Nuh. Islamists attacked a peaceful Hindu procession on July 31. Since partition, Nuh has remained a hotbed of radical Islamic activities amidst the presence of organisations like Jamat. As a result, Nuh became the centre of crimes like forced conversion, beef trade, and cow smuggling.
This case whose details are making rounds of the internet is a classic example of how radicalised minds work. As per a report by the Hindi daily Dainik Jagran, an Islamist mob entered a hospital where victims of the violence were admitted.
They segregated the patients into two, based on their religions and attacked Hindus; this included women, children, and pregnant women.
The report says, on the day of the attack, an Islamist mob equipped with sticks and other weapons followed a Hindu man. To protect his life he rushed to the hospital nearby identified as Alwar hospital.
In the meantime, the mob set the vehicle of the doctor on fire, broke CCTV cameras installed outside the hospital, and then thrashed the man. They tore off his clothes and paraded him naked in the hospital.
When the miscreants entered the hospital some of them jumped into the terrace while others entered the campus. Those who entered the patient wards did a shocking act.
The Muslim mob asked names of the patients and only attacked those who were Hindus. They did this with women, children and elderly people as well. The mob did not stop there as they also attacked the doctors and staffers based on their religion.
A pregnant woman was also admitted to the hospital, the miscreants attacked her with a stick on her arms and legs. When the woman tried to escape, she was pushed and hence fell down.
After the mob violence, the hospital staff and doctors were so scared that they said nothing. At the same time, the scene of the mischief created outside the hospital has been captured in the camera installed outside.
The police identified the two accused as Nair and Anjum through the footage and arrested them.
https://www.jagran.com/haryana/mewat-ncr-nuh-violence-miscreants-beat-patients-and-health-workers-by-asking-religion-in-hospital-23489591.html