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1990 Bijnor riot

In October 1990, there was a major communal riot in Bijnor, a town in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. Stemming from a celebratory procession by local Hindu groups, it was the most destructive riot in the wake of concurrent Hindu nationalist campaigns, which eventually led to the demolition of Babri Masjid. The riots were also characterized by phases of passive and active complicity of the state machinery.

Official estimates put the death-toll at 87; unofficially, the count varies from around 200 to 300 with most of the dead being Muslims.

Background edit

Amrita Basu et al. notes that there was a near-total absence of any communal riots at Bijnor before 1988.[1][2][3] A few distinct events manifested across the politico-religious sphere in the following years, that led to the gradual build-up of animosity and did serve as a precursor to the riots.[1][2]

Municipal elections edit

In the 1988 municipal elections, a Muslim lawyer - Zafar Khan, from BSP was elected as the chair, having defeated Sandip Lal, a fellow Hindu contender from BSP, who was also backed by BJP.[1] Effectively, it was more of a religious fight than political.[1] Notwithstanding the demographic skew against Hindus, Lal was poorly educated and corrupt (contra Khan) and his history of switching political allegiances drastically hampered his chances; the election also saw a lower voter turnout among Hindus.[1]

Soon enough, the elected Hindus in the council (most of whom were prominent faces of communal outfits) accused Khan of being partisan in the distribution of funds and appointments at key posts including Vice Chairman, which was traditionally allotted to opposition.[1] The claims of fund misuse and partisan appointments have been since located to be entirely unfounded; a Muslim was illegally installed as the Vice Chairman, in absence of Khan, via a conspiracy hatched by the Hindu councilors.[1]

Along while, there were multiple attempts to bring a no-confidence motion against Khan esp by weaponizing the nominated members, but none managed to succeed esp that he was close to Mulayam Yadav, the then-chief minister from BSP (who changed nominated members at will).[1] The last such attempt was in June 1990.[1]

Property dispute edit

In around July 1990, there was a huge fracas about the fate of vacant land adjoining a mosque.[1]

The Hindu councilors along with local members of RSS claimed that the property belonged to a Hindu, who was settled elsewhere but failed to pay taxes.[1] On notification by the municipality of pending usurpation, he did pay the dues but yet Khan had evicted him to unilaterally allot the property to a Muslim, who was supposedly planning to inaugurate a beef shop.[1] A local daily The Bijnor Times, (which was promised with favors by Lal, shall he were elected) heavily aided in the amplification, so as to discredit Khan.[1] The allegations were unfounded in that the municipality owned the land, since long back and there was only a single request for renting out the property, which the entire council had approved of.[1]

On 25 August, a group of Hindus, led by Bajrang Dal, occupied the property and were soon reinforced in large numbers, as rumors spread of an impending attack by Muslims.[1] After a bout of stone-pelting between the communities, local police vacated the property by force and arrested the agitating Hindus.[1] An old Muslim woman was killed by a ricocheting bullet and another Muslim died in the hospital, later.[2] In light of the volatile situation, the municipality temporally stalled the scheduled land-allocation, in what was conceived as a victory by the Hindus.[1]

Ram-jyotis edit

In the wake to the Babri Masjid demolition, VHP organised a cross-state tour, wherein karsevaks went about in a procession with flame-torches and sought to rekindle the Hindu spirit.[1] The then BSP government chose to prohibit them from entering the town by installing a barricade over the lone entry-bridge, fearing communal disturbances.[1]

In response, thousands of Hindu women formed into a flash mob, stormed the bridge in active defiance of state orders, and enabled the Ram-jyotis into the town.[1] This proved to be a major turning point as to the inclusion of women in physical manifestations of Hindu nationalism, and for the female-inflicted violence, that would form a major part of the Bijnor riot.[1]

Communal harmony rally edit

The relations further deteriorated when the-then chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav held one of the many 'communal-harmony rally' at Bijnor on 9 October 1990.[1] Poised as an antidote to RSS-BJP processions in the wake of Ayodhya, it was widely attended by Muslims from across nearby districts.[1] Incidentally, Lal was the chief organiser, whilst Khan chose to boycott it, fearing a flare-up of tensions.[1]

In the speech, Mulayam vowed to protect the Babri Masjid and spoke about unity between Muslim and Backward Classes against Savarna Hindus.[2] The speech was perceived to be inflammatory by Hindus and widespread violence followed soon afterward.[1][2] Muslims were heckled to prevent attending the rally and their vehicles were attacked, whilst returning during night; effigies of Mulayam were burnt by a combine of BJP and ShivSena, as well.[1] The district president of VHP was attacked, in what has been since alluded to an internal conspiracy for the sake of rumor-mongering, by local intelligence agencies.[1]

Three people (two Hindus and one Muslim) died and thirty shops were subject to loot and arson, in the aftermaths; bomb blasts were frequently heard around the town and the local marketplace was closed for four days.[1][2] Ninety-five people (sixty-five Hindus and thirty Muslims) were arrested but soon released due to continuous protests by the Hindu populace, who accused the authorities of minority appeasement.[1]

Riot edit

Course edit

Build up edit

The initial destruction of Babri Masjid was planned on 30 October 1990.[1] The karsevaks started to arrive by 25th and pursuant to instructions of Mulayam Yadav, were subject to mass-incarcerations; by 26th, 637 were already arrested and that local prisons were filled up, a girls' intermediate college was transformed to a temporary prison.[1][2] Securities at the latter facility were minimal and they wandered out to the town, with ease.[1]

Schools and colleges chose to announce indefinite closure, in light of the communally polarized environment.[1] Public assemblies were banned soon afterwards.[1]

Immediate trigger edit

On 30 October, the detained karsevaks assembled at an Arya Samaj temple, in the town square with local VHP members, in anticipation of the demolition.[1][2] At around 11 a.m., a police officer reached the temple and spread misleading news, supposedly referenced from BBC, about the procession having reached Ayodhya and started with the planned destruction.[1] Within an hour, a several-hundred strong victory procession made its way through a Muslim locality of the town and engaged in provocative sloganeering; the slogans were strikingly similar to those used in previous communal riots.[1] Local Hindus however, rejected the claims and asserted of singing devotional songs, only.[2] The administration did not choose to not pay any heed to multiple calls for action on the initial congregation, which was a violation of the imposed prohibition on public assembly or on preventing its passage through the Muslim quarters.[1][2]

Amidst this volatile atmosphere, a local Muslim doctor – Mushir Ahmed – chose to keep open his dispensary.[1] After the Muslims started pelting stones at the Hindu rally; Ahmed chose to shelter a few Hindu women at the forefront of the rally, who were caught in the cross-fire.[1] The Hindus in the rally however suspected Ahmed of abducting those women, and he was murdered.[1]

This served as the immediate basis for the riot that was to follow.[1] As his dead body was taken back to home, the local Muslims attacked a Hindu neighborhood of Joggis, a lower caste among Hindus, and retaliation followed soon.[1] By evening, 48 were killed.[1][4]

Curfew and state-complicity edit

The state responded by declaring a town-wide curfew at around 1:30 AM on 31 October and deploying Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC).[1]

However, they were heavily partisan and effectively allowed the Hindus, to go on a rampage looting and burning down Muslim shops whilst restricting the Muslims to their houses; PAC later claimed of being accompanied Hindu nationalists, only as to their inability to maneuver in an alien territory.[1][2] Basu notes that post the installation of a curfew, it was no longer a symmetric warfare but state-assisted and perpetrated mass-violence against Muslims, which continued unabated till 3 October.[1] The-then editor of Dainik Jagran argues that the relatively one-sided violence perpetrated by Muslims in Bartwaan had de-professionalized the state-forces in entirety and raked in a communal mobocracy.[1]

There were numerous instances of the PAC torturing, physically violating and executing Muslims, whilst accompanied by local Hindu residents.[1] Looting and arsons of Muslim houses were extensively facilitated, as well.[1] 5 mosques were destroyed, per local reports.[1]

Spread edit

The riots were mostly restricted to urban Bijnor but sporadic bursts of violence were reported from some adjoining villages esp. in Rampur Bakli.[1][2] Agricultural equipment et al. were destroyed, in addition to torture, rape and summary executions.[1]

Closure edit

The entire city was handed over to the Army on 3 November, who finally reined in the riot.[2] Curfew timings were gradually relaxed, before being withdrawn all-together after 10 days.[2] During the span, outsiders, even the local legislator were not allowed in.[2] By mid-November, normalcy was restored.[2] Official estimates put the death-toll at 87; unofficially, the count varied from around 200 to 300.[1][5]

Local media coverage edit

The local media (esp. Bijnor Times) were actively complicit in contributing to the proliferation of rumors and sustaining the riot, via mis-reporting and partisan editorializing.[1][2] There was extensive pro-Hindu bias and the reporting during riots, were essentially Islamophobic.[1][2]

Bijnor Times initially blamed the Muslims for stone-pelting on a peaceful procession by Hindus, and deemed the riots to be pre-planned by the local Muslim populace.[1][2] It soon changed its narrative and alleged of outsiders to have instigated the riots; this was also readily accepted by the local administration.[2] The paper also inflated the death toll, on the side of Hindus and alleged of police appeasement, towards the Muslims.[1]

Aftermath edit

The entire administration was subject to a complete overhaul, soon.[1] Pro-active policing was relied upon along with peace-building measures, to prevent any recurrence.[1] The town has not been witness to any riot, since.[2]

The next elections for state as well as national legislature were won by BJP with percentage-totals of 53 and 47 respectively.[2]

Analysis edit

The riot has been deemed to be the most destructive riot in the wake of concurrent Hindu nationalist campaigns.[1][2]

Jeffery argues that the riots primarily arose from pre-existing negative stereotyping of Muslims by the Hindu populace which reached a tipping point around November 1990, guided by the broader political sentiments of militant Hindu mobilization under BJP and aggressive responses by the BSP government in state; once the riots started there was a cycle of retaliation, further confirmation of prejudices and further retaliation, effectively leading to an unchecked cycle of positive feedback.[2][4] Jeffery failed to locate any standing in the economic sphere, though.[2]

He noted that local explanations varied from claiming of the riot being organised and perpetuated in entirety by outsiders to blaming the local Muslims and Khan.[2] All the sides commonly blamed the state machinery for adding to the riots, though.[2] Some gave justifications based on intersection of caste and religion, as well.[2] Jeffery did note that a combination of all these factors, contributed to the riots, as well.[2]

Basu, however, argues that the causes ought be located in the intersection of social, political as well economic planes.[1]

Almost all the Hindus interviewed by Basu, in the aftermath of the riots, squarely blamed Khan, for communalizing the regional politics and even instigating the riots, contrary to all available evidence.[1] The political need of the Hindus to exert themselves in the local municipal council and thus, gain greater control over economy, aided in the manifestation of the riot.[1] Khan's success in forging a Muslim+Lower-caste electoral base under BSP's aegis and transgression of rigid social boundaries, also hampered the social goal of BJP to subsume all Hindus under the fold of Hindutva, thus hampering larger political prospects in the region.[1] This was since reflected in BJP playing integral roles in building up the volatile atmosphere up till the riots.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn Basu, Amrita (1995). "Why Local Riots Are Not Simply Local: Collective Violence and the State in Bijnor, India 1988-1993". Theory and Society. 24 (1): 35–78. doi:10.1007/BF00993322. ISSN 0304-2421. JSTOR 657919. S2CID 144839645.
    • A near-duplicate version of this article was also published over Basu, Amrita (1994). "When Local Riots Are Not Merely Local: Bringing the State Back in, Bijnor 1988-92". Economic and Political Weekly. 29 (40): 2605–2621. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4401857.
    • Another near-duplicate version of this article has been published over Basu, Amrita (2015). "When Local Violence Is Not Merely Local: A Tale of Two Towns". Violent Conjunctures in Democratic India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 115–161. doi:10.1017/cbo9781316105719.007. ISBN 978-1-316-10571-9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Jeffery, Roger; Jeffery, Patricia M. (1994). "The Bijnor Riots, October 1990: Collapse of a Mythical Special Relationship?". Economic and Political Weekly. 29 (10): 551–558. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4400897.
  3. ^ Jeffery, Roger; Jeffery, Patricia (1997). "An island of peace?". Population, Gender and Politics : Demographic Change in Rural North India. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511621550.003. ISBN 9780511621550.
  4. ^ a b Jaffrelot, Christophe (1999). "The Early 1990s: How to conquer and retain power". The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics: 1925 to the 1990s : Strategies of Identity-building, Implantation and Mobilisation (with Special Reference to Central India). Penguin Books India. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-14-024602-5.
  5. ^ Engineer, Asghar Ali (1991). "The Bloody Trail: Ramjanmabhoomi and Communal Violence in UP". Economic and Political Weekly. 26 (4): 155–159. ISSN 0012-9976. JSTOR 4397237.

1990, bijnor, riot, october, 1990, there, major, communal, riot, bijnor, town, state, uttar, pradesh, india, stemming, from, celebratory, procession, local, hindu, groups, most, destructive, riot, wake, concurrent, hindu, nationalist, campaigns, which, eventua. In October 1990 there was a major communal riot in Bijnor a town in the state of Uttar Pradesh India Stemming from a celebratory procession by local Hindu groups it was the most destructive riot in the wake of concurrent Hindu nationalist campaigns which eventually led to the demolition of Babri Masjid The riots were also characterized by phases of passive and active complicity of the state machinery Official estimates put the death toll at 87 unofficially the count varies from around 200 to 300 with most of the dead being Muslims Contents 1 Background 1 1 Municipal elections 1 2 Property dispute 1 3 Ram jyotis 1 4 Communal harmony rally 2 Riot 2 1 Course 2 1 1 Build up 2 1 2 Immediate trigger 2 1 3 Curfew and state complicity 2 1 3 1 Spread 2 1 4 Closure 2 2 Local media coverage 3 Aftermath 4 Analysis 5 ReferencesBackground editAmrita Basu et al notes that there was a near total absence of any communal riots at Bijnor before 1988 1 2 3 A few distinct events manifested across the politico religious sphere in the following years that led to the gradual build up of animosity and did serve as a precursor to the riots 1 2 Municipal elections edit In the 1988 municipal elections a Muslim lawyer Zafar Khan from BSP was elected as the chair having defeated Sandip Lal a fellow Hindu contender from BSP who was also backed by BJP 1 Effectively it was more of a religious fight than political 1 Notwithstanding the demographic skew against Hindus Lal was poorly educated and corrupt contra Khan and his history of switching political allegiances drastically hampered his chances the election also saw a lower voter turnout among Hindus 1 Soon enough the elected Hindus in the council most of whom were prominent faces of communal outfits accused Khan of being partisan in the distribution of funds and appointments at key posts including Vice Chairman which was traditionally allotted to opposition 1 The claims of fund misuse and partisan appointments have been since located to be entirely unfounded a Muslim was illegally installed as the Vice Chairman in absence of Khan via a conspiracy hatched by the Hindu councilors 1 Along while there were multiple attempts to bring a no confidence motion against Khan esp by weaponizing the nominated members but none managed to succeed esp that he was close to Mulayam Yadav the then chief minister from BSP who changed nominated members at will 1 The last such attempt was in June 1990 1 Property dispute edit In around July 1990 there was a huge fracas about the fate of vacant land adjoining a mosque 1 The Hindu councilors along with local members of RSS claimed that the property belonged to a Hindu who was settled elsewhere but failed to pay taxes 1 On notification by the municipality of pending usurpation he did pay the dues but yet Khan had evicted him to unilaterally allot the property to a Muslim who was supposedly planning to inaugurate a beef shop 1 A local daily The Bijnor Times which was promised with favors by Lal shall he were elected heavily aided in the amplification so as to discredit Khan 1 The allegations were unfounded in that the municipality owned the land since long back and there was only a single request for renting out the property which the entire council had approved of 1 On 25 August a group of Hindus led by Bajrang Dal occupied the property and were soon reinforced in large numbers as rumors spread of an impending attack by Muslims 1 After a bout of stone pelting between the communities local police vacated the property by force and arrested the agitating Hindus 1 An old Muslim woman was killed by a ricocheting bullet and another Muslim died in the hospital later 2 In light of the volatile situation the municipality temporally stalled the scheduled land allocation in what was conceived as a victory by the Hindus 1 Ram jyotis edit In the wake to the Babri Masjid demolition VHP organised a cross state tour wherein karsevaks went about in a procession with flame torches and sought to rekindle the Hindu spirit 1 The then BSP government chose to prohibit them from entering the town by installing a barricade over the lone entry bridge fearing communal disturbances 1 In response thousands of Hindu women formed into a flash mob stormed the bridge in active defiance of state orders and enabled the Ram jyotis into the town 1 This proved to be a major turning point as to the inclusion of women in physical manifestations of Hindu nationalism and for the female inflicted violence that would form a major part of the Bijnor riot 1 Communal harmony rally edit The relations further deteriorated when the then chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav held one of the many communal harmony rally at Bijnor on 9 October 1990 1 Poised as an antidote to RSS BJP processions in the wake of Ayodhya it was widely attended by Muslims from across nearby districts 1 Incidentally Lal was the chief organiser whilst Khan chose to boycott it fearing a flare up of tensions 1 In the speech Mulayam vowed to protect the Babri Masjid and spoke about unity between Muslim and Backward Classes against Savarna Hindus 2 The speech was perceived to be inflammatory by Hindus and widespread violence followed soon afterward 1 2 Muslims were heckled to prevent attending the rally and their vehicles were attacked whilst returning during night effigies of Mulayam were burnt by a combine of BJP and ShivSena as well 1 The district president of VHP was attacked in what has been since alluded to an internal conspiracy for the sake of rumor mongering by local intelligence agencies 1 Three people two Hindus and one Muslim died and thirty shops were subject to loot and arson in the aftermaths bomb blasts were frequently heard around the town and the local marketplace was closed for four days 1 2 Ninety five people sixty five Hindus and thirty Muslims were arrested but soon released due to continuous protests by the Hindu populace who accused the authorities of minority appeasement 1 Riot editCourse edit Build up edit The initial destruction of Babri Masjid was planned on 30 October 1990 1 The karsevaks started to arrive by 25th and pursuant to instructions of Mulayam Yadav were subject to mass incarcerations by 26th 637 were already arrested and that local prisons were filled up a girls intermediate college was transformed to a temporary prison 1 2 Securities at the latter facility were minimal and they wandered out to the town with ease 1 Schools and colleges chose to announce indefinite closure in light of the communally polarized environment 1 Public assemblies were banned soon afterwards 1 Immediate trigger edit On 30 October the detained karsevaks assembled at an Arya Samaj temple in the town square with local VHP members in anticipation of the demolition 1 2 At around 11 a m a police officer reached the temple and spread misleading news supposedly referenced from BBC about the procession having reached Ayodhya and started with the planned destruction 1 Within an hour a several hundred strong victory procession made its way through a Muslim locality of the town and engaged in provocative sloganeering the slogans were strikingly similar to those used in previous communal riots 1 Local Hindus however rejected the claims and asserted of singing devotional songs only 2 The administration did not choose to not pay any heed to multiple calls for action on the initial congregation which was a violation of the imposed prohibition on public assembly or on preventing its passage through the Muslim quarters 1 2 Amidst this volatile atmosphere a local Muslim doctor Mushir Ahmed chose to keep open his dispensary 1 After the Muslims started pelting stones at the Hindu rally Ahmed chose to shelter a few Hindu women at the forefront of the rally who were caught in the cross fire 1 The Hindus in the rally however suspected Ahmed of abducting those women and he was murdered 1 This served as the immediate basis for the riot that was to follow 1 As his dead body was taken back to home the local Muslims attacked a Hindu neighborhood of Joggis a lower caste among Hindus and retaliation followed soon 1 By evening 48 were killed 1 4 Curfew and state complicity edit The state responded by declaring a town wide curfew at around 1 30 AM on 31 October and deploying Provincial Armed Constabulary PAC 1 However they were heavily partisan and effectively allowed the Hindus to go on a rampage looting and burning down Muslim shops whilst restricting the Muslims to their houses PAC later claimed of being accompanied Hindu nationalists only as to their inability to maneuver in an alien territory 1 2 Basu notes that post the installation of a curfew it was no longer a symmetric warfare but state assisted and perpetrated mass violence against Muslims which continued unabated till 3 October 1 The then editor of Dainik Jagran argues that the relatively one sided violence perpetrated by Muslims in Bartwaan had de professionalized the state forces in entirety and raked in a communal mobocracy 1 There were numerous instances of the PAC torturing physically violating and executing Muslims whilst accompanied by local Hindu residents 1 Looting and arsons of Muslim houses were extensively facilitated as well 1 5 mosques were destroyed per local reports 1 Spread edit The riots were mostly restricted to urban Bijnor but sporadic bursts of violence were reported from some adjoining villages esp in Rampur Bakli 1 2 Agricultural equipment et al were destroyed in addition to torture rape and summary executions 1 Closure edit The entire city was handed over to the Army on 3 November who finally reined in the riot 2 Curfew timings were gradually relaxed before being withdrawn all together after 10 days 2 During the span outsiders even the local legislator were not allowed in 2 By mid November normalcy was restored 2 Official estimates put the death toll at 87 unofficially the count varied from around 200 to 300 1 5 Local media coverage edit The local media esp Bijnor Times were actively complicit in contributing to the proliferation of rumors and sustaining the riot via mis reporting and partisan editorializing 1 2 There was extensive pro Hindu bias and the reporting during riots were essentially Islamophobic 1 2 Bijnor Times initially blamed the Muslims for stone pelting on a peaceful procession by Hindus and deemed the riots to be pre planned by the local Muslim populace 1 2 It soon changed its narrative and alleged of outsiders to have instigated the riots this was also readily accepted by the local administration 2 The paper also inflated the death toll on the side of Hindus and alleged of police appeasement towards the Muslims 1 Aftermath editThe entire administration was subject to a complete overhaul soon 1 Pro active policing was relied upon along with peace building measures to prevent any recurrence 1 The town has not been witness to any riot since 2 The next elections for state as well as national legislature were won by BJP with percentage totals of 53 and 47 respectively 2 Analysis editThe riot has been deemed to be the most destructive riot in the wake of concurrent Hindu nationalist campaigns 1 2 Jeffery argues that the riots primarily arose from pre existing negative stereotyping of Muslims by the Hindu populace which reached a tipping point around November 1990 guided by the broader political sentiments of militant Hindu mobilization under BJP and aggressive responses by the BSP government in state once the riots started there was a cycle of retaliation further confirmation of prejudices and further retaliation effectively leading to an unchecked cycle of positive feedback 2 4 Jeffery failed to locate any standing in the economic sphere though 2 He noted that local explanations varied from claiming of the riot being organised and perpetuated in entirety by outsiders to blaming the local Muslims and Khan 2 All the sides commonly blamed the state machinery for adding to the riots though 2 Some gave justifications based on intersection of caste and religion as well 2 Jeffery did note that a combination of all these factors contributed to the riots as well 2 Basu however argues that the causes ought be located in the intersection of social political as well economic planes 1 Almost all the Hindus interviewed by Basu in the aftermath of the riots squarely blamed Khan for communalizing the regional politics and even instigating the riots contrary to all available evidence 1 The political need of the Hindus to exert themselves in the local municipal council and thus gain greater control over economy aided in the manifestation of the riot 1 Khan s success in forging a Muslim Lower caste electoral base under BSP s aegis and transgression of rigid social boundaries also hampered the social goal of BJP to subsume all Hindus under the fold of Hindutva thus hampering larger political prospects in the region 1 This was since reflected in BJP playing integral roles in building up the volatile atmosphere up till the riots 1 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn Basu Amrita 1995 Why Local Riots Are Not Simply Local Collective Violence and the State in Bijnor India 1988 1993 Theory and Society 24 1 35 78 doi 10 1007 BF00993322 ISSN 0304 2421 JSTOR 657919 S2CID 144839645 A near duplicate version of this article was also published over Basu Amrita 1994 When Local Riots Are Not Merely Local Bringing the State Back in Bijnor 1988 92 Economic and Political Weekly 29 40 2605 2621 ISSN 0012 9976 JSTOR 4401857 Another near duplicate version of this article has been published over Basu Amrita 2015 When Local Violence Is Not Merely Local A Tale of Two Towns Violent Conjunctures in Democratic India Cambridge University Press pp 115 161 doi 10 1017 cbo9781316105719 007 ISBN 978 1 316 10571 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Jeffery Roger Jeffery Patricia M 1994 The Bijnor Riots October 1990 Collapse of a Mythical Special Relationship Economic and Political Weekly 29 10 551 558 ISSN 0012 9976 JSTOR 4400897 Jeffery Roger Jeffery Patricia 1997 An island of peace Population Gender and Politics Demographic Change in Rural North India Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511621550 003 ISBN 9780511621550 a b Jaffrelot Christophe 1999 The Early 1990s How to conquer and retain power The Hindu Nationalist Movement and Indian Politics 1925 to the 1990s Strategies of Identity building Implantation and Mobilisation with Special Reference to Central India Penguin Books India p 422 ISBN 978 0 14 024602 5 Engineer Asghar Ali 1991 The Bloody Trail Ramjanmabhoomi and Communal Violence in UP Economic and Political Weekly 26 4 155 159 ISSN 0012 9976 JSTOR 4397237 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1990 Bijnor riot amp oldid 1221044784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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