After driving for an hour in the back of a truck from a refugee camp, Khatoon, 28, arrived at her village under police escort and went straight to the house she was forced to flee when violence erupted.
"This is where I used to live with my family," Khatoon said as she stepped inside her home, now bare except for a few bricks and clothes.
"How can I return? I have little children, what if we are attacked again?"
The marathon election, with Thursday the biggest day of voting so far, is expected to sweep Hindu nationalist hardliner Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party to power over the ruling Congress.
Among the 92 constituencies voting Thursday were a group of villages in the key northern state of Uttar Pradesh, where communal riots erupted in September and killed more than 50 people, mostly Muslims.
Since then, thousands of Muslims have been living in camps just kilometres away, too scared to return to their homes where they once lived peacefully alongside majority Hindus in a sugarcane belt.
The clashes erupted when Hindus allegedly killed a Muslim man supposedly for sexually harassing a woman, triggering deadly retaliation that quickly spiralled into three days of riots.
With few toilets, little running water and just enough electricity in each tent to power one or two lightbulbs, conditions at the camps are poor. Some, like Khatoon, say they have not received compensation.
Instead of resolving the situation, politicians have been accused of trying to exploit the tensions in Muzaffarnagar district to win votes along religious lines, in a battleground state that sends 80 lawmakers to parliament.
Modi's right-hand man faces allegations of incitement after he reportedly told Hindu leaders in the area last week to seek "revenge" at the ballot box against a government that "protects and gives compensation to those who killed Hindus".
His party says the remarks were taken out of context.
Congress and the Samajwadi Party, which runs the government in Uttar Pradesh, are trying to win over Muslims, who at 13 percent of the population are the largest religious minority.
"My family will not vote for Modi. He was the one behind the riots," Khatoon said, expressing fears held by some religious minorities.
Many Muslims point to deadly religious riots in Gujarat in 2002, which Modi is accused of failing to prevent as the western state's chief minister. He denies any wrongdoing.
"We have not received any money. But I will vote for them (Samajwadi Party) in the hope that like the other victims, we will also get the money some day," said Khatoon, squatting outside her tent.
Inside, there was a string bed and a discoloured mattress on the floor along with a few boxes of belongings. With limited space, some of the family of seven sleep outside at night.
Khatoon and the others spent three hours waiting anxiously Thursday at the camp for the truck to take them back to Lisarh village to vote.
When they finally arrived, they were led by police through narrow lanes to the polling stations. Former neighbours from the majority Hindu Jat community stared at the returnees with a sense of familiarity.
But neither side spoke to the other.
COMMENTS (13)
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@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan:
"Shame on these Hindu extremists who forced Indian Muslims out of their homes. Thank God for Pakistan that we don’t face these problems. All prayers to Indian Muslims, may they get justice."
First, any riots, violence and suffering of human beings is to be condemned strongly irrespective of religious affiliations.
But, if you are really sincere about your comment, instead of shedding crocodile tears for the "suffering" Indian Muslims, why don't you demand that they be allowed to immigrate to Pakistan to escape the Hindu "extremists"? Wasn't Pakistan created for all Indian Muslims?
As for "we don't face these problems", did you ask the Shia, Ahmedis, Christians, Baloch, HIndus and Sikhs and other minorities?
@confused: "@3rdRockFromTheSun: When are u holding that referendum in Kashmir under UN supervision that Pandit Nehru promised?" As soon as you ( Pakistan) fulfill all conditions in UN resolution prior to holding the plebiscite. Good luck!
@confused: When pak army moves back according to UN resolution? Also pandit Nehru has died and so doesnt rule any more. Also kashmiri do not want referendum after Indra sheikh accord. UN is also against referendum since 2011.
@confused: Looks like you have not been reading news that ET itself has published. Just recently there were huge protests in the so called Azad Kashmir. They were protesting against Pakistan, its army and Pakistan's government for depriving them of their rights and their extreme impoverished conditions. Huge amounts of money donated by various countries to assist the population of Azad Kashmir who lost everything during the earthquake was all used up by other provinces and the population there never received anything. Even the world community saw this and did not give any assistance to Pakistan when Pakistan suffered due to floods in the later years. Pakistan gave away huge chunk of Kashmir region to China to get nuclear technology. Now, Pakistan is giving away Baluchistan, again to China, to benefit Punjab. After presenting a plan with much pomp and show to the Baluch that the pipeline from Iran to Gwadar, all the way to Kashgar and to interior China and also the new $ 4 billion oil refinery in Gwadar to refine crude from Iran shall benefit Baluchistan, the first thing Pakistan did was to cancel the pipeline contract with Iran.
When are u holding that referendum in Kashmir under UN supervision that Pandit Nehru promised?
the day muslims return to arabia?
Do two wrongs make a right? Both sets of people are Indian citizens. Classic "what-about-ery"
It is sad that the Muslims get used and abused over and over again by the "secular" parties but they still put all their belief in them. The "secular" parties have been ruling UP practically forever since independence but does any Muslim stop to think why they are still impoverished and cheated time and again ! Also, the riots seem to have been triggered by the torture and killing of 2 Hindu (Jat) youth.
I hope Modi wins the Elections, he 'll just help proving the "Two Nation Theory" right.
Shame on these Hindu extremists who forced Indian Muslims out of their homes. Thank God for Pakistan that we don't face these problems. All prayers to Indian Muslims, may they get justice.
@3rdRockFromTheSun: When are u holding that referendum in Kashmir under UN supervision that Pandit Nehru promised?
@3rdRockFromTheSun: "..No? Thought so!.."
You thought wrong. Are you perchance accusing Election Commission of India (EC) of partiality? Even before the beginning of 2009 election itself EC had made arrangements for Kashmiri Pandits in Refugee camps to vote under proper security. People in the refugee camps in Jammu, Delhi, Kandhamal and Chhattisgarh were assisted. Jammu & Delhi refugee camps house Pandit refugees chased out by Muslims and 6 refugee camps at Kandhamal were meant for Christians of Orissa tormented by Hindus. 3 to 4 companies of para-military rapid action force per camp as Escorts were provided by EC so that voting could take place safely.
The future of all Indian muslims if Modi is elected. Good luck to our brothers and sisters across the border!
So, can the Hindu Pandits too return to their ancestral homes in Kashmir from whence they were driven out, to vote for the elections?
No? Thought so!