No Justice Yet For Moinul Haque, Stomped On After Being Shot 2 Yrs Ago & Thousands Of Others Evicted In Assam (Article 14)

Since the death of a 12-year-old boy and a 30-year-old farmer—stomped on by a police photographer after being shot—during evictions of about 1,300 Bengali-speaking Muslim families in northern Assam in 2021, their brothers have waged a fruitless battle for justice. The government has not made postmortem reports available to the families, and it appears to have lied to the Gauhati High Court about rehabilitation. The government called them ‘illegal encroachers’, but many had paid land taxes for decades. A farm project for indigenous youth, justification for the evictions, appears to be floundering, with milk from cows imported from Gujarat drying up.

Mumtaz Begum, widow of Moinul Haque, shot by police on 23 September 2021, has not recovered from her husband’s death. Now a woman of few words, she seeks justice, but says she does not believe she will get it. Her children will never see his graveyard, she says, because the government has bulldozed the graveyard/ARSHAD AHMED

By Arshad Ahmed

Dhalpur, Darrang district (Assam): “Are you asking about Farid? The boy they killed two years ago?” 

Taij Uddin, a lean man in his 60s, sat on a bench along a stream called Nau Nodi or new river in Dhalpur, a vast swathe of fertile sandbar or char on the bank of the Brahmaputra in northern Assam’s Darrang district. The chars are shifting islands of fertile land shaped by the great river, whose average discharge is the fifth largest among rivers worldwide. 

It was Thursday, 23 September 2021, when Sheikh Farid, described by his family as a playful boy, was more cheerful than ever, said his mother, Haseena Bano, a middle-aged woman, in evident sorrow as she recalled that day. 

The reason, Bano explained, was that he had gone to the Dhalpur post office—a couple of km from his home in a village called Dhalpur 2—to pick up his new Aadhar card, which would give him a much-valued identification number in a land where identity and identification are fiercely contested issues. 

Farid was unaware of the tension in the area that day. Hundreds of armed police and district officials swarmed the char to continue an eviction in Dhalpur 1 and 3 that had begun three days earlier, on orders of the government of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma.  

The evictions came three months after the BJP came to power. One of its election planks was to free the state’s land from “illegal encroachers”.

This story was originally published in article-14.com. Read the full story here.

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