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Asia India

Man killed for chewing tobacco near India’s Golden Temple

The protection of shrines is a highly sensitive issue for the Sikh faith



A Nihang Sikh wearing an oversized turban offers prayers at Golden Temple on the occasion of 418th anniversary of first installation of Guru Granth Sahib, in Amritsar, in a file picture.
Image Credit: ANI

AMRITSAR: Indian police said on Friday they had arrested three members of a radical Sikh sect accused of hacking to death a young man for chewing tobacco near the Golden Temple, the faith’s holiest shrine.

Harmanjeet Singh, 22, was killed after an altercation with three Nihangs — a Sikh warrior sect known for dressing in blue robes, carrying swords, and a puritanical moral code.

The trio had accused Singh of being drunk and consuming tobacco - both prohibited under the religion’s codes of conduct.

“The incident occurred in full public view,” Amritsar police commissioner Arun Pal Singh told reporters on Thursday, a day after the murder.

“Onlookers watched the entire episode at Kahia Wala Bazar on Wednesday night and did not come forward to prevent it.”

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Police had arrested all three men by Friday afternoon, officers told AFP.

The protection of shrines is a highly sensitive issue for the Sikh faith, and the consumption of tobacco, liquor or drugs on a holy site is considered an act of desecration.

The killing took place in a market just a few minutes’ walk from the Golden Temple, the headquarters of the religion’s most senior clergy and home of its holy book of scripture, the Guru Granth Sahib.

Last year a crowd beat a man to death on the grounds of the Golden Temple after he jumped over a railing and approached the holy book with a sword.

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