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Godhra

Godhra is a town in Gujarat, India. In February 2002, about 58 people died in a train fire in Godhra. In the following days and weeks, it is reported that around 800 to 2000 people were killed throughout Gujarat in what have been called some of the worst communal riots seen in India since it gained independence. The perceived cause for the former incident is seen as triggering off the latter.

The train fire in Godhra

In February
2002, a sleeper coach in the train Sabarmati Express, coming from Faizabad and proceeding towards Ahmedabad caught fire a few minutes after it left the Godhra railway station on February 27, 2002, killing an estimated 58 people. The coach that was ravaged in the fire was occupied predominantly by members and sympathisers of the Sangh Parivar, called Kar Sevaks who were returning after a pilgrimage to Ayodhya, a place in North India and the site of the Babri Masjid-Ram Janma Bhoomi dispute. This incident was a precursor to a spate of widepsread communal violence in the state which lasted nearly three months. The incident was widely reported in the media and the most commonly circulated version was that this was an incident of sabotage and arson, aimed at the Hindus. Because Godhra is a town with a Muslim majority, it was widely suspected that a few miscreants from that community were responsible for this ghastly incident. During the course of investigation, the central investigating agencies found evidence of arson. The Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) in its initial report, confirmed that the fire was fuelled by 60 litres of inflammable liquid. Though acceptance of the accounts so far described is almost unanimous, the following are the key points of contention between the various parties.
  • A few eye-witnesses have testified that there was an altercation between a Kar Sevak and a Muslim tea vendor at the railway station preceding the catastrophe, apparently over the payment of the due amount. Some people claim that this incident had happened when the Kar Sevaks were on the way to Ayodhya, a few days earlier at the same station. The Sangh Parivar refutes the version and maintains that the passengers were the victims of unprovoked violence.
  • There were also widespread, but unconfirmed reports to the effect that a Muslim girl was physically abused by a few people from inside the coach who tried to pull her inside the train. The Sangh Parivar vehemently disputes this claim.
  • The FSL report had concluded controversially that since the doors of the coach were latched from the inside, there was a slim possibility that the liquid fuel was thrown from the outside, prior to setting the fire. This prompted opposition parties (Congress and the Communist Party of India) to point the accusing finger at Sangh Parivar, suspecting it of stage-managing the incident to stir up communal tension for political gains. However, a few survivors claimed that they had managed to escape through the doors, and this raised questions about the veracity and completeness of the investigation report.
  • The Sangh Parivar also alleged that a local Congress opposition party member was involved in the arson. It alleged that the incident was not an act of immediate provoaction and reaction, but one involving a deep-rooted controversy, involving terrorists.
  • Kar sevaks are claimed by some to be an informal police force of the Sangh Parivar, who use violence as a means of solving social conflict, but are claimed by others to be those who indulge in social service by being attached to a Hindu temple.
Points of view differ on how the fire happened.\n* The initial point of view in the media was that a mob of local people (mostly Muslims) lit the fire.\n* Another point of view, based on interviews with passengers on the train, witnesses to the incident, local police and railway officials suggest that the fire could not have been lit from the ground, and that its cause was an argument provoked by the kar sevaks that became increasingly heated (metaphorically) to the point of becoming heated in a literal (and lethal) sense. \n** A common version of this interpretation claims that the Kar sevaks refused to pay for snacks they bought at the train station, that they physically assaulted an old bearded Muslim tea vendor, they abducted his young daughter, they took her to the S-6 coach, locked its doors and closed the windows. This point of view is criticised as an urban legend or conspiracy theory by some.\n* Another point of view is that a member of the Congress (I) political party was the main person responsible. Many accusations were made about the media's role in reporting the fire:\n*Many complained that the English language media in India, which they view as mainly communist, applauded the burning of Hindus by Muslims and stated that the Hindus asked for it.\n*Some say that the story of Kar Sevaks assaulting the Muslim tea vendor's daughter and carrying her onto the train was presented by the Western media as fact despite being merely an urban legend.\n*Another accusation is that the Gujarati language media uncritically quoted the words of Chief Minister Narendra Modi which supported revenge by Hindus against Muslims. On July 14, 2004, Lalu Prasad Yadav, amidst walkout by the Opposition ordered a high-level department inquiry into the Godhra tragedy of 2002. The report is expected in 3 months and Mr. Yadav promised to fix accountability.

The riots that followed

\nMain article:
2002 Gujarat violence In the massacre that followed the Godhra incident, it has been reported that over 2000 people were killed. Points of view differ on the number, with the figure 2000 being seen by some as an exaggeration, and by others as an underestimate. Points of view differ with respect to how these deaths occurred: some refer to these as riots while others refer to these as a pogrom. Much of this article is from 2002 Gujarat violence.

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