Bajrang vigilantes beat, humiliate Muslim trader

Bhopal, January 07: A Muslim cattle trader’s son was beaten and part of his head, one eyebrow and half his moustache shaved off by alleged Bajrang Dal workers in Chhindwara in Madhya Pradesh after he refused to give them money to allow him to ferry cattle which the attackers alleged were meant for slaughter.

Police rescued the 25-year-old victim, Anish Aslam Kureshi, but charged him with unlawfully transporting cattle for slaughter under a state law for preserving cattle, and the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act. A sessions court in Chhindwara ordered his release on bail today.

His attackers, whom the police identified as Bajrang Dal workers, were also arrested, but were charged with minor offences. They were released almost immediately by the Bichhua police station.

On December 22, a tough new Madhya Pradesh anti-cow slaughter law providing for seven years in jail for eating beef, empowering police to carry out raids on mere suspicion, and putting the burden of proving innocence on the accused received presidential assent. Kureshi was not charged under this law.

According to Kureshi’s father Aslam Kureshi who met Governor Ram Naresh Yadav in Bhopal today, his son was waylaid by a Bajrang Dal group at Sarangbihari in the small hours of December 31. The men demanded money to allow him to pass, and when Anish refused, they damaged the Bolero pick-up he was driving, and dragged him to Goni village some two kilometres away.

They took away the Rs 8,315, mobile phone and ATM card that Anish was carrying, and after tying him to a pole, beat and shaved him, Kureshi told the Governor. He was about to be paraded in the village when police rescued him, Kureshi said.

Kureshi alleged the Bajrang Dal workers had torn up the receipt that proved the cattle in Anish’s vehicle had been purchased the previous day from a fair in Chandgram. The cattle were meant for sale in Umranala bazaar, the family said, and denied that they were headed for a slaughterhouse.

“We often give them (the Bajrang Dal) money to escape harassment. That day they asked for Rs 20,000 and beat up and humiliated Anish who refused to pay,” Anish’s younger brother Salman Kureshi told.

“The local police had to plead with the Bajang Dal leaders to free Anish,” said the father.

Chhindwara SP Dr Ashish said both Anish and his attackers were in the wrong. He said the police booked seven Bajrang Dal workers for bailable offences because the Kureshis refused to share details with the police. In the light of new allegations, he said, he had asked SDOP (Saunsar) Bhupendra Sengar to probe further.

Both SP Ashish and SDOP Sengar said the Kureshis were into the illegal transport of cattle, and often sold them to a slaughterhouse in a neighbouring state. Anish was carrying no transport permit or medical certificates for the cattle.

-Agencies