Home India Politics BJP shutdown: violence in some states, quiet in others

BJP shutdown: violence in some states, quiet in others

By IANS,

New Delhi : Several highways were blocked, some trains were stopped and thousands of commuters suffered Thursday as a BJP-VHP sponsored shutdown against the decision to cancel land allotted to the Amarnath shrine in Jammu and Kashmir hit several states, leaving others unaffected.

Educational establishments were closed, offices reported thin attendance and many shops downed their shutters as the strike came into effect.

Although states like Tamil Nadu, Bihar and West Bengal were left largely untouched by the daylong strike call as was the Indian capital, there was sporadic trouble in Orissa, Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra.

The worst hit were the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-ruled Madhya Pradesh, where curfew was imposed in Indore’s Bombay Bazar and Mukeripura areas and special forces were called to control communal tension in parts of Bhopal, and Chhattisgarh as well as Assam. However, the strike had no impact in the other northeastern states of Nagaland, Manipur, Meghalaya, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh and Mizoram.

Interestingly, Gujarat’s ruling BJP declined to participate saying that it sympathised with the cause but did not want to take a chance with the precarious security situation in view of the annual Jagannath Rath yatra Friday.

“About 150 rath yatras are taken out in the state, and keeping the security aspect uppermost in mind we have decided not to join the strike,” BJP spokesperson and Rajya Sabha MP Vijay Rupani told IANS.

He said the decision was taken after parleys with party president Rajnath Singh.

The Gujarat government, he said, had a lot at stake and wanted to ensure that the annual procession in honour of Lord Jagannath passed off peacefully. “No chances can be taken on security and communal peace,” Rupani added.

It was the same fear that kept the situation under control in Orissa, which is governed by the Biju Janata Dal-BJP alliance.

“We observed the shutdown for only two hours in the morning because of the annual rath yatra in Puri on Friday,” said a coordinator for the Bajrang Dal, an ally of the VHP, Subash Chouhan.

But there was plenty of trouble elsewhere.

The Delhi-Bhopal Shatabdi train was stopped near Agra as were other trains in Ural and Mughalsarai districts.

If train passengers suffered so did those using highways to get to their destination as workers of the BJP and the VHP took to the streets.

The Delhi-Amritsar highway was blocked by the protesters as was the Chandigarh-Ludhiana highway and other arterial roads across the states.

There were also reports of shops being vandalised. In Uttar Pradesh’s Kanpur and Lucknow cities, in Punjab’s Rajpura town, where activists targeted a Subhiksha grocery store, and in Mumbai as well – where miscreants barged into the Kashmir Arts Emporium and started breaking the furniture and fittings.

The VHP’s international general secretary Praveen Togadia claimed that the strike was “completely successful”.

The Jammu and Kashmir government Tuesday formally cancelled the allotment of 40 hectares of forest land for the Amarnath board that manages the pilgrimage to the high altitude shrine dedicated to Lord Shiva. The issue that has polarised the state and led to curfew in Hindu-majority Jammu region has been picked up the BJP and the VHP in the hope that it will find wider resonance in the rest of the country.