In times of trial a childs place is near the father, they believe. So they went, thousands of obedient sons and daughters marching the roads of India together.
All week, followers of the Dera Sacha Sauda religious sect converged on the city of Panchkula, where a court on Friday found Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh guilty of raping two followers, according to news reports. Police put the town on a security lockdown, the Associated Press reported.
And, in the wake of the ruling, authorities in both Haryana and the neighboring state of Punjab, also on high alert, battled against an outbreaks of unrest against police and the news media by followers of the headline-grabbing Singh, known as the guru of bling.
At least 13 people were killed and 32 injured in the widening clashes, Union Home Secretary Rajiv Mehereshi told reporters. Vivek Bhadu, the chief medical officer of the Civil Hospital in Panchkula, put the number of injured at 150.
We were not expecting the conviction The fight has just begun, one follower, identified as Rajesh, was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India.
The violence quickly spread to New Delhi, about 150 miles to the south. A rail car was set ablaze at one station in the city.
The sects leader is a cultural heavy-hitter among Indias holy men. With a black Santa-size beard and a penchant for roaring around on motorcycles, Singh describes himself on Twitter as Spiritual Saint/Philanthropist/Versatile Singer/Allrounder Sportsperson/Film Director/Actor/Art Director/Music Director/Writer/Lyricist/Autobiographer/DOP.
But the state courts said he was a rapist who took advantage of two followers 14 years ago, charges Singh denied. Over the past couple of weeks, as the verdict neared, masses of his followers reportedly more than 100,000 of them arrived in the region, and the city was not ready. In a video appeal before the verdict, Singh asked his supporters not to resort to violence, AP reported.
Panchkula sits on a heat-stunned plain in the northern Indian state of Haryana. The believers pushed in like a wave that refused to break, packing roadsides and lying in the shade from colorful tents stretched over empty fields. They did not leave when the local government said go. They dug in when the state reportedly canceled the regions 29 train runs, shut down the Internet, and put the army on standby.
While the Deras followers maintained their presence was peaceful and supportive, critics said it amounted to threat-by-numbers and was meant to frighten riot-weary government into a lenient verdict.
It is absolutely an intimidating tactic, Utsav Singh Bains, an attorney for the two victims, told NDTV this week. This is a subversion of justice. You cannot put any kinds of pressure on a judicial system as a means to intimidate.
If anything, however, the situation in Panchkula illustrates how intractable the guru world remains in Indias globalizing social and political circles.
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