19-year-old beaten to death over ‘sacrilege’ charge in Punjab

Update: 2024-05-05 17:21 GMT

Ferozepur: A 19-year-old youth was beaten to death following an alleged sacrilege incident that took place at a gurdwara here on Saturday, police said.

Bakshish Singh, a resident of Talli Gulam village, allegedly tore some pages of the Guru Granth Sahib, the holy book of the Sikhs, after entering the premises of the gurdwara in Bandala village, they said.

His father Lakhwinder Singh said that Bakshish was mentally disturbed and was undergoing treatment for it.

Police have registered an FIR against the youth for the alleged sacrilege.

Bakshish’s father, however, called on the police to register a case against those who killed his son.

According to police, Bakshish allegedly tore some pages of the Guru Granth Sahib and then tried to flee. He was caught by some people and as the news of the alleged incident spread, and villagers assembled at the gurdwara and thrashed the youth, they said.

He later succumbed to injuries, police said.

Police registered the FIR against Bakshish under section 295-A (deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings or beliefs) of the Indian Penal Code at the Arif Ke Police Station on a complaint lodged by Lakhvir Singh, chairman, Sri Guru Granth Sahib Satkar Committee.

Police have also registered an FIR against unidentified persons on the complaint of Bakshish’s father.

Giani Raghbir Singh, the Jathedar of the Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat of the Sikhs, expressed grief over the incident of sacrilege in Ferozepur.

He termed Bakshish’s death as a reaction to the “failure to punish the culprits and give exemplary punishments by law.”

Moreover, the Jathedar has also asked the Sikh ‘Sangat’ to socially and religiously boycott the family of the youth and not to allow his last rites to be held in any gurdwara.

In a statement, Singh said for a long time, incidents of sacrilege of the Guru Granth Sahib have been taking place under a “well-planned conspiracy”.

He said that the government’s law is neither proving successful in stopping the incidents of sacrilege nor in punishing the culprits.

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