‘Only the Poor Die’: Nagpur Riots Claim First Victim, Family’s Sole Breadwinner. (Photo: PTI)

By Eshwar

On 17 November, while communal violence was underway in Maharashtra’s Nagpur, Irfan Ansari boarded an auto-rickshaw at about 11:00 pm to go the Nagpur railway station.

Communal tensions were high through the day following protests by Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal to demand for the removal of Aurangzeb’s tomb and alleged desecration of a holy chadar during their demonstrations.

Irfan, a resident of Banda Nawaz Nagar and a welder by profession, was to catch a train to Itarsi, Madhya Pradesh, post midnight.

As he reached Gitanjali Chowk in Hansapuri area, about a kilometer away from the station, the driver abandoned Irfan after seeing a mob ahead. He decided to avoid the main road and walk the rest of the distance via small gullies. But what should have been a 15-minute walk turned fatal after he encountered a mob in one of the internal lanes he was passing by.

“The family told him to postpone his journey that day. If only he had listened, he would have been alive,” Imran Ansari, his younger brother, told The Quint over the phone, still processing his brother’s death in the holy month of Ramzan.

“He was immediately taken to the hospital by the police. I received a call at 1:00 am from a doctor. We immediately rushed there,” Imran said.

Irfan was hit by a rod on the head, had a wound from a sharp object on the back, and had bruises all over the body from being kicked repeatedly, he said. “He was full of blood when we first saw him that night. He was in severe pain and could hardly talk. We told him that he would be treated and will get better soon,” Imran recalled.

This story was originally published in thequint.com. Read the full story here.