A Congress delegation will visit Sambhal today
Sambhal: On Monday, a Congress delegation led by Ajay Rai, the party’s Uttar Pradesh president, will visit Sambhal, the scene of a stone-throwing incident on November 24.
“It was resolved by all of the party workers that we would all remain at our party headquarters. It is fortunate for us that we remained here today and made decisions on our future course of action and strategy.Considering that they have been deployed in great numbers outside, we shall attempt to follow the Gandhian path.Our employees will attempt to depart by 10:30 a.m.
Their duty is to stop them, and they will stop us. Our task is to leave, and we will make every effort to do so. Ajay Rai told the media, “There is only one reason to go: the injustice and atrocities they have committed there, the way people were shot in the head and beaten up there. The government is afraid of all these things to which the government will be exposed.”
Last night, the head of the Uttar Pradesh Congress and several Congress officials remained at the party office in Lucknow.
A three-member judicial team inspected the Shahi Masjid location in Sambhal, Uttar Pradesh, where a stone-pelting incident occurred on November 24 under heavy security.
The committee members visited the locations and discussed the situation with authorities and locals. Security guards escorted the panel as they visited the region affected by the incident.
A Samajwadi Party (SP) team was barred from entering the Sambhal area, which is rife with violence, earlier on November 30.
Akhilesh Yadav, the leader of the SP, said that the government was dictating the administration’s remarks.
“A team from the Samajwadi Party was en route to Sambhal. We are all in favor of justice and peace. The government orders the administration to make its remarks. “Ensuring justice for the people is the duty of the government,” he said.
Since a local court ordered an inspection of the mosque on November 19, tensions in Sambhal have been high.
Four people were killed in clashes between protesters and police over the court-ordered assessment of the Jama Masjid.
A petition asserting that the mosque location was formerly a Harihar temple prompted the assessment.