IOL
South Asia Correspondent
NEW
DELHI, October 19 (IslamOnline) - The lynching of five Dalits (low-caste
Hindus) in Jhajjhar district of Haryana state bordering New Delhi
earlier this week has taken a new turn as villagers insist it was not
the mob of Hindu villagers who killed the five Dalits, but policemen on
duty.
The
Dalits were killed Tuesday, October 15, in the presence of 50 policemen,
a city magistrate and several government officials, including deputy
chief of district police. The Indian Express broke the story on
October 17.
The
police claimed a mob of 2,000 enraged Hindus, led by members of a
quasi-fascist Hindu nationalist group called Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(VHP-World Hindu Council) killed these men for allegedly slaughtering a
cow.
VHP
senior vice-president Acharya Giriraj Kishore told the press in Delhi
Friday, October 18, that his men had not led the mob that lynched the
Dalits. However, he quoted Hindu scriptures to point out that the life
of a cow is more precious than that of a human being.
He
said it had to be ascertained whether the cow was killed by the five men
or was already dead. Until such time as a report on this was available,
nothing could be said. Not even the state government was in a position
to say anything, the VHP leader claimed.
However,
Kishore shrugged off the enormity of the lynching by asking, Can anyone
discipline a mob? The drift of his argument was that people were very
much within their right to have lynched the Dalits for taking a cow's
life, which is more precious than a man's.
On
the other hand, Dalits maintained that they skinned only dead animals, a
practice that has continued for hundreds of generations. These low-caste
Hindus skin dead animals and bury the carcass. They don't kill cows or
any other cattle.
Meanwhile,
villagers have alleged that they had nothing to do with the lynching,
nor were the Dalits skinning a dead cow. They said the five Dalits were
carrying skins of dead animals to a nearby town to sell when the
policemen intercepted them, demanding bribe.
The
Dalits had always bribed them, but this time an altercation began on the
quantum of bribe, the villagers said. That triggered police violence,
leading to the murder of the Dalits.
Trade
in animal skin is perfectly legal (except in the skin of endangered
species). However, it is normal for policemen to demand bribe even for
normal, legal business transactions in any field.
Nobody
has been arrested for the crime. In any case, killing a Dalit is not a
great deal within the Indian Hindu caste system as they are rated even
below pigs and cattle in the scriptures quoted by the VHP leader above.
The
state government, instead of doing anything meaningful, ordered an
enquiry. An enquiry report takes months, even years, to be completed.
After that the government invariably drops the case or leaves enough
legal loopholes to let the criminals escape justice.
To
complicate matters, the government ordered another enquiry Friday,
October 18. The high government officials entrusted with the second
enquiry declared grandly, "The orders have come today, and we will
try and get to the bottom of the truth."
Meanwhile,
politicians indulged in predictable skullduggery. A spokesman of the
Bhartiya Janata Pary (BJP), a sister organisation of VHP, declared in
New Delhi that they condemned any kind of killing, thus equating bovine
slaughter with manslaughter.
Equivocating,
he issued the bland statement, "We hope the Haryana state
government goes into the depth of the matter." He did not hope the
culprits were caught and jailed, but that the fact was established
whether the cow was "killed" or was dead already. And he
forgot about the five men.
Meanwhile,
the two major communist parties CPI and CPIM, said the VHP, had incited
the mob and taken out a procession to celebrate the achievement of
killing five Dalits who had supposedly killed a cow.
But
where is the state? Nobody knows.