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India: Christmas terror in Orissa —as Hindu militants gain ground
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Fri, 12/28/2007 - 23:28.
At least four people are dead following sectarian clashes that broke out over Christmas celebrations in Kandhamal district of the eastern Indian state of Orissa. Hindu and Christian residents put each other's homes to the torch in the Christian-dominated village of Brahmanigaon. When Hindu residents took refuge in the police station, a group of some 500 besieged the station house—some reportedly firing on it. When police returned fire, four residents were killed. Three police were also reported injured. More may have been killed in clashes, but all communication to the village has been cut. Hindustan Times reports Dec. 28 that the violence began when Christians attacked the vehicle of local Hindu leader Swami Laxmananda Saraswati near Daringbadi when he was on his way to perform a yagna in Brahmanigaon. Local Hindus attacked Christian homes and churches in retaliation, sparking days of clashes. The Catholic-oriented Asia News reported Dec. 26 that three Christians were killed in the initial violence, with tens injured, 13 churches set on fire, two parish houses destroyed, a Christian orphanage vandalized, and police cars torched. Calling the violence "a full scale onslaught by the Viśva Hindū Parişad [Hindu World Organization] (VHP)," Asia News writes:
According to the Asia News account, the violence spread throughout the district, with VHP militants attacking Christians homes and churches, and the police failing to intervene. Gujarat pogroms rewarded —again
The Rama Wars, Pt. II: Ayodhya's sequel When Tamil Nadu state Chief Minister Muthuvel Karunanidhi questioned the historical existence of Rama, Hindu nationalists held protests in many parts of the country, with militants launching arson attacks on the offices of his party, the DMK (Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, or Dravidian Progress Conference), and even attacking his house in Bangalore. West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya added fuel to the fire earlier this month, commenting that "Ram was born in the imagination of poets and Ram Setu is a natural formation." (IANS, Dec. 8) As at Ayodhya, the science itself has become politicized. BBC reported Sept. 14 that in reaction to widespread protests, the Indian government had withdrawn a report submitted in the court battle over the dredging project, which had questioned the historical existence of Rama. Subsequently, Sify News reported Dec. 8, the Hyderabad-based National Remote Sensing Agency (NRSA), part of India's Department of Space, released a study finding the shoal could be the remains of a man-made "ancient bridge between India and Sri Lanka in Palk strait." See our last post on India. |
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