Current Affairs

Kasganj: Year After Chandan Gupta’s Murder, Brother Appeals To PM Modi To Allow Tiranga Rally On Republic Day

Madhur Sharma

Dec 31, 2018, 10:53 AM | Updated 10:53 AM IST


 Youth protests in New Delhi in February 2018 against the killers of Chandan Gupta, who lost his life in Kasganj violence (K Asif/India Today Group/Getty Images)
Youth protests in New Delhi in February 2018 against the killers of Chandan Gupta, who lost his life in Kasganj violence (K Asif/India Today Group/Getty Images)

Vivek Gupta, brother of 19-year-old Chandan Gupta who was killed in Uttar Pradesh’s Kasganj district during a ‘Tiranga Yatra’ last Republic Day, has written to prime minister Narendra Modi, chief minister Yogi Adityanath, and the Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah.

The letter, a copy of which is with Swarajya, seeks permission to hold a Tiranga yatra on the upcoming Republic Day. It also draws attention towards the state government’s unfulfilled promise to build a ‘Chandan Chowk’ in memory of his brother.

In his letter, Gupta writes that he and others had applied for permission to carry out a Tiranga yatra on Independence Day earlier as well, but officials had denied them permission. Their request is reportedly not being heeded this time too.

Gupta told Swarajya that he is yet to receive responses for his previous letters.

Gupta said that the Tiranga yatra last during last year’s Republic Day was not a first. “The yatra was being taken out for at least last eight years in the city on the Independence Day and Republic Day, and there was never an issue with that,” he said.

“There was also never an issue of taking any permission. It was only last one year that we had to seek a permission to carry out the yatra”, he added.

He said that government officials refuse permission claiming that they do not have approval from their superiors. Last year, security was also beefed up across the city to maintain law and order.

“If such a large force can be deployed for stopping the yatra, then why can’t it be deployed so that we peacefully carry out the yatra?” Gupta said. “We are willing to carry out the yatra through the route prescribed by the administration, and are even willing to cut it short, but the administration is not heeding our request at all.”

The denial of permission is not the only point of grievance for Chandan Gupta’s family. Not only the promise of ‘Chandan Chowk’ but also a government job to a member of the family has not been fulfilled yet. There is also the issue of compensation.

“Our family got 20 lakh in compensation, whereas the person whose shop was burnt in the violence got 22 lakh. Our child’s death is therefore worth less than a burnt shop,” Gupta told Swarajya.

Madhur Sharma is a post-graduate student of journalism at the Indian Institute of Mass Communication, New Delhi, and a history graduate from Delhi University. He tweets at @madhur_mrt.


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