World | India
Protests turn violent
The Gujjar movement for affirmative action took another violent turn on Friday in Rajasthan with three people killed in clashes with the police.
Jaipur: The Gujjar movement for affirmative action took another violent turn on Friday in Rajasthan with three people killed in clashes with the police, just as some leaders were attempting to hammer out a compromise with the state government to end the eight-day impasse.
Three people, including a policeman, died in the ensuing violence - taking the number of those killed in the latest round of violence since May 23 to 40.
One day after the community's movement for Scheduled Tribe status disrupted life in the national capital and its surrounding areas, violence broke out in Sawai Madhopur district, about 170 kilometres from here, when some Gujjars tried to block a road and stoned the police trying to disperse the mob.
"The incident occurred when a section of Gujjar protesters tried to block the road. When police tried to disperse the mob, they pelted stones. The police had to fire tear gas and use canes. After this we had to resort to firing," police chief Umesh Mishra said.
The deaths, which are likely to make community members more intransigent, came as a section of the leadership was meeting here to try to bring the state government and the Gujjars to the negotiating table.
They had taken the initiative to work out a proposal acceptable to their leader, K.S. Bainsla, and his supporters, who for the last eight days have been squatting on train tracks near Bayana, 160 kilometres from here, affecting traffic on the New Delhi-Mumbai sector.
Proposal to discuss
"After working out a proposal, we would travel to Bayana where the proposal would be discussed with Bainsla," Roop Singh, spokesperson of the Gujjar Sangarsh Aarakshan Samiti headed by Bainsla, said.
While tentative efforts at peace were being made, tension continued for the eighth day in succession, with the movement by Gujjars affecting train and highways passing through the state.
Bainsla and hundreds of his supporters - with some of the bodies of those killed in police firing - continued their sit in at Bayana. And, in adjoining Sikandra in Dausa district, over 300 Gujjars sat with six bodies, blocking the national highway connecting Jaipur-Agra.
Army and paramilitary forces are patrolling Bharatpur, Dausa, Sawai Madhopur, Karauli districts to control violence.
The traditional shepherd community is listed as other backward classes in the state and entitled to 27 per cent reservation. However, they are demanding Scheduled Tribe status.
Share this article
News Editor's choice
-
Daughters: Book on Sadat 'one-sided'
Pictorial collection excludes children from first wife
-
Over 6,000 Haj pilgrims to get vaccines
H1N1 and meningitis jabs compulsory for those going to Makkah in Saudi Arabia
-
Abu Dhabi residential city on track
Abu Dhabi Municipality says Dh651m infrastructure project to be completed

