Patna: A town in Bihar, eastern India, on April 4 witnessed sectarian tension after some miscreants tore religious posters a day before a Hindu festival.
According to police, security forces have been deployed in Nawada, about 150 km southeast of the state capital of Patna. The situation in the town is under control, they claimed.
Hundreds of people blocked national highway 31 to protest and demanded action those involved in tearing the posters, twocircles.net reported.
The situation took an ugly turn when some youth threw stones at those demonstrating near downtown Nawada.
“Both slogan shouting groups clashed and pelted stones at each other. They broke the glasses of vehicles and set a few shops ablaze,” Superintendent of Police Vikas Barman said.
“When the situation went out of control, the police opened fire to disperse the mob,” he added.
Barman said the situation is tense but under control now. “The district administration is fully alert.”
According to a police official, federal minister Griraaj Singh, who is the BJP MP from Nawada parliamentary constituency, was present in the town at the time of the incident.
“Soon after being informed about the incident, Singh reached the site and appealed to the people to maintain peace and harmony,” he said.
Nawada district magistrate Manoj Kumar said a preliminary inquiry suggests the dispute was a result of a report that religious posters were torn by some anti-social elements. It took a communal turn later.
“The administration has begun a probe into the matter and deployed adequate security forces at all sensitive places,” Kumar said.
Communal tension erupted in Nawada in 2013 after an altercation between a group of kanwarias (Hindu pilgrims) and another community over the menu of a roadside eatery.