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2012 Assam violence

In July 2012, violence in the Indian state of Assam broke out with riots between indigenous Bodos and Bengali Muslims in Bodoland region of North East.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] The first incident was reported to have taken place on 20 July 2012.[10] As of 8 August 2012, 77 people had died[11] and over 400,000 people were taking shelter in 270 relief camps, after being displaced from almost 400 villages.[12][13] Eleven people have been reported missing.[14][15]

2012 Assam communal violence.
The violence took place in districts of Kokrajhar (top left, coloured red), Dhubri (bottom left, coloured red) and Chirang (formed out of parts of Bongaigaon (top right, coloured pink)).
LocationAssam, India
Date20 July 2012 (2012-07-20) – 15 September 2012 (2012-09-15)
Attack type
Ethnic-communal Mass violence and attack by Bodos on ethnic Bengali Muslims.
Deaths77 (as of 8 August 2012)[1]

On 27 July 2012, Assam's Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi blamed the UPA led national government for a "delay in army deployment to riot-hit areas".[16] The next day, Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh visited the relief camps in Kokrajhar and called the recent violence a blot on the face of India. Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram visited the state on Monday, 30 July to review the security situation and the relief and rehabilitation measures being taken.[17]

Lok Sabha member from Kokrajhar, Sansuma Khunggur Bwiswmuthiary blamed illegal immigration for the violence in the state.[18] The Election Commissioner of India, H.S. Brahma, said that of the 27 districts in Assam, 11 of them will be shown to have a Muslim majority when the 2011 census figures are published.[4][19] Singh was criticised for not dealing with the flood of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.[20] A journalist had asserted that the flooding of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh was a myth.[citation needed] The violence and exodus of thousands of people from Northeast India reportedly led to a series of incessant protests in Assam, at multiple locations, during the months of August–September. The protesters' main demand was expeditious detection and deportation of illegal infiltrators from Assam. On 15 September, at a convention of non-political indigenous ethnic groups, organisations representing some tribes Bodo, Dimasa, Tiwa, Deuri, Karbi, Garo, Rabha, Sonowal Kacharis and other indigenous communities decided to form a coordination committee for the cause. The tribal leaders said that illegal immigration has threatened the existence, right to land and resources to all indigenous people of the entire state, and it was not limited to BTAD alone.[21]

Background

The violence in 2012 followed ethnic tensions between the indigenous Bodo people and Bengali-speaking Muslims. While the Bengali-speaking Muslims state that they are descendants of East Bengali Muslims brought to Assam during the British Raj, local indigenous communities allege that the Muslim population has increased, boosted by refugees from the erstwhile East Pakistan before the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971[22] and by subsequent illegal migrants from Bangladesh.[23][24]

By the mid-1970s, increased competition for livelihood, land and political power led to frequent incidents of violence, including the Nellie massacre after the controversial 1983 state elections, which left nearly 3,000 dead, and other large scale clashes. These incidents resulted in resentment directed at India's central government, not only from Bodos, Rabhas, Tiwas, Keot(Kaibarta) and other indigenous ethnic groups for failing to prevent illegal migration, but also from the indigenous Assamese Muslim community for failing to protect the rights of minorities.[23][25]

In 1998, Srinivas Kumar Sinha, who then was governor of Assam, had sent a report to then Indian President, KR Narayanan, explaining about the problems that the unchecked illegal immigration of Bangladeshis would bring to the integrity of India.[26] In that report, he had highlighted the history that Assam was first claimed by Pakistan during 1947 and then by Bangladesh, due to its rich natural resources. The report raised worries about what might happen if the illegal immigrants gain majority and ask for secession from India. He also cited the "Greater Bangladesh project" which might entice the immigrants to merge those regions of Assam with Bangladesh[26]

The rapid growth of international Islamic fundamentalism may provide the driving force for this demand. The loss of Lower Assam will severe the entire North-East from the rest of India and the rich natural resources of that region will be lost to the nation.

— Srinivas Kumar Sinha.[27]

Riots in Kokrajhar, Chirang

Ethnic tensions between Bodos and Bengali-speaking Muslims escalated into a riot in Kokrajhar on 20 July 2012, when Muslims killed four Bodo youths at Joypur.[28] This was followed by retaliatory attacks on local Muslims killing two and injuring several of them on the morning of 21 July 2012.[28] Almost 80 people were killed, most of whom were Bengali Muslims and some Bodos. 400,000 people were displaced to migrant camps, most being Muslims .[29] The Indian army was deployed amid curfews to stem the mob rioting, with permission to shoot on sight.[30][31] Around 500 villages had been destroyed through arson.[32]

Central government response

 
The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at a relief camp, July 28, 2012

On the request of Sansuma Khunggur Bwiswmuthiary, MP of Kokrajhar, the Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh called the Chief Minister of Assam, Tarun Gogoi, on 23 July 2012 and instructed him to do whatever was necessary to restore peace.[33] The violence continued despite the efforts of the state law enforcement agencies, and on 24 July 2012, India's central government deployed paramilitary forces and 13 columns of the Indian Army to the affected districts. On the same day, shoot-on-sight orders and an indefinite curfew were enforced across Kokrajhar district, which also led to the death of four people when police fired at violent crowds in the Rampur and Chaparkata areas of Kokrajhar.[34] The Army conducted flag marches and the disrupted rail services were resumed on 25 July 2012, under the protection of the central forces. Union Home Secretary R.K. Singh stated that there were signs of improvement and called upon the Assam government to immediately act against the "ring leaders" of both factions.

On 26 July, an indefinite curfew and the shoot-on-sight orders were enforced in Kokrajhar district, along with a night curfew in Chirang and Dhubri districts.[14] On 26 July, the state's chief minister, Tarun Gogoi, announced the payment of ₹ 600,000 as compensation to the next of kin of the dead. Gogoi also announced that the people who were rendered homeless or displaced would be provided new houses at government expense. The chief minister assured the population that peace would soon return to the violence-affected areas. Singh visited the district of Kokrajhar to observe the situation on 28 July 2012 and offered support to the victims.[13][35] The prime minister said that the Centre will "closely work with the state government to provide a sense of security to all affected areas to ensure that they can go back to their houses secure in the knowledge that their lives and livelihood are secure". Singh said ₹ 200,000 would be given to the next of kin of those who died and ₹ 50,000 to the injured. He announced ₹ 1 billion for relief and rehabilitation of the affected people in the six affected districts, ₹ 1 billion as Special Plan assistance for development programs in the affected areas and another ₹ 1 billion under the Indira Awaas Yojana. ₹ 30,000 each would be given to those whose houses were totally destroyed, ₹ 20,000 under the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund to those whose houses were partially damaged.[36] The prime minister ordered an inquiry committee to be set up to look into the violence, and directed the state government to provide security so that the affected people can return home.[9] On 28 July, Gogoi said that the late arrival of central forces, including the Army, assisted the spread of clashes in the state.[37] According to the media reports, the Army was initially reluctant to deploy the troops and wanted clarification from the Defence Ministry on deployment because the situation "seemed to have communal overtones". When the situation deteriorated rapidly and another request was made, the ministry authorised Army deployment on 25 July 2012.[9]

The Centre has authorized the Assam government to deploy more than 11,000 paramilitary personnel in the state's violence-hit districts and has dispatched a relief plane with medical teams and supplies. Central paramilitary forces are now out in full force in Assam; the deployment of 65 paramilitary companies has been ordered and 53 companies have reached Assam. Of these, five were sent on the night of 20 July. 7,300 paramilitary personnel were deployed in strife-torn Kokrajhar, Chirang and Dhubri districts after moving them from other states in the wake of clashes between Bodos and Bengali-speaking Muslims.[9]

AIUDF leader Badruddin Ajmal claimed that the state administration was complicit in the violence and demanded a CBI inquiry into the riots.[38]

Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, recommended a CBI probe into the clashes in BTAD and Dubri districts and claimed "internal and external forces were at work".[39]

On 7 August 2012, the Centre ordered CBI probe into the continued ethnic clashes in the state.[40]

According to the Times of India, some 14 Muslim groups which came into existence in the last 20 years are under observation by intelligence agencies after inputs suggested that their activities were "inimical to peace and social harmony". The organizations named are Muslim Security Council of Assam, United Liberation Militia of Assam, Islamic Liberation Army of Assam, Muslim Volunteer Force, Muslim Liberation Army, Muslim Security Force, Islamic Sevak Sangh and Islamic United Reformation Protest of India.[41]

Criticism of the response

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and some senior Indian officials are said to have questioned whether the deployment of the Indian Army to curb the outbreak of violence was enacted fast enough.[42][43]

CBI investigation

On 7 August 2012, the Govt of India ordered CBI probe of the matter.[40] CBI on 19 September 2012, carried out first arrests by arresting five youths in connection with alleged lynching of four former Bodo youths in Kokrajhar area on 20 July. BPPF MLA Pradip Brahma was arrested along with Mohammed Hashem Ali, Mohammed Adom Ali Sheikh, Mohammed Hashim Ali Rehman, Mohammed Qurban Ali Sheikh, Mohammed Imran Hussain. They were arrested after they allegedly confessed of their involvement.[44] Further investigation able to catch real culprit behind 2012 ethnic clash, has named an Assam Police Constable Mohibur Islam alias Ratul who is on run at present.[45]

Repercussions in other parts of India

Maharashtra

Pune

On 8 and 9 August, some Meiteis were attacked in Pune. Students and professionals were beaten up by Muslims allegedly in Pune's Kondhwa and Poona College areas.[46] Attackers asked victims which state they belonged to, and those who replied Manipur were beaten. One of the victims said some attackers wore college uniform while others were in casual clothes.[47] Police arrested nine Muslim youths for the attacks.

Mumbai

On 11 August 2012, a Muslim protest against the riots in Assam and attacks on Muslims in Burma was held at Azad Maidan in Mumbai. The protest was organised by Raza Academy,[48] and was attended by two other groups, Sunni Jamiatul Ulma and Jama'at-e- Raza-e-Mustafa.[49] It ended in violence; two were killed and 54 others injured, including 45 policemen.[50][51][52] Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik said it was around 3 pm that the crowd turned violent, after some protesters displayed "provocative photos" of the Assam violence. "Some people started raising slogans against the police and media. They set fire to police vehicles," said Patnaik. "As we tried restraining the crowd, a scuffle broke out between the protestors and police."[53] The Mumbai Police Crime Branch suspects that the riot situation outside Azad Maidan was part of a "big conspiracy". Crime Branch sources said the police are probing the alleged role of "outside agencies". Crime Branch officers said the police felt that the violence may have been pre-planned as the protestors were equipped with gear to torch vehicles,[54] which they used to set fire to three media outdoor broadcasting (OB) vans and four police vans, one of which belonged to the riot control police.[54] They also damaged several other vehicles, including BEST buses. At least 30 vehicles were damaged in the incident. The police had to resort to a lathi charge to disperse the crowd. Two of the OB vans belonged to ABP News and P7 news.[54] Eight of the 45 policemen hurt sustained serious head injuries.[55] The police claimed that "at least five woman police constables were molested by mob."[56] There were also reports that a few of the rioters had stolen police weapons and fired in the air and at the police, but no casualties were reported.[56] Some photographers were also reportedly injured during the violence.[57] The police later claimed that provocative pamphlets were distributed during the protest, and they were investigating their source.[54]

The Amar Jawan Jyoti memorial for martyred soldiers in South Mumbai was desecrated during the riot.[58]

The President of the Raza Academy, Alhaj Mohammed Saeed Noori Sahab, said the "miscreants" involved in the violence were not associated with the academy. "Our protest was peaceful," he said.[59] Noori stated that an "irresponsible" speech had been made during the rally, which the Indian Express claimed, exacerbated tensions. Noori said: "There were several persons on the stage. One irresponsible person made statements regarding the media coverage. He was immediately stopped and attempts were made to calm the situation. We had no idea that this will happen," he said, condemning the attack on the media.[59]

Riots at Azad Maidan led to panic in the nearby colleges and hospitals. Cama and Albless Hospital and St Xavier's College went in lock-down mode to prevent rioters from entering their premises.[60]

While condemning the violence caused by rioters, All India Secular Forum social activist Irfan Engineer blamed Raza Academy for being parochial in nature. Engineer said: "The riots have ruptured the lives of every person in Assam. It has nothing to do with Muslims, Hindus, Bodos or anybody. Raza Academy, while organising the rally, should have taken all measures to see that the crowd does not go out of control or infiltrators take advantage of it or that protest rally just does not become confined for one community and thereby score an advantage in the community itself."[48]

23 people were arrested on charges of murder and have been remanded to police custody. Raza Academy and Madinatul Ilm Foundation were booked under section 302 of IPC. Police suspect that Facebook and SMS's were used to mobilise the mob.[61]

The rioters were found carrying sticks, rods and petrol cans to the rally, so police suspect the riot was pre-meditated. They are investigating the source of the weapons. Police have found CCTV footage showing protesters pouring petrol on vehicles before setting them alight.[61]

On 14 August 2012, Bal Thackeray chief of Shiv Sena and editor of Saamna newspaper published an editorial condemning the Congress-ruled Maharashtra government for "bowing" before "anti-national" Muslims who went on the rampage in south Mumbai. He compared the violence with the 26/11 terrorist attack on Mumbai.[62]

While 26/11 happened all of a sudden, Saturday's violence happened right under the nose of the city police. Those who held south Mumbai to ransom are not just miscreants, they are anti-national Muslims. However, it is unfortunate that the police did nothing to control the crisis. The office of the police commissioner is barely 100 steps away from the place where the Muslim youths went on the rampage. They took away weapons from policemen, molested women, assaulted innocent citizens and torched public vehicles. Yet the police did nothing. Their bullets turned into chocolates."[62]

A special team of 12 officers from the Crime Branch headed by an assistant commissioner of police will conduct the investigations. Two police rifles stolen by the mob were recovered in Amrutnagar, Mumbra, in neighbouring Thane district. Only 19 rounds out of 160 rounds stolen have been recovered so far.[61]

Andhra Pradesh

Two labourers, Sudip Barman, 23, and Khanin Ray, 32 from North-East were attacked in Andhra Pradesh while traveling on the Ernakulam Express. One of the men sustained severe injuries and later died.[47]

Uttar Pradesh

On 17 August 2012, Muslim mobs resorted to large scale violence against mediapersons, bystanders, shops, vehicles and tourists in several cities including Lucknow, Kanpur and Allahabad.[63][64] In Lucknow, after the Friday Namaz, a mob of 500 ravaged various landmarks of the city including Buddha Park, Haathi Park, Shaheed Smarak and Parivartan Chowk,[63] and vandalized many statues including those of Gautam Buddha and Mahavira.[64][65]

Attacks on people from Northeast and exodus

In August 2012, 30,000 people from the Northeast region had fled Bangalore after attacks[66] and threats of more attacks to come after Ramadan. Shiyeto from Nagaland, resident of Bangalore, was attacked by a group of people who threatened to kill him if he did not leave the city before Ramadan. Another person from Assam was alleged to be attacked.[66]

Cities of Pune, Chennai and Hyderabad also witnessed an exodus of people from Northeast.[67] In the national capital Delhi, rumours that people from the Northeast will be targeted, particularly after Ramadan, started circulating.[67]

Union Home Ministry has banned bulk SMS and MMS for 15 days to quell rumours and threats.[66] Railways have introduced two special trains to meet the rush of people.[68]

Singh called for maintaining peace at "any cost".[68] Then Bharatiya Janata Party president Nitin Gadkari blamed illegal migrants for the attacks on people from Northeast.[68] Gadkari said the violent mob in Mumbai had waived a Pakistani flag, made provocative remarks and vandalised the martyrs' memorial. He also condemned the attack on the media present and the assault on women police by the demonstrators at Azad Maidan.[69]

DGP Dinesh Reddy of Andhra Pradesh State, said, "Police have been deployed at all localities with a sizeable North-East population, to boost the community's confidence. Besides, round-the-clock police patrols have been organised."[70]

A policeman at Chennai Egmore station, where Howrah-bound trains from the South make a brief halt, remarked about the exodus: "The large crowds remind me of the arrival of Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka decades ago."[70]

On 18 August 2012, Bangalore police arrested three persons for sending SMSs and MMSs, to incite hatred against people from Northeast.[71] Anees Pasha, Thaseem Nawaz and Shahid Salman Khan were arrested, and four mobiles, two computers and one laptop were seized from them.[71] The culprits are believed to have shown clippings of violence in Assam and told a group of Northeast youths that they would face a similar fate if they continued to stay in Bangalore beyond 20 August.[71]

In Coimbatore, police arrested a person identified as B Mohammed Sheik Hassain, for sending more than 200 hate SMSs. According to Hassain, a person named Anvar first sent him the message. Hassain has been charged under the IPC for threat to national integration and creating public mischief, and under the Copyright Act.[72]

Investigators traced the source of hate messages to Islamist groups such as Popular Front of India, Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, Manita Neeti Pasarai and Karnataka Forum for Dignity. The SMS campaign was designed to create panic among people from Northeast forcing them to flee and to damage the social fabric and economy.[73][74][75] The Kerala State Intelligence was asked to check the veracity of the report with respect to the PFI.[76]

Bangalore

Messages were circulated warning people of Northeastern states of India to leave Bangalore and other cities before Eid al-Fitr (the festival that marks the end of Ramadan) which was on 20 August 2012.[77]

Special events were held by the Muslim community at the Jumma Masjid mosque in Bangalore with all the religious leaders present. An assurance was given by Anwar Sharieff, chairman of the Jumma Masjid Trust Board, to people from Northeast that the rumors spread were baseless.[78]

See also

References

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External links

  • . Tehelka Magazine. 4 August 2012. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2012..
  • . SAAG. 29 September 2005. Archived from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  • Ali, Mohammad (16 August 2012). "Bodoland Muslims might turn 'militant,' warns minorities panel". The Hindu. Chennai, India.
  • Reporters, B. S. (18 August 2012). "Exodus of northeastern people hits businesses in Bangalore". Business Standard.
  • "Assam calm; exodus to North-East continues". Live Mint. 18 August 2012.
  • . Hindustan Times. 20 August 2012. Archived from the original on 19 August 2012.
  • "'Stateless' remedy to illegal problem". Asian Age. 15 August 2012.
  • . SAAG. 23 August 2012. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012.
  • . Online News Portal. 28 August 2012. Archived from the original on 7 September 2012. Retrieved 28 August 2012.

2012, assam, violence, july, 2012, violence, indian, state, assam, broke, with, riots, between, indigenous, bodos, bengali, muslims, bodoland, region, north, east, first, incident, reported, have, taken, place, july, 2012, august, 2012, people, died, over, peo. In July 2012 violence in the Indian state of Assam broke out with riots between indigenous Bodos and Bengali Muslims in Bodoland region of North East 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 The first incident was reported to have taken place on 20 July 2012 10 As of 8 August 2012 77 people had died 11 and over 400 000 people were taking shelter in 270 relief camps after being displaced from almost 400 villages 12 13 Eleven people have been reported missing 14 15 2012 Assam communal violence The violence took place in districts of Kokrajhar top left coloured red Dhubri bottom left coloured red and Chirang formed out of parts of Bongaigaon top right coloured pink LocationAssam IndiaDate20 July 2012 2012 07 20 15 September 2012 2012 09 15 Attack typeEthnic communal Mass violence and attack by Bodos on ethnic Bengali Muslims Deaths77 as of 8 August 2012 1 On 27 July 2012 Assam s Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi blamed the UPA led national government for a delay in army deployment to riot hit areas 16 The next day Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh visited the relief camps in Kokrajhar and called the recent violence a blot on the face of India Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram visited the state on Monday 30 July to review the security situation and the relief and rehabilitation measures being taken 17 Lok Sabha member from Kokrajhar Sansuma Khunggur Bwiswmuthiary blamed illegal immigration for the violence in the state 18 The Election Commissioner of India H S Brahma said that of the 27 districts in Assam 11 of them will be shown to have a Muslim majority when the 2011 census figures are published 4 19 Singh was criticised for not dealing with the flood of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh 20 A journalist had asserted that the flooding of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh was a myth citation needed The violence and exodus of thousands of people from Northeast India reportedly led to a series of incessant protests in Assam at multiple locations during the months of August September The protesters main demand was expeditious detection and deportation of illegal infiltrators from Assam On 15 September at a convention of non political indigenous ethnic groups organisations representing some tribes Bodo Dimasa Tiwa Deuri Karbi Garo Rabha Sonowal Kacharis and other indigenous communities decided to form a coordination committee for the cause The tribal leaders said that illegal immigration has threatened the existence right to land and resources to all indigenous people of the entire state and it was not limited to BTAD alone 21 Contents 1 Background 2 Riots in Kokrajhar Chirang 3 Central government response 3 1 Criticism of the response 4 CBI investigation 5 Repercussions in other parts of India 5 1 Maharashtra 5 1 1 Pune 5 1 2 Mumbai 5 2 Andhra Pradesh 5 3 Uttar Pradesh 5 4 Attacks on people from Northeast and exodus 5 5 Bangalore 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditSee also Illegal immigration in India Assam agitation and Assam Accord The violence in 2012 followed ethnic tensions between the indigenous Bodo people and Bengali speaking Muslims While the Bengali speaking Muslims state that they are descendants of East Bengali Muslims brought to Assam during the British Raj local indigenous communities allege that the Muslim population has increased boosted by refugees from the erstwhile East Pakistan before the Indo Pakistani War of 1971 22 and by subsequent illegal migrants from Bangladesh 23 24 By the mid 1970s increased competition for livelihood land and political power led to frequent incidents of violence including the Nellie massacre after the controversial 1983 state elections which left nearly 3 000 dead and other large scale clashes These incidents resulted in resentment directed at India s central government not only from Bodos Rabhas Tiwas Keot Kaibarta and other indigenous ethnic groups for failing to prevent illegal migration but also from the indigenous Assamese Muslim community for failing to protect the rights of minorities 23 25 In 1998 Srinivas Kumar Sinha who then was governor of Assam had sent a report to then Indian President KR Narayanan explaining about the problems that the unchecked illegal immigration of Bangladeshis would bring to the integrity of India 26 In that report he had highlighted the history that Assam was first claimed by Pakistan during 1947 and then by Bangladesh due to its rich natural resources The report raised worries about what might happen if the illegal immigrants gain majority and ask for secession from India He also cited the Greater Bangladesh project which might entice the immigrants to merge those regions of Assam with Bangladesh 26 The rapid growth of international Islamic fundamentalism may provide the driving force for this demand The loss of Lower Assam will severe the entire North East from the rest of India and the rich natural resources of that region will be lost to the nation Srinivas Kumar Sinha 27 Riots in Kokrajhar Chirang EditEthnic tensions between Bodos and Bengali speaking Muslims escalated into a riot in Kokrajhar on 20 July 2012 when Muslims killed four Bodo youths at Joypur 28 This was followed by retaliatory attacks on local Muslims killing two and injuring several of them on the morning of 21 July 2012 28 Almost 80 people were killed most of whom were Bengali Muslims and some Bodos 400 000 people were displaced to migrant camps most being Muslims 29 The Indian army was deployed amid curfews to stem the mob rioting with permission to shoot on sight 30 31 Around 500 villages had been destroyed through arson 32 Central government response Edit The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at a relief camp July 28 2012 On the request of Sansuma Khunggur Bwiswmuthiary MP of Kokrajhar the Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh called the Chief Minister of Assam Tarun Gogoi on 23 July 2012 and instructed him to do whatever was necessary to restore peace 33 The violence continued despite the efforts of the state law enforcement agencies and on 24 July 2012 India s central government deployed paramilitary forces and 13 columns of the Indian Army to the affected districts On the same day shoot on sight orders and an indefinite curfew were enforced across Kokrajhar district which also led to the death of four people when police fired at violent crowds in the Rampur and Chaparkata areas of Kokrajhar 34 The Army conducted flag marches and the disrupted rail services were resumed on 25 July 2012 under the protection of the central forces Union Home Secretary R K Singh stated that there were signs of improvement and called upon the Assam government to immediately act against the ring leaders of both factions On 26 July an indefinite curfew and the shoot on sight orders were enforced in Kokrajhar district along with a night curfew in Chirang and Dhubri districts 14 On 26 July the state s chief minister Tarun Gogoi announced the payment of 600 000 as compensation to the next of kin of the dead Gogoi also announced that the people who were rendered homeless or displaced would be provided new houses at government expense The chief minister assured the population that peace would soon return to the violence affected areas Singh visited the district of Kokrajhar to observe the situation on 28 July 2012 and offered support to the victims 13 35 The prime minister said that the Centre will closely work with the state government to provide a sense of security to all affected areas to ensure that they can go back to their houses secure in the knowledge that their lives and livelihood are secure Singh said 200 000 would be given to the next of kin of those who died and 50 000 to the injured He announced 1 billion for relief and rehabilitation of the affected people in the six affected districts 1 billion as Special Plan assistance for development programs in the affected areas and another 1 billion under the Indira Awaas Yojana 30 000 each would be given to those whose houses were totally destroyed 20 000 under the Prime Minister s National Relief Fund to those whose houses were partially damaged 36 The prime minister ordered an inquiry committee to be set up to look into the violence and directed the state government to provide security so that the affected people can return home 9 On 28 July Gogoi said that the late arrival of central forces including the Army assisted the spread of clashes in the state 37 According to the media reports the Army was initially reluctant to deploy the troops and wanted clarification from the Defence Ministry on deployment because the situation seemed to have communal overtones When the situation deteriorated rapidly and another request was made the ministry authorised Army deployment on 25 July 2012 9 The Centre has authorized the Assam government to deploy more than 11 000 paramilitary personnel in the state s violence hit districts and has dispatched a relief plane with medical teams and supplies Central paramilitary forces are now out in full force in Assam the deployment of 65 paramilitary companies has been ordered and 53 companies have reached Assam Of these five were sent on the night of 20 July 7 300 paramilitary personnel were deployed in strife torn Kokrajhar Chirang and Dhubri districts after moving them from other states in the wake of clashes between Bodos and Bengali speaking Muslims 9 AIUDF leader Badruddin Ajmal claimed that the state administration was complicit in the violence and demanded a CBI inquiry into the riots 38 Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi recommended a CBI probe into the clashes in BTAD and Dubri districts and claimed internal and external forces were at work 39 On 7 August 2012 the Centre ordered CBI probe into the continued ethnic clashes in the state 40 According to the Times of India some 14 Muslim groups which came into existence in the last 20 years are under observation by intelligence agencies after inputs suggested that their activities were inimical to peace and social harmony The organizations named are Muslim Security Council of Assam United Liberation Militia of Assam Islamic Liberation Army of Assam Muslim Volunteer Force Muslim Liberation Army Muslim Security Force Islamic Sevak Sangh and Islamic United Reformation Protest of India 41 Criticism of the response Edit The Ministry of Home Affairs MHA and some senior Indian officials are said to have questioned whether the deployment of the Indian Army to curb the outbreak of violence was enacted fast enough 42 43 CBI investigation EditSee also Central Bureau of Investigation On 7 August 2012 the Govt of India ordered CBI probe of the matter 40 CBI on 19 September 2012 carried out first arrests by arresting five youths in connection with alleged lynching of four former Bodo youths in Kokrajhar area on 20 July BPPF MLA Pradip Brahma was arrested along with Mohammed Hashem Ali Mohammed Adom Ali Sheikh Mohammed Hashim Ali Rehman Mohammed Qurban Ali Sheikh Mohammed Imran Hussain They were arrested after they allegedly confessed of their involvement 44 Further investigation able to catch real culprit behind 2012 ethnic clash has named an Assam Police Constable Mohibur Islam alias Ratul who is on run at present 45 Repercussions in other parts of India EditMaharashtra Edit Pune Edit On 8 and 9 August some Meiteis were attacked in Pune Students and professionals were beaten up by Muslims allegedly in Pune s Kondhwa and Poona College areas 46 Attackers asked victims which state they belonged to and those who replied Manipur were beaten One of the victims said some attackers wore college uniform while others were in casual clothes 47 Police arrested nine Muslim youths for the attacks Mumbai Edit Main article Azad Maidan riots On 11 August 2012 a Muslim protest against the riots in Assam and attacks on Muslims in Burma was held at Azad Maidan in Mumbai The protest was organised by Raza Academy 48 and was attended by two other groups Sunni Jamiatul Ulma and Jama at e Raza e Mustafa 49 It ended in violence two were killed and 54 others injured including 45 policemen 50 51 52 Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik said it was around 3 pm that the crowd turned violent after some protesters displayed provocative photos of the Assam violence Some people started raising slogans against the police and media They set fire to police vehicles said Patnaik As we tried restraining the crowd a scuffle broke out between the protestors and police 53 The Mumbai Police Crime Branch suspects that the riot situation outside Azad Maidan was part of a big conspiracy Crime Branch sources said the police are probing the alleged role of outside agencies Crime Branch officers said the police felt that the violence may have been pre planned as the protestors were equipped with gear to torch vehicles 54 which they used to set fire to three media outdoor broadcasting OB vans and four police vans one of which belonged to the riot control police 54 They also damaged several other vehicles including BEST buses At least 30 vehicles were damaged in the incident The police had to resort to a lathi charge to disperse the crowd Two of the OB vans belonged to ABP News and P7 news 54 Eight of the 45 policemen hurt sustained serious head injuries 55 The police claimed that at least five woman police constables were molested by mob 56 There were also reports that a few of the rioters had stolen police weapons and fired in the air and at the police but no casualties were reported 56 Some photographers were also reportedly injured during the violence 57 The police later claimed that provocative pamphlets were distributed during the protest and they were investigating their source 54 The Amar Jawan Jyoti memorial for martyred soldiers in South Mumbai was desecrated during the riot 58 The President of the Raza Academy Alhaj Mohammed Saeed Noori Sahab said the miscreants involved in the violence were not associated with the academy Our protest was peaceful he said 59 Noori stated that an irresponsible speech had been made during the rally which the Indian Express claimed exacerbated tensions Noori said There were several persons on the stage One irresponsible person made statements regarding the media coverage He was immediately stopped and attempts were made to calm the situation We had no idea that this will happen he said condemning the attack on the media 59 Riots at Azad Maidan led to panic in the nearby colleges and hospitals Cama and Albless Hospital and St Xavier s College went in lock down mode to prevent rioters from entering their premises 60 While condemning the violence caused by rioters All India Secular Forum social activist Irfan Engineer blamed Raza Academy for being parochial in nature Engineer said The riots have ruptured the lives of every person in Assam It has nothing to do with Muslims Hindus Bodos or anybody Raza Academy while organising the rally should have taken all measures to see that the crowd does not go out of control or infiltrators take advantage of it or that protest rally just does not become confined for one community and thereby score an advantage in the community itself 48 23 people were arrested on charges of murder and have been remanded to police custody Raza Academy and Madinatul Ilm Foundation were booked under section 302 of IPC Police suspect that Facebook and SMS s were used to mobilise the mob 61 The rioters were found carrying sticks rods and petrol cans to the rally so police suspect the riot was pre meditated They are investigating the source of the weapons Police have found CCTV footage showing protesters pouring petrol on vehicles before setting them alight 61 On 14 August 2012 Bal Thackeray chief of Shiv Sena and editor of Saamna newspaper published an editorial condemning the Congress ruled Maharashtra government for bowing before anti national Muslims who went on the rampage in south Mumbai He compared the violence with the 26 11 terrorist attack on Mumbai 62 While 26 11 happened all of a sudden Saturday s violence happened right under the nose of the city police Those who held south Mumbai to ransom are not just miscreants they are anti national Muslims However it is unfortunate that the police did nothing to control the crisis The office of the police commissioner is barely 100 steps away from the place where the Muslim youths went on the rampage They took away weapons from policemen molested women assaulted innocent citizens and torched public vehicles Yet the police did nothing Their bullets turned into chocolates 62 A special team of 12 officers from the Crime Branch headed by an assistant commissioner of police will conduct the investigations Two police rifles stolen by the mob were recovered in Amrutnagar Mumbra in neighbouring Thane district Only 19 rounds out of 160 rounds stolen have been recovered so far 61 Andhra Pradesh Edit Two labourers Sudip Barman 23 and Khanin Ray 32 from North East were attacked in Andhra Pradesh while traveling on the Ernakulam Express One of the men sustained severe injuries and later died 47 Uttar Pradesh Edit On 17 August 2012 Muslim mobs resorted to large scale violence against mediapersons bystanders shops vehicles and tourists in several cities including Lucknow Kanpur and Allahabad 63 64 In Lucknow after the Friday Namaz a mob of 500 ravaged various landmarks of the city including Buddha Park Haathi Park Shaheed Smarak and Parivartan Chowk 63 and vandalized many statues including those of Gautam Buddha and Mahavira 64 65 Attacks on people from Northeast and exodus Edit In August 2012 30 000 people from the Northeast region had fled Bangalore after attacks 66 and threats of more attacks to come after Ramadan Shiyeto from Nagaland resident of Bangalore was attacked by a group of people who threatened to kill him if he did not leave the city before Ramadan Another person from Assam was alleged to be attacked 66 Cities of Pune Chennai and Hyderabad also witnessed an exodus of people from Northeast 67 In the national capital Delhi rumours that people from the Northeast will be targeted particularly after Ramadan started circulating 67 Union Home Ministry has banned bulk SMS and MMS for 15 days to quell rumours and threats 66 Railways have introduced two special trains to meet the rush of people 68 Singh called for maintaining peace at any cost 68 Then Bharatiya Janata Party president Nitin Gadkari blamed illegal migrants for the attacks on people from Northeast 68 Gadkari said the violent mob in Mumbai had waived a Pakistani flag made provocative remarks and vandalised the martyrs memorial He also condemned the attack on the media present and the assault on women police by the demonstrators at Azad Maidan 69 DGP Dinesh Reddy of Andhra Pradesh State said Police have been deployed at all localities with a sizeable North East population to boost the community s confidence Besides round the clock police patrols have been organised 70 A policeman at Chennai Egmore station where Howrah bound trains from the South make a brief halt remarked about the exodus The large crowds remind me of the arrival of Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka decades ago 70 On 18 August 2012 Bangalore police arrested three persons for sending SMSs and MMSs to incite hatred against people from Northeast 71 Anees Pasha Thaseem Nawaz and Shahid Salman Khan were arrested and four mobiles two computers and one laptop were seized from them 71 The culprits are believed to have shown clippings of violence in Assam and told a group of Northeast youths that they would face a similar fate if they continued to stay in Bangalore beyond 20 August 71 In Coimbatore police arrested a person identified as B Mohammed Sheik Hassain for sending more than 200 hate SMSs According to Hassain a person named Anvar first sent him the message Hassain has been charged under the IPC for threat to national integration and creating public mischief and under the Copyright Act 72 Investigators traced the source of hate messages to Islamist groups such as Popular Front of India Harkat ul Jihad al Islami Manita Neeti Pasarai and Karnataka Forum for Dignity The SMS campaign was designed to create panic among people from Northeast forcing them to flee and to damage the social fabric and economy 73 74 75 The Kerala State Intelligence was asked to check the veracity of the report with respect to the PFI 76 Bangalore Edit Messages were circulated warning people of Northeastern states of India to leave Bangalore and other cities before Eid al Fitr the festival that marks the end of Ramadan which was on 20 August 2012 77 Special events were held by the Muslim community at the Jumma Masjid mosque in Bangalore with all the religious leaders present An assurance was given by Anwar Sharieff chairman of the Jumma Masjid Trust Board to people from Northeast that the rumors spread were baseless 78 See also EditIllegal Migrants Determination by Tribunal Act 1983References Edit Assam 5 killed in fresh violence toll rises to 61 Zeenews india com 5 August 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Assam violence due to Bodo Muslim feud The Indian Express 17 August 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Media fueling the myth of Muslim infiltrators The Shillong Times 13 August 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 a b How to share Assam Indian Express 28 July 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 As Tensions in India Turn Deadly Some Say Officials Ignored Warning Signs Asia Pacific 28 July 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Key facts about Assam violence Archived 27 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine hindustantimes com 26 July 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 External elements behind Assam violence Govt Zeenews com 6 August 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Demographic change and Assam violence Archived 3 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Pioneer a b c d Assam violence Home Minister Sushil kumar Shinde to visit state on Monday Top 10 developments NDTV 28 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2012 9 killed curfew clamped in Kokrajhar The Assam Tribune 21 July 2012 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2012 Assam violence Four more bodies found toll rises to 77 IBN 8 August 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Sandeep Joshi K Balchand Sushanta Talukdar 25 July 2012 Crack down on ring leaders Centre tells Assam The Hindu Chennai India Retrieved 25 July 2012 a b India s PM promises help to riot victims Al Jazeera 28 July 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2012 a b Assam Violence Death Toll Rises to 44 Outlook Press Trust of India 26 July 2012 Archived from the original on 27 July 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Assam violence continues for fifth day toll now 44 First Post 27 July 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Under fire Assam CM blames central govt Hindustan Times 27 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Assam violence Home Minister Chidambaram to visit state on Monday Top 10 developments NDTV com Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 29 July 2012 Live Advani loses vote on adjournment motion over Assam violence firstpost com 8 August 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Dasgupta Swapan 3 August 2012 Twist in the tale Calcutta India Telegraphindia com Retrieved 9 August 2012 Assam violence a fallout of vote bank politics NewIndianExpress com 5 August 2012 Retrieved 9 August 2012 Extinction fear haunts indigenous Assamese The Pioneer 17 September 2012 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Key facts about Assam violence Hindustan Times 26 July 2012 Archived from the original on 28 July 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2012 a b Bhaumik Subir 26 July 2012 What lies behind Assam violence BBC News Retrieved 27 July 2012 Assam violence A history of conflict rooted in land NDTV 27 July 2012 Assam riots Fruits of living in denial over Bangladesh influx First Post 25 July 2012 a b Assam riots Fruits of living in denial over Bangladesh influx Firstpost 25 June 2012 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Assam governor asks Centre to seal Bangladesh border rediff com a b 9 killed curfew clamped in Kokrajhar Assam Tribune 21 July 2012 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Killing for a homeland The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 19 April 2016 Bhaumik Subir 26 July 2012 What lies behind Assam violence BBC News BBC News Retrieved 19 April 2016 India s Assam issues shoot on sight orders amid violence BBC World News 24 July 2019 Retrieved 20 December 2019 India struggles to control ethnic violence in Assam Reuters 24 July 2012 Retrieved 19 April 2016 Assam violence MHA officials to speak to warring factions IBN Live 25 July 2012 Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Assam violence 4 killed in police firing toll reaches 25 Business Standard 24 July 2012 Assam riots live Tarun Gogoi attacks national media for negative role FirstPost 26 July 2012 Retrieved 26 July 2012 PM announces Rs 300 crore package for Assam says riots a blot on the nation The Economic Times 28 July 2012 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Samudra Gupta Kashyap 28 July 2012 Gogoi says central forces reached late The Indian Express Retrieved 28 July 2012 Abdi SNM 13 August 2012 Interview with Badrudding Ajmal Outlook Magazine Assam govt recommends CBI probe into violence The Hindu Chennai India 7 August 2012 a b Kokrajhar erupts again Centre orders CBI probe 8 August 2012 Archived from the original on 8 August 2012 Muslim outfits under lens in Assam Manipur The Times of India 8 August 2012 Archived from the original on 5 December 2013 Sudhi Ranjan Sen Assam violence Was the Army deployed too late Home ministry to take up the issue with the Prime Minister NDTV Sharma Betwa 2 August 2012 In Assam Grim Aftermath to July Riots NYTimes com Bangladesh India blogs nytimes com Retrieved 9 August 2012 CBI Makes First Arrests in Assam Violence Case The Outlook India 19 September 2012 Archived from the original on 20 September 2012 Retrieved 19 September 2012 Assam cop triggered Bodoland riots CBI The Times of India Retrieved 24 September 2018 Pune attacks against North East students too provoked by Assam video say police Retrieved 16 August 2012 a b Six attacks on Manipuris many from northeast choose to stay home The Times of India 12 August 2012 a b Assam echoes in Mumbai 11 August 2012 Two dead in Mumbai as protest rally turns into a riot 12 August 2012 Protest against Assam riots turns violent in Mumbai The Times of India Mumbai India IANS 11 August 2012 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Assam riots 2 killed 20 injured as protestors go on rampage in Mumbai The Times of India 12 August 2012 2 dead 54 hurt in Mumbai protest over Assam violence Indian Express 11 August 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2012 2 dead 54 hurt in Mumbai protest over Assam violence The Indian Express 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 a b c d Police probing if violence was a big conspiracy The Indian Express 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 I could see them tossing policemen up and down The Indian Express 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 a b Mumbai violence Woman cops molested by rioters DNA India 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 Assam effect Riot in the city as protesters go on rampage DNA India 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 Assam violence protest in Mumbai 23 arrested police claim women constables molested by mob at Azad Maidan West News India Today Indiatoday intoday in 12 August 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2012 a b Mumbai violence Organisers admit remarks against media led to tension The Indian Express 12 August 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2012 Mumbai violence Panic at Cama Xavier s 8 December 2012 a b c Mumbai Violence Seems Pre Planned Police 12 August 2012 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 a b When anti national Muslims held Mumbai to ransom bullets turned into chocolates Shiv Sena The Times of India 19 August 2012 Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 a b Khan Atiq 18 August 2012 Mob goes berserk in Lucknow targets media The Hindu Chennai India Retrieved 20 August 2012 a b UP sees violence over Myanmar Assam events curfew in Allahabad MSN News 18 August 2012 Archived from the original on 19 August 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2012 BJP Police did not act during violence on govt instance Indian Express 19 August 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2012 a b c Northeast people indeed assaulted threatened in Bangalore 18 August 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b North East people s exodus continues 18 August 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b c PM CALLS FOR MAINTAINING PEACE AT ANY COST Retrieved 18 August 2012 Illegal migrants responsible for attacks on NE people Gadkari Business Standard India Press Trust of India 16 August 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b N E exodus from 3 states unabated 17 August 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 a b c Cops nab gang which sent hate SMSs in Bangalore The Times of India 18 August 2012 Archived from the original on 21 August 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2012 20 yr old held for forwarding hate SMS The Times of India 20 August 2012 Archived from the original on 22 August 2012 Retrieved 20 August 2012 How HuJI PFI lobbed the hate bomb with ease Rediff 21 August 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2012 Caught napping again Northeast exodus rogue SMSes traced to HuJI Kerala group Archived from the original on 21 August 2012 PTI 21 August 2012 States Kerala Inflammatory messages Kerala based outfit under scanner The Hindu Chennai India Retrieved 29 December 2012 Shah Shreya 17 August 2012 India bans mass sms for eid The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 17 August 2012 Special event in Bangalore on Eid The Hindu Chennai India 22 August 2012 External links Edit The Butchers of Kokrajhar Tehelka Magazine 4 August 2012 Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2012 Politics of Infiltration A Threat to Socio cultural Identity of Assam SAAG 29 September 2005 Archived from the original on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 21 August 2012 Ali Mohammad 16 August 2012 Bodoland Muslims might turn militant warns minorities panel The Hindu Chennai India Reporters B S 18 August 2012 Exodus of northeastern people hits businesses in Bangalore Business Standard Assam calm exodus to North East continues Live Mint 18 August 2012 Illegal migrants turn Assam into drug hub Hindustan Times 20 August 2012 Archived from the original on 19 August 2012 Stateless remedy to illegal problem Asian Age 15 August 2012 BODO MUSLIM CONFLICT in ASSAM Historical Roots SAAG 23 August 2012 Archived from the original on 29 August 2012 Whats Happening in Assam Anybody bothered Online News Portal 28 August 2012 Archived from the original on 7 September 2012 Retrieved 28 August 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2012 Assam violence amp oldid 1123498939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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