Vadodara's violent past |
 Communal and caste violence has acquired endemic proportions in Gujarat during the last three decades. The Ahmedabad-Vadodara belt has been a witness to some of most gruesome instances of violence, claiming hundreds of lives. Here's a lowdown on Vadodara's shaky past. |
1961-71 During 1961-71, 16 of the 17 districts in the state saw communal violence, recording some 685 incidents in urban areas and 114 in rural. Of the 685 incidents recorded for the decade, 578 occurred in 1969 alone, which proved to be the worst riots of the decade. Starting with Ahmedabad, the worst affected city, violence spread to several other places including Vadodara. The death toll in Ahmedabad itself stood at over a thousand, along with extensive destruction of properties belonging largely to minority community. For the first time in Vadodara, planned riots took place in 1969. A mob carried out well-planned attacks batch of six to seven persons with tools and bars would break the locks of shops of Muslims, material taken and shops thereafter looted by a mob. |
1971-81 The 70s and 80s saw growing incidence of caste and communal tension in Vadodara. Popular movements and agitations in the city turned, eventually breaking out into communal rioting. It first happened in 1974 with the Navnirman movement, which had begun as a secular protest against Chimanbhai Patel’s government, and became linked with Jayaprakash Narayan's movement. October-November 1978 saw prolonged rioting in Vadodara, affecting the localities of Wadi, Chaukhandi, Ahmedabadi Pole, Raopura road, and Pratapnagar. Several shops belonging to Muslims were burnt in the riots lasted for over a month. |
1981-82 Communal tensions resurfaced in 1981 and persisted for over a year between September 1981- December 1982. The city went through several bouts of rioting interspersed with moments of uneasy calm. The beginnings of these riots was attributed to a gradual build of rivalries between groups aspiring to control the thriving illicit liquor trade, culminating in violent conflicts. It was not long before what was evidently a conflict of interest took a violent communal turn. On September 11, 1981 a rumour had spread out from the Hindu dominated Ladwada area purporting desecration of a Ganesh idol by a Muslim child. Some 18 incidents of communal rioting were recorded in the city between September 1981 and December 1982. Extensive burning and looting of houses and shops followed thereafter. The worst instance, however, occurred on 13 December 1982 that involved the participation of middle class youth in the violence, indicating a change in the composition of the rioters. The pattern changed in 80s and social conflicts, principally over the issue of reservation quotas for backward castes and communities and the reactive political mobilisation of the upper castes deeply hostile to reservation as an idea. The trend first came into view with the communal disturbances of 1981-82. The anti-reservation stir of 1985 in Gujarat and the communal riots that followed it, stabilised the trend. On March 18, 1982, the mrthuya ghant, literally the death knell, of the reservation policy was sounded in Ahmedabad. It had its disastrous side-effects in many towns and cities of Gujarat. |
The 1990s In September 1990 on the occasion of Ganesh Visarjan, saw the worst ever riots in Vadodara in the walled city. Each and every shop belonging to Muslims in the walled city and Raopura were broken with the help of gas cutters, looted and burnt. The destruction took place in the presence of the police as well as thousands of people during the Ganesh Visarjan procession in broad daylight and in the presence of police. Police fired 80 rounds of bullets in a small Muslim area, Rajpurani Pole near Mandvi, to stop any Muslim who would come out on the road to save his/her property or to protect the Jumma Masjid. Nalin Bhat, then Minister in the State Government, personally stood and directed the firing by the police. In 1992, incidents of communal tension also took place as aftermath of demolition of Babri Masjid. |
Violence of 2002 The Best Bakery case is among the most serious instances of violence during the Gujarat carnage of 2002. On March 1, 2002, a mob in Vadodra (erstwhile Barodra), Gujarat, the ignominious Best Bakery massacre took place as nearly 1000 rioters swooped on the bakery-cum-residence owned by late Habibullah Sheikh at 2100 hours IST and within a matter of hours eleven members of the Sheikh family and three bakery employees were either charred to death or hacked to pieces. Best Bakery case: A flashback |
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