http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?sectionName=Cricket&id=3b47b34b-d035-414b-b847-e283a121495c&Headline=Punjab+tense+after+night+of+violence%2c+Army+called+in

Indo-Asian News Service
Jalandhar (Punjab), May 25, 2009
First Published: 09:04 IST(25/5/2009)
Last Updated: 09:31 IST(25/5/2009)

Punjab tense after night of violence, Army called in

Towns in Punjab remained tense on Monday morning after a night of
violence on Sunday by members of a Dalit Sikh sect protesting a clash
in a gurudwara in Austria's capital Vienna.

District authorities in Jalandhar, which saw the maximum violence,
requisitioned the army and the Border Security Force (BSF) late Sunday
night even as the Punjab Police was out on the streets in full force
to control the rampaging mobs belonging to the Sachh Khand sect,
followers of Guru Ravi Dass Sabha.

The entire Doaba belt (the area between rivers Sutlej and Beas)
comprising Jalandhar, Phagwara, Nawanshahr and Hoshiarpur towns were
tense throughout the night. Jalandhar and Phagwara were the worst hit
areas. Unrest was also reported from the industrial city of Ludhiana,
60 km from Jalandhar.

Although no one was injured in the clashes, scores of public and
private vehicles were set ablaze by the protestors in Jalandhar and
Phagwara. A State Bank of India ATM was also set ablaze in Jalandhar.

Many people were stranded on the roads after the violence broke out.

On Sunday, at least 11 people were injured in a fight between two
rival factions of the Sikh community at a Gurudwara in the Austrian
capital. Some of the injured were in a critical condition, the
Austrian police said.

The incident took place during a sermon by two guest gurus from India.

According to reports, several bearded and turbaned men equipped with
at least one firearm stormed the shrine during sermon. In the melee,
members of the congregation pounced upon the attackers and overpowered
them, beating some severely.

Meanwhile, the security has been beefed up in several parts of Punjab
after the protestors went on a rampage.

Curfew has been imposed in Jalandhar, which continued Monday morning,
even though the police claimed the situation was brought under
control.

"The situation turned bad and we have requisitioned the army, BSF and
the Punjab Armed Police units to control the situation," said Sanjiv
Kalra, inspector general of police (IG), Jalandhar range.

The protestors also clashed with the police at some places in
Jalandhar. The protestors blocked roads and highways around Jalandhar
and in the nearby industrial town of Phagwara.

"It is a very serious situation. Curfew has been imposed in Jalandhar
City following the violence. Road and rail traffic has been affected,"
Kalra told IANS.

Railway traffic through Jalandhar, including the New Delhi-Amritsar
Shatabdi train, was affected as protestors blocked rail tracks.

Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal condemned the Vienna incident and
urged people in Punjab to remain peaceful. He urged the central
government to take up the matter with the Austrian government so that
the guilty were punished.

The government blacked out the television news channels in the state
to ensure that the violence did not spread to other parts after seeing
the images on TV.

Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) president Avtar Singh
Makkar also condemned the Vienna attack and urged people to maintain
peace in Punjab.

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