"Not Possible For Police To Protect Everyone": Haryana Chief Minister Appeals For Calm
"If there is no amity, there is no security," Manohar Lal Khattar stated. There is no security if everyone insists on opposing each other. It is impossible for the police, the army, or you and me to safeguard everyone."
Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar said today that it is impossible for the police to safeguard everyone in a state and urged the people to preserve peace and harmony. Since Monday, Haryana has seen a surge of ethnic violence that have claimed six lives. The violence has now reached the national capital's gates.
"There is no security if there is no amity." There is no security if everyone insists on opposing each other. "It is impossible for the police, the army, or you and me to protect everyone," he stated.
"A specific environment is required to ensure security." There must be friendship and good connections... for this, we have peace committees... If there is a problem, we can take action. They've marched for peace... travel anyplace in the globe, the cops can't protect everyone. "We have two lakh people but only 50,000 cops," he continued.
Mr Khattar also stated that the state had no information about Monu Manesar, the individual accused of being at the core of the violence that caused the communal confrontations on Monday.The Rajasthan government has filed a case against him," Mr Khattar informed the journalists today.I have informed the Rajasthan government that we are willing to assist them in locating him.The Rajasthan Police is now looking for him. We have no information about his location. "How can we say whether they have or have not?" he said.Monu Manesar has been on the run since February for the murder of two men in Rajasthan's Jodhpur. However, he is claimed to have distributed an offensive film, which enraged several individuals.
The incident was sparked by rumors that he was spotted at the Vishwa Hindu Parishad's religious march in Nuh. Some others hurled stones at the parade, and things quickly got out of hand. More than a hundred cars were burnt and vandalized after midnight, including a mosque.Ripples from Monday's incident have reached the affluent neighborhoods of Gurugram, which is next to Delhi and has been placed on high alert.
Early on, Gurugram issued prohibitory orders prohibiting big gatherings. However, however, a crowd of 200 people defied the restriction and set fire to a row of cafes and shanties near a residential society, burning them to cinders.To avoid arson, the selling of loose fuel or diesel has been prohibited.Today, the right-wing Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal are marching through Delhi, causing enormous traffic bottlenecks.