‘What Is This?’: SC Asks UP Govt to See Witnesses in Lakhimpur Kheri Case Are Protected

The SC was hearing a plea by family members of farmers who were mowed down by a vehicle purportedly belonging to Ashish Mishra against his bail and release from jail.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court asked the Uttar Pradesh government to ensure that witnesses in the Lakhimpur Kheri case are protected after petitioners’ challenging the bail for prime accused Ashish Mishra informed the court that a prime witness had been attacked and threatened.

“Madam, what is this? They are saying a witness has been attacked. You have to file detailed counter. See that witnesses are protected. We’ll list immediately after Holi,” Chief Justice of India N.V. Ramana told Uttar Pradesh state counsel, advocate Ruchira Goel. Also on the bench were Justices Surya Kant and Hima Kohli.

Three family members of farmers who were mowed down in October 2021 by a vehicle purportedly belonging to Ashish Mishra, the son of Union minister and influential BJP leader Ajay ‘Teni’ Mishra, have moved court against his bail and release from jail.

Four more people died in the ensuing violence in Lakhimpur Kheri that day. Ashish Mishra was named prime accused and the Special Investigation Team investigating the incident had noted that the incident was a “planned conspiracy.” Mishra was given bail by the Allahabad high court on February 10 – which coincided with the first phase of elections to the Uttar Pradesh assembly.

The families of the farmers have sought a stay on this bail order, saying the verdict was unsustainable in the eyes of law as there has been no meaningful and effective assistance by the state to the court in the matter. The petitioners have also argued that the charge sheet against Ashish was also not produced, nor did the court consider it.

Senior advocate Dushyant Dave and advocate Prashant Bhushan appeared for the petitioners, LiveLaw has reported.

Dave told the apex court that the high court had been “misdirected” on the principles of granting bail, especially considering that a trial court had earlier refused Ashish bail.

“See what has influenced him. Sufficient material has come on record to pin him down in chargesheet. FIR isn’t sacrosanct, investigation is important,” Dave said.

Bhushan informed the court of an alleged brutal attack on one of the prime witnesses.

“After bail was granted to him (Mishra), one of the prime protected witnesses was brutally attacked. The people who attacked him said, ‘Now that BJP has won election they’ll take care of him’,” Bhushan said.

This is not the first time that the Supreme Court has told the Uttar Pradesh government to grant protection to witnesses in this case.

The apex court on October 26, 2021, had given a similar direction, asking the state government to record the statements of other relevant witnesses before judicial magistrates under section 164 of the CrPC.

Days before this, observing that the probe into the Lakhimpur Kheri violence should not be an unending story, the Supreme Court 20 had rapped the state government, saying the Adityanath dispensation was “dragging its feet.”

Lakhimpur Kheri: SC to Hear Plea Challenging the Bail of Ashish Mishra

A bench headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana took note of the submission of lawyer Prashant Bhushan, appearing for some farmers, that there was an attack on one of the prime witnesses of the case.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday said it would set up a bench to hear on Wednesday a plea challenging the grant of bail by the Allahabad high court to Ashish Mishra, son of Union minister Ajay Mishra, in connection with the Lakhimpur Kheri violence that left eight people, including four farmers, dead.

A bench headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana took note of the submission of lawyer Prashant Bhushan, appearing for some farmers, that there was an attack on one of the prime witnesses of the case.

“The people who attacked the witness threatened by saying now that BJP has won, they will take care of him,” Bhushan said, adding that other co-accused are also seeking bail relying on the Allahabad high court order granting bail to Ashish Mishra.

The CJI said he would constitute the bench which had heard the case earlier and list it for hearing on Wednesday.

A bench of the CJI and Justices Surya Kant and Hima Kohli had earlier heard the case pertaining to the incident that had left eight people, including four farmers, dead and had appointed a former judge of the Punjab and Haryana high court, to monitor the probe.

On March 11, the top court had agreed to list for hearing on Tuesday the plea seeking cancellation of Mishra’s bail in the case.

Also watch: Watch | ‘Khalistanis Responsible for Lakhimpur Kheri Violence’: UP BJP MLA

A single-judge bench of the high court, on February 10, had granted bail to Mishra who had spent four months in custody.

Three family members of farmers who were killed in the violence have sought a stay on the February 10 bail order of the high court, saying the verdict was unsustainable in the eyes of law as there has been no meaningful and effective assistance by the state to the court in the matter .

Recently, another plea seeking cancellation of bail of Ashish Mishra was filed by advocates Shiv Kumar Tripathi and C.S. Panda on whose letter the apex court had taken suo motu cognisance of the incident.

On October 3 last year, eight people were killed in Lakhimpur Kheri during violence that erupted when farmers were protesting against Uttar Pradesh deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya’s visit to the area.

Four farmers were moved down by the SUV. A driver and two BJP workers were then allegedly lynched by angry farmers.

Also read: Lakhimpur Kheri: Fact Finding Team Says Police’s Role ‘Reprehensible’, Criticises Govt Response

A journalist also died in the violence that triggered outrage among opposition parties and farmer groups agitating over the Union government’s now-repealed farm laws.

On November 17 last year, the top court had appointed Justice Rakesh Kumar Jain, former judge of the Punjab and Haryana high court, to monitor the probe by the Uttar Pradesh SIT.

The plea for cancellation of Mishra’s bail has been filed by farmers, Jagjeet Singh, Pawan Kashyap, and Sukhwinder Singh, through Bhushan.

The plea said, “The lack of any discussion in the high court’s order as regards the settled principles for grant of bail is on account of lack of any substantive submissions to this effect by the state as the accused wields substantial influence over the state government as his father is a union minister from the same political party that rules the state.”

The impugned order is unsustainable in eyes of law as there has been no meaningful and effective assistance by the State to the court in the matter contrary to the object of the first Proviso to Section 439 of Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, which provides that in grave offences notice of bail application should ordinarily be given to the public prosecutor.

(PTI)

Farmers’ ‘Rail Roko’ Protest Affects 160 Trains at 184 locations

The protest was called by farmers demanding the dismissal and arrest of Union minister Ajay Mishra in connection with the Lakhimpur-Kheri incident.

New Delhi: Nearly 160 trains have been affected at 184 locations due to the six-hour ‘rail roko’ protest called by the Samyukta Kisan Morcha’s (SKM) over the Lakhimpur-Kheri incident.

According to India Today, 63 trains have been stopped before the destination, 43 trains cancelled and one train has been diverted due to the protest.

The protest also hindered the schedule of 50 trains, Railways’ chief public relation officer told PTI.

 

The trains that have been affected in the Northern Railway zone include the Chandigarh-Ferozepur Express. Its scheduled departure from Ludhiana was 7 am, but has been stranded there due to a blockade in the Ferozpur-Ludhiana section, the official told the news agency.

The New Delhi-Amritsar Shatabdi Express was halted near Shambu station as protesters blocked railway tracks near Sahnewal and Rajpura.

In Rajasthan, the agitation affected train movement in Hanumangarh and Sriganganagar of the Bikaner division.

An Northern Western Railway spokesperson said rail traffic on Bhiwani-Rewari, Sirsa-Rewari, Loharu-Hisar, Suratgarh-Bathinda, Sirsa-Bathinda, Hanumangarh-Bathinda, Rohtak-Bhiwani, Rewari-Sadulpur, Hisar-Bathinda, Hanumangarh-Sadulpur and Sri Ganganagar-Rewari sections was affected due to the agitation.

Also read: The Lakhimpur Kheri Incident Didn’t Occur by Chance, It Was a Long Time Coming

The Bathinda-Rewari Special train and the Sirsa-Ludhiana Special train will remain cancelled on Monday, he said, adding the route of Ahmedabad-Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra Special train has also been changed.

The train which departed from Ahmedabad on Saturday will run on the changed route via Rewari-Delhi-Pathankot to Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra, he said.

The SKM, an umbrella body of farmer unions that is spearheading the agitation against the Union government’s three agricultural laws, had said “protests will be intensified until justice is secured” in the Lakhimpur Kheri case.

The SKM had said that all train traffic would be stopped from 10 am till 4 pm on Monday during the ‘rail roko’ protest over the demand of the dismissal and arrest of Union minister Ajay Mishra in connection with the Lakhimpur Kheri case.

Four farmers were killed in Uttar Pradesh’s Lakhimpur Kheri on October 3 after they were mown down by a vehicle, allegedly driven by Ajay Mishra’s son Ashish Mishra. Four other people were killed, including two Bharatiya Janata Party workers, a journalist and Ajay Mishra’s driver.

A first information report against Ashish Mishra alleged that he was in one of the vehicles, an allegation denied by him and Ajay Mishra.

Ashish Mishra was arrested in the case on October 9, a week after the incident.

(With inputs from PTI)

Ten Days Later, a Senior BJP Leader Meets Kin of Party Worker, Driver Killed in Lakhimpur Incident

Uttar Pradesh law minister Brajesh Pathak visited the family of BJP worker Shubham Mishra and Union minister Ajay Mishra’s driver Hariom Mishra who were killed during the October 3 violence.

New Delhi: Ten days after the October 3 Lakhimpur Kheri incident, a senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader on Wednesday met the families of a party worker and the driver of Union minister Ajay Mishra who were among those killed in the violence.

Uttar Pradesh law minister Brajesh Pathak arrived in the district without any official protocol and visited the family of party worker Shubham Mishra in Shivpuri locality of Lakhimpur and driver Hariom Mishra in Parsehra Khurd village under Phardhan (Kheri) police limits, party sources told PTI.

The law minister avoided interaction with the press during his visit in Lakhimpur Kheri. But when contacted later, he told PTI over the phone that he had gone to extend condolences and pay his tributes.

“We are with the families of all the deceased. It is a very unfortunate incident and the guilty will be punished after an impartial inquiry,” he said.

According to the PTI report, he assured medical help and treatment to the parents of one of them who are not well.

“The families have not made any demands but we are with the families of all the victims. We also assured them of impartial action in the matter,” he said, adding that he will visit the third victim soon.

Eight people, including four farmers, two BJP workers, a Union minister’s driver and a journalist, were killed and 12-15 people were severely injured in the violence that had erupted in Tikonia village in Lakhimpur Kheri district on October 3. The farmers were allegedly knocked down by a car carrying BJP workers travelling to welcome UP deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya to an event in the area.

Shubham Mishra, another BJP worker Shyam Sundar, and the Union minister’s driver Hariom Mishra were allegedly lynched by the farmers.

Also read: In Lakhimpur Kheri, BJP Proves India Has No Rule of Law Today

Shubham Mishra’s family has alleged that he was made a “sacrificial goat” in the incident, and demand “martyr status” from the saffron party, The Wire reported.

The Wire visited Hariom Mishra’s family, which lives in a village named Parsehra Bujurg in Lakhimpur Kheri’s Fardhan, roughly 100 km from the spot of the violence. He was the sole breadwinner in his family. His father has been sick for the past decade, and his medicine costs sometimes amount to as much as Rs 10,000 per month. Mishra’s third sister is yet to be married.

Although Hariom’s boss, minister of state for home affairs Ajay Mishra, promised to visit the family the next day, he never showed up. However, the family said that he has assured them of taking care of his sister’s marriage by providing them with Rs 1 lakh, when required. Local BJP MLA Yogesh Verma had come to meet the family earlier.

According to the Indian Express, state law minister Pathak has promised to fulfil their demands, including the issuance of “arms licence, status of BJP martyr and a fair investigation in their killings”.

UP law minister Brajesh Pathak (in glasses, white) with kin of a BJP worker killed in the Lakhimpur Kheri incident. Photo: Twitter@brajeshpathakup

However, the family of Shyam Sunder Nishad, who was the BJP ‘mandal mantri’ for the Singahi area in Lakhimpur Kheri, told the daily no one contacted them regarding Pathak’s visit to the area. Journalist Raman Kashyap’s family also told the newspaper that no one had contacted them about the senior BJP leader’s visit.

Pathak told the Indian Express that he will visit the families of Nishad and Kashyap, and the farmers, as soon as the situation normalises in that region.

Pathak’s visit coincides with a delegation of Congress leaders, including Rahul Gandhi, meeting President Ram Nath Kovind in the national capital and demanding immediate dismissal of Ajay Mishra over the Lakhimpur Kheri violence.

Also read: Ahead of UP Polls, Lakhimpur Kheri Unites Opposition Against BJP Like Never Before

While some district-level BJP leaders have visited the homes of the two party workers and the Union minister’s driver, Pathak is the first notable personality to do so.

A sum of Rs 45 lakh each was also given to the families of the two BJP workers and the minister’s driver as compensation, an amount equal to that provided to the kin of the four farmers and the journalist.

A week after the incident, the UP Police on October 10 arrested Union minister Ajay Kumar Mishra’s son Ashish Mishra in connection with the incident. He was named in a first information report following allegations that he was in one of the vehicles that mowed down the farmers protesting over UP deputy chief minister Maurya’s visit.

The Opposition has criticised the ruling party for the delay in arresting the Union minister’s son, and called the state law minister’s visit as “just a formality” after so much pressure has been built by the Opposition leaders.

(With PTI inputs)

Watch | Lakhimpur Kheri, Ashish Mishra and PM Modi’s Visit to Lucknow

As Uttar Pradesh occupies headlines, a close look at the politics at play.

Uttar Pradesh is once again in the headlines, the reason this time is the loss of lives in Lakhimpur Kheri. It’s alleged that Ashish Mishra, son of Minister of State for Home, Ajay Mishra, drove a car over protesting farmers, causing the death of four of them.

Sharat Pradhan in The Wire’s show Lucknow Central sheds light on the issues at play.

Watch | Lakhimpur Kheri: BJP Union Minister’s Son Ashish Mishra Arrested in Murder Case

Ashish Mishra is accused of ramming his car into protesting farmers, resulting in the death of four people and injuries to several more.

Union minister of state for home Ajay Mishra’s son Ashish Mishra has been arrested in the Lakhimpur Kheri violence case. Ashish Mishra is accused of ramming his car into protesting farmers, resulting in the death of four people and injuries to several more. Ashish was called by the police for questioning on Saturday, after which he was arrested.

Eight people lost their lives in the violence, including two BJP workers, Ashish Mishra’s driver and a journalist.

The Wire‘s Mukul Singh Chauhan discusses Ashish Mishra’s arrest and more in this video.

Lakhimpur Kheri: Editors Guild Demands Court-Led SIT Probe into Journalist’s Death

In a statement, the Guild noted that there are “competing versions” in the media on whether the death was caused by bullet wounds or not.

New Delhi: The death of TV journalist Raman Kashyap in the Lakhimpur Kheri violence is shocking and raises many questions, the Editors Guild of India (EGI) said on Tuesday and demanded that a separate probe be conducted by a court-led special investigation team to ascertain the circumstances under which he died.

“EGI is shocked by the death of Raman Kashyap… He was killed along with eight others in the violence that erupted after some vehicles were driven through the protesting farmers allegedly under the instructions of Ashish Mishra, son of Union minister of state, Ajay Kumar Mishra,” the EGI said.


Kashyap was reporting on the events of the day when – in what the EGI called a “horrific incident” – the VIP convoy ran through protesting farmers, killing some of them.

From Kashyap’s house in Nighasan village, The Wire has exclusively reported on his family’s reaction to the death and their complaint that his role in covering the event was responsible for his death.

In a statement, the Guild noted that there are “competing versions” in the media on whether the death was caused by bullet wounds or not. It also labelled the incident as a terror attack intended to scare farmers.

“In what is clearly a terror attack meant to spread fear amongst the farmers, the killing of Kashyap raises many questions. There are competing versions about Kashyap’s death including a version that claims he died of bullet wounds,” it added.

The EGI said an independent inquiry is, therefore, needed to establish the cause of the TV journalist’s death.

“The Editors Guild demands that the death of Kashyap be separately probed by a court-led special investigation team to ascertain the circumstances of his death and also attempt to recover and use the footage of his camera to build the sequence of events leading to his death,” the EGI said.

The Editors body also expressed concern over the varying versions of the incident in different sections of media.

“The EGI is concerned about the varying versions of the incident in different sections of the media. It is imperative for the media to report the facts and not versions,” it said.

‘Neither Shown FIR, Nor Allowed to Meet Counsel in UP Police Custody’: Priyanka Gandhi

Chhattisgarh CM Bhupesh Baghel was meanwhile prevented from leaving the Lucknow airport to enter Uttar Pradesh where he said he wished to meet Priyanka Gandhi Vadra.

New Delhi: Uttar Pradesh police registered a case and arrested Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra over apprehension of breach of peace, while Chhattisgarh chief minister Bhupesh Baghel was prevented from coming out of the city airport to meet her.

Uttar Pradesh has seen widespread protests over the Lakhimpur Kheri violence and the government has imposed several prohibitive orders around the state.

Detained on her way to Lakhimpur Kheri, Vadra has been in custody for a day already. She has said that no notice or copy of the FIR has been provided to her even after her 38-hour detention and that she was not allowed to meet her legal counsel.

Vadra

In addition to the case against Vadra and 10 others under sections related to preventive detention “due to apprehension of breach of peace,” Uttar Pradesh police has also filed a case under Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) sections 151, 107, 116 (all related to preventive detention due to apprehension of breach of peace) against Uttar Pradesh Congress chief Ajay Kumar Lallu and party leader Deependra Hooda.

“Total 11 persons have been arrested by us. On Monday around 4.30 am, Priyanka ji was stopped while on her way to Lakhimpur Kheri. We told her that you should not go there as the situation is not fine and section 144 CrPC is in effect. She did not listen to us and in proper security presence, we had to take her to a local guest house,” said Hargaon station house officer (SHO) Brijesh Kumar Tripathi, according to Indian Express.

“These are preventive sections. Once we get assurance that there would not be violation of peace by them these sections will be removed,” Sitapur Sub-divisional Magistrate Pyare Lal Maurya said.

Vadra said her counsel had been standing at the gate of the compound since Tuesday morning.

“Presently I am not going into the details of the completely illegal physical force used on my colleagues and me at the time of my arrest as this statement serves merely to clarify the continuing illegality of my confinement at the PAC compound in Sitapur, UP,” she said.

“I have not been served with any order or notice. Nor have they shown me an FIR. I have not been produced in front of a magistrate or any other judicial officer either. I have also not been allowed to meet my legal counsel who has been standing at the gate since morning,” the Congress leader also said.


Gandhi Vadra has been kept in detention since Monday morning after she wanted to meet the families of the victims of the Lakhimpur clashes.

She said she has seen a portion of a paper on social media in which the authorities have named 11 people, including eight who were not even present at the time she was arrested.

In fact they have even named the two persons “who brought my clothes from Lucknow on the afternoon of October 4”, she said.

Vadra said she has been placed under arrest as verbally informed to her by the arresting officer DSP Piyush Kumar Singh, CO City, Sitapur, under Section 151 at 4.30 am on October 4.

Congress workers protest outside the 2nd Battalion PAC in Sitapur where Priyanka Gandhi Vadra is allegedly detained on her way to Lakhimpur Kheri. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire

“At the time I was arrested I was travelling within the district of Sitapur, approximately 20 km from the border of district Lakhimpur Kheri which was under section 144. However to my knowledge section 144 was not imposed in Sitapur,” she said.

She said she was travelling in a single vehicle with four other persons, two local Congress workers, Rajya Sabha MP Deepender Hooda and Sandeep Singh and no security car or Congress workers other than the four persons were accompanying her.

“I was then driven to the PAC compound, Sitapur accompanied by two female and two male constables. Having been brought to the PAC compound, no further communication regarding the circumstances or the reasons, or the sections under which I have been charged have been communicated to me by the UP Police or administration until now-38 hours later at 6.30 pm on October 5, 2021,” she said.

A number of Congress workers have come out in support of her and have demanded her immediate release so that she can visit the families of the violence victims and share their grief.

Congress workers also staged a candle march outside the guest house in Sitapur where she has been kept. They took out the march in solidarity with her and the farmers protesting in Lakhimpur this evening.

An image from the Lucknow airport, tweeted by Baghel. Photo: Twitter/@BhupeshBaghel

Baghel

Baghel sat on a dharna at the Chaudhary Charan Singh Airport after he was stopped from going to the Uttar Pradesh Congress office and Sitapur, where Vadra is detained.

Eight people died and several others were injured on Sunday in a clash. Four of the dead were farmers, who were allegedly knocked down by vehicles driven by BJP workers travelling to welcome Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya to an event in the area. It has been alleged that one of the cars had Union minister Ajay Mishra’s son in it. However, the minister has denied it.

Also read: The Lakhimpur Kheri Incident Didn’t Occur by Chance, it Was a Long Time Coming

“I am being stopped from going out of Lucknow airport without any orders,” Baghel wrote in a tweet, in which he posted a photo of him sitting on the floor at the airport.

“Why am I being stopped? I am not going to Lakhimpur where there are prohibitory orders in place. I am only going to PCC (Congress office),” he asked the police personnel.

Baghel uploaded footage of him attempting to reason with police.

Talking to mediapersons at the airport, Baghel said he does not plan to go to Lakhimpur Kheri but to the Congress office where he was scheduled to address a press conference later in the day and to meet the party national general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra at Sitapur.

The Uttar Pradesh government had on Monday itself asked the Lucknow airport authority not to allow Chhattisgarh chief minister and the Punjab deputy chief minister who had to visit Lakhimpur Kheri in view of the violence that erupted there.

Also watch | Lakhimpur Kheri: Priyanka Gandhi and Akhilesh Yadav Take On UP Government

“After the incident in Lakhimpur, the district magistrate has imposed prohibitory orders there to maintain law and order. It is requested that you should not allow Chhattisgarh CM and Punjab deputy CM at the CCS Airport in Lucknow,’ Additional Chief Secretary, Home, Awanish Kumar Awasthi had said in a letter dated October 3 to the Airport Authority of India (AAI).

Prevented from going into Uttar Pradesh as well, Punjab Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi on Tuesday held a silent protest at Gandhi Smarak Bhawan in Chandigarh. He said he will meet Union home minister Amit Shah and raise the Lakhimpur Kheri incident.

(With PTI inputs)

Note: This report is being updated with news as it comes.

Family’s Complaint Says Dead Reporter ‘Shot At’ For Filming VIP Convoy that Killed Farmers

Raman Kashyap’s family has also alleged that he died due to negligence and that the police failed in its duty to rush him quickly to a hospital.

Nighasan, Lakhimpur Kheri: Sitting on a cot in his house, Ram Dulare Kashyap reads the newspaper which contains details on the death of his 35-year-old son, Raman. It is the morning of Tuesday, October 5.

As the internet remains shut for the third consecutive day in Lakhimpur Kheri district, in the aftermath of the violence on Sunday that took the lives of eight people, Ram Dulare is irked that he is unable to send photos of his son’s last rites to relatives. The internet was restored only on Tuesday evening.

The last rites took place on Monday, October 4, at around 4 pm, after the post-mortem was concluded at the local district hospital.

The ‘Hindustan’ newspaper. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire

The violence that took place in Lakhimpur Kheri’s Tikunia on Sunday is still top news. The headline on Ram Dulare’s paper, Hindustan, says “Khiri me sharton ke saath shaanti bahal” (‘With conditions met, peace prevails’).

The report says that the area is finally peaceful after farmers ended their protests and agreed to perform the last rites of the deceased farmers. 

This came after Union minister Ajay Kumar Mishra’s son, Ashish, whom the farmers have held responsible for the violence, and others, were booked by the police.

The Uttar Pradesh police registered an FIR on the basis of a farmer’s complaint, and named Ashish and others in connection with offences under 22 sections, including murder and criminal conspiracy.

A small blurb on the corner reads, “Eight people lost their lives in the violence.”

Ram Dulare says that even though he and his two other sons are farmers, his deceased son should not be treated the same as the others who lost their lives during the violence because Raman was a journalist. 

“He was not there to protest, or support anybody. He went there as a reporter to report the incidents. He was killed while doing his job and should be treated like that,” he stated.

Raman Kashyap’s father, holding his two children. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire.

Sunday

Raman Kashyap was a reporter with Sadhna news channel and had gone to Tikunia on Sunday after receiving a message on a media group. The message was an update on hundreds of farmers gathering to protest the visit of local MP and Union minister of state for home Ajay Mishra (known to his supporters as “Teni”), and UP deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya. 

Mishra, in a statement on the number of BJP workers killed on Sunday, had also included Kashyap in the list. 

Locals at the site of the violence told The Wire that a programme called ‘Dangal’ is held every year in October to honour Mishra’s deceased father. 

Farmers have alleged that Mishra’s son, Ashish, was heading the convoy of three cars that ran over farmers, killing four and injuring several. The minister has denied the allegation and said that his son was not present at the spot where the violence occurred. Out of the eight people killed that day, four were farmers. 

While there has been no official confirmation, it is being reported that the four others killed include a driver and two BJP workers who died after farmers allegedly retaliated to the protesters’ deaths and set vehicles on fire.

With no official statement yet on the deaths of non-farmers, reports also said that a ninth person had died. However, ADG (law and order) Prashant Kumar confirmed to The Wire that the actual toll was indeed eight.

Also watch | Lakhimpur Kheri: Priyanka Gandhi and Akhilesh Yadav Take On UP Government

On Sunday, Ram Dulare started worrying when his friends who lived nearby returned from Tikunia but Raman was nowhere to be found. His phone was switched off. 

Late at night, a distressing call from the nearby police station alarmed the family. Ram Dulare, along with his two younger sons, Pawan and Rajat, one of his sons-in-law and a brother, rushed to the Lakhimpur district hospital and saw Raman’s dead body.

Pawan told The Wire that the family has submitted complaints to the local police station at Nighasan and also at Tikunia, where the incident occurred, alleging that minister Mishra’s son, Ashish, was responsible for the journalist’s death. 

“Eyewitnesses said because of the coverage of the car [that mowed down farmers], the journalist was fired at and footage of the incident contains sound of the gunshots too,” said the complaint, a copy of which The Wire has obtained.

The Kashyap family’s police complaint.

The family told The Wire that Raman had severe injuries on his body and head. They are now waiting for the post mortem report.

Roughly 50 metres away from Raman Kashyap’s house, a stone structure engraved with the minister’s name stands proudly. 

The board outside Kashyap’s house. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire.

Police

Sunil Maurya, a local reporter and neighbour of Raman Kashyap in Nighasan, says he was a few hundred metres away when the violence escalated. Maurya says he could hear the sounds of the vehicles hitting the farmers.

“But the police did not do anything to stop the cars,” he says. 

Surdeep Singh Channi, another journalist who runs his own digital news channel, UC News, says he was present when the vehicles rammed into people. 

“I, along with a few other journalists, were covering the farmers’ protest when we suddenly saw three cars rushing towards us. The car rammed into a few people, and to save myself, I jumped to the side of the road. Because of this, I also sustained injuries,” he told The Wire.

Also read: Lakhimpur Kheri: ‘Video of Incident’ Goes Viral; Families Demand Autopsy Reports Before Cremation

However, immediately afterwards, he left the spot along with two injured farmers for first aid at a nearby hospital. When he returned, he could not find Raman Kashyap anywhere. 

“I waited for Kashyap till evening, so we could go back home together. Later, I got the news that he had died,” he says. 

Raman Kashyap leaves behind his wife, Aradhana, his three-year-old son, Abhinav, and 11-year-old daughter, Vaishnavi. He was the eldest among his two brothers and sister. Raman’s two brothers are farmers.

Kashyap’s 3-year-old son. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire.

Vaishnavi, who studies in Class 6, is unconvinced that her father will not return. She looks at the cars passing by and asks her uncle, Pawan, innocently, “Is it him?” 

Pawan says three-year-old Abhinav still thinks that his father is out on a short trip and will come back soon with samosas for him and his sister.

‘Negligence’

Kashyap’s family says he only joined the news channel two months ago and was also a teacher at a local school. 

His friend, Umesh Pandey, says that the police were not fully prepared to handle the situation, despite indications that a lot of people were going to gather.

“One of my friends had said that there was a huge possibility of violence during the protest. If a normal person could tell that the situation can get so bad, why couldn’t the police anticipate it in advance and act accordingly?” Pawan also asks.

Kashyap’s family and friends. To the left is Pawan. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire

“Our family’s main problem is with the local Tikunia police. First, they did not do enough to ensure the safety of people who were around the area, and secondly, they did not provide first aid to my brother,” he says. 

When Pawan spoke to the driver of the ambulance in which Kashyap was taken to the hospital, he learned that at least two health centres were passed before he was finally taken to a hospital. 

“They spent ages just on the road, instead of getting first aid treatment for him.  I believe that my brother died due to negligence as he could not get the required medical treatment. The police were doing their duty, but could have also fulfilled their duty as human beings by helping the victims with timely medical aid,” he told The Wire.

‘A journalist’

The family has demanded that compensation of Rs 50 lakhs be paid to his family, along with a government job for Kashyap’s wife. “The SDM has told us that the administration will listen to us and help us out,” Raman’s father says.  

SDM Om Prakash Gupta, when contacted by The Wire, say that they are still “waiting for directions” from the UP government before taking any steps. 

“We have sent reports of the deceased and the injured from our side. No special arrangements have been made for Raman Kashyap. He will be put into the same bracket as everybody else who has lost their lives,” he says.

Pawan says that if his brother is put into the same bracket, it is unlikely that the family will receive compensation, as many farmers have lost their lives during the ongoing farmers’ protest, but none have been compensated yet. 

His father too, says that his son “died a reporter,” and should be treated as such. 

Party politics

Ram Dulare, along with his entire family, have been BJP voters all their lives.

“We were never active campaigners for the party; we were more like silent voters. Despite being farmers, we supported the BJP silently. But we are not so sure anymore,” Ram Dulare said.

Raman Kashyap’s mother, Santoshi Devi, says that she does not know “too much” about politics. But she is clear that the programme involving the ministers should have been cancelled when it faced resistance from farmers.

“The programme could have been cancelled if the farmers had a problem with it. What was the big deal? Why put people at risk just because of a programme?” she asks.

Aradhana, Raman’s wife, is in no condition to speak. “I would not have let him go if I knew it would be so dangerous. How could I let him go into such a dangerous situation?” she asks, still in shock. 

Aradhana Kashyap. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire

Looking at their wedding photos, Aradhana says her husband was a loving father and partner. 

Raman and Aradhana’s wedding photos. Photo: Ismat Ara/ The Wire

“I cooked him dal chawal, and he left for the battleground where he lost his life. If I had known that it would be the last meal he was going to have, I would have made him something better.”

Watch | Lakhimpur Kheri: Priyanka Gandhi and Akhilesh Yadav Take On UP Government

The Uttar Pradesh government has said a retired high court judge will conduct an inquiry into the incident.

The Uttar Pradesh government has said a retired high court judge will conduct an inquiry into the Lakhimpur Kheri incident in which a car, allegedly belonging to the convoy of Union minister Ajay Mishra’s son’s convoy, mowed down a group of farmers, killing eight and injuring many more.

Along with this, the Yogi Adityanath government has also announced financial assistance of Rs 45 lakh to the families of the four farmers killed in the incident and a government job to one member of the family. Rs 10 lakh will be given to the injured farmers.

Opposition leaders Akhilesh Yadav of the Samajwadi Party and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra of the Congress were detained by the police after they attempted to reach the place where the killings occurred.

Arfa Khanum Sherwani of The Wire discusses the incident in detail.