India mosque survey sparks clashes, two dead

By The Straits Times | Created at 2024-11-24 14:29:09 | Updated at 2024-11-24 16:37:27 2 hours ago
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Updated

Nov 24, 2024, 10:25 PM

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Nov 24, 2024, 10:25 PM

LUCKNOW - Indian Muslim protesters clashed with police on Nov 24 with at least two people killed in riots sparked by a survey investigating if a 17th-century mosque was built on a Hindu temple.

“Two persons were confirmed dead,” Mr Pawan Kumar, a police officer in Sambhal in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, told AFP, adding that 16 police officers were “seriously injured” during the clashes.

The Press Trust of India news agency quoted officials saying three people had died.

Hindu activist groups have laid claim to several mosques they say were built over Hindu temples during the Muslim Mughal empire centuries ago.

Street battles broke out when a team of surveyors entered the Shahi Jama Masjid in Sambhal on orders from a local court, after a petition from a Hindu priest claiming it was built on the site of a Hindu temple.

Protesters on Nov 24 hurled rocks at police, who fired tear gas canisters to clear the crowd.

Hindu nationalist activists were emboldened earlier in 2024 when Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated a grand new Hindu temple in the northern city of Ayodhya, built on grounds once home to the centuries-old Babri mosque.

That mosque was torn down in 1992 in a campaign spearheaded by members of Mr Modi’s party, sparking sectarian riots that killed 2,000 people nationwide, most of them Muslims.

Some Hindu campaigners see an ideological patron in Mr Modi.

Calls for India to more closely align the country’s officially secular political system with its majority Hindu faith have rapidly grown louder since he was swept to office in 2014, making the country’s roughly 210-million-strong Muslim minority increasingly anxious about their future. AFP

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