CAA-NRC: IAS aspirant Suleman dies in police firing

BIJNOR: An IAS aspirant was among those killed in the anti-CAA protest that claimed two lives in last week’s violence in Uttar Pradesh.

Cops finally admit firing

Earlier, the UP DGP O.P. Singh had maintained that ”not a single bullet was fired” during the unrest. Later, the Bijnor police for the first time admitted to have opened fire in ‘self defence’ during the protests that erupted across the state.

Bijnor Superintendent of Police Sanjeev Tyagi told a news channel, “When one of our constables moved ahead to take back the gun that was snatched away by the protesters, a member of the crowd opened fire at him. He had a narrow escape. In retaliatory and self-defence firing, one person was shot at. His friends had taken him away. His name is Suleman and he died. One more protester, Anas, died in firing from the crowd.”

Suleman- a UPSC aspirant

Suleman, 20, was preparing for his civil services entrance exam and that he had nothing to do with the protests.

“My brother had gone to offer namaaz. He was returning home after the namaaz to eat something. He had fever for the last couple of days. He did not go to the mosque near our home. He went to another mosque. When he stepped out, there was lathi-charge and tear-gassing by the police. The police picked him up and shot at him,” said Suleman”s brother Shoaib Malik.

Who is Anas?

Another person identified as Anas, in his early twenties, was killed the day his toddler son turned seven months old.

Congress General Secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra had visited Bijnor on Sunday and met the families of Suleman and Anas.

Police intimidation

The families claim the police intimidated them after the incident and warned them not to speak to anyone about it.

The police didn’t even allow the families of Anas and Suleiman to conduct their burial in Nehtaur region.

Many families of the arrested persons claimed that the police barged into their homes, snatch jewellery from the women and also vandalised their homes.

Deaths amid protest

Eighteen people have died in the state, many of them from bullet injuries, but the state police has maintained that it has not fired a single bullet at protesters anywhere.

The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, for the first time, makes religion the test of citizenship in India. The government says it will help minorities from three Muslim-dominated countries to get citizenship if they come to India because of religious persecution.