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 बेंगलोरमा आक्रमणको हल्ला, नेपाली विद्यार्थी र कामदार पनि त्रासमा
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Posted on 08-17-12 7:56 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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FRIDAY, 17 AUGUST 2012 09:38 नागरिक
 
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मणि दाहाल, काठमाडौं, भदौ १- भारतको बेंगलोरमा पढ्दै गरेकी स्वयम्भू बिजेश्वरीकी बबिता अधिकारीले अर्को साता सुरु हुने परीक्षाको तयारी राम्रोसँग गर्न सकेकी छैनन्।   
असम राज्यमा भएको साम्प्रदायिक हिंसाका कारण बेंगलोरमा आफूमाथि आक्रमण हुनसक्ने भन्दै भारतको पूर्वोत्तर क्षेत्रका हजारौँले शहर छाड्न थालेपछि अधिकारीलाई परीक्षाभन्दा पनि सुरक्षा चिन्ताको विषय बनेको छ।
भारतको पूर्वोत्तर राज्यका बासिन्दाजस्तै देखिने भएकाले अध्ययन र रोजगारीका लागि बेंगलोरमा रहेका अधिकारीजस्ता हजारौं नेपाली चिन्तित भएका छन्। 'अगस्ट २३ बाट परीक्षा हुँदैछ, छाडेर फर्कन खोजेका थियौं,' इन्डो-एसिया एकेडेमीमा नर्सिङ बिएसस्सी प्रथम सेमेस्टर पढ्दै गरेकी अधिकारीले बिहीबार साँझ नागरिकसँग टेलिफोनमा भनिन्, 'कलेज प्रशासनले सुरक्षाको आवश्यक व्यवस्था मिलाउँछौं भनेपछि नफर्कने भयौं, तर हल्ला चलेपछि डर लागिहाल्दो रहेछ।'
कलेज प्रशासनसँग कुरा गर्दा विश्वविद्यालयले परीक्षा नसार्ने भएको र आक्रमणको हल्लामात्र भएकाले त्यसको पछि लागेर भविष्य नबिगार्न सुझाव आएपछि नफर्कने निर्णय गरेको अधिकारीले बताइन्। 'अन्य कलेजमा अध्ययन गर्ने नेपाली विद्यार्थीसँग पनि कुराकानी भइरहेको छ,' उनले भनिन्।
कलेज प्रशासनले परिस्थिति शान्त नहुन्जेल बाहिर ननिस्कन सुझाव दिएको उनले बताइन्। उनले आफू पढ्ने कलेजमा मात्र करिब साढे २ सय नेपाली विद्यार्थी भएको बताइन्।
नागरिकसँग कुरा गर्दै सफ्टवेयर इन्जिनियरका रूपमा बेंगलोरमा काम गर्दै आएका झापाका सुशील पोखरेल र महावीर जैन अस्पतालमा नर्सका रूपमा काम गर्दै आएकी काठमाडौं पेप्सीकोलाकी स्मिता ढकाल र चिकित्साशास्त्र पढ्दै आएका कलंकीका विवेक घिमिरेले पछिल्लो अवस्थाले सुरक्षाको चिन्ता थपेको बताएका छन्।
भारतको पूर्वोत्तर राज्यका हजारौं बासिन्दाले आफूमाथि आक्रमण हुनसक्ने त्रासमा बेंगलोर छाडेका छन्।
टाइम्स अफ इन्डियाका अनुसार बेंगलोरको रेल्वे स्टेसन पूर्वोत्तर राज्यका बासिन्दासहित नेपाल, भुटान र तिब्बतका नागरिकको भीड लागेकाले अस्तव्यस्त भएको छ।
बिबिसीसँग भारतका गृहसचिव आरके सिंहले पूर्वोत्तर राज्यका मानिसमाथि आक्रमण हुँदैछ भनी आएको विषय 'अफवाह' मात्रै भएको बताए। उनले भारतको कुनै पनि स्थानमा बस्ने पूर्वोत्तर क्षेत्रका नागरिकलाई कुनै खतरा नभएको जिकिर गरे। बेंगलोर प्रशासनले पनि 'अफवाह' मात्र भएकाले सुरक्षित रहन आग्रह गरेको छ।
'बेंगलोर प्रहरीका प्रमुखको नाममा सबैलाई आएको एसएमएसमा सुरक्षामा कुनै समस्या नभएको र अफवाहमात्रै भएको उल्लेख छ,' पोखरेलले नागरिकसँग भने।
असमका मुख्यमन्त्री तरुण गोगोइले पछिल्लोपटक महाराष्ट्रको पुनामा एक पूर्वोत्तर राज्यका विद्यार्थीमाथि आक्रमण भएपछि दक्षिणी भारतमा आक्रमणको त्रास फैलिएको बताएको पिटिआईले जनाएको छ।
पश्चिम रेल्वेले बिहीबार राति २ बजेभित्र बेंगलोरबाट पूर्वोत्तर राज्यमा जान २ हजार २० जनाले टिकट बुक गरेको जनाएको छ। घर फर्कन चाहनेका लागि बुधबारको बेंगलोर-गुवाहिटी एक्सप्रेसका अतिरिक्त दुइटा रेल व्यवस्था गरिएको थियो।

http://www.nagariknews.com.np/

 
 

 
Posted on 08-17-12 8:11 AM     [Snapshot: 27]     Reply [Subscribe]
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 Scared, but going home to reassure families, northeasterners say
 
 
 

 
 
 
Scared, but going home to reassure families, northeasterners say
Thousands of people from the northeast fled from Bangalore on Aug 16 as fear grew of a backlash over violence against Muslims in Assam and neighbouring Myanmar. (Reuters photo)
 

BANGALORE: They are between the age group of 18 and 35. Many are poor and hence, a vulnerable lot. They are not just scared about the rumours of threats to lives of natives of northeast, but are going home to reassure their worried parents.

Even on the third day of the northeasterners' exodus, the crowd did not seem to reduce at the Bangalore City railway station; rather more students and people belonging to the community thronged the stations to get a ticket and leave the city as early as possible. Even women and girls travelled standing in the trains all the way to Guwahati.

"I don't care if I have a seat in the train or not. I am happy that I have got ticket for myself and my six brothers are there to take care of me. I just want to reach home safely and see my parents," said Prerna Thakuri, native of Darjeeling in West Bengal. Prerna took the first special train to Guwahati which left Bangalore at 3pm.

She has her own readymade food-selling business in BTM and two of her brothers' work in a hotel. Many like her have just managed to take themselves and their luggage on the train and to them going home matters the most right now.

"I am afraid but not sure what is going on. My parents are worried, and even the situation in Assam is getting worse at this time. I only want to be with my parents and families and amid my own people," said Narul Bora, 27-year-old security officer of an industry in Jigani. He stays with his wife and two other families in the industrial area. Narul belongs to Sonitpur district in Assam and is going home only with the hope that he can come back soon.

However, many of them are scared and unsure whether they would ever return to Bangalore. They are afraid despite ministers, police, lawyers, ABVP and media assuring them that they would be safe. "I don't trust anyone. I have heard of some of the friends who have been beaten up or harassed by people of this state. Even my employer said that I should leave the city, which means that no one is going to care for us," said Raju Chetri, a labourer from Assam working in Bannerghatta.

"We would have stayed back if our employers would have assured us their support and help, but instead they also said that it is good if we leave the city for our own good. My mother is very worried, and I have three other siblings to look after. I think it's best for us to go home," said Anu Pradhan, native of Nepal who has been living in Darjeeling for decades. She works in a salon inside the Infosys campus in Electronic City. Her friends who stay with her near Electronic City also work in the same campus in food joints, or as salon employees and they work with a firm who is outsourced for such facilities in the campus.

Food served by IAC, RSS, ABVP

Even on Thursday, the ABVP camp remained open at the railway station, and members went around meeting various families, trying to inspire confidence in the northeast community people to stay back. They also served food for the people waiting at the railway station to get tickets to go home in the morning.

It was Sangh Parivar and India Against Corruption volunteers who served lunch for all of them. Even for those who had boarded the special train were all fed before they left the city. Few lawyers from city civil court had also come to the crowds to inspire the community people and shared their contacts, in case the community members feel threatened.

Techie reaches out to northeasterners

Abhishek Rajpal, a techie who leads a comfortable life reached out to northeasterners on Thursday. "It is so disturbing that I could not resist myself coming here and stopping them from leaving the place. If these people leave the city because of fear and rumours, it would instil a thought of regional bias against the people from northeast setting a bad precedent," said Rajpal. He hails from Bihar and is working here in a reputed multi-national corporation on Bannerghatta road.

"Most people working in secure offices and driving in hi-tech security fitted cars do not feel the anxiety of insecurity. But I could not remain unperturbed when my fellow countrymen are living in fear," he told TOI.

Rajpal spent the whole day at the Bangalore City railway station talking to the people waiting to catch a train only to convince them not to leave the city in fear.




 

 
Posted on 08-17-12 8:15 AM     [Snapshot: 45]     Reply [Subscribe]
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बेंगलुरु के बाद दूसरे शहरों से भी पूर्वोत्तर के लोगों का पलायन



 
NE people flee Bangalore
 
बेंगलुरु से पलायन करते पूर्वोत्तर के लोग
नई दिल्ली।। अपने ऊपर हमले की आशंका से डरे पूर्वोत्तर के लोगों का पलायन रुकने के बजाय बढ़ता ही जा रहा है। बेंगलुरु और हैदराबाद के बाद अब पूर्वोत्तर के लोग मुंबई, पुणे, चेन्नै समेत देश के कई हिस्सों से भाग रहे हैं। केंद्र और राज्य के नेताओं के अलावा स्थानीय प्रशासन की अपीलों के बावजूद पूर्वोत्तर के लोगों के मन में बैठा डर निकल नहीं पा रहा है।

पिछले महीने असम में बोडो और मुस्लिमों के बीच हुई हिंसा थी। उसके बाद मुंबई में मुस्लिम संगठनों द्वारा इसके विरोध के प्रदर्शन में हिंसा हुई थी। इस वक्त देश के कई हिस्सों में ऐसी अफवाहें फैल रही हैं कि पूर्वोत्तर के लोगों पर हमले किए जाएंगे। इन्हीं अफवाहों से डरे लोग पूर्वोत्तर के राज्यों में अपने घर लौट रहे हैं। इन अफवाहों के पीछे सोशल साइट्स पर शेयर की जा रही वे तस्वीरें भी हैं, जिनका इस मुद्दे से कोई लेना-देना नहीं है।

इस मुद्दे पर कैबिनेट की मीटिंग में भी चर्चा हुई। केंद्रीय गृह सचिव आरके सिंह ने भरोसा दिलाया है कि बेंगलुरु में स्थिति सामान्य है और पूर्वोत्तर के लोग पूरी तरह सुरक्षित हैं। उन्होंने कहा कि असम में भी हालात कंट्रोल में हैं और हम अफवाह फैलाने वालों को खोज निकालेंगे।

चेन्नै: चेन्नै में रहकर काम करने वाले पूर्वोत्तर के 3 हजार से ज्यादा मजदूर इगमोर-डिब्रूगढ़ एक्सप्रेस पकड़ने के लिए स्टेशन पर पहुंचे। इनमें से केवल 300 लोग ही ट्रेन पर चढ़ पाए। बाकी लोग बेंगलुरु से आने वाली ट्रेनों का इंतजार कर रहे हैं।

बेंगलुरु: कर्नाटक के मुख्यमंत्री जगदीश शेट्टर ने लोगों को सुरक्षा का पूरा भरोसा दिया है लेकिन पूर्वोत्तर के लोग बेंगलुरु छोड़कर जा रहे हैं। बुधवार रात तक 6800 लोग स्पेशल ट्रेनों के जरिए बेंगलुरु से जा चुके थे। होम मिनिस्टर आर. अशोक ने कहा, 'हम लोगों से निवेदन कर रहे हैं कि वे बेंगलुरु से न जाएं। कोई आपको छू भी नहीं सकता। सरकार हर वक्त आपके साथ है। अगर आपको डर लग रहा है तो आप पुलिस को कभी भी फोन कर सकते हैं। 

हैदराबाद: हैदराबाद में एग्जाम देने आए मणिपुर और अरुणाचल प्रदेश के 6 लड़कों को कुछ स्थानीय लोगों ने धमकी दी और उन लड़कों ने वापस लौटने के लिए फ्लाइट बुक करा ली। 6 लड़कों में से एक पामहेबा ने बताया, 'मैं सुबह नाश्ता करने के लिए निकला। 7 लोकल लोगों ने मुझसे पूछा कि क्या मैं असम का हूं। मैंने बताया कि मैं मणिपुर का हूं। उन्होंने कहा कि वे सभी स्टेट्स एक जैसे हैं और मुझे तुरंत वापस लौट जाना चाहिए। मेरे दोस्तों को भी कुछ लोगों ने डराया है। हमने लौटने का फैसला किया है।'

पुणे: गुरुवार रात तक पुणे से पूर्वोत्तर के करीब 2000 लोग जा चुके थे। रेलवे स्टेशन पर आरपीएफ और पुलिस की बड़े स्तर पर तैनाती की गई। रेलवे ने आजाद हिंद एक्सप्रेस में 2 और कोच लगाए।

असम: असम में गुरुवार को 2 घटनाओं में 19 लोग घायल हुए। कोकराझार के गोसाईगांव में कुछ बदमाशों ने 9 मुस्लिमों पर ऐसिड फेंका। बकसा के तामुलपुर में प्रदर्शनकारियों की गिरफ्तारी का विरोध कर रहे 10 बोडो लोग पुलिस के साथ हुई झड़प में घायल हो गए।

दिल्ली: नॉर्थ-ईस्ट के लोगों में फैले पैनिक के मद्देनजर दिल्ली में भी ऐहतियाती कदम उठाए जा रहे हैं। पुलिस कमिश्नर नीरज कुमार ने नॉर्थ-ईस्ट के लोगों को अफवाहों पर ध्यान न देने को कहा है। साथ ही भरोसा दिलाया है कि किसी भी तरह घबराने की जरूरत नहीं है। उन्होंने कहा, 'पुलिस हर लिहाज से चौकस है। फिर भी अगर नॉर्थ-ईस्ट के लोगों को कोई असुविधा, परेशानी या आशंका है, तो तुरंत पुलिस से संपर्क करें। पुलिस उनकी समस्या का तुरंत समाधान कराएगी।'

पुलिस कमिश्नर ने गुरुवार को इस मामले में अपने अफसरों को भी खास निर्देश दिए। उनके निर्देश पर जॉइंट कमिश्नर (नॉर्थ-ईस्ट मैटर्स) रोबिन हिब्बू ने नॉर्थ-ईस्ट के स्टूडेंट लीडर्स के साथ पुलिस मुख्यालय में मीटिंग की। डीसीपी-नॉर्थ और डीसीपी साउथ-ईस्ट ने दिल्ली में काम करने वाले नॉर्थ-ईस्ट के लोगों के साथ बैठक की।

 
Posted on 08-17-12 10:07 AM     [Snapshot: 207]     Reply [Subscribe]
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नेपाल मा जातीय दंगा मचाउन FUND गर्ने इंडिया लै आफ्नै ओखती को तितो स्वाद फेला परेको जस्तो छ |

 
Posted on 08-18-12 11:19 AM     [Snapshot: 694]     Reply [Subscribe]
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जस्तो कर्म गर्यो तेस्तै फल भोग्ने त हो नि ! फेरी यो हावा उत्तर तिर लाग्यो भने के होला ? माओ बादी ले रोपेको बिज संसारकै सबै भन्दा ठुलो बिउ होला ? यो भारतीय काण्डले मलजल छर्किने काम त गर्दैन ?

 
Posted on 08-20-12 9:41 AM     [Snapshot: 886]     Reply [Subscribe]
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Analysis - Clashes expose India's communal divide as elections loom

 
 
 
 
 
 

NEW DELHI | Sun Aug 19, 2012 10:27pm BST

(Reuters) - The anonymous text message on Bhumidhar Das' mobile phone was chilling: "Muslims will attack and kill our people after Ramadan. Return home."

Within hours, Das, a Hindu working at a car factory in the city of Pune, joined tens of thousands of fellow migrant workers returning to hometowns in the remote northeast after getting or hearing of similar messages.


 

Nearly 80 people have been killed and 400,000 displaced in fighting between Muslims and mostly Hindu Bodo tribesmen in northeastern Assam state in recent weeks. The mass flight was sparked by rumours that Muslims, a big minority in predominantly Hindu India, were seeking revenge for the Assam violence.

Normally, there is little fallout in the rest of India from bouts of violence in Assam, which borders Bangladesh and is one of seven states connected to the main bulk of the country by a 'chicken neck' of land. This time, however, the grisly scenes unfolding in the far-flung northeast may fan communal politics in a country where simmering tensions between Hindus and Muslims have often been exploited for electoral gain.

As India heads for national elections in 2014 amid a sharp slowdown in growth, religious politics, along with a loss of jobs and wealth, could be a key issue.

"The conflict in Assam is getting communalised," said Zoya Hasan, a political scientist at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University and former member of the National Commission for Minorities.

"Right-wing nationalist parties are cashing in on this by calling Assam's Muslims 'foreigners' and 'illegal Bangladeshi migrants' who threaten the fabric of Indian society. They are not going to let this go so easily, especially with elections coming up and will try to make this a Hindu-Muslim issue."

The state and other parts of the northeast are home to hundreds of tribes and ethnic groups. Violence usually stems from tribal rivalries, anger against Muslim settlers from Bangladesh or from insurgencies.

While religion-driven politics has taken a backseat in the last decade of India's economic boom, there are signs Muslim discontent over the violence is spreading. While parties across the political spectrum have condemned the recent bloodshed in Assam, divisive rhetoric has come from all sides.

In India's financial capital, Mumbai, massive protests by Muslims against events in Assam turned violent earlier this month, killing two people and wounding dozens. In Pune, the city where Das was working, students from the northeast were beaten. Unrest has also been reported in Lucknow and Allahabad in the north.

Rumours of Muslim retaliation at the end of the holy month of Ramadan this week have swirled, with threats of attacks on northeast Indians carried on social media and phone text messages.

As a result, more than 30,000 migrants from the northeast working in cities such as Mumbai, Pune, Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad rushed in terror back to their homes. How safe they will be there is open to question - two of those fleeing were killed and nine were injured on Sunday after they were pushed from a moving train.

The Interior Ministry said on Saturday most of the text messages and website images originated inPakistan, an Islamic state and India's arch-rival. Islamabad rejected the suggestion as "baseless and unfounded".

MASSACRES

In Assam, conflict between Bodo tribes and Muslims is not new. Decades of feuding over land rights and political power has often erupted into blood-letting, the worst of which was in 1983 when nearly 3,000 people were massacred.

Bodos say Muslims are illegal settlers from neighbouring Bangladesh who take their land, reducing them to a minority.

They point to a surge in the Muslim population, which is now better organised politically under influential leaders such as Badruddin Ajmal, whose party is the main opposition in the state of tea plantations and oilfields.

Muslims say they are not illegal immigrants and that they are being marginalised by Bodos, who are economically and politically stronger.

Over time, India's two main political parties - the secular Congress, which rules the state as well as in New Delhi, and the main opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) - have sought to benefit from conflict.

The BJP has often been accused of fomenting Hindu-Muslim violence. It supports the Bodos' claims and accuses Congress of allowing illegal immigration for electoral gains.

"The Congress Party ... does not have to import illegal immigrants to increase its votebank," Arun Jaitley, a senior BJP leader told parliament. "The government must stop this illegal immigration, the entire border must be fenced, the detection and deportation (of illegal migrants) must begin forthwith."

Congress says most Muslims in Assam are Indian citizens.

In Assam's squalid displacement camps, hundreds of thousands of Bodos and Muslims languish, too fearful to return home after seeing their villages razed, possessions looted or neighbours shot or hacked to death.

Weeks after clashes broke out, convoys of paramilitary trucks still drive through the main roads in this lush rice-growing region. A night curfew remains in place.

IDENTITY POLITICS

Fathoming what happened in Assam is critical for India, whose history is scarred with episodes of slaughter by citizens divided by ethnicity and religion.

Centuries of rule by medieval Muslim invaders drove a wedge between Hindus and Muslims, a suspicion that has only grown since the bloody birth of Pakistan, which was carved from Muslim-majority areas of India in 1947.

Up to one million people were killed in Hindu-Muslim violence when Pakistan was created, which many Indians still refer to as "Partition".

About 170 million Muslims live in India. Many are disenchanted, their alienation partly fuelled by the demolition of the 16th-century Babri mosque by Hindu zealots in 1992 and communal riots in Gujarat state in 2002, when around 2,500 people, mostly Muslims, were hacked and burnt to death.

The BJP rose to prominence in the early 1990s on the back of a Hindu revivalist movement. Its leaders led the demolition of the Babri Mosque.

"The BJP is known to play up the communal issue on a much larger scale than Congress. They have an upper caste Hindu agenda," said Asghar Ali Engineer, chairman of the Centre for Study of Society and Secularism.

This has not automatically translated into Muslim support for Congress, which had enjoyed the Muslim vote in the years after independence from Britain.

Congress has often been accused of failing to protect Muslims, and a substantial portion of that vote has waned, going to new regional parties instead.

The Gujarat riots, however, saw the tide turn again in favour of Congress in the 2004 elections, as Muslims saw the party as the only one capable of stopping the BJP and its "Hindutva" or Hindu nationalist agenda.

Making up about 14 percent of India's 1.2 billion people, Muslims are the biggest minority group. Their vote is critical in key swing states such as Assam, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in the north, West Bengal in the east and Kerala in the south.

With a large chunk of middle class moderate Hindus put off by the Gujarat riots, the BJP has tried to reinvent itself - balancing the need for a softer Hindutva plank with a broader agenda of development and good governance.

Its leaders such as Narendra Modi, chief minister of Gujarat, under whose watch the 2002 riots took place, have in recent years adopted a softer line as they jostle to become the party's prime ministerial candidate in the 2014 elections.

ASSAM IMPACT

Just how the Assam violence is dealt with could be a deciding factor in votes in certain states.

"Incidents such as what we have witnessed in Assam are read very keenly by the Indian voter. He watches how things are managed or, in this case, mismanaged and exploited," said M.J. Akbar, editorial director of India Today magazine.

There is likely to be a return to anti-Muslim rhetoric and issues such as illegal migration as right-wing parties struggle to form vote-winning policies with an electorate fed up with an opposition that is seen as keener to bash the government than work with it as the economy slows sharply.

For Congress, the issue will be much more complicated, analysts said.

The party will have to consolidate Muslim votes won in the last elections in 2009, while at the same time reassure moderate Hindus who have been angered by the handling of the Assam violence.

"The way this violence took place, the killings and the massive displacement as well as the exodus of northeast people, is likely to lead to more polarisation between Hindu and Muslims," said Sabyasachi Basu Ray Chaudhury, political scientist at Kolkata's Rabindra Bharati University.

On Friday, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told migrants from the northeast they were safe, while adding that India's "communal harmony" was at stake.

Many from the northeast say they need more than just words of reassurance.

Two trains from Bangalore packed with around 4,000 people arrived in Guwahati, Assam's main city, over the weekend.

"I have left due to fear. My job is important, but my life and that of my family is more precious," said security guard Binod Boro, 30, who got down from a train onto an overcrowded platform, followed by his wife and their two-year-old daughter.

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/08/19/uk-india-politics-idUKBRE87I09Y20120819?feedType=RSS&feedName=worldNews


 


 
Posted on 08-20-12 9:43 AM     [Snapshot: 887]     Reply [Subscribe]
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बेंग्लोरमा दंगा फैलिने त्रासले नेपाली धमाधम घर फर्किदै
 
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एकै दिन सयभन्दा बढी फर्किए-
विक्रम गिरी, महेन्द्रनगर, भदौ ४- भारतको दक्षिणी क्षेत्र बेंग्लोरमा काम गर्दै गरेका नेपालीहरु त्यहाँ दंगा फैलिने त्रासले धमाधम घर फर्किन थालेका छन्। हिंसा फैलिने त्रासले नेपालीहरु दिनहुँ घर फर्किने क्रम बढ्दो छ। पश्चिमी नाका गड्डाचौकी भएर सोमबार एकै दिन सयभन्दा बढी नेपालीहरु घर फर्केका छन्। 
  आफूलाई असुरक्षित ठान्दै जागिर छाडेर झिटिगुन्टासहित उनीहरु घर फर्किएका हुन्।

बेंग्लोरवाट रेलमा ३६ घण्टाको यात्रा गरी भारतको राजधानी दिल्लीबाट बस चढी नेपालीहरु सीमावर्ती भारतीय शहर बनबासा पुग्न थालेका छन्। बनवासादेखी बैंग्लोर चार दिनको दुरीमा पर्छ। बैंग्लोरमा मजदुरी गर्न तथा पढ्न गएका नेपालीहरु साता यता घर फर्किन थालेका हुन्। घर फर्किनेको संख्या बढ्दै गएको इलाका प्रहरी कार्यालय गड्डाचौकीले जनाएको छ।

मुश्लिमहरुको ईद पर्व चलिरहेको र सकिएपछि दंगा फैलिने त्रासले फर्किन थालेका घर आएकाहरुले बताए। 
'बेंग्लोरबाट फर्किनेहरु त्रसित मुद्रामा भेटिए' इलाका प्रहरी कार्यालय गड्डाचौकीका प्रहरी नायव निरीक्षक नेत्र प्रसाद भट्टले भने, 'आक्रमणको त्रास फैलिँदै गएपछि फर्किनेको संख्या दिनहुँ बढ्दै छ।'

फर्किनेमा धेरैजसो सुदूरपश्चिम घर भएकाहरु रहेको उनले बताए।

'अछाम र बझाङका नागरिक बढी छन्' सई भट्टले भने, 'केही मध्यपश्चिमका जिल्लाका समेत छन्।' साता अघि मात्रै मजदुरी गर्न गएकाहरु समेत घर फर्किन थालेको उनले बताए।

केही महिनाअघि भारतको आसाममा दंगा फैलिएपछि त्यसको असर मुम्बई र बेंग्लोरमा समेत परेको छ। नेपाली र पूर्वोत्तर भारतका बासिन्दाहरु जागिर र सम्पत्तिको पर्वाह नगरी घर फर्किन थालेका छन्।

आफूहरु चढेको रेलमा ठूलो संख्यामा नेपालीहरु घर फर्केको मुकेशले बताए। घर फर्किनेमा बेंग्लोरमा पढ्दै गरेका नेपालीहरु समेत छन्। उनीहरु दिल्लीबाट जहाज र बसबाट घर फर्किन थालेका छन्।

ठूलो संख्यामा नेपालीहरु बेंग्लोर लगायतका दक्षिणी भेगमा मजदुरी तथा पढाइका लागि बस्दै आएका छन्।

'घर फर्किनेको तथ्याङ्क राख्ने गरेका छैनौं' गड्डाचौकीमा तैनाथ एक प्रहरीले भने, 'बेंग्लोरको अवस्थावारे जानकारी लिने काम मात्रै गरिरहेका छौं।'

 

 


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