Hundreds of thousands of devotees of Lord Shiva undertake a
pilgrimage on foot to holy sites in the northern states of
Uttarakhand, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh (U.P.) during the period to
collect water from the river Ganga, which is then offered at
local Shiva temples.
Devotees also follow dietary restrictions, such as no meat,
during their journey - a practice that has been cited by police
officers to justify the directions given earlier this week.
Police in Muzaffarnagar district of U.P. said the order,
communicated orally, was given every year during the holy month
and was "nothing new".
"This time one saint requested us that it should be done in
order to avoid eating anything which might corrupt their efforts
during this holy month," Inspector Rakesh Kumar, Muzaffarnagar
police's public relations officer, told Reuters.
Reuters was unable to immediately verify this was an annual
request.
Leaders of opposition groups fear the move will create a "deeper
communal divide" and lead to Hindus avoiding eateries employing
Muslims.
"Such orders are social crimes, which want to spoil the peaceful
atmosphere of harmony," opposition Samajwadi Party's chief
Akhilesh Yadav said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Pawan Khera, spokesperson for the main opposition Congress,
asked in a post on X, whether the direction was "a step towards
economic boycott of Muslims".
Located in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state which is
ruled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Muzaffarnagar witnessed communal
clashes in 2013 that killed about 65 people, mostly Muslims, and
displaced thousands.
Although Modi was sworn-in for a rare third straight term last
month with the support of his allies, his BJP lost 29 seats in
U.P., where one-fifth of the 240 million population is Muslim.
BJP and Modi's federal government have, on multiple occasions,
been accused by civil society, opposition groups, and some
foreign governments of making decisions aimed at fanning
religious discrimination.
Modi, however, says he does not oppose Islam or Muslims and is
"resolved" to not discriminate between Hindus and Muslims.
(Reporting by Saurabh Sharma, writing by Sakshi Dayal; Editing
by Sharon Singleton)
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