Patna, Nov
2: Bihar opposition leader Rabri Devi was arrested here Friday along with several
Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) legislators for disrupting law and order during a shutdown
called by the party to protest against the attacks on journalists by ruling Janata
Dal-United (JD-U) legislator Anant Singh and his henchmen. This
is the first time that Rabri Devi, a former chief minister and wife of Railway
Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav, has protested aggressively on the roads against the
two-year-old National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government led by Nitish Kumar. She
led hundreds of RJD workers and leaders from her official residence at Circular
Road to Bailey Road and was seen shouting slogans against the attacks on media
persons with a green flag in her hand. During
her protest, she said it was shameful that journalists were not safe and free
to work in the state. Rabri
Devi and other RJD legislators were arrested at Dak Bungalow square, the busiest
crossing in the heart of Patna. Normal
life was badly affected in the state with clashes between protestors and the police
reported from dozens of places. Nearly 3,000 protestors have been arrested across
the state during the shutdown called by the RJD. The
Congress, the Communist Party of India-Marxist Leninist (CPI-ML) and the Lok Janshakti
Party promptly expressed support to the RJD-sponsored strike. "Hundreds
of activists belonging to the opposition were arrested for disrupting law and
order. There were reports of clashes between supporters of the strike and the
police at several places across the state," A.R. Sinha, the state police
chief, told IANS. Schools
and business establishments were closed in most of the districts and only a few
buses plied on the roads. "Traffic
was paralysed due to blockade of roads and national highways at several places
by protestors," a police official said. Security
personnel were deployed in large numbers across the state to avoid any untoward
incident. President
of the Bihar Public School and Children's Welfare Association D.K. Singh said
that all the private schools remained closed Friday due to the shutdown. Anant
Singh and his supporters had beaten up two journalists who had come to interview
him and then attacked several more media persons when they protested against the
first attack Thursday. As
political parties condemned the brazen assault, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar ordered
the administration to act - albeit five hours late. The police arrested Anant
Singh and four others including his personal and official bodyguards. The
chief judicial magistrate here sent Anant Singh - who is seen as a terror in Bihar
and who faces over two dozen criminal charges including that of murder - to Patna's
Beur Jail until Nov 13. "The
state government was virtually forced to send Anant Singh to jail after the hue
and cry by media persons and opposition leaders," RJD leader Shakeel Ahmad
Khan said. It
all began when NDTV journalist Prakash Singh and his cameraman Habib Ali went
to Anant Singh's house for his reaction to allegations that he had raped and murdered
a young woman, Reshma Khatoon. The
woman had sent a letter to the chief minister, police officials and media persons
before her death, accusing Anant Singh, his associate Mukesh Singh and a bodyguard
of the legislator of raping her. Prakash
Singh and Habib Ali said they were held hostage for two hours and mercilessly
beaten by Anant Singh and his men. Both men were later rushed to a hospital. "Anant
Singh beat us mercilessly and also abused us," a shaken Prakash Singh said. According
to witnesses, when other journalists marched to Anant Singh's residence to denounce
the incident, they too came under attack. The
journalists said Anant Singh's men poured out of his house and beat them with
bamboo sticks. As the journalists fled, stones were thrown at them. Some supporters
of Anant Singh fired shots in the air. As
news of the attack spread, Nitish Kumar - who has always considered Anant Singh
a confidant - became incommunicado. He later said he would ask the Central Bureau
of Investigation (CBI) to probe the rape-cum-murder allegation against the JD-U
legislator. In
her letter to Nitish Kumar, Reshma, in her early 20s, had alleged that she faced
danger to her life. Reshma's
brother told a TV channel that his sister was raped and killed by Anant Singh.
He claimed that the legislator had told him that his sister's body had been dumped
at Patel Nagar, a middle-class locality. The
police later recovered the body of a young woman from the area, suspected to be
of Reshma, stuffed in a sack. Her letter was found with the body. Anant
Singh, a legislator from Mokama, is known as 'Chhote Sarkar' in the area. In 2004,
he had brandished an AK-47 rifle in public, although private possession of the
assault rifle is illegal. (IANS)
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