Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
India

Dadri Lynching: Ministers Voice Concern, Up Report Sans Murder Charge

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Oct, 2015 11:47 AM
    Eight days after a mob lynched a Muslim man following rumours that he ate beef, Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Tuesday warned that threats to the country's secular fabric won't be tolerated.
     
    However, according to sources, a report on the incident sent by the Uttar Pradesh government to the union home ministry does not mention 'murder' as one of the charges, and said "slaughter of a banned animal" was the reason behind the attack.
     
    On September 28 in a village in Greater Noida, near the national capital, a mob dragged 50-year-old Mohammed Akhlaq out of his home and lynched him saying he ate beef. His family denied the allegation. His 21-year-old son Danish was left critically injured and is now recuperating in hospital.
     
    The home ministry had on Monday expressed concern over incidents with communal overtones, and directed state governments to act strictly against elements seeking to exploit religious sentiments.
     
    Rajnath Singh, responding to questions on the sidelines of a function here, said his ministry would look into the Uttar Pradesh government's report on the lynching.
     
     
    "Any threat to the secular fabric of the country will not be tolerated. It is the duty of every citizen to maintain social harmony and I appeal to people to uphold this," Singh said.
     
    In New York, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley told NDTV that such incidents affect the country's image and "amount to policy diversions".
     
    "India is a mature society. We have to rise above these incidents because they certainly don't bring a good name as far as the country is concerned.
     
    "And I have also said that they can amount to policy diversions." 
     
    Jaitley said it was the duty of every Indian, "in his actions or comments, to stay clear of unfortunate or condemnable incidents of this kind".
     
     
    The report, which was sent to the union home ministry on Monday night, mentions that Uttar Pradesh Police registered a first information report (FIR) on charges of attempt to murder, rioting, unlawful assembly of people, punishment for voluntarily causing hurt, breach of peace, criminal intimidation and house trespass, the sources said.
     
    However, section 302 of the Indian Penal Code pertaining to murder was not mentioned, the sources said.
     
    The report says eight out of 10 people involved in the incident have been arrested.
     
    Meanwhile, AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi opposed Uttar Pradesh minister and Samajwadi Party leader Azam Khan's move to take the lynching incident to the United Nations.
     
    He said in Hyderabad that if Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav supports Khan's move, the government in Uttar Pradesh should resign and President's Rule be imposed.
     
     
    The Hyderabad MP said the incident was an internal matter of India and Muslims can never fight against their own country.
     
    Reacting to Jaitley's statement that Dadri like incidents hurt India's image, he said the question was not of image but of "our morals and moral duty".
     
    The Aam Aadmi Party, meanwhile, asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to end his silence over the incident.
     
    AAP leader Ashutosh slammed Modi and also sought action against Bharatiya Janata Party leaders for their "provocative" remarks.
     
     
    "Today is the eighth day of the Dadri incident, the prime minister has not spoken. Nation does not know what he feels and is he against such incidents?" he tweeted.
     
    The AAP leader said no religion can have the permission to shatter the nation's trust.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket
    Despite apprehensions raised by some BJP MPs about a proposed India-Pakistan cricket series, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is determined to break the ice with the neighbouring country through "cricket diplomacy", informed sources here said.

    Modi Seeks To Improve Relations With Pakistan Via Cricket

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh
    India has credible information that underworld don Dawood Ibrahim is in Pakistan and we will not rest till he is brought back, Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Monday. But Pakistan denied the fugitive is present there.

    Dawood In Pakistan, We'll Get Him, Says Rajnath Singh

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences
    The economy rebounded; exports and imports declined, foreign-exchange reserves grew; coal production, electricity generation and petroleum consumption rose, non-performing assets (NPAs) in banking soared.

    Modi And Manmohan: 1 Year, Spot The Differences

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey
    A nationwide India TV-C Voter opinion poll, telecast on Monday, said that External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj leads the union ministers in terms of performance. 

    78 Percent Don't Want Land Bill, 63 Percent Say Modi's Image Anti-poor: Survey

    Jayalalithaa Acquitted Of Charges, Set To Return As Tamil Nadu's Chief Minister

    "Justice has won," the former Tamil Nadu chief minister gloated hours after a special bench in Bengaluru acquitted her in the Rs.66.65 crore case in which she was sentenced to four years in jail by a lower court.

    Jayalalithaa Acquitted Of Charges, Set To Return As Tamil Nadu's Chief Minister

    BJP MP Opposes India-Pakistan Cricket Series

    BJP MP Opposes India-Pakistan Cricket Series
    A Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) parliamentarian on Monday expressed his opposition to the proposed India-Pakistan cricket series in December.

    BJP MP Opposes India-Pakistan Cricket Series