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Firebrand BJP MP Yogi Adityanath has compared the situation in western Uttar Pradesh to that in Kashmir in 1990s, when Kashmiri Pandits had to flee the Valley, while the party defended its leaders over their controversial remarks during the poll campaign on the alleged exodus of Hindu families from Kairana.
"Western Uttar Pradesh is following in the footsteps of Kashmir. In 1990, Kashmir Pandits were forced to migrate in large numbers,” Gorakhpur MP Adityanath said at election meetings in Loni and Sahibabad last evening.
His remarks came even as BJP MLA Suresh Rana, an accused in the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, was booked on Monday by Uttar Pradesh Police on charges of inciting hatred. At a meeting, Rana said that curfew will be imposed in Kairana, Deoband and Moradabad if he is elected again in Assembly polls next month.
Asked about Adityanath's remarks, BJP's UP chief Keshav Prasad Maurya on Tuesday said the situation in Western UP was "very bad". Maurya also accused the Samajwadi Party government of giving patronage to goons who were responsible for migration of people.
Kicking up a row, BJP MP Hukum Singh had in June last year claimed that close to 350 Hindus had left Kairana over alleged threats and extortion by criminal elements belonging to a particular community. Singh, however, had later done a U-turn saying it was not a communal matter.
Adityanath on Tuesday insisted that his statements should should not be seen as communal.
(With PTI inputs)
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