Indian women threaten to start taking arms against cow vigilantes if government fails to protect their men

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The mob attack on a Muslim trader in Jharkhand’s Ramgarh two days ago has raised anger among women of the community saying they would be forced to carry arms against self acclaimed cow vigilantes.

The women say they are disappointed in the police’s reactions and attitude toward these illegal terror groups, and believe the government is in hypocritically in support of cow vigilantes. A mob of 100 people on Thursday thrashed trader Alimuddin, also known as Asgar Ali, and set his car on fire on the suspicion that he was transporting beef – the latest in a string of similar incidents of cow-related violence, local news report says.

“Mob justice would be meted with mob-justice,” said Mariam Khatun, the wife of the dead trader.

A lot of people flooded her modest home to console her. Around her, 70-odd women, many of them associated with local organisations, nodded in agreement.

The village has erupted in anger and grief as many say Muslim men are becoming soft targets in the name of beef trade. Earlier in June, a 200-strong mob thrashed a 55-year-old Muslim dairy owner and set his house ablaze after a cow carcass was found near his home in Giridih.

“We are scared of rising incidents of lynching targeting only Muslim men in the state. These are not accidents but a deliberate act of few groups supported by the administration,” said Mamina Khatun. She said that women were living in fear every day, worried that the male members of the family might not return home.

“If government can’t act, we will pick up arms against them to save our men,” she said.

There is also anger against the administration that is seen as complicit in the violence.

“Why do people of a particular community have so much interest in our eating habit, when we do not peep into their kitchen? Asked Abida Khatun, another resident of the village.

But others advise calm and don’t want communal tensions flaring in the Muslim-majority village of 350 households. Whenever younger men appeared restless, the elders were seen convincing them out to understand the situation.

“We are peace-loving people. A mere incident cannot instigate us to take law in hands who played a role of mediator between the villagers and the administration,” said Bhola Khan.

Sahjad Ahmad, a student of Jamia Millia Islamia, of a neighbouring village said, “Our anger is that police did not take action against the culprit even after passing more than 30 hours. The villagers have simple demand to nab the culprits and punish them.”

 

 

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