Jafferabad Violence was One-sided and Preplanned; Relief not Enough, Says Delhi Minority Panel

Date:

Burnt down mosque (Photo- Delhi Minority Commission)

Clarion India

NEW DELHI — A delegation of Delhi Minority Commission comprising chairman Zafarul Islam Khan and member Kartar Singh Kochhar visited the areas affected by mob violence in Jafferabad on March 4 and came to the conclusion that it was “one-sided and pre-planned.”

“It is our assessment that the violence in North East district in Delhi was one-sided and well-planned in which maximum damage was inflicted on Muslim houses and shops with local support. Without massive help, these people will not be able to rebuild their lives. We feel that the compensation announced by Delhi Government is not adequate for the purpose,” said the fact-finding team’s report released by the minority panel on Wednesday.

Northeast Delhi has witnessed massive violence by the huge right-wing mobs, in which Muslims and their properties were specifically targeted in an organised manner during 23-26 February. The anti-Muslim violence claimed the lives of around 50 people and injured hundreds.

The panel’s report said that in Shiv Vihar, two schools were used by the rioters to take shelter. “In Shiv Vihar, we found two schools, both of which were occupied by goons who had come in from outside. The first is Rajdhani Public School owned by Faisal Farooq and the other the DRP Convent School owned by Pankaj Sharma. Both share a wall. At Rajdhani School, driver Raj Kumar told us that some 500 persons barged into his school at around 6:30pm on Monday, 24 February. They wore helmets and hid their faces. They remained there for the next 24 hours. They went away the next evening after the arrival of a police force in the area.”

Pointing to the rioters’ specific target against Muslims, the report said, “At Bhajanpura, we found that Muslim-owned shops like a travel agency and a motorcycle showroom were looted and torched while Hindu-owned shops were left untouched.”

They also found a similar pattern in Khajuri Extension. “In Khajuri Extension, Jameel Ahmad has a car repair garage where seven cars, six auto-rickshaws and nine motorcycles were burnt. He told us that Hindus took away their cars hours before the garage was torched and its building looted and damaged.”

“There are many more affected localities in the North East district which we could not visit. Thousands of people have fled from the area and gone to their villages in UP or Haryana or are now living with relatives elsewhere in Delhi. Hundreds are still living in camps run by the community. Some are also living in camps run by the Delhi Government.”

Here is the full text of the report:

“A delegation of Delhi Minorities Commission, comprising DrZafarul-Islam Khan, chairman, and Kartar Singh Kochhar, member, visited the violence-affected areas of the North East district in Delhi. “The commission started its tour of the area by meeting the area ACP and DCP who explained the problems involved in policing, rescuing and rehabilitation. They claimed that policemen bravely rescued hundreds of stranded people who were surrounded by mobs, like rescuing 350 Muslims from Sherpur on 25 February. Later, the delegation, accompanied by some police officers and members of the commission’s peace and minority advisory committees, toured the affected areas. Here is what the commission found during this tour:

“We found extensive damage to Muslim houses, shops and workshops everywhere we went. We found that people were visiting their damaged homes and houses for the first time since they fled on 24-25 February but since the houses and shops were badly damaged and the debris were lying inside as well as on the streets, there was no question that they will be able to start living there again anytime soon. Moreover, removing debris or starting repairs will affect their chances of getting any compensation from the government.

“At a parking lot near Ambedkar College, we found burnt hand-carts (thelas) and tractors. The guard at the site told us that 100 hand-carts and 11 tractors were torched and a school bus, still parked at the place, was extensively damaged. The attackers took away whatever they could, like batteries of the vehicles, before torching them.

“At Yamuna Vihar, on one side of the road are Muslim houses and shops while on the other side are Hindus’ houses and shops; and both areas were affected by looting and burning. At a charred petrol pump, the owner Mahinder Aggrawal claimed that 30 vehicles were torched there.

“At Bhajanpura, we found that Muslim-owned shops, like a travel agency and a motorcycle showroom, were looted and torched while Hindu-owned shops were left untouched.

“We also saw councillor Tahir Husain’s factory building that was still under construction. He is an accused in the riots.

“At E-Block of KhajuriKhas, we found Muslim shops burnt. A police officer claimed that the area-DCP saved 350 Muslims from the locality.

“In Gali 5 of KhajuriKhas, residents told us that violence started there late in the night of 23 February shortly after the threat and ultimatum issued by (BJP leader) Kapil Mishra. This gali is a blind alley where some 100 persons lived and they could not on their own flee via the main road. They left the place under police protection in the morning of 25 February. In this gali, we found the house of the BSF jawan Mohammad Anis, which was badly damaged. He was not at home at the time though four members of his family were present. We saw here a carpenter’s shop owned by Muhammad Ilyas which was looted and badly damaged.

“In 3/51 Khajuri Extension, Jameel Ahmad has a car repair garage where seven cars, six autorickshaws and nine motorcycles were burnt. He told us that Hindus took away their cars hours before the garage was torched and its building was looted and damaged.

“At C-429 in Gali 29 of KhajuriKhas, we saw the gutted Masjid Fatima where people had taken refuge in the belief that mobs will not attack a religious place. Masoom Ali’s damaged house is adjacent to the mosque. He told us that the SDM was telling them that residents of one house will get only one compensation irrespective of the number of families living there.

“In the same gali, there is house no. C/1/28/413 which belongs to Prem Chand, Delhi Police ISI who had let it out to a Muslim family since 2007. The house was torched after the family fled the place. The rioters returned later to burn it once again.

“In Brijpuri, we found the 30-year-old Arun Modern School owned by Bhisham Sharma who was a Congress MLA several times. It was extensively burnt and damaged in the evening of 25 February. Movables like computers and even steel railings and CCTV cameras were taken away. As many as 800 students study here. This was the only place where we found repairs going on, on a war footing, perhaps to reopen the school at the earliest.

In Shiv Vihar, we found two schools, both occupied by the goons who had come from outside the area. The first is Rajdhani Public School owned by Faisal Farooq and the other is DRP Convent School owned by Pankaj Sharma. Both share a wall. At Rajdhani School, driver Raj Kumar told us that some 500 persons barged into his school at around 6:30pm on Monday, 24 February. They wore helmets and hid their faces. They remained there for the next 24 hours. They went away the next evening after the arrival of a police force in the area. They were young, well-built people who had arms and giant catapults which they used to throw petrol bombs from the school roof to other houses across the road. Some of them used heavy ropes, still in the school, to climb down into the other adjacent school. They took away the computers and other things they could carry, and smashed and burnt what they left behind.

“At DPR School, we were given the same description of the people who occupied the Rajdhani School, but more people, upwards of 1500, stayed here for over 24 hours from the 24th evening. They climbed down into the school from the roof of the adjacent Rajdhani School. Roop Singh, guard, gave us the same description of those people as given by the Rajdhani School driver.

“Singh told us that he somehow saved himself and his family by slipping away via a rear door. He lived with his family in a quarter inside the school. He told us that these people looted or burnt everything in the school. We found in the school’s open area a mound of burnt desks with only their steel frames intact. They were going to fix new wooden tops on those frames.

“The Rajdhani School gave us a photograph (attached) of the mob which had occupied it for over 24 hours. In it, young people are seen wearing helmets and covering their faces. The guard of the DRP School confirmed that the same kind of people occupied his school also. Over 2,000 such people stayed in the two schools for over 24 hours. They used to go out in small trucks, in shifts of 2-3 hours each time, to execute their looting and burning mission outside. Their food was brought to them inside the school. It was clear that they had local people helping them.

WORST-HIT SHIVPURI

“In Shivpuri, Muslim are a small minority. It is the worst-affected area. We found that outnumbered Muslim homes were selectively burnt and damaged. We found here Aulia Masjid which was gutted and badly damaged. The floor of the mosque was hidden by the debris and two gas cylinders were lying on the floor. Apparently these could not explode.

HOUSES BLASTED WITH GAS CYLINDERS

“Most houses were blasted using gas cylinderss taken from other houses. We found here in Gali 10, the bakery of Iqrar son of Mohammad Afsar which was looted and later burnt in the night of 25 February.

“There are many affected localities in the North East district which we could not visit. Moreover, thousands of people have fled the area and gone to their villages in UP or Haryana or were living with their relatives elsewhere in Delhi. Hundreds are still living in camps run by the community. Some are also living in camps run by the Delhi Government.

VIOLENCE WAS ONE-SIDED

“It is our assessment that the violence in North East district of Delhi was one-sided and well-planned in which maximum damage was inflicted on Muslim houses and shops, with local support. Without massive help, these people will not be able to rebuild their lives. We feel that the compensation announced by Delhi government is not adequate for the purpose.

theclarionindia
theclarionindiahttps://clarionindia.net
Clarion India - News, Views and Insights about Indian Muslims, Dalits, Minorities, Women and Other Marginalised and Dispossessed Communities.

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