Dera chief conviction: Trail of death and destruction descends on Panchkula

Violence by supporters of Dera chief brought back the chilling memories of Jat agitation

Press Trust of India  |  Panchkula (Haryana) 

Trail of death and destruction descends on Panchkula
Vehicles set alight by Dera Sacha Sauda sect members burn in Panchkula, Haryana, on Friday, August 25, 2017. Deadly riots have broken out after a court convicted Dera chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh of raping two of his followers. Photo: AP/PTI

A trail of death and destruction descended on Panchkula, otherwise a peaceful city of Haryana, as soon as the self-styled godman Singh was convicted by a Panchkula's special in a rape case.

The violence and arson by the supporters of the Sacha Sauda chief brought back the chilling memories of last year when this city, on the outskirts of Chandigarh, witnessed agitation by the Jats over the reservation.


Followers of Ram Rahim, who had gathered here in thousands over the past four days, went on a rampage, hurling stones, vandalising media vehicles and setting afire several vehicles, many among them two wheelers.

At least 12 deaths were reported so far and the count is likely to go up.

Thick smoke billowed high in the sky as terrified local residents locked themselves inside their homes as scenes outside shook even the toughest of the tough to the bone.

"My motorcycle has been burnt down. I had parked it near the road and gone nearby for some work," said a young man working with a private company.

A steady stream of ambulances was bringing scores of injured people to the local civil hospital.

It was not clear if the injuries were due to police action or violence by followers.

At least one person was seen lying motionless by the roadside.

Many women among the followers who had gathered here gave a tough time to the police and paramilitary personnel.

Immediately after the here convicted the Sacha Sauda chief, many of his followers broke police barricades and security cordons.

At least three OB vans of private television channels were damaged. Two vans were overturned by a mob.

judge Jagdeep Singh, while holding the 50-year-old chief guilty of rape, said the quantum of sentence would be pronounced on August 28, counsel HPS Verma told reporters outside the

Punjab and High had come down heavily on the government for its apparent inability to maintain law and order in the state ahead of the verdict and pulled it up for not imposing Section 144 CrPC correctly to prevent the huge gathering of followers in

The bench had asserted that the did not want a repeat of a situation similar to the one witnessed in February last year when violence during Jat reservation stir in claimed 30 lives and property worth hundreds of crores of rupees was damaged by arsonists.

Today's violence which broke out here was third major incident after last year's Jat agitation violence and November 2015 when there was a two-week tense standoff between some of the self-styled 'godman' Rampal's followers and the police in Hisar during which five women and a child had died.

Rampal had later been arrested after the tense standoff between some his supporters and the police after close to 15,000 of his followers were evacuated from the sprawling premises.