advertisement
(The Yogi government has revoked the charges under the National Security Act against Bhim Army chief Chandrashekhar Azad Raavan, effecting his release from jail. The Quint is republishing this ground report on the 2017 Thakur-Dalit clashes that led to his arrest. This article was first published on 14 May 2017.)
On 5 May 2017, it was a Thakur rally passing through a Dalit neighbourhood in UP’s Saharanpur that sparked off clashes between the two communities.
The rally was being held in honour of Maharana Pratap. But the Dalit residents of Shabbirpur, the village where the violence occurred, allege that the Thakurs had a different agenda in mind.
27-year-old Sumit Singh died in the clashes. Fifteen others were injured. Dozens of homes were burned down. Vehicles were torched.
Sumit Singh’s uncle Ved Lal Singh claims it was a conspiracy against the Thakurs. “The Dalits burned their own houses down after realising that they had killed a young Thakur in the clashes. The arson was to cover up the murder,” he said.
Based out of his village of Chhutmalpur in Saharanpur, 29-year-old Chandrashekhar Azad helms a group of young Dalit volunteers. They call themselves the Bhim Army. It is an organisation that has come to play a key role in the region’s caste conflict since the clashes in Shabbirpur.
On 9 May, when the police denied permission for a Dalit mahapanchayat in the district, clashes erupted between the cops and Dalit protesters in ten different localities of Saharanpur.
The protesters went on to burn down a police chowki, numerous vehicles and a memorial for Maharana Pratap that was being built by upper caste Thakurs. At least 11 police personnel and a sub-divisional magistrate were injured in stone-pelting.
Despite his army of Ambedkarites being blamed for the arson and violence on 9 May, Vinay Ratan Singh is unapologetic and even defensive about the actions of the mob.
Founded in July 2015, the Bhim Army is yet to complete even two years of its existence. But it’s already caught the eye, and ire, of many in Uttar Pradesh.
Ved Lal Singh, a Thakur from Rasoolpur, doesn’t hide his contempt for the bandwagon of Dalit volunteers.
Rural Saharanpur’s new Superintendent of Police, Vidya Sagar Mishra, admits that the Bhim Army is on his radar too.
With massive security deployment in Saharanpur following the widespread violence on 9 May, the district is in a state of uneasy calm. The tension between the Dalits and the Thakurs is palpable. And even as those on the ground suspect a political design behind the repeated incidents of violence, is there any end in sight for the caste wars of Uttar Pradesh?
Cameraperson: Abhay Sharma
Video Editors: Mohd Irshad Alam and Purnendu Pritam
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)