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Rampur Tiraha firing case

The Rampur Tiraha firing case refers to police firing on unarmed Uttarakhand statehood activists at Rampur Tiraha (crossing) in Muzaffarnagar district in Uttar Pradesh in India on the night of 2 October 1994.

The activists, part of the agitation for the separate state of Uttarakhand, were going to Delhi to stage a dharna, a sit-in protest at Raj Ghat on Gandhi Jayanti, the following day, when alleged unprovoked police firing in the night of 1 October led to the death of 6 statehood activists and some women were allegedly raped and molested in the ensuing melee. Mulayam Singh Yadav was Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, when the incident occurred.

Case history

Legacy

The incident left an indelible mark on the agitation for the state of Uttarakhand and eventually led to the partition of the state of Uttar Pradesh in 2000.[citation needed]

The Uttarakhand State government has built a 'Shahid Smarak' (Martyr's Memorial) at the Rampur Tiraha, the site of the incident, and a memorial function is observed here, each year.[7]

Further reading

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e State of limbo[usurped] Frontline, October, 2008 (The Hindu).
  2. ^ a b Uttarakhand firing case The Times of India, 2 Jul 2007.
  3. ^ CBI court in 1994 firing case Hindustan Times, Press Trust of India, 16 June 2007.
  4. ^ Rampur Tiraha firing The Times of India, 31 Jul 2003.
  5. ^ UP cops convicted in 1994 firing case The Times of India, 20 Nov 2003.
  6. ^ acquittal of accused in Rampur Tiraha incident Deccan Herald, 8 August 2005.
  7. ^ a b Khanduri committed to statehood agitationists' dreams Daily Excelsior, 7 Oct 2007.

External links