Delhi on edge as VHP, Bajrang Dal protest Hindu man's lynching in Bangladesh
Protesters forced several barricades down as polices truggled to contain the surge.
PTI
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The high security area witnessed a beefed-up police presence ahead of the protest (PTI)
New Delhi, 23 Dec
Holding saffron flags and shouting slogans against the
lynching of a Hindu man in Bangladesh, hundreds of supporters of the VHP and
the Bajrang Dal broke barricades and clashed with police near the fortified
Bangladesh High Commission on Tuesday.
Protesters forced several barricades down as polices truggled to contain the surge.
The high security area witnessed a beefed-up police presence
in the morning ahead of the protest announced by the Hindu right against the
lynching of a Hindu man in the strife-torn neighbouring nation.
The area had been secured with three layers of barricades
and a reinforced presence of police and paramilitary.
An officer said a 15,000-strong police force was deployed
ahead of the demonstration.
He said police managed to hold the protesters about 800
metres from the High Commission.
DTC buses were parked as an obstacle to thwart the
protesters' bid to reach the high commission.
A sea of banners and placards bobbed in the air, reading
denunciatory messages against the Bangladesh government.
A placard read: "Hindu rakt ki ek ek boond ka hisaab
chahiye (Each drop of blood of a Hindu must be accounted for)."
On 18 December, Dipu Chandra Das, a 25-year-old garment
factory worker, was lynched by a mob and his body set on fire over alleged blasphemy
in Baluka in Mymensingh.
According to the police, Das was first beaten up by a moboutside the factory and then hanged from a tree. The crowd left the body of the
deceased by the Dhaka-Mymensingh Highway and later set it on fire.
"A Hindu man was brutally assaulted and killed. We
request our government to take strict action against those who are behind the
killing. We also demand that the Bangladesh police take strict action against
those who are behind the killing," a protester said.
Another said, "We in India consider every community as
our brothers and sisters. Every Hindu in every country must be treated in the
same way."
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