Marshall

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