Sikh rivals fight at temple in Austria; 16 injured

By VERONIKA OLEKYSN – 15 minutes ago
VIENNA (AP) — Sikhs wielding knives and a handgun attacked two
preachers at a rival temple in Vienna on Sunday in a brawl that left
at least 16 people wounded, police and witnesses said. A related clash
later broke out in northern India.
Witnesses said a group of bearded and turbaned men attacked the
religious leaders at the temple in Austria's capital and their
followers moved to defend them.
The preachers were among the six people who suffered serious wounds
and were identified by Indian diplomats and police as Nirajnan Das and
Sant Rama Anand. Police said both were out of danger after undergoing
operations for gunshot wounds.
Police spokesman Michael Takacs said the scene was "like a
battlefield." Six suspects were in custody with more arrests possible,
he said.
Mohnder Ram, a worshipper who said he had attended services at the
temple for decades, said it is run by followers of Shri Guru Ravidas,
a 14th-century founder of a Sikh sect called Dera Sach Khand.
In India, fighting between mainstream Sikhs and followers of the guru
broke out in the northern city of Jalandhar several hours after the
Vienna clash, in what locals there described as an apparent reaction
to the melee in the Austrian capital. Sanjiv Kalra, a senior police
official at Jalandhar, said that protesters had set fire to a number
of vehicles and erected several roadblocks across the city. He gave no
other details.
Witnesses in Vienna spoke of chaos.
"Everybody was praying and then it started with knives and a pistol,"
said Nermal Singh, bare-footed, his shirt bloodied and his head
bandaged from what he said was a knife wound.
Ram, 72, said, "I heard four to five shots" in the temple. "People
started screaming, children were crying as they ran out.
"It was like war. There was lots of blood everywhere."
Witness Mohinder Ram also spoke of "blood everywhere," adding: "People
were hit and stabbed with knives."
Bimla Laka, who lives in a ground-floor apartment just opposite the
building housing the temple, said she saw seven or eight men with
lengthy beards and dark blue and orange turbans fleeing the building.
It was not clear whether some of the weapons used were kirpans, the
ceremonial daggers carried by Sikhs. Police said kirpans may legally
be worn by Sikhs in Austria.
Takacs, the police spokesman, said of the six people in serious
condition, four were "definitely perpetrators." The most serious
wounds were caused by gunshots to the abdomen and head.
The possibility that not only the attackers but also some of the
worshippers were armed was being investigated, said Takacs. He denied
reports that temple leaders had asked in vain for police protection
after telephone threats last week, saying no such requests were
received.
Bernhard Segal of Vienna medical services said that one of the more
seriously wounded had to be resuscitated several times at the scene.
He described those hurt as of Indian origin and between 30 and 50
years old.
Witnesses said the perpetrators were fundamentalist Sikhs from a
higher caste, who accused one or both of the preachers of being
disrespectful of the Holy Book. Indian news reports said the attackers
were incensed that one of the preachers was given a ceremonial shawl
considered a high Sikh honor.
Ram said about 400 people were at the service when the fight broke out
in the temple, in a residential building of the working-class Viennese
neighborhood. Police put the number at between 150 and 300.
Four ambulances and three medical helicopters transported the victims
to hospitals.
The temple is situated in Vienna-Rudolfsheim, the capital's 15th
district near Westbahnhof, one of Vienna's main train stations. Police
cordoned off the area.
The Dera Sach Khand sect comprises mostly Sikhs belonging to the lower
Dalit caste.
There are several such Deras across the northern state of Punjab.
While there are disagreements between the Deras and Sikh religious
authorities, violent clashes are rare.
Sikhs make up less than 2 percent of India's 1.1 billion people, the
vast majority of whom are Hindus.
Associated Press writers Muneeza Naqvi in New Delhi and Eric Willemsen
in Vienna contributed to this report.
Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.



-- 
Ranjit

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