Northeast Delhi violence has so far claimed the lives of 38 people, as more people with injuries approached hospitals for treatment. According to authorities, the violence in the most affected areas as ebbed, but has not completely subsided. Thousands of people have now begun picking up pieces of their shattered livelihoods in the area.
Four days after communal clashes that began in northeast Delhi over the amended citizenship law and spiralled into bloodshed, arson, and looting, the body of a man was found in a drain in Johri Enclave and there were scattered incidents of vehicles and shops being set on fire in Maujpur, Bhajanpura and other areas.
While there was no precise figure for the number of arrests, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta told the Delhi High Court that 48 FIRs were lodged in relation to the violence.
Delhi Police transferred the riots probe to the Crime Branch and formed two Special Investigation Teams.
The GTB Hospital in Dilshad Garden, where many of the 200 injured in the riots that broke out on Monday are being treated and where scores of people lined up outside the mortuary to claim the bodies of their loved ones, recorded five more deaths.
Eleven more deaths were reported on Thursday, taking the total death toll to 38, a senior Delhi Health Department official said.
Northeast Delhi violence: What Opposition says
Meanwhile, the opposition Congress took the issue to the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Accusing Home Minister Amit Shah of "abdication of duty", a Congress delegation led by party chief Sonia Gandhi urged President Ram Nath Kovind to call for his resignation and remind the Centre of its "raj dharma".
"The situation is returning to normal. We are here to reassure people that we are with them," newly appointed Special Commissioner SN Shrivastava, who visited the affected areas, told reporters.
Battle-scarred and desolate with scorched, blackened walls, the ashen remains of vehicles, glass shards and bricks, several fires still burnt in the most mixed neighbourhoods of the national capital's northeastern edge.
Shops, pharmacies, and other establishments were closed and people stayed indoors unless it was imperative to step out. Several families were seen leaving with whatever they could salvage from their vandalised homes.
As they tried to come to terms with the losses to their shops, workshops and in some cases fruit and vegetable carts, residents recounted the violence of the night before.
In Yamuna Vihar, three to four rioters came around 4 am on Thursday to burn vehicles.
"One of them was holding a bucket in his hand. He started pouring some liquid on three vehicles. One of the cars caught fire. We raised an alarm after which they fled," a local said, saying groups of people in the neighbourhood stay up all night to keep watch.
A few kilometres away, a charred board at a private school in Brijpuri read, "Welcome to a very happy school".
The 52-year-old Arun Modern Senior Secondary School looks no less than a cemetery, said an official, looking around at the damage which he estimated to be over Rs 70 lakh.
The GTB Hospital also presented a picture of despair with some sobbing uncontrollably and others maintaining a stoic silence with barely held back tears as they waited at the hospital to receive the bodies of those killed in the communal mayhem.
Among those who lost their lives was 22-year-old Ashfaq Hussain, an electrician who got married only 10 days ago and was shot while he was returning home in Gokalpuri after attending to a complaint. Still trying to wrap his head around what had happened, his relative held up a smiling photograph of his bride Tasneem Fatima.
Relatives of 35-year-old Mudassir Khan from Kardampuri said they have been coming to the mortuary for two days to claim his body.
"Today, we have been waiting here since 8 am and the post-mortem is finally underway," said Arbaaz Khan.
Mudassir, who worked in a scrap manufacturing unit, was outside his house on Monday when he was attacked by a mob, his family said. He sustained a bullet injury on his head and was declared brought dead by doctors at GTB hospital.
Northeast Delhi violence: Kejriwal announces monetary help to families of victims
Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal announced his government will give Rs 10 lakh to the families of those who lost their lives and those seriously injured will get Rs 2 lakh.
He also said the government will bear the cost of the treatment of those injured in the violence and admitted to private hospitals.
Asked about the alleged involvement of his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) councillor Tahir Hussain in the riots, Kejriwal said, "If those involved in the riots are found to be from the AAP, give them double punishment."
Hussain has denied any involvement in the riots or the killing of an Intelligence Bureau staffer Ankit Sharma whose family accused him of being behind the murder, saying they are "baseless accusations".
Police later registered an FIR against Hussain on a complaint by Sharma's father.
Meanwhile, the government hit back at comments on the violence by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) and by "few individuals" as well as by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.
"We have seen comments made by USCIRF, sections of the media and a few individuals regarding recent incidents of violence in Delhi. These are factually inaccurate and misleading, and appear to be aimed at politicising the issue," MEA Spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said.
"The statements which have come out of OIC are factually inaccurate, they are selective, they are misleading. There is an effort on the ground, to restore normalcy, to create confidence," Kumar said.
Taking cognizance of the concerns of students taking board exams, the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) will conduct fresh exams unable to appear for papers in other parts of the national capital due to the violence in northeast Delhi, officials said.
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