From: bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com
To: 

http://scroll.in/article/760490/as-the-bjp-rushes-to-capitalise-on-dadris-beef-lynching-regions-muslims-grow-anxious
Driven by the electoral gains from the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, the BJP’s 
politicking is greatly vitiating the region’s Hindu-Muslim relations.Shoaib 
Daniyal  · Today · 10:30 amPhoto Credit: Shoaib DaniyalThe small dhaba outside 
Bishara is doing brisk business, thanks to the scores of journalists who have 
descended on the village to cover the brutal 28 September lynching of Mohammed 
Akhlaq over beef. Inside the dhaba, Manoj Rana, a resident of Bishara, is 
alternating between raging at the reporters and lecturing to them. In one of 
his calmer moods, he gives his own version of how Akhlaq got lynched, which 
involves villagers dramatically discovering the remains of a calf Akhlaq had 
allegedly slaughtered and then rushing to his house.

Rana is unfazed by any questions of morality here. This happened because Akhlaq 
had “destroyed our religion”, he said. Rana refused to even call it a murder. 
“Uski mrityu hui hai," he said. "Hatya nahin, mrityu.” He "died" is how I would 
put it. "Murdered" is the wrong term.

The Dadri beef lynching has been making headlines and generating enormous 
amounts of outrage across Anglophone India – which is admirable. But at the end 
of the day, it bears well to remember that Manoj Rana has no compunctions about 
displaying his allegiance to his version of “dharm” (religion) over any secular 
morality that Anglophone India’s outrage is predicated on. And, at the end of 
the day, it is this that will triumph over any transitory metropolitan rage. 
Already Mohammed Akhlaq’s family has been shifted to the secured premises of 
the Indian Air Force in New Delhi – no matter the media and the outrage, they 
know that their physical safety is not guaranteed given the ground reality and 
the views of their own neighbours.

Apprehensive of violence

It is not only Akhlaq’s family who are anxious about the future, given the 
religious extremism and communalisation sweeping through the area. As can be 
expected, the entire region’s Muslim minority is fearful and apprehensive of 
violence and a repeat of the Muzaffarnagar anti-Muslim riots in the run-up to 
the 2014 national elections.

As it turns out, the Bishara lynching wasn’t a one-off incident. The morning 
after Mohammed Akhlaq was murdered, a mob – outraged over the rumours that a 
cow had been killed – engaged in stone pelting and violence at the National 
Thermal Power Corporation plant around 5 km from Bisahda. In this violence, a 
55-year old Muslim man, Shabir Ali, was beaten up. “They identified me as 
Muslim by my beard and kurta-pajama and also stoned the mosque nearby,” said 
Ali, convalescing in his village, Dehra, around 12 km from Bisahda.


Shabir Ali at his home after being attacked

It seems the violence was brought under control by some quick police action by 
the Uttar Pradesh authorities and a heavy police presence still exists in the 
area. Without this clampdown, things could easily have spiraled out of control 
after September 28. As of now, police are deployed in heavy numbers outside the 
NTPC plant. A smaller posse is also deployed at the mosque that had been stoned 
when Ali was attacked.


Police posse outside the NTPC mosque

Litany of small-scale communal attacks

The pradhan of Dehra, Mustaqim Ghulam is morose at the situation. “There has 
been lot of tension in this area for some time now," he said. "This murder just 
makes it worse,” he said. He recounts a whole litany of incidents where 
small-scale communal attacks have been made on the village’s Muslim residents 
ever since the Muzaffarnagar riots. “The police did a very good job in 
controlling the situation this time," Ghulam said. "We are also walking on 
glass because we know if we respond to provocation it is us who will be the 
losers. But for how long will this continue? The miscreants who are doing this 
know they can get away with it because it suits some people politically.”

At a nearby village, Khichra, Mohammed Shauqeen, owner of a restaurant regrets 
the state of affairs as well. “This area has never seen communal tension, not 
even in 1947. But for the last two years, the situation has become quite bad. 
Nothing has happened till now but the spark has been lit”.

Even after the Bishara murder, there are efforts to vitiate the atmosphere. 
“Someone called the police in Chithera village close to where we are and 
claimed that a cow had been slaughtered," Shauqeen said. "Another rumour was 
spread in another nearby village that a man’s calf had been killed, when it had 
actually died of natural causes and he was simply skinning it. Why are people 
doing this other than to create disturbances for political gain?”

Forced ghettoisation expected

In the second incident, which occurred in Khera Todi village, the Uttar Pradesh 
police have already arrested one man for inciting violence and gathering a 
large crowd on false pretext.

“Muslims who are minorities in their villages are thinking of leaving already 
and shifting to Muslim-majority villages,” said Shauqeen. “Who can live in a 
mixed village if based on a rumour someone can come into your house and kill 
you just like that?”

Communal ghettoisation is a common feature of Indian cities, driven by 
violence. If it comes to the villages of West Uttar Pradesh, it would be a 
turning point.

The BJP’s Muzaffarnagar model

Abdul Raheem, who is the vice-principal of a local madrassa in village Piplehda 
also brings up the close social ties between Hindus and Muslims in the area. 
“We are all the same people: thakurs, all descendants of Rana Pratap,” said 
Raheem. “Why are we at each others throats? I read about the incident at 
Bisahda and it makes me very sad. This is obviously a political game.”

Indeed, investigations by the Indian Express have shown that in West Uttar 
Pradesh, communal incidents are highly correlated with elections. And, of 
course, the electoral benefits from the Muzaffarnagar riots are plain to see in 
the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Uttar Pradesh tally: an unprecedented 73 seats 
from the state in the 2014 General Elections.

It was little wonder that Narendra Modi had Sanjeev Baliyan, an accused in the 
Muzaffarnagar riots, sworn in as part of his first cabinet. Of course, the same 
electoral arithmetic means a whole train of BJP leaders have descended on 
Bishara to further vitiate the atmosphere after Akhlaq’s lynching. The Union 
minister of culture, Mahesh Sharma called the murder an “accident” and BJP 
member of Parliament Sakshi Maharaj plainly saidthat he himself was ready to 
kill for the cow, the cleanest defense of the Dadri lynching yet from the BJP. 
All of which makes the region’s Muslims extremely fearful of what the future 
holds for them.

We welcome your comments at lett...@scroll.in


                                          

Reply via email to