Vehicles set on fire by demonstrators burn outside the Azad Maidan ground area in Mumbai yesterday Two people were killed and over 50, including 41 policemen, injured as a protest by several Muslim organisations to condemn the alleged attacks on Muslims in Myanmar and the Assam riots turned violent, officials said. An alert has been sounded in the city. “Two people are reported dead in St George Hospital (in south Mumbai) and the over 50 injured are being treated in hospitals here,” an official from the disaster management cell told IANS. Of the 52 injured, 41 are policemen, the official added. Those killed have been identified as Mohamed Umar, 22, and Altaf Shaikh, 18. A photographer from Sakal Times, Prashant Sawant, 50, was also seriously injured in the violence along with at least three other photo journalists. Terming the situation “delicate”, the city police chief said that a red alert has been issued. “The holy month of Ramadan is on. Considering there were serial blasts in Pune recently, and that the Independence Day is also coming up, we have issued a red alert in the city until the situation is entirely under control,” Mumbai Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik told media persons here. Over 25,000 members and activists of several Muslim organisations staged a protest yesterday at Azad Maidan in south Mumbai to protest alleged attacks on Muslims in Myanmar and the Assam riots. Led by Raza Academy, an organisation working to promote Islamic culture, the protest to condemn the alleged attacks on Muslims in Myanmar was supported by other organisations like Sunni Jamaitul Ulma and Jamate Raza-e-Mustafa. They also condemned the riots and violence in Assam. “The situation got out of control as a group of protesters turned aggressive at around 3.15pm. I personally spoke to a few of them who were on the dais and requested them to maintain calm,” Patnaik added. However, the group had already started pelting stones on city buses and started setting media and police vans on fire. Patnaik said that around 10 buses and six vans were damaged. Policemen had made a baton charge to disperse the mob. They also fired in air and immediately cordoned off the area. Asked whether the lack of proper security led to the incident, Patnaik said that the security at Azad Maidan was proper. “There were enough policemen at the ground and there was no lapse in security system. However, an angry mob has to be handled with tact and use of force often worsens the situation and hence the policemen did not use force,” he said. The violence, however, affected the local train services on the harbour and central lines. Traffic jams were also seen on roads leading to southern and south central parts of the city. Opposition parties hit out at the government for the violence. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said yesterday that the attack was an apt example of how the state government has no hold over the deteriorating law and order situation in the city. “We condemn the attack on media persons and on duty policemen. However, police should have anticipated violence during an event that had a huge gathering,” a BJP spokesperson said. Republican Party of India (RPI) chief Ramdas Athawale also condemned the attack. The Mumbai Press Club alleged that the violence broke out after a Muslim cleric verbally attacked the media for not covering the atrocities in Myanmar and Assam. “According to eyewitnesses, a maulana in his speech verbally attacked the media, claiming that the atrocities in Assam and Burma were deliberately not being covered by the press. This incensed the crowd which turned against photographers and TV crews on and around the Maidan,” the Press Club said in a statement. It also demanded that the government immediately order an enquiry to determine how the violence erupted and punish those responsible for it. Gogoi hints at judicial probe into violence Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi said yesterday a judicial inquiry would be instituted into the recent violence in Kokrajhar, Chirang and Dhubri districts that killed 77 people and displaced over 400,000 people. A Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the violence is already underway. A team had visited the violence-affected areas of Kokrajhar on Friday. “We have decided to institute a judicial inquiry regarding the violence in the three districts,” Gogoi told reporters in Guwahati. “To find out the real culprits behind the recent violence, a judicial inquiry is required. The CBI has already started its inquiry and taken up seven special cases,” he said. Gogoi dismissed demands to dissolve the Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC), which runs the administration in four Bodoland Territorial Areas Districts (BTAD). “A section of people have been trying to project that there were more killings in areas under the BTC after its creation. But actually after the creation of the BTC in 2003, the violence came down in the areas under the council,” said Gogoi. He assured the violence-affected people their rehabilitation and said 160,000 people had already left relief camps and 100 relief camps have been closed down. (gulf)
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