Thumbing his nose at Mumbai police, a defiant Raj Thackeray today led thousands of Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) supporters in a march before holding a public meeting where he pitched for immediate ouster of the state home minister and city police chief for the August 11 violence at Azad Maidan.
Denied permission to hold a road march from Girgaum Chowpatty to Azad Maidan, Thackeray flexed his political muscles and mustered thousands of supporters on the beach at Marine Drive amid heavy police bandobust to protest last fortnight’s violence that claimed two lives but insisted it was not aimed at grabbing pro-Hindutva space.
Thackeray blamed outsiders for the August 11 violence and said Maharashtrians were not responsible for it.
“Attackers came from UP, Jharkhand and Bihar. I fear we will continue to suffer due to people from outside,” he told the public meeting at Azad Maidan, harping on his pet pro-Marathi theme.
“I am standing here to express solidarity with our brothers and sisters in the police force and the media and to demand immediate resignation of Home Minister R R Patil and police commissioner Arup Patnaik,” he said, launching a blistering attack on the two for failing to control the situation after violence erupted during a demonstration to protest alleged persecution of Muslims in Assam and Myanmar.
Though Mumbai police had granted MNS permission for the meeting at Azad Maidan, he was not given a go ahead for the road march apprehending breach of peace.
“They (Patil and Patnaik) have played with the morale of the police. Our policemen kept waiting for instructions to control violence. When a DCP got hold of a rioter, an abusive Patnaik told him to let off the offender,” Thackeray said.
“I am on the streets for my Marathi brothers and sisters who suffered in the attack. Today’s morcha is for the policemen, for the media and others who suffered,” he said, adding, “If they (home minister and police chief) have little shame, they should quit now.”
Though Thackeray’s show of strength is being seen by many as an attempt to claim a slice of the Hindutva political pie hitherto controlled by the Shiv Sena and the BJP, the MNS chief said, “I am not veering towards Hindutva. Maharashtra dharma is my only dharma.”
Referring to illegal migrants in the city, he waved a purportedly Bangladeshi passport at the crowd saying, “This is a single entry passport. It means once you come in, you need not go back.” He then dramatically flung the travel document into the crowd.
Attacking the state government, Thackeray demanded to know why it had not paid any compensation to the policemen injured in the August 11 attack in which two protesters were killed and 52 others injured, including 44 policemen besides those from the media.
“How do we expect them (policemen) to stand up and fight when such a thing happens next time,” he said.
He also targeted Samajwadi Party MLA Abu Azmi for allegedly giving an assistance of Rs 1.5 lakh to the families of protesters killed during the incident. “Abu Azmi is giving compensation to the rioters. Has he ever cared to inquire about the policemen injured in the brutal attacks,” he said.
Thackeray also wondered why there is trouble in Maharashtra when there are riots elsewhere and vice versa.
“When Babri Masjid was demolished, there were communal riots in Maharashtra. Days after the riots at Azad Maidan, there was trouble in Lucknow. What is the link?” he said.
Slamming the police authorities for denying him permission for the march, he said Raza Academy, the organisers of the August 11 protest, was allowed to hold the protest at Azad Maidan despite their “poor track record“.
“In 2006, during a protest by Raza Academy in Bhiwandi, two policemen were killed and their bodies thrown into burning buses. Still they get permission for a public protest.”