Police in India arrest politician's son in killing of 4 protesting farmers
CBC
Indian police on Saturday arrested the son of a junior minister in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government days after nine people were killed in a deadly escalation of year-long demonstrations by tens of thousands of farmers against contentious agriculture laws in northern India, a police officer said.
Four farmers died Oct. 3 when a car owned by Junior Home Minister Ajay Mishra ran over a group of protesting farmers in Lakhimpur Kheri, a town in Uttar Pradesh state, officials and farm leaders said.
Farm leaders alleged that Mishra's son was in the car when it ran over the protesters, but Mishra denied it. His driver and three members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, who were in a car, were all killed by the protesters by beating them with sticks in the violence that broke out after the incident.
Police officer Upendra Agarwal said on Saturday that Ashish Mishra was arrested following day-long questioning in the town after "he failed to furnish any supportive evidence to prove that he was not present in any of the three vehicles that plowed through a crowd of farmers killing four of them."
Ajay Mishra said that his son was innocent and was not present.
The arrest came a day after India's top court criticized the state government for not arresting Ashish Mishra against whom a criminal case of murder is being investigated by the police. On Friday, Mishra made the police wait for hours for questioning before sending a message that he was unwell and couldn't make it.
Darshan Pal, a farmers' leader, and Akhilesh Singh, an opposition Congress party leader, demanded the removal of his father from Modi's government.
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