[For the snaps visit the site.]

http://scroll.in/article/730652/fifty-kilometres-from-delhi-hundreds-of-muslims-have-become-refugees-overnight

RELIGIOUS VIOLENCE
Fifty kilometres from Delhi, hundreds of Muslims have become refugees overnight

A mob of 300 Jat men rampaged through a village in Ballabhgarh this
week, attacking Muslims. The reason: they don't want a mosque in the
village.
Anumeha Yadav  · Today · 09:15 am

Fifty kilometres from Delhi, hundreds of Muslims have become refugees overnight
Photo Credit: Anumeha Yadav

The normality of the evening was deceptive. A little before 6 pm on
May 25, most residents of Atali village in Ballabhgarh, in Haryana's
Faridabad district, were out tending to their cattle. A few were in
their homes cooking dinner. Zahida Parveen had just settled down on
the second storey of her home in preparation for the asar ki namaz.
Suddenly, there was a loud noise.

"I looked out and saw 14-15 men enter the gate of the house armed with
bricks, sticks and swords," said Parveen, a slender woman in her early
20s. "I heard them break the door to the ground floor of our house."
She bolted the door to the second floor and hid in a room. The sounds
of destruction continued drifting from below, glass being smashed and
things being hurled around. She could hear the men rush up to where
she was. "They were breaking down the door," Parveen said. "I hid
inside the bathroom. They entered my room, shouting 'Let these people
die in the fire, if not at our hands.'"

Parveen doesn't remember how long she stayed hidden while mayhem
played out on the other side of the bathroom door. The men smashed a
washbasin, overturned furniture and set fire to three cars downstairs
before eventually walking away. Parveen and her relatives escaped from
the roof when, after what seemed like hours, the police arrived.

Three days on, Parveen and her family were still living in fear at the
Ballabgarh police station along with 200 other Muslims from Atali.

Thirty-year old Sameena was attacked by the mob inside her home.

Refugees in their town

At the police station, the Muslim men sat in groups on a lawn at the
entrance, in the blazing heat. Further inside, about a hundred women
sat on a rug spread on the asphalt, with a thin cloth tent sheltering
them from the sun. Children, many in the school uniforms they were
wearing three days ago, huddled around the women. In one corner, there
were stacks of bananas and plastic pouches of drinking water provided
by social activists.

They all recounted the same tale: on Monday, a 300-strong mob of Jat
men went on the rampage in Atali, attacking Muslims and their
property. At least 20 Muslims were trapped in the assault, three of
whom are still lying in BK Hospital with burn injuries and cuts.

Parveen's sister-in-law Naeema fractured her left foot while trying to
escape. Sameena, a neighbour, suffered a big bruise on her arm. Others
had injuries on faces and backs from the stones pelted at them.

Nanho, 65, and Sama, 9, narrated how they hid under a cot to save
themselves. "Eent barsi thi - they were pelting bricks," said Sama,
dressed in her school tunic. Nassi Begum added: "The Jats brought men
from 12 villages to attack us. Our girls had to run to save their
honour and their lives."

Zahida's mother-in-law Haseena Al alleged that she appealed to the
policemen present in the village to protect them from the mob but they
refused. "I held the policemen's arm begging him to help my family,
but they ignored our plea."

Nine-year old Sama had just returned from school when the mob attacked.

Most families expressed anxiety about their unlocked houses and their
untended cattle back in the village. But they can't go back. Clashes
have continued on the periphery of the village despite the deployment
of several police battalions, and the villagers fear for their lives.
On Tuesday, when officials suggested shifting them to the village
school while their houses were repaired, the villagers refused
outright. "The Jat men are keeping a watch, they will trap us inside
the school and attack again," said Ruksana. "Two women went along with
the men to the village yesterday in a bus accompanied by the police.
They saw the men still standing peering from the roofs."

Communal politics

At Atali, the scars of the Monday violence weren't too hard to see. A
mosque that was being constructed in the centre of the village, next
to a small temple and the village pond, bore the scars of the attack -
its scaffolding was damaged and a stone plate bearing the name of the
mosque had been blackened.

The villagers said the discord was grounded in the Jats' opposition to
the construction of the mosque. A smaller Muslim shrine had stood on
the spot. "After the Mumbai riots in 1992-'93, a smaller structure at
the same spot where the Faqir Muslims use to pray was burned," said
Sher Singh, a farmer. "Then later, the villagers had collected Rs
10,000 for its repair."

Several villagers recounted that in 2010, when sarpanch elections were
due, the construction of a new mosque had become a point of contention
between the Jat and Faqir Muslim communities in Atali. Most villagers
spoke of the 2010 events in the context of the sarpanch elections due
again in August. "The Muslims have almost 400 votes," said Sher Singh.
"In the upcoming election, both candidates know that this vote matters
in a population of 3,000."

The half-built structure of the mosque in the center of Atali village.

Both candidates in the approaching sarpanch election are Jat - Rajesh
Chaudhary and Pehlad Singh - the same as the last time. Villagers said
that though Pehlad Singh had supported the construction of the mosque
in the previous election, this year he was opposing it.

"Every five years, this issue is raked up to fool people," said the
local MLA Tek Chand Sharma of the Bahujan Samaj Party. "This mosque
has existed at least 30 years. It is there in all revenue records."
Sharma, the sole BSP MLA in the 90-member Haryana assembly, is allied
with the Bharatiya Janata Party government in the state.

In 2009, before the previous sarpanch elections, Jat and Pandit
villagers filed a case in the Chief Judicial Magistrate's court for an
order restraining the construction of a larger mosque. The mosque's
pillars had been erected by then but further construction was stopped.
Later, when the court ruled against the petitioners, a second petition
was filed before the Sub Divisional Magistrate questioning whether the
land belonged to the panchayat or the Waqf Board. The Sub Divisional
Magistrate gave a decision this March identifying the land as
belonging to the Waqf Board.

A few weeks later, the dispute over the mosque intensified.

On May 21, four days before the mob assault, 30 policemen were
stationed at the mosque site to allow the construction to begin. A day
later, Deputy Commissioner of Police Bhupinder Singh said he presided
over a meeting of villagers from both communities at the Ballabhgarh
police station. At this meeting, the current sarpanch, Rajesh
Chaudhary, gave a statement to Muslim villagers that the mosque
construction could go on as permitted by the local courts. But on May
25, as labourers began building the roof over the scaffolding and
policemen kept watch, the mob attacked.

Deeper divide

While a few Hindu villagers were injured in the stone-pelting on
Monday, the maximum damage was suffered by the half-built mosque and
the 17 Muslim homes around it. Inside these abandoned homes, many of
which were unlocked, there was still a smell of charred wood. In most
of them, fridges and cupboards had been ransacked and overturned, and
the floors were littered with bricks, clothes and children's footwear.
In some, half-cooked vegetables lay over the stove.

Inside the abandoned homes, floors are littered with bricks and the
families' belongings.

"The village gets cooking gas through a pipeline and the attackers cut
these pipes to ignite the homes on fire," said DCP Bhupinder Singh. A
godown belonging to a Muslim family was set alight after the first
wave of attack, he said. The villagers named 20 youths from the
village in the First Information Report, but the police hadn't
arrested anyone.

While the Jat own the most land in the village, followed by Pandit and
Saini families, most Muslim households support themselves through
cattle rearing. Some Muslims own vehicles that they rent out and a few
others work as drivers.

In conversations with this reporter, most Hindu villagers were
defensive. "Why are you asking us?" snapped Yogesh Bhardawaj, a
20-something who works as a gardener in Ballabhgarh. He advised, "Go
ask the Muslims," using a derogatory term for Muslim men.

Harish Yadav, a farmer, claimed that the Muslims "pelted stones at our
women on Monday. That is when we retaliated". However, when asked to
identify the women, he could not name them.

The two Muslim households that were among the most well-off in the
village suffered the maximum losses - the families of Haji Sabir Ali,
who own a pumps business and works as a contractor with the
Electricity Board, and his relative Isaq Khan. The family's property
was completely damaged, with the mob setting fire to several air
conditioners Ali owned and three of his cars. "They were Faqirs, they
used to beg and starve," said Harish Yadav. "Now, it seems they have
become contractors."

Policemen guard the house of Haji Shabir Ali.

The youth in the village as well as local BJP workers showed a
WhatsApp message circulating in the area since the previous day,
exhorting Hindus to gather in large numbers to fend off impending
attacks from Muslims. "Last night, I heard that 15 vehicles full of
Muslims had arrived in the village," said Mahesh Saini, a farmer. "It
has become impossible to sleep."

Ten kilometres away, at the Ballabhgarh police station, the Muslim
families prepared for their third sleepless night outside their homes,
as young men began lining the asphalt road with chadars. "Why did they
do this?" asked Rahmati, an elderly farm worker. "Were we not Muslim
100 years back? What has changed now?"

A villager reads aloud a WhatsApp message exhorting Hindus to gather
in the village by night.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to