High Court halts demolition drive in Nuh; miscreants start fire in Gurugram mazar

GURUGRAM/CHANDIGARH, Aug 7: The Punjab and Haryana High Court on Monday halted the demolition drive in Nuh where authorities were bulldozing “illegally-constructed” buildings following communal clashes last week, while unidentified men allegedly started a fire in a mazar in adjoining Gurugram.

The court of Justice G S Sandhawalia took suo motu cognisance of the exercise in Nuh and directed the Haryana government not to carry out any further demolition.

Officials had said some of the buildings were used by rioters when a Vishva Hindu Parishad procession was targeted by a stone-pelting mob on July 31. It led to communal clashes that spread to Gurugram.

Six people, including two home guards and a cleric, were killed in the violence.

In the early hours of Monday, some prayer material at a mazar, visited both by Muslims and Hindus in Gurugram’s Khandsa village, was set afire, said the shrine’s caretaker Ghasite Ram.

According to a complaint filed by Ram at the Sector 37 police station, he received a phone call around 1.30 am about a fire in the shrine.

He said the fire was brought under control with the help of people. But the pray material kept inside the mazar were burnt, he added.

Ram said he learnt that a group of five-six young boys gathered there and started the fire.

He said he has been working at the shrine for about seven years and has seen “people of all religions offering their respect there”.

The small shrine located in the middle of a market also has pictures of Hindu deities on the inner walls along with the tomb of a “peer baba”. On the outer wall also, there are picture of a Hindu deity, and the Om and Swastik symbols.

Ram told PTI on Monday morning, “This is a decades-old mazar of ‘peer baba’ and all villagers offer prayers here.”

Police have lodged an FIR in the case against unidentified persons under sections 34 (acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention), 153A (promoting enmity between different groups), 188 (disobedience of an order duly promulgated by a public servant), 436 (mischief by fire or explosive substance with intent to destroy house) of the IPC.

A senior police officer said they are trying to identify the accused and arrest them.

The incident happened when prohibitory orders under section 144 of the CrPC were still in force in Gurugram in view of the communal clashes that began in the neighbouring Nuh district and spread to parts of the city and nearby areas last week. The Gurugram district administration lifted section 144, which prohibited an assembly of four or more persons at a time, on Monday.

As authorities in Nuh district Sunday razed some illegal structures including a hotel from where stones were allegedly pelted on the religious procession, the high court took suo motu cognisance of the exercise and directed the state government not to carry out any further demolition.

Deputy Commissioner, Nuh, Dhirender Khargata said the demolition drive in the district has been stopped following the orders of the court.

“I have ordered the officials to stop the drive against the illegal construction,” he said.

In the last three days, illegal constructions have been removed from 57.5 acres of land at 37 places in the district.

As many as 162 permanent and 591 raw structures have been demolished in the district till Monday, officials said.

Meanwhile, a committee formed after a “mahapanchayat” at Tigra village in Gurugram on Monday demanded the formation of an SIT for a “fair investigation” into the killing of the Muslim cleric, claiming that some youth from the village were made scapegoats for the attack.

In a memorandum to the deputy commissioner and the police commissioner, the committee also sought an investigation into the “reasons” for the attack on the mosque.

At least four villagers were arrested after the Anjuman Masjid in sector 57 of Gurugram was attacked by a mob in the early hours of August 1, hours after the Vishva Hindu Parishad procession was attacked in adjoining Nuh district. The mahapanchayat was held to protest the arrests.

“The police have no direct or indirect evidence against them and they were only made a scapegoat…,” the memorandum read, adding the arrests were made “on the basis of unfounded suspicion and false information”.

It further demanded that the investigation should be completed within a week and the four people “tortured and arrested” by police released.

Deputy Commissioner Nishant Kumar Yadav assured the committee that there will be an impartial inquiry into the matter. “Action will be taken only against those who are guilty, no innocent will be harassed unnecessarily,” he told the committee members.

Police said an eatery (dhaba) near Rathiwas village in Gurugram was set on fire on Saturday night. They said an FIR was registered at the Bilaspur police station in the night itself.

They also said it arrested on Sunday night 15 people accused of violence in Sohna, who were sent to judicial custody by a court.

Meanwhile, a delegation of senior Haryana Congress leaders led by party’s state unit chief Udai Bhan plan to visit Nuh on Tuesday.

The party said the purpose of the visit is to re-establish peace and brotherhood in the area. (PTI)