Pune, Jun 7: The crackdown in the Pune hate crime case continues. The police are still looking for four more people involved in the murder of the 24-year-old IT professional, Mohsin Shaikh.
Meanwhile, days after Mohsin Shaikh was brutally murdered, Hadapsar has limped back to normalcy. But the incident has scared the residents of this area. "Peace has been disturbed. People have got scared. It was a peaceful area. This has never happened before," said a local. "The locals whether Hindu or Muslim live in harmony. It's outsiders who come and create differences," another resident added.
The question is as to what has changed in this quaint part of Pune. Few months ago, film student Kislay was attacked by members of the ABVP for screening Anand Patwardhan's film just after the murder of rationalist Narendra Dabholkar.
"What is happening in Pune is that people have normalised violence. People have accepted it as daily routine. It keeps happening. Like banning certain books or the other. Groups are mustering courage because the state isn't acting," Kislay said.
In 2004, over 150 activists of 'Sambhaji Brigade' ransacked the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute for helping American author James Laine. Laine had allegedly made objectionable remarks on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj.
In 2010, a political controversy over the statue of Shivaji's guru Dadoji Konddev led to violence in the city.
Is the murder of the 24-year-old IT professional an indicator of what not just this city but our country is bracing for? Pune is limping back to normalcy but the ripple effect of this crime doesn't appear to be diminishing. The question is as to how long can such radical groups and extremists be allowed to function.
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