March 19, 2016

MAN TIED TO HINDU VIGILANTE GROUP AMONG 5 HELD IN DEATHS OF 2 MUSLIMS

[The police were cautious about identifying a motive in the killings, noting that members of the same vigilante group confessed to extorting money from Muslim cattle traders on at least three earlier occasions. Mr. Singh also noted that one of the assailants had a personal grudge against the family of at least one of the victims.]

By Suhasini Raj
NEW DELHI — A member of a Hindu vigilante group organized to protect cows was among five men arrested on Saturday in connection with the murder of two Muslim cattle traders, who were beaten and then hanged from a tree, the police said.
The two victims were leading oxen to be sold at an animal fair before dawn on Friday when they were spotted by Awadhesh Sahu, a Hindu man, said Purushottam Singh, a police officer in Latehar, a district in the eastern India state of Jharkhand.
Mr. Sahu said he believed that the two were leading the animals to slaughter and summoned seven friends to intercept them on the highway. The group surrounded the cattle traders, Mohammad Majloom Ansari, 32, and Mohammad Ibrahim Ansari, 13, took them into the forest and beat them, in an assault that lasted about 90 minutes, Mr. Singh said.
The police were cautious about identifying a motive in the killings, noting that members of the same vigilante group confessed to extorting money from Muslim cattle traders on at least three earlier occasions. Mr. Singh also noted that one of the assailants had a personal grudge against the family of at least one of the victims.
But elements of the case were reminiscent of a killing that occurred in September, when vigilantes from Save the Cow, a Hindu activist group, gathered a mob of about 1,000 people and lynched a Muslim man who was rumored to have slaughtered a cow.
That case drew international attention, in part because members of the governing Bharatiya Janata Party condemned the police for filing murder charges, and because Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared hesitant to publicly condemn the violence.
The five detained suspects have confessed to the crime, the police said, and three other people are being sought by the police. Among the men still being sought, Mr. Singh said, is one who made inflammatory statements and “whipped up the passion of the remaining seven” so that “they could not control their emotions.”
The men arrested in connection with the killings include a farmer, a clerk, the owner of a cement shop and the owner of a small school. Mr. Singh said previous threats by the Hindu group ended once Muslims singled out for intimidation paid money to the group’s members, “but this time, their passions flared” and “they killed them.”
“At this point, we can confirm that at least one of them is a member of a cow vigilante group,” Mr. Singh said.

Ellen Barry contributed reporting.

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[The rankings are are based on perceptions of visitors to the website and includes some relevant data from World Health Organisation and other institutions, Numbeo.com says about the pollution index. The index is an estimation of the overall pollution in the city with the biggest weight given to air pollution and then to water pollution.]

 


In a latest finding which may not surprise many, Kathmandu has been ranked the third most polluted city in the world, according to Pollution Index 2016.

According to latest pollution index published by Serbia-based research website Numbeo.com, Nepal’s Capital city sits in the third position of the pollution ranking with a pollution index of 96.66. The last pollution ranking published in the middle of 2015 had also placed Kathmandu in the third position while in the beginning of 2015 Kathmandu was in the fifth position.
The rankings are are based on perceptions of visitors to the website and includes some relevant data from World Health Organisation and other institutions, Numbeo.com says about the pollution index. The index is an estimation of the overall pollution in the city with the biggest weight given to air pollution and then to water pollution.
The dismal performance in pollution index was expected as a 2014 report of the Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment shows that Kathmandu air contains 400 micrograms of particulate matter up to 10 micrometres in size per cubic metre or the PM10 is 400µg/m3. However, the maximum limit for PM10 set by the National Ambient Air Quality Standards is 120µg/m3. Likewise, another 2014 report by Clean Energy Nepal shows that Kathmandu air contains 260 micrograms of particles smaller than 2.5 micrometres in size per cubic metre or the PM2.5 is 260µg/m3 against maximum limit of 40µg/m3. The air quality samples for both results were taken from Putali Sadak.
The existing situation of water pollution is equally troubling. According to a research conducted by Bagmati Civilisation Integrated Development Committee in October last year, water in the Bagmati River at Minbhawan contains 0.53 milligrams of dissolved oxygen per litre or the DO is 0.53mg/l. Comparing this to the fact that any aquatic animal cannot survive in water with less than 3mg/l shows how polluted our rivers are. Likewise, chemical oxygen demand of water--total measurement of all chemicals in the water that can be oxidised--at the same place is 128.44mg/l and biochemical oxygen demand--the amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic biological organisms--is 68.3mg/l. The effluent standard for industries for both COD and BOD is less than 30mg/l.
In the latest pollution index, Tetovo city of Macedonia has been ranked the most polluted city in the world followed by Egypt’s capital city Cairo. Other Asian cities Philippines’s capital Manila, Noida and Delhi of India, Guangzhou of China and Ho Chi Minh City of Vietnam also make the top 10.

In the Pollution Index for Country 2016, Nepal sits in the 17th place with Egypt as the most polluted country in the world.