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NEW DELHI (Compass
Direct News) – Hindu extremists raided Christian
events in Madhya Pradesh state this month, leaving a
visiting theology student dead and several other
Christians injured.
The body of 23-year-old Amit Gilbert was recovered from
a water well 25 feet from the site of a Christian
revival meeting that 15 to 20 Hindu extremists attacked
on April 17 in Gram Fallaiya, Post Pathakheda, Betul
district. With covered heads and carrying iron rods and
bamboo clubs, members of the Hindu extremist Dharam Sena
and Bajrang Dal cut electricity at the night-time event
and began striking, sending the more than 400 in
attendance running, Christian leaders said.
Eyewitnesses said the assailants chased Gilbert, of
Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh state, and beat him mainly on
his legs. Police in the state controlled by the Hindu
extremist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said that for the
moment they believe Gilbert accidentally fell into the
well amid the chaos, but Christians present said that is
unlikely.
His body was found with his head and legs submerged in
the 1.5-meter deep water of the well, yet he had no
water in his lungs or stomach when Christians drew him
out, said Pastor Santwan Lal, organizer of the April
15-17 revival event, suggesting that Gilbert was dead
before being thrown in.
“Amit was hit first and then picked up and thrown into
the well,” Pastor Lal said. “If he had fallen into the
well, he would have had more bruises and at least a
broken bone or two, since the well is rocky and narrow.
But that was not the case.”
Pastor Lal and others Compass spoke with said they
believe the posture of the body leaves no doubt that
Gilbert was murdered.
“He sustained an injury on the left side of his face
near the ear,” Pastor Lal added.
An autopsy was conducted, but authorities are not
disclosing findings, Pastor Lal said. Hindu extremists
from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and Bajrang Dal are
reportedly exerting intense pressure on local
authorities.
Betul Assistant Sub-Inspector Santosh Jain told Compass
that the results of the autopsy, conducted by a team of
doctors, will not be released because they have now
become politicized.
Police on April 19 arrested nine people in connection
with the incident and charged them with rioting,
violence and trespassing, but not murder. Officers also
registered Gilbert’s death under the Section 174 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, which pertains to inquiry
and report on an incident involving death of a person
whether suicide or otherwise.
“We are trying hard, but this case does not seem to be
moving forward,” Jain said. “A report has been
registered against 10 to 12 [initially] unidentified
people, and we have so far arrested nine. All have
accepted their involvement in the crime, and all belong
to the Bajrang Dal. Not one of them is a local from
Betul. Their bails have been rejected at the lower
court.”
Arrested were Rakesh Dhurwe, Neeraj Rajput, Radheshyam
Sahu, Sonu Rajput, Raju Kahar, Rajesh Oriya, Raju
Deshmukh, Arun Thackrey, and Hemrath Bahalavi, he said.
Though police have initially determined that Gilbert
fell into the well, they say they are open to the
possibility that he was thrown into it.
Pastor Lal added that two women were also injured in the
melee.
“As a result of the violence, two ladies attending the
meeting were hit, and one of them was admitted in a
local hospital for three days,” he said.
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