Death toll from Delhi's worst riots in decades rises to 38
The death toll from Delhi’s worst riots in decades
has risen to 38, as a political row broke out over the transfer of a judge who
criticised the police and government’s handling of the crisis.
Tensions remained high in India’s capital, as
thousands of riot police and paramilitaries patrolled streets littered with the
debris from days of sectarian riots.
Justice S. Muralidhar, a Delhi high court judge,
sharply criticised the police and called on officers to investigate politicians
from Narendra Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata party for inciting violence.
Muralidhar was transferred to another state court in
a late-night order, prompting an outcry among opposition politicians and on
social media. Manish Tewari, opposition Congress party leader, said every lawyer
and judge in India should strongly protest what he called a crude attempt to
intimidate the judiciary.
Ravi Shankar Prasad, the law minister, insisted it
was a “routine transfer”.
The violence began over a disputed new citizenship
law on Monday, which led to clashes between Muslims and Hindus in which
hundreds were injured. Many suffered gunshot wounds, while arson, looting and
stone-throwing also took place.
As the nation reeled from the bloodshed, a heavy
deployment of security forces brought an uneasy calm on Thursday.
At the heart of the unrest is a citizenship law
which makes it easier for non-Muslims from some neighbouring Muslim-dominated
countries to gain Indian citizenship. UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet
said the new law adopted last December is of “great concern” and she was
worried by reports of police inaction in the face of assaults against Muslims
by other groups. “I appeal to all political leaders to prevent violence,”
Bachelet said in a speech to the UN human rights council in Geneva.
Critics say the law is biased against Muslims and
undermines India’s secular constitution. Prime minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu
nationalist Bharatiya Janata party has denied having any prejudice against
India’s 180 million Muslims, saying that law is required to help persecuted
minorities.
On Wednesday the US Commission on International
Religious Freedom, which advises Washington but does not set policy, voiced
“grave concern” about the violence as president Donald Trump was visiting.
Anurima Bhargava, a commissioner appointed by
Democrat house speaker Nancy Pelosi, also expressed alarm at reports that Delhi
police “have not intervened in violent attacks against Muslims”.
Trump, asked at a news conference in the capital
about the violence, said the issue was “up to India” and praised Modi’s
“incredible” statements on religious freedom.