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Strike Paralyses Life in Gujarat, Mumbai As Delhi Remains Normal

Elderly Muslim passes by closed shops in Ahmedabad during the strike

By IOL South Asia Correspondent

NEW DELHI, September 27 (IslamOnline) - Life in India’s national capital remained almost normal Thursday, September 26, despite the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) call for an all-India strike to protest Tuesday’s terrorist attack on Akhshardham Swaminarayan temple in Gandhinagar, Gujarat.

A strike is a complete cessation of all commercial and other activities, including plying of buses, taxis and trains. VHP is a militant anti-Christian, anti-Muslim organization, an affiliate of the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP).

However, for political reasons this time, the BJP has chosen to stay away from VHP’s call in Gujarat, Delhi and some other places. Breaking from the central leadership, the Maharashtra state BJP unit participated in the strike.

At other places also, BJP workers were seen enforcing the strike despite the fact that their party had clearly said it would not participate in it.

BJP/VHP activists demonstrating against Pakistani High Commission in Delhi

Life was totally paralyzed in Gujarat as all commercial establishments remained closed and educational institutions declared holiday. At quite a few places in Gujarat banks kept shutters half open. Bajrang Dal activists stabbed two persons in Surat. Open shops in Gujarat towns as well as in Mumbai were attacked and ransacked by the Hindu zealots.

Heavy deployment of police, army and paramilitary forces in the big cities of Gujarat, Ahmedabad, Surat and Vadodara saw to it that the nasty anti-Muslim pogrom of March-April was not replayed. The pogrom had begun with a strike like Thursday’s.

Car movement on roads in Gujarat state capital was extremely thin, consisting of official cars. Buses were taken off the road to avoid attacks on them. During the anti-Muslim pogrom, buses too were attacked.

Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi was advised by the central leadership not to allow a repeat of March-April pogrom which had brought shame to the state, party and country.

Modi seemed to have reined in his anti-Muslim propensities and refrained from dangerous anti-Muslim gimmicks, although he could not help repeating his allegations that Pakistan was behind the attack on the temple.

In Ahmedabad, Muslims who had begun to return from relief camps to their looted and burnt homes, scampered off to the camps again fearing violence during the strike as they remembered the last round of pogrom began with a similar strike called by the same hoodlums.

Muslims said they were not taking chances this time. Most of them fled to safer areas as early as Tuesday, September 24, even as the terrorist killings were underway.

Muslims fleeing the scene did not bother to switch off lights or lock their homes before leaving. Muslims have been praying for this new threat to pass off peacefully.

In Gujarat’s big cities, the army staged flag marches to reassure citizens that all was well. BJP leaders instead of making incendiary speeches like last time, made an appeal to people to remain peaceful.

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