Koregaon Bhima violence a planned attack, says report

January 20, 2018 09:43 pm | Updated 09:43 pm IST

Pune: The violent clashes that occurred in Koregaon Bhima village on New Year’s Day which left one person dead was not a riot but an attack planned well in advance, asserts a report prepared by a coordination committee formed to assist the police in their investigations.

“Based on inputs from locals, we have gathered enough evidence to prove that the clashes were the culmination of a series of provocative acts orchestrated by the radical Hindutva leader Milind Ekbote and the followers of Sambhaji Bhide ‘Guruji’,” RPI(A) leader Dr. Siddharth Dhende, who is Pune’s Deputy Mayor and a member of the committee, told The Hindu .

According to another committee member, the board erected near the tomb of Govind Ganapat Gaikwad, a Dalit from the Mahar community who is said to have performed the final rites of the slain Maratha king Sambhaji (Shivaji’s son), was pulled down by Hindutva activists on Ekbote’s instigation three years ago as a precursor to the events of December 29 last year.

“Ekbote used to visit Sambhaji’s tomb at Vadhu-Budruk village (4 km from Koregaon Bhima) and had even floated a ‘committee’ dedicated to its preservation. However, his real purpose during the course of his visits to the village appears to foment caste tensions through his inflammatory speeches,” said the member, requesting anonymity.

The report further points to inflammatory messages circulating on social media which strongly hint at a conspiracy.

On December 15 last year, a provocative message posted by a person allegedly belonging to a Hindutva outfit and doing the rounds on Facebook spoke of “mourning for” Dalits gathering to celebrate the bicentenary of the Battle of Koregaon on January 1.

Similarly aggressive posts which went viral on social media on December 30 and 31 exhorted Hindutva activists to assemble at Vadhu-Budruk, while some spoke of a rally to be addressed by Ekbote and Bhide Guruji.

The report further observes (based on inputs from locals and the regional press) that Ekbote was slated to hold a press meet on the evening of December 30 at Hotel Sonai in Perne Phata on the Pune-Nagar Road. The meet was apparently called off.

“The people we spoke to also mention that the Hindutva leader held a conference somewhere else. We demand that the police pursue these leads with due diligence,” said Dr. Dhende.

He further said that local shopkeepers in Vadhu and surrounding villages said that they were forced to down shutters on December 31 itself.

“The next day, the villages adjoining Bhima-Koregaon observed a social boycott of Bhim Sainiks and Dalits who had come to pay homage to the Ranstambh (Victory Pillar). The visitors were not given food or water,” said Dr. Dhende.

A mob of 1,500-2000 people comprising Hindutva activists, believed to be the followers of Ekbote and Bhide Guruji, was believed to have gathered on January 1 near Bhima-Koregaon at around 9: 30 a.m. with the sole purpose of wreaking havoc and disturbing the peace of the occasion, alleges the report.

“The mob split into three groups and began furiously pelting stones, smashing shop windows, damaging vehicles in which the Dalits arrived, not even sparing police vehicles,” said a committee member.

The committee, comprising leaders from major Dalit outfits, was set up under the aegis of Vishwas Nangare-Patil, Inspector-General of Police (Kolhapur Range), on January 9 to aid the police in their probe for purposes of ensuring transparency.

The octogenarian Bhide ‘Guruji’ has a formidable following in the western Maharashtra sugar-belt districts of Sangli, Satara and Kolhapur. Among his biggest followers include Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, both of whom regard Bhide Guruji as an example of simple living and an inspirational teacher.

The complaint against Bhide, Ekbote and their supporters in Pimpri was lodged by Anita Ravindra Salve, a member of the Bahujan Republican Socialist Party. Another criminal case was lodged against the duo in Aurangabad. Both cases have been transferred to the Shikrapur police in Pune district.

The 85-year-old Hindutva leader has in turn accused Bharipa Bahujan Mahasangh (BBM) chief Prakash Ambedkar for wrongly blaming him for the Koregaon Bhima ‘conspiracy’.

Rahul Phatangale, a 28-year-old youth, lost his life when he was out to buy vegetables at the time the violence erupted. Around 50 vehicles were burnt in the rioting which raged for several hours.

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