India's riot toll rises to 46 as capital remains on edge
The riots in
Tensions between Hindu hard-liners and Muslims protesting the Hindu-first policies of Prime Minister
Apart from a single tweet after the riots had almost ended, Modi has been publicly silent on the violence.
His powerful home minister,
The rumors spreading on Sunday included reports of armed groups marching in neighborhoods while chanting slogans, and houses being set on fire.
The panic subsided when police reached out to both Hindu and Muslim religious leaders and asked them to help maintain calm in their neighborhoods. Police also issued statements and some lawmakers took to the streets to reassure people that the situation was normal.
On Monday, India’s top court agreed to hear cases filed by riot victims accusing leaders of Modi’s
Mishra had demanded at a rally that police shut down a Muslim-led protest in the city or else he and his followers would do it themselves.
Hours later, Hindus and Muslims fought each other with guns and swords, metal rods and axes, leaving the streets where the rioting occurred resembling a war zone.
The violence had largely subsided by Wednesday, but the Indian capital has remained on edge.
Most of the dead and injured were Muslims, with thousands fleeing their homes in fear.
The main opposition
Shah controls the city’s police force, which has been accused of aiding Hindu mobs in the clashes. Police have denied the allegations.
Senior
Authorities are yet to provide an official account of what sparked the violence. Police spokesman
The violence is the latest in a long line of communal clashes that date to the British partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947, when the country was split into secular, Hindu-majority
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