Months after riots, Indian refugees are still suffering

By James Mutti, India Country Specialist, Amnesty International USA,

The riots that killed over 50 people and engulfed the northern Indian district of Muzaffarnagar in August and September of 2013 have been over for months.


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But for tens of thousands of mostly Muslim refugees forced from their homes in the violence, the injustice continues today. Those guilty of murder, rape, arson and other violent crimes continue to walk free, and dozens of young children have frozen to death in squalid, make-shift refugee camps.



14-year-old Feroze Khan breaks down after hearing his parents talk about his younger brother who died in Malakpur camp due to cold. More than 50 children and many old age people have died because of cold and lack of medical facilities in the relief camps set up for Muzaffarnagar riots victims (Photo Credit: Raj k Raj/Hindustan Times via Getty Images).

The Uttar Pradesh state government is hoping that paying off refugees and forbidding them from returning to their homes and land, along with a healthy dose of political mudslinging and obfuscation, will make the violence and gross human rights violations magically disappear.

The state government’s indifference to the suffering of Muzaffarnagar’s refugees during and after the riots contrasts sharply with Chief Minister Akilesh Yadav’s recent personal Bollywood and a foreign sight-seeing trip for state ministers.

The government’s current strategy to forcibly clear out the refugee camps to create the illusion that life is back to normal instead of providing justice and safety for those driven from their homes demonstrates a shocking lack of respect for basic human rights and the rule of law.

India is preparing for national elections this year, and many fear that the deadly political tactic of stirring up violence between religious communities – mostly Hindus and Muslims – will increase as elections draw closer.

Such violence is not spontaneous. For months before it erupted in Muzaffarnagar, rumors spread and tensions rose between Hindus and Muslims, initiated and amplified by various political and religious actors and aggravated by the state government’s incompetent response.



Dilshana Begum, 25, lost her five month old boy to cold at Malakpur camp in Shamli, India (Photo Credit: Raj k Raj/Hindustan Times via Getty Images).

As elections near, it is important for the world to be watching and to deliver a message that this politically-motivated violence is unacceptable in a true democracy.

If you or anyone you know has photographed the riots and its effects in Muzaffarnagar, Amnesty International would like to share your images on our website. Send only original photos with your name, date taken, photo description and email address to [email protected].

[Courtesy: http://blog.amnestyusa.org/]

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