Dozens injured in Indian holy city riots: police

Several of those injured are in critical condition although the situation has now been brought under control


Afp October 06, 2015
The waterfront on the banks of the River Ganges at Varanasi. PHOTO: AFP

LUCKNOW: Extra police and paramilitaries were deployed to the Indian holy city of Varanasi on Tuesday after nearly 50 people were injured during riots in which a police post was torched and dozens of vehicles damaged.

The violence broke out on Monday night when police fired tear gas at a group of holy men known as sadhus who were protesting at the authorities' refusal to allow them to immerse idols in the River Ganges last month.

A court recently banned the immersions to try to curb pollution of the holy river, but the sadhus say the ruling contravenes their religion.

Read: Three feared dead in violence in India's northeast

Officials in the city, which is Prime Minister Narendra Modi's parliamentary seat, said the situation soon escalated as a mob went on the rampage through the streets.

Varanasi is the holiest city in Hinduism and one of the world's oldest cities.

Akash Kulhari, a senior superintendent of police, said 40 officers and eight civilians had been injured in the clashes.

"These rioters damaged 20 two-wheelers, seven vehicles of district administration and police, apart from torching a police booth-cum-tourist facilitation centre and the CCTV unit there," he said.

Rajmani Yadav, the district magistrate for Varanasi, said several of those injured were in critical condition although he said the situation had now been brought under control.

Read: Rising clashes: India witnesses 25% rise in communal violence

An overnight curfew had now been lifted but extra security forces were out on the streets.

"Security forces are keeping a strict vigil to prevent any untoward incident," Yadav told AFP.

Varanasi, in the east of the giant state of Uttar Pradesh, is a major pilgrimage site for Hindus who often cremate their relatives there before scattering their ashes in the Ganges.

While other parts of Uttar Pradesh are regularly blighted by violence between Hindus and Muslims, violence is extremely rare in Varanasi.

COMMENTS (3)

@just_someone | 9 years ago | Reply @just_someone: Of course India is shining. Did you even read the article or does the word riot automatically trigger hopes of inter-religious disharmony in your febrile imagination, chump. Sorry to dash your hopes - It was between rowdy sadhus and policemen.
indian | 9 years ago | Reply @just_someone: shining pakistan.
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