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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

30 dead in clashes after godman held guilty

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PANCHKULA: At least 30 people were killed on Friday when clashes broke out in northern India after a court convicted a controversial religious leader of raping two of his followers, sparking fury among tens of thousands of supporters who had gathered to await the verdict.


Authorities rushed hundreds of troops to the city of Panchkula after followers of guru Ram Rahim Singh torched cars, threw rocks and attacked television vans, breaking their windows and overturning one.


More than 100,000 were estimated to have gone to the city in Haryana state, where India’s federal investigations agency had set up a special court to rule on the charge that he had raped two female devotees.


“Thirty people have died and 80 were injured,” a medical officer at the government hospital in Panchkula said without giving his name.


Singh has a vast following in Haryana, where he runs a spiritual movement that claims to have millions of devotees around the world.


Authorities imposed an indefinite curfew in Panchkula, where mobile Internet services had earlier been cut off and troops deployed ahead of the verdict.


As news of Singh’s conviction spread there were reports of violence in the neighbouring state of Punjab and on the outskirts of the capital Delhi, which borders Haryana.


“Two train stations have been burnt in Punjab and two empty (train) coaches have been set on fire in Delhi’s Anand Vihar station,” said Neeraj Sharma, a spokesman for Indian Railways.


Hundreds of trains passing through Punjab and Haryana have been cancelled, he said.


Prosecutor Harinder Pal Singh Verma said Singh was “calm after the verdict was passed” and had been flown by helicopter to another city in Haryana.


He will be sentenced on August 28.


‘Guru in bling’


The 50-year-old self-styled “godman” is known as the “guru in bling” for his penchant for bejewelled costumes, although the source of his apparently vast wealth is unclear.


The rape case was brought against him after an anonymous letter was sent to then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee in 2002 accusing him of repeatedly raping the sender and several other women in the sect.


A judge asked the Central Bureau of Investigations to look into the accusations, but it took years to trace the alleged victims and it was not until 2007 that two women came forward and filed charges.


India has been rocked by numerous scandals involving popular ascetics claiming to possess mystical powers, and Singh is no stranger to controversy.


In 2015 he was accused of encouraging 400 followers to undergo castration at his ashram. He also stood trial for conspiracy over the murder of a journalist in 2002.


He describes his sect as a social welfare and spiritual organisation.


Speaking before his conviction, supporters who had gathered in Panchkula credited him with turning their lives around, with some saying his organisation had helped them kick an addiction to alcohol.


“I’ve been part of the Dera movement for two decades and in that time I have not touched a drop,” said Gajendere Singh, a recovering alcoholic who said he was aged around 60.


“Before joining, people did not pay me much attention. But after, I had a support network.” — AFP


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