Maharashtra Pune On 8 and 9 August, some
Meiteis were attacked in
Pune. Students and professionals were beaten up by Muslims allegedly in
Pune's Kondhwa and Poona College areas. Attackers asked victims which state they belonged to, and those who replied
Manipur were beaten. One of the victims said some attackers wore college uniform while others were in casual clothes. Police arrested nine Muslims as the alleged perpetrators of the attacks.
Mumbai On 11 August 2012, a Muslim protest against the riots in Assam and
attacks on Rohingya Muslims in
Myanmar was held at
Azad Maidan in Mumbai. The protest was organised by
Raza Academy, and was attended by two other groups, Sunni Jamiatul Ulema and Jama'at-e-Raza-e-Mustafa. It ended in violence; two were killed and 54 others injured, including 45 policemen.
Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik said it was around 3 pm when the crowd turned violent, after some protesters displayed "provocative photos" of the Assam violence. "Some people started raising slogans against the police and media. They set fire to police vehicles," said Patnaik. "As we tried restraining the crowd, a scuffle broke out between the protestors and police." The
Mumbai Police Crime Branch suspects that the riot outside Azad Maidan was part of a "big conspiracy". Crime Branch sources said the police are probing the alleged role of "outside agencies". Crime Branch officers said the police felt the violence may have been pre-planned as the protestors were equipped with gear to torch vehicles, which they used to set fire to three media outdoor broadcasting (OB) vans and four police vans, one of which belonged to the riot control police. The police claimed "at least five woman police constables were molested by the mob." There were also reports of a few rioters having stolen police weapons and fired in the air and at the police, but no casualties were reported. The police later claimed provocative pamphlets were distributed during the protest, and they were investigating their source. The President of the Raza Academy,
Alhaj Mohammed Saeed Noori, said the "miscreants" involved in the violence were not associated with the academy. "Our protest was peaceful," he said. Noori stated that an "irresponsible" speech had been made during the rally, which the
Indian Express claimed exacerbated tensions. Noori said: "There were several people on the stage. One irresponsible person made statements regarding the media coverage. He was immediately stopped and attempts were made to calm the situation. We had no idea that this will happen," he said, condemning the attack on the media. While condemning the violence caused by rioters, All India Secular Forum social activist Irfan Engineer blamed Raza Academy for being
parochial in nature. Engineer said: "The riots have ruptured the lives of every person in Assam. It has nothing to do with Muslims, Hindus, Bodos or anybody. Raza Academy, while organising the rally, should have taken all measures to see that the crowd does not go out of control or infiltrators take advantage of it or that protest rally just does not become confined for one community and thereby score an advantage in the community itself." Rioters were found carrying sticks, rods and petrol cans to the rally, so police suspected the riot was pre-meditated and investigated the source of the weapons. Police found CCTV footage showing protesters pouring petrol on vehicles before setting them alight. A special team of 12 officers from the Crime Branch headed by an
assistant commissioner of police will conduct the investigations. Two police rifles stolen by the mob were recovered in Amrutnagar,
Mumbra, in neighbouring
Thane district. Only 19 rounds out of 160 rounds stolen were recovered. In Lucknow, after the
Friday Namaz, a mob of 500 ravaged various landmarks of the city including Buddha Park, Haathi Park, Shaheed Smarak and Parivartan Chowk,
Attacks on people from Northeast and exodus In August 2012, 30,000 people from the Northeast region had fled
Bangalore after attacks and threats of more attacks to come after
Ramadan. Shiyeto from
Nagaland, a resident of Bangalore, was attacked by a group of people who threatened to kill him if he did not leave the city before Ramadan. Another person from Assam was alleged to be attacked. In the
national capital Delhi, rumours that people from the Northeast will be targeted, particularly after Ramadan, started circulating. Then
Bharatiya Janata Party president Nitin Gadkari blamed illegal migrants for the attacks on people from Northeast.
DGP Dinesh Reddy of Andhra Pradesh State, said, "Police have been deployed at all localities with a sizeable North-East population, to boost the community's confidence. Besides, round-the-clock police patrols have been organised." A policeman at
Chennai Egmore station, where
Howrah-bound trains from the South make a brief halt, remarked about the exodus: "The large crowds remind me of the arrival of
Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka decades ago." Anees Pasha, Thaseem Nawaz and Shahid Salman Khan were arrested, and four mobiles, two computers and one laptop were seized from them. Investigators traced the source of hate messages to Islamist groups such as
Popular Front of India,
Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, Manita Neeti Pasarai and
Karnataka Forum for Dignity. The SMS campaign was designed to create panic among people from the Northeast forcing them to flee and to damage the social fabric and economy. The Kerala State Intelligence was asked to check the veracity of the report with respect to the PFI.
Bangalore Messages were circulated warning people of Northeastern states of India to leave Bangalore and other cities before
Eid al-Fitr (the festival that marks the end of Ramadan) which was on 20 August 2012. ==See also==