http://scroll.in/article/809953/this-town-in-up-has-grappled-with-a-divide-since-2013-and-bjps-hindu-exodus-claim-may-deepen-it

COMMUNAL POLITICS

This town in UP has grappled with a divide since 2013 – and BJP's
'Hindu exodus' claim may deepen it

BJP MP Hukum Singh has backtracked on his claims, but the residents of
Kairana and nearby areas are feeling unsettled.

Yesterday · 02:30 pm
Updated Yesterday · 03:42 pm

Anumeha Yadav

In the early hours of the morning last Monday, Khalid Ali woke up with
a start. His brother who works as a labourer in Delhi was on the
phone. “He sounded very worried,” recounted Ali, his polio-stricken
legs folded on a cot inside his one-room brick tenement. “He asked,
'Has a Hindu-Muslim riot broken out in Kairana?' I told him, 'No,
everything seems peaceful here.'”

Located in western Uttar Pradesh’s Shamli district, the town of
Kairana is two kms away from Nahid colony, the relief camp in which
Ali lives. It's one of the many camps that came up in 2013 after
Hindu-Muslim riots left 60 people dead and displaced thousands in the
districts of Muzzafarnagar and Shamli. Three years later, hundreds of
Muslim families like Ali’s continue to live in difficult conditions in
these settlements, unable to return to their villages.

Only later that day did Ali discover the cause of the rumours about
renewed religious violence in Kairana: the area's Bharatiya Janata
Party MP Hukum Singh had announced that 346 Hindu families had been
persecuted and driven out of the Muslim-majority town over the last
two years. Zee News compared the events in Kairana to the exodus of
Pandits from Kashmir in the 1990s.

However, after several newspapers reported that Hukum Singh's list
contained the names of people who were dead and also of Hindus who
were still living in the town, the MP backtracked on his claims on
Tuesday, saying the exodus was not communal in nature.

Despite this, his initial statements sparked great anxiety in the area.

The news put Ali's neighbour, a brick-kiln worker named Islamuddin, on
the edge. His family had fled Gadirampur village in Shamli district in
2013, walking three nights to safety.

Islamuddin connected the MP's claims to the Uttar Pradesh assembly
elections scheduled for early 2017. On the road to Kairana, the BJP
has put up large billboards announcing "Mission 265+ for 2017" and
"Vikas Maharally".

“The last time too, the riots in Muzzafarnagar occurred a year before
the general elections,” he said. “If violence breaks out again, it is
we – the poorest – who will be the first to die.”

Khalid Ali who lives in Nahid colony, 2 km from Kairana, was anxious
after the news of Hukum Singh's claims of Hindus fleeing the town.

Criminal gangs

In Kairana, local police officials expressed both exasperation and
amusement as they released information debunking Hukum Singh's claims.
Going door-to-door along with officials deputed by the district
magistrate, they had managed to check on 119 of the Hindu names on the
MP's list. The police document had columns showing “death by natural
causes” against three names. Twelve families who the MP claimed had
fled were actually found to still be living in Kairana, while 37
families had left between seven to 10 years ago. Only 24 had migrated
in the last three years, primarily for jobs and economic reasons.

The district officials who were part of the verification teams were
divided over the reasons why the families named by Hukum Singh had
migrated from Kairana.

When he made the list of names public, Singh had blamed the exodus on
extortion threats by a Muslim gangster named Mukhim Kala.

At the district headquarters in Shamli, Superintendent of police Vijay
Bhushan denied the allegations.“This is baseless,” said Bhushan. “At
the time of Mukhim's arrest, he had 14 murder charges against him, of
whom three victims were Hindu and 11 were Muslim.” The claims that
Hindus were being targeted was a “political gimmick”, the policeman
said.

“In Mukhim Kala gang, there were four Hindus and eight Muslim
criminals in a 12-member gang, and all have been arrested,” said
Bhushan. “We are simply trying to do our jobs. Anyone who claims
otherwise should first examine the police records.”

But while Mukhim Kala, the gangster and extortionist named by Singh,
was arrested last October, an elderly policeman, who had worked at
Kairana thana for 15 years, conceded that before that for several
years, both Muzzafarnagar and Shamli had been wracked by gang fights
and crime.

“Khagha gang, a criminal group, was active in the region till 2010,
and after Khagha was killed in an encounter in 2012, his accomplices
Mukhim and Sabir became the leaders of the gang,” said the official,
who asked not to be identified. “Kidnappings, extortion, killings
became common. Despite this, no circle officer or deputy
superintendent of police has been posted here since the last official
left four months back.”

Apart from crime, Kairana also has high unemployment. The nearest
factories are in Panipat in Haryana, 25 kilometers away, and in
Sonipat, 65 kilometers away. “There are no jobs here, and at most, you
can set up a cart or small shop,” said an official. “Most people are
daily wage labourers who earn just Rs 200, and cannot afford to spend
Rs 50 commuting to Panipat every day, so they leave.”

Officials said that in some instances Hindu families may have shifted
out of their old homes in predominantly Muslim areas after the 2013
Muzzafarnagar riots to buy properties on the outskirts of town.

But was the shift a result of coercion or a perceived threat from the
majority Muslim community? Or was it to search for better livelihoods?

On the ground, the truth seem to lie somewhere in between the two claims.

The names on the list

One of the areas listed by Singh that have seen a large out-migration
by Hindus is Bishaiyat Khairana, a crowded neighbourhood on the
western edge of town.

>From Hukum Singh's list of those who had fled the neighbourhood,
Narendra Dhiman, who runs a small flour mill, identified the name of
his old neighbour Ramnath Dhiman. But Ramnath Dhiman and his family
had migrated over 10 years ago, he said. Also on the list were
Banwari, son of Sumerchand, and Punna Ram, son of Mukhteyar Singh, but
Dhiman said that they were dead.

The list names Goti, an ironsmith, as having left the area but he was
a Muslim Gujjar and not Hindu, said Mohammed Akbar, a BCom student.

Similarly, in Alkhurd Khairana, another predominantly Muslim
neighbourhood, Mahendra Kashyap, who makes sweets at weddings, said
the list named Begraj, Man Singh, Chetan Lal among the migrants. But
the three, who work as daily wage labourers, had migrated to Panipat
three years ago to look for work, said Kashyap.

There is little communal hostility in the neighbourhood, said Kashyap,
who recounted that following the killing of two businessmen by Mukhim
gang in 2014, Hindu and Muslim shopkeepers joined together to organise
a protest for eight days to demand action against the criminal gangs.

“All shopkeepers together organised a bazaar bandh for over a week so
that the police arrests the extortionists,” confirmed Urmila Panchal,
whose family are the only Hindu family living on their street in
Alekhurd. Panchal said her family had planned to sell their home in
2010 but had been persuaded by their Muslim neighbours to stay back.
“We had even finalised the negotiations for the house but our Muslim
neighbours said you have lived here amongst all of us for so long,
please stay back, and we did,” she said.

Her son Shantanu Panchal, who runs a confectionary shop, said that if
the family moved, it would be to live in a place with better
infrastructure. “We get electricity at irregular hours, there are no
higher education institutes or good colleges,” he said.

Deepening divide

While Hindu families living in Bishaiyat Khairana and Alkhurd Khairana
denied any families having left because of religious reasons, in
another neighbourhood called Retewala Khairana, an affluent farmer,
Sompal Rod, read out the names of six family members who he claimed
had left because of threats by powerful Muslims.

“Rampal, Subhash, Rajkumar are my uncle's sons,” said Rod, as he
glanced over Hukum Singh's list. "Along with three other second
cousins on this list, Bhopal, Rajveer and Radheshyam, they sold 60-70
bighas of land that they owned and left for Saharanpur a year and a
half ago because they were under threat." Rod described a rivalry with
other landed families from the Muslim community going back several
years.

Sompal Rod, a farmer, says his relatives had to leave Kairana after a
dispute with Muslim farmers.

In the villages around Kairana, Muslim Gujjars, Hindu Gujjars and
Pathans own most of the farmland. “Five years ago, my cousin Rampal
was named as one of the accused in a Pathan's murder,” recounted Rod.
“He was jailed for four months and his firearm was confiscated by the
police. He decided to leave because they feared getting named in other
cases.”

Rod said he had also approached Hukum Singh with the complaint that
Hindus were under pressure from the administration that was biased
against them, an allegation denied by the district police
superintendent.

During the 2013 riots in Muzzafarnagar, 50 kilometers away, Kairana
did not record a single instance of communal violence. But Darbarkhurd
Khairana – a mixed neighbourhood off Panipat Road with over a hundred
Sheikh, Kashyap, Julaha, Valmiki families – had witnessed residents
firing in the air, even though no one was injured.

Of those named by Hukum Singh from this area, local doctor Shripal
Kashyap identified four – Shyama Jatav, Rishipal Kashyap, Vinod Kumar,
Subhash Kumar – as having left to find work in Panipat and Loni more
than two years ago. But he said one of the workers, Dharampal Kashyap,
had left after a fight with a Muslim neighbour. “Dharampal had a
gambling business and the two had a fight over their business deal,”
said Kashyap.

Arun Valmiki, a sanitation worker in his early 20s, said that
Darbarkhurd Khairana had seen the population of Hindus drop from 30%
to 8%. But when pressed for further details, he said he was citing the
figure from a TV report he watched last week in the wake of Hukum
Singh's claims. “But the fact is after the 2013 riots, thousands of
Muslim families came as refugees to Kairana,” said the young man
dressed in a t-shirt and jeans. “The forest area around town is full
of Muslim families from Muzzafarnagar and around, and because of this,
Hindus fear them.”

Communal lens

Jeejan Begum, a 60-year old resident of the area, wasn't willing to
accept that line of reasoning. “My family used to live in Barhal 15
years back, and then we moved to Kandla, then to Kairana after Muslim
Gujjars looted our house thrice,” recounted Jeejan Begum. “We are
Muslim, but we faced robberies too. How does religion come into this?”

Yosouf Tyagi, a reporter with the Urdu daily Dainik Awam E Hind, said
that Kairana had been dealing with significant crime for many decades.
“Till some years ago, because of poor policing, Muslim Gujjar gangs
were hired for contract killings and robberies by all communities to
settle personal rivalries,” he said. But this, he said, is being
viewed with a communal lens in recent years.

Dr Tasleem Ahmed, a physician who practices near the local court, also
voiced the same concern: that a response to crime is now being
portrayed as Hindu-Muslim conflict. He said that the most vulnerable
families in the areas were those living without proper houses even
three years after the riots.

“Thousands came to Kairana, Dabedhikhurd, Malakpur, Kandala in fear
after the 2013 riots, and many were forced to leave again because of
livelihood distress,”said Dr Ahmed. “It has come very easy to Hukum
Singh to present this 346 Hindus list. But what happend to over 50,000
affected by Muzzafarnagar riots. I want to ask our MP? Where is that
list?”

Hukum Singh's claims are vastly exaggerated, if not untrue, residents
said. But, as Ahmed concluded, the rhetoric used by the BJP MP is
likely to exacerbate the suspicion among Kairana's residents.


-- 
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 https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to