Neither ‘Lynching’, Nor ‘Hate Crime’, a Muslim Scrap Dealer’s Death Is Now Cursed to Obscurity

Uttar Pradesh police, which lodged an FIR against two Muslim journalists and three others for calling the incident a “lynching” on social media, have not provided a reason as to how Firoz Qureshi died.

Jalalabad (Shamli): Jalalabad, a Muslim-majority qasba in western Uttar Pradesh’s Shamli, shot to infamy for the death of a Muslim scrap worker in early July this year.

A number of reports indicated that Firoz Qureshi, around 30-years-old, may have been lynched by a Hindu mob on July 4, 2024. But the state police soon lodged a first information report against two Muslim journalists and three others for calling the incident a “lynching” on social media. This move was criticised by journalist unions and many in the civil society.

Since then, Firoz’s death has polarised many in the region. While his family members believe that he died owing to injuries caused by the alleged beating that he faced at the hands of a Hindu mob, others have been inclined to speculate differently. Consequently, even after a fortnight, Firoz’s death has remained shrouded in mystery.  

Business as usual 

The newly-built and bustling alleys of Jalalabad market appear to have moved on, mirroring a usual business day, largely unaffected by the death of a poor scrap worker. Small grocery stores, makeshift eateries, repair shops, and fruit vendors make up the market.

Tucked inside its narrow lanes is a dense neighbourhood where the predominantly Muslim working classes struggle everyday to make a living. Firoz lived here with his wife, and his three children – two boys and an infant daughter. Their eldest is around five-years-old.

Firoz’s wife has not stepped out of her home ever since Firoz passed. His sons are scampering around, looking for a stray mobile phone to play video games on. The rest of his family are distraught.

Arshad Qureshi, a cattle trader and one of Firoz’s brothers, seeks insaaf, or justice, for his brother. “Many influential people have come to meet us since Firoz’s death. We have only asked for insaaf and a fair investigation. We do not expect any compensation from anyone,” Arshad says, adding that the whole family is worried about the future of Firoz’s wife and children.  

Amjad and his brothers, along with their families, had gone to Hasanpur Lohari, another qasba a few kilometres away, to attend their nephew’s wedding on July 4. It was around late evening, when Amjad returned home, that he was informed by an acquaintance that the police had detained Firoz for his alleged involvement in a scuffle. He immediately reached the police chowki, where some policemen handed Firoz over to him. 

“He was half-naked, and almost unconscious. His body had marks that clearly showed he was beaten up,” Amjad tells The Wire.

“The police said that some residents of Ghaasmandi had complained that Firoz was creating trouble in the area. So, the police had picked him up,” Amjad says. 

Firoz’s brother Afzal. Photo: Video screengrab/The Wire

A loudspeaker and a wedding gift

When Amjad enquired with people of the neighbourhood about what conspired during the day, he was told that some Hindus in the adjacent mohalla Ganga Aryanagar, also known as Ghaasmandi, had beaten him up after an argument over the use of a loudspeaker. Ganga Aryanagar is one of the few localities in Jalalabad with a mixed population. 

Unlike other mohallas of Jalalabad, Ganga Aryanagar is markedly prosperous. Wholesale grocery stores owned by Bania and Punjabi communities, a sparkly clean Jain temple, a school and a guest house managed by the temple trust, and a string of well-maintained houses owned by both Hindus and Muslims populate it.  

According to Amjad, Firoz as a scrap dealer and like any other street vendor, used a loudspeaker that played a pre-recorded vendors’ call urging people to sell scrap to him. On July 4, Amjad says, Firoz left home early in the morning on his usual rounds. “But he could not do any business all day, so he decided to go for another round to the mohalla near the Jain Mandir at around 5 in the evening. That was the last we saw him before all of us left for the wedding. Firoz told us that he would attend the wedding reception a day later, on July 5. He hoped to make some money for a wedding gift,” Amjad tells The Wire. 

Cut to 9 pm, Amjad brought Firoz to his home in a semi-conscious state. He said that by the time he and his brothers brought in a doctor, he was dead. “He couldn’t move, he was asphyxiated,” Kaif, Firoz’s nephew, adds. 

The Jain Mandir square where the incident allegedly happened.

Kaif says that a few Muslim acquaintances who lived near the Jain Mandir told him that Firoz was dragged to the Jain Mandir chauraha (square) and beaten up after an argument ensued between Firoz and some residents over the noise that the Firoz’s loudspeaker made. Kaif immediately showed a picture showing Firoz begging a crowd to let him go. The picture had the daily Punjab Kesari’s watermark stamped on it. He also showed a video that showed what appeared to be blood clots on Firoz’s body and small wounds but no blood stains. The Wire could not confirm whether the video was shot before Firoz died or after his death.

By the time Firoz died, his family and a number of neighbours had gathered at the local police chowki. By this time, the eldest brother in the family, Afzal Qureshi, had arrived to speak with the police. “Many amongst us were feeling extremely angry over the way Firoz had been beaten. They urged us to block the roads. But I was categorical that our fight should be legal and peaceful and we will seek justice through proper means,” Afzal tells The Wire. 

Kaif, Firoz’s nephew.

An FIR emerges

Afzal narrates what he learnt about the episode leading to Firoz’s death. “I am illiterate. I told the police what I had heard, while one among them was noting down my narration,” Afzal said. Afzal’s version became the basis of the FIR lodged by the police on July 5.  

The FIR, and subsequently the post-mortem report, later became the primary factors that have created confusion over the death of Firoz. 

Curiously, Afzal’s version is worded quite peculiarly. For instance, this is how Afzal is said to have described his brother Firoz, “…Yesterday, on 04/07/24 at around 08:00 pm, my brother Firoz who used to take drugs occasionally (kabhi kabhaar nasha kar leta tha) had gone to Ganga Aryangar for some work…”

The FIR then goes on to quote Afzal as saying that residents of Ganga Aryanagar – Pinki, Pankaj, Rajendra and their associates – beat up Firoz, before he was rescued by two persons named Ikram and Arshad with great difficulty. The FIR then added Afzal as saying that Firoz died at 11 pm and urging strict action against the accused persons. 

On being asked about his description of Firoz as an addict, Afzal says, “When I was narrating the incident, a police personnel asked me whether he used drugs. I replied he used drugs occasionally. So, the police insisted that it should be included in the complaint.”

“Let us assume for once that he used drugs. But is it justified that a person who uses drugs should be flogged in the public,” Kaif asks. 

Also read: Uttar Pradesh: 11 Days After Death by Lynching, Muslim Man Charged With Dacoity, Assault of Woman

Whither mob lynching?

Meanwhile, the police has dismissed all claims that termed Firoz’s death as a result of “mob lynching”, and has foregrounded aspects of Firoz’s “drug addiction” and his “unruly behaviour” in an intoxicated state. The post-mortem report also does not indicate any “wounds” on Firoz’s body that could have been the consequence of the beating he allegedly faced. 

Speaking with The Wire, the Station House Officer of Thana Bhawan police station, Jitendra Kumar Sharma, who is also the investigating officer (IO) in the case, says, “Firoz, in a state of intoxication, forcibly entered a number of houses, following which residents of the locality complained to the police. He died after three hours of the incident.”

Asked why the police handed over Firoz to his family members instead of registering a case against his alleged trespassing, Sharma says, “The residents were not willing to register a case. As he was in a bad state, possibly because of an overdose, we thought it fit to hand him over to his family members.”

Sharma adds that the police will act according to the evidence gathered in the case. “The post-mortem report clearly says that there were no wounds found in his body that could have resulted in death. The viscera from his body has been preserved. We will take any further action after the viscera report comes.”

He insists that the reports declaring Firoz’s death as “lynching” are merely rumours and urges people to restrain from it, as such claims may “disrupt communal harmony in the region.”

Sharma says that there is no evidence to suggest that Firoz was beaten up, nor are there any eyewitnesses to buttress such a claim. The initial reports suggesting a scuffle over a loudspeaker or Firoz’s possible attempt at theft are also rejected by Sharma, who says that the evidence gathered after the initial probe did not back any such claim.  

Another police official in Jalalabad, who did not want to be named, tells The Wire that no camera footage has been found where the residents were seen beating up Firoz. Notably, the Jain Mandir square where Firoz was allegedly beaten up has a number of CCTV cameras installed by the temple establishment.

As a result, the police have not arrested the accused persons named by Afzal. Firoz’s family members resent the fact that no action has been taken against the accused persons, but hope that the final post-mortem report will clear the air.  

No ‘hate crime’, no cause of death

As the confusion over Firoz’s death has only exacerbated, multiple questions remain. Why has the police delayed the testing of viscera? Despite the sensitive nature of the case, the police have shown no hurry in clearing the clouds of confusion around Firoz’s death, and have instead resorted to booking social media users and journalists for disrupting communal harmony. 

There are also some obvious discrepancies. While Afzal and others in the family said that Firoz left home for Jain Mandir around late evening at around 5 pm, the FIR notes that he left home towards Ganga Aryanagar only at 8 pm. The police claim that Firoz died three hours later at around 11 pm but have not clarified the number of hours that Firoz spent in the police chowki – something his family members appear to have no clear understanding about either. Only a clear timeline of the day can clear such doubts.

The family members say that Firoz went to Ganga Aryanagar on his usual round to collect scrap but the FIR notes that he went there “for some work”. The motive of Firoz’s trespassing, too, has not been established. The police have not said anything about Firoz’s possible attempt at theft, even as it does not appear to have verified the alleged fight that ensued over the loudspeaker noise.  

While the police have dismissed a case of “hate crime”, they have not established a cause of death as yet. This has further intensified speculation on the matter, including the police’s own guess that Firoz may have died because of an overdose.        

In Jalalabad, most people were tightlipped or claim to know little about what conspired on July 4. Both Muslim and Hindu residents express their distress over the incident that has garnered attention all over, but most also say that they got to know about it only a day or two later. A Hindu resident in Ganga Aryanagar tells The Wire, “We came to know about the incident only the next day. We heard that someone was trying to break into a Jain household.” They say that Muslims and Hindus have always lived together in the locality, and it was improbable that something like “lynching” could happen here. 

Another Hindu resident says, “Both Hindus and Muslims live together here but barely interact with each other. But our businesses surely overlap and we work together in such times.”

Meanwhile, even as journalists have been booked, a video showing a Hindu godman justifying the “lynching” of a “Muslim thief” has become viral in the region. Several Hindutva activists elsewhere, too, have supported such “instant justice” for “Muslim thieves”. 

As both the police and Jalalabad residents have struggled to name even a single eyewitness and produce conclusive evidence in the case, the scrap dealer Firoz’s death has been cursed to obscurity.

Singhu Lynching: FIR Against Victim for ‘Desecration’; SIT Probes Video Clip

In the video, the victim can be heard telling the mob surrounding him that he was given Rs 30,000 by someone but for what purpose is not clear.

New Delhi: Haryana police has registered an FIR against the man who was killed at the Singhu border in connection with the alleged desecration of the Sikh holy book, Indian Express has reported.

Lakhbir Singh, who hailed from a village in Punjab’s Tarn Taran, was killed on October 15 and his body tied to a barricade at the Singhu border with a hand chopped off and with multiple wounds caused by sharp-edged weapons.

So far, four members of the Nihang order, have been arrested in connection with the killing.

Lakhbir Singh was booked under section 295-A (deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs) of the Indian Penal Code.

The news outlet has quoted Virender Singh, deputy superintendent of police (DSP), Law and Order, Sonipat, as having confirmed that the FIR was indeed registered. It was filed on October 17 at Kundli police station.

On Thursday, October 21, Assistant Superintendent of Police, Kharkhoda, Sonipat, Mayank Gupta, said that the Special Investigation Team of the Haryana Police is probing the veracity of a purported video in which Lakhbir Singh is allegedly seen making some claims.

“This video was circulating yesterday and we are working towards verifying the veracity of this clip in which the victim is heard telling the mob surrounding him that he was given Rs 30,000 by someone but for what purpose is not clear,” ASP Gupta told PTI.

“Whether he is saying this under duress is also not clear,” added Gupta who is heading one of the two SITs former by the Haryana Police to probe the incident.

While one SIT was formed to carry out the overall probe into the case, the Gupta-led SIT was constituted to investigate the videos of the incident circulating on social media.

Also Read: Singhu Border Killing: ‘Religious Issue’ and ‘Conspiracy to Derail Farmers’ Protest’, Says SKM

Gupta said in the fresh video clip, the victim is also heard sharing the phone number of a person with the mob.

“There are reports that one more video of the incident was circulating on social media and police were trying to verify that too,” he said.

“On the basis of various videos which were circulating, we have identified more people for their involvement in the incident. Further investigations are on,” he said.

On Wednesday, the Punjab government had also constituted a special investigation team to look into the complaint of the sister of the Dalit labourer lynched at a farmers’ protest site in Singhu that he was “allured” and taken to the Delhi-Haryana border.

She also demanded a probe into the matter.

(With PTI inputs)

‘Say Jai Shri Ram’, Killers of Muslim Man in NCR Said, Police Deny Murder Was Hate Crime

On Sunday, Mohammad Sabir received a call from his father Aftab Alam, who strangely did not say a word. For the next 40 minutes he heard the events that would lead up to his father’s death.

Noida: On Sunday, at around midnight, 20-year-old Mohammad Sabir was told by the police that they had found the lifeless body of his father, Aftab Alam, tied to the side of his own car.

Sabir wasn’t entirely surprised to hear this, he says. A few hours earlier, he had sensed that something was wrong when he received an unusual call from his father – who didn’t utter a word after he picked up the phone. Sabir heard “drunk” men on the other end of the phone asking his father if he would like to drink.  Alam said ‘no’, Sabir heard.

The men then asked him his name, according to Sabir. By then, having sensed that something was wrong, he began recording the call. In the audio file of the call available with The Wire, at 8:39 minutes, one of the men can be heard saying, “Jai Shri Ram bol, bol Jai Shri Ram”.

The chant has become the rallying cry of violent Hindutva action and has preceded several lynchings.

Sabir heard no conversation after that. But 11 minutes later, at the 19:41 minute mark, one of the men can be heard saying, “Saans ruk gayi.” ‘He has stopped breathing.’

“My father had gone to drop one of his old clients at Bulandshahr yesterday at around 3 pm. He made the drop at around 7 pm and left for home. On the way he called me and told me to recharge his Fast Tag. I did that at around 7:30 pm and then after a while I got a call again, I think this was from near a toll booth. He had probably sensed that some men he had come across were not the right sort of people, so he called me and possibly put the mobile phone in his pocket,” said Sabir.

Also read: The India in Which Tabrez Ansari Died Continues to Live

Sabir recorded the call for the next 40 minutes, till his father’s phone apparently switched off. He immediately went to the nearest police station, Mayur Vihar Phase I, and asked for help.

“Sub-inspector Sanjay sir helped me when I told him about the matter. He immediately started tracking my father’s mobile phone and accessed the last location of the SIM card,” said Sabir.

This ‘last location’ was near Badalpur police station, where the police found Aftab Alam’s bruised, lifeless body. He was taken to a nearby hospital.

Sabir broke down upon recalling the sight of his dead father. “His tongue area was badly bruised, ears were bleeding, there was a big cut on his face. This is clearly a case of mob lynching,” he said, using the phrase which has come to symbolise hate crimes in India. “But the police has only registered a robbery case.”

Sabir added, “We are Muslims, but we have a right to live.”

However, the Badalpur police station house officer denied that it was a case of “mob lynching” or “hate crime” and said that the case is being investigated.

The FIR, registered on the same night, charged the anonymous assaulters under sections 394 (voluntarily causing hurt in committing robbery) 302 (punishment for murder) and 201 (causing disappearance of evidence of offence, or giving false information to screen offender).

It is not clear how Alam came across the perpetrators or who and how many they were.

Also read | Jharkhand: Lynched Adivasi Man Was Dragged for 1 km, Mob Chanted Hindu Slogans

A devoted father, keen on sons’ education

Aftab Alam was a resident of Trilokpuri, Noida had been working as a driver since 1996. Driving was his main livelihood. He has a wife, his three sons, ailing parents and two siblings, all of whom depend on him and Sabir financially.

During the lockdown, Alam had not stepped out due to fear of contracting and spreading the coronavirus, said his family. However, when a family friend, an old client, called him up to ask if he could drop them from Gurgaon to Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh, he could not refuse. Having earned no money during the lockdown and struggling to make ends meet, Alam thought that the trip would be a good idea.

Alam’s younger sons, Mohammad Shahid, 19, and Mohammad Shajid, 17,  along with Sabir, are bright students who had secured good marks in their board examinations.

Sabir is a third year B.Com student in the School of Open Learning, University of Delhi. Shahid and Shajid study at Ahlcon Public School in Mayur Vihar, and they scored 76% and 92% marks respectively in their Class 10 board examinations.

Alam’s father, 65-year-old Mohammad Tahir, said, “Had it been a case of robbery, why wouldn’t they take the car? They would have stolen the car and thrown his body out on the street. This was clearly a case of mob lynching. They only took the mobile phone.”

Shahid is preparing for his NEET exams and said his father’s only goal was to make sure that his children get a good education.

Also read: On the Night Before Holi, a Muslim Man Was Lynched in UP

“I am a student who studies in a good school through the Economically Weaker Sections quota. Even during this health crisis, my father had managed to pay our fees with his minimal earnings. My brother, Shajid is preparing for the JEE next year,” said Shahid.

“In his career as a driver, he never had one fight with anybody. He went to work, came back home, invested in his sons’ education and that was it. He never even visited other people’s houses because he spent all his time earning money for us,” he added.

Pointing to the kitchen in his house, he said, “At this time, we are short of ration at home but look at my bookshelf. My father, despite not having enough money to manage food for the house, bought me books and notebooks worth Rs 1,800.”

Shajid, the youngest son and the “brightest” according to the family said, “When we both got our Class 10 results, Shahid had secured lesser marks than me. But my father took out a note of Rs 1,000 and asked us to take Rs 500 each, without giving me preference for securing better marks. He showed faith in both of us and knew that he [Shahid] would also make him proud someday.”

Also read: From ‘Jai Shri Ram’ to ‘Jai Siya Ram’, Modi Tempers Mandir Battle Cry, For Now at Least

Alam’s mother, 60-year-old Najmu Nisa wondered how the house would function now.

Alam’s wife, Rehana Khatoon, 36, had only come to know of his death on Monday afternoon. Khatoon said she wanted justice for her husband. Consoling his mother Shahid said he would find a way of securing that. “I will speak to my teachers at school, they will come up with a solution. What has happened has happened. Now we will deal with what happens,” the 19-year-old said.

Alam’s last rites were performed at 5.30 pm on Monday.