This Indian man’s house was demolished in Khargone because he is Muslim, he says


“In the blink of an eye, my home was demolished,” said the 45-year-old fruit seller, whose kitchen, fruit cart, and cattle shed have ​all been destroyed. “While I stood there watching… (the police) just walked away.”

Scraps of wood, rusty metal and garbage line the sandy pavement outside his home, where his four young children play.

His home was one of several properties in Khargone city’s Chhoti Mohan Talkies neighborhood, in India’s central Madhya Pradesh state, ​that he says were demolished by authorities following violent clashes between Hindus and Muslims that broke out on April 10 — the day of the Hindu festival Ram Navami.

Experts say the demolitions are the tip of a far deeper problem and that this is only the latest in a string of attacks on the country’s Muslim population, fueled in part by the ​ascendance of India’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

They argue that Muslims in BJP-run Madhya Pradesh have been disproportionately punished following the violence, raising fears that members of the country’s ​largest minority religion — about 200 million of India’s 1.3 billion population are Muslim — are being persecuted under the BJP.

Communist Party of India leader Brinda Karat, center, stands in front of a bulldozer during the demolition of Muslim-owned shops in New Delhi's northwest Jahangirpuri neighborhood, in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, April 20, 2022.

They point to similar problems in the capital New Delhi, where ​witnesses told CNN that authorities began demolishing shops and other structures in the predominantly Muslim neighborhood of Jahangirpuri on Wednesday, days after violent clashes between Hindus and Muslims broke out following Hanuman Jayanti, a celebration of the birthday of the Hindu god Hanuman.

For Baig, there is an extra sense of injustice.

Baig said he and his neighbors were nowhere near the scene of the clashes.

“I don’t know what is happening in my country,” said Baig, who ​says he has lived in the property for more than 30 years. “But all I can say is that I’m paying the price of being a Muslim.”

Rubble and debris from Shahdullah Baig's destroyed home.

‘My shops were demolished because I am Muslim’

The communal violence in Khargone erupted after groups of Hindu men carrying saffron flags — a color associated with Hinduism that has in recent years become increasingly politicized — marched through Muslim-majority neighborhoods on Ram Navami, a festival that celebrates the birth of the revered Hindu god, Lord Ram.
The details of the clashes are disputed. Violent skirmishes between Hindus and Muslims erupted, with some men throwing stones and holding weapons in the air, according to video from local news outlets. Houses and cars were set on fire, and at least one person died ​– a Muslim man — in the clashes, state police told reporters. A curfew was imposed in the city to quell the violence on April 10, and some restrictions were lifted after 11 days, they said. The government said they have set aside a cumulative sum of $131,000 for families affected by the violence.

But it is the scenes of state officials bulldozing properties that gained the most attention, with activists and citizens decrying the move as unjust and unlawful.

Khargone authorities demolish a property following the violence.

Dr. Tameezuddin Shaikh was at home on April 11 when he received a phone call from a friend informing him that authorities were bulldozing his son’s medical shop in the predominantly Muslim neighborhood of Talab Chowk in Khargone.

“I was…



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