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Report Alleges Officials Orchestrated Mosque Survey Unrest in Sambal

By KT NEWS SERVICE • 2025-07-03 • 5 min read

NEW DELHI: A fact-finding report has exposed what it describes as a calculated attempt by authorities in Uttar Pradesh to engineer communal violence in Sambhal, where a mosque survey in November 2024 ignited deadly unrest.

The 114-page report, “Sambhal: Anatomy of an Engineered Crisis — Myth, Violence, and the Weaponisation of Faith in a Muslim-Majority City”, jointly released by the Association for Protection of Civil Rights (APCR) and Karwan-e-Mohabbat, warns that the crisis could turn Sambhal into “the new Ayodhya.”

According to the report, the sequence of events was set in motion by a local court’s sudden order on 19 November 2024 to survey the 16th-century Shahi Jama Masjid, following a petition by Hindu plaintiffs claiming the mosque was built over a demolished Hari Har temple, believed to be linked to Lord Kalki.

The order was passed within hours of the petition’s filing, without hearing the mosque management, in violation of legal norms and the Places of Worship Act, 1991.

Officials, including the district magistrate and police chief, oversaw the survey, which began the same evening. A second survey on 24 November, accompanied by a crowd shouting “Jai Shri Ram”, saw the mosque’s ablution tank drained — an act viewed as desecration that sparked mass protests.

Instead of engaging with community leaders or calming tensions, the police responded with lathi-charges, teargas, and gunfire.

Five Muslim men, including minors, were killed, dozens injured, and over 85 arrested. Eyewitnesses and videos cited in the report dispute police claims that protesters were armed, pointing instead to excessive and unlawful police force.

The violence, the report states, did not end on that day. In the following weeks, Muslim-majority neighbourhoods were subjected to raids, mass arrests, demolition drives, and punitive electricity crackdowns — moves described as “retaliatory bulldozer justice”.

Alleged encroachments were selectively targeted, and a large police outpost was hastily built at the mosque’s entrance. New Hindu temples were “discovered”, cleaned, and reopened for worship in Muslim localities, accompanied by official rituals and public statements portraying Muslims as historic usurpers.

Key Findings of the Report

The report highlights how administrative actions, combined with communal narratives, have systematically sought to rewrite Sambhal’s history. The town — home to 350,000 to 400,000 people of Turkic descent and historically peaceful despite its symbolic link to Kalki mythology — now faces state-backed efforts to recast it as a site of Hindu grievance.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath’s speeches have further inflamed tensions, the report notes, with exaggerated accounts of past riots and inflammatory calls for Muslims to “relinquish” mosques claimed to have been built over temples.

The Supreme Court has intervened, staying further surveys and trial proceedings, and sealing the survey report pending the Allahabad High Court’s decision. Yet, the report warns, Sambhal remains gripped by fear.

Victim families report intimidation, surveillance, and forced statements. Community members say routine government actions — from checking property records to electricity bills — have become tools of coercion.

Harsh Mander, who wrote the report’s foreword, compared the unfolding situation to the early stages of the Babri Masjid crisis.

“This is not a clash between Hindus and Muslims of Sambhal,” the report stresses. “It is a conflict between the state and its Muslim citizens.”

District Magistrate Rajender Pensiya dismissed the report as “a farce,” defending the administration’s actions as lawful measures to maintain peace.

But rights groups and legal experts argue that Sambhal’s crisis underscores the urgent need for upholding secular principles and protecting minority rights against the weaponisation of history and myth.

Timeline: How Sambhal Was Pushed to the Brink

19 November 2024

 24 November 2024

 25–30 November 2024

 29 November 2024

 December 2024 – March 2025

 January 2025

The full report can be read here.

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