“accident”.
“How can the leader call my husband’s murder an accident?” Akhlaq’s widow Ikraman, who suffered facial injuries, said at the family home. “I don’t think the minister knows the difference between an accident and murder.”
Critics say Sharma’s comment implicitly condoned Akhlaq’s lynching and pandered to fringe Hindu militants who have recently become active in the district.
The BJP’s ideological parent, the rightwing Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS), recently likened the slaughter of a cow to the rape of a Hindu girl.
“The Dadri incident is a chilling turning point in our politics,” Shekhar Gupta, a former newspaper editor, wrote in the Business Standard. “It marks the rise of Hindu supremacist mob militancy that the BJP won’t unequivocally disown or condemn.”
India’s voluble culture minister, Mahesh Sharma - also the MP for the area - has described the killing as “an unfortunate accident” and “misunderstanding”.
Tarun Vijay, a BJP MP and a member of the party’s national executive, elaborated in the Indian Express: “Lynching a person merely on suspicion is absolutely wrong,” he wrote - the inference seemingly that if there was irrefutable proof Akhlaq had butchered a cow, his slaughter might be justified.
The Uttar Pradesh police investigating Akhlaq’s murder may have had the same thing in mind. They took samples of the meat stored in the victim’s family fridge for “forensic tests” to assess whether or not it was beef, which many Hindu extremists believe should be a mitigating factor for the murderers.
Slaughtering cows is banned in many parts of India. But local BJP leaders commenting on the killing in Dadri say beef-eating is a “provocation” that would naturally prompt a forceful reaction from devout Hindus - akin to the “blame the victim” rhetoric often used for women who have been raped. India’s enfeebled opposition Congress party has hardly taken a stand either.
While Rahul Gandhi has criticised “the politics of hate”, top Congress leaders declared they support a national ban on cow slaughter, heedless of the millions who regularly consume beef.
And Modi? India’s most masterful political communicator - who as a candidate emotionally denounced what he described as growing violence against cows - has been stubbornly silent. Some see his silence as indifference. Others believe it reflects his tacit support for the politics of hatred and fear being stoked by so many in his party.
“The blame for this has to fall entirely on Modi,” wrote Pratap Bhanu Mehta, director of the Centre for Policy Research. “This government has set a tone that is threatening, mean-spirited and inimical to freedom.”
Akhlaq’s widow says, “Even now I can’t believe that my Hindu neighbours killed my husband. My neighbours were like my extended family,” said Ikraman, who will spend a month in mourning in a room near the bloodstained murder scene.
Local Muslims say Akhlaq’s killing was a pre-meditated attack aimed at polarising the village on religious lines by militant Hindu groups loyal to Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which won power in the May 2014 general election.
Sharma and Modi are both members of an umbrella group, the RSS, that is the BJP’s ideological parent. The movement propagates an ideology of Hindutva, or Hindu-ness, which asserts India is a Hindu nation.
Police have arrested seven Hindu youth over the murder and one paramilitary soldier accused of planning the attack. Investigators are also searching for Hindu activists who spread rumours and online posts stating that Akhlaq had stored 6kg of beef in his refrigerator.
The region holds village council elections this week and Bisara has, in the wake of the killing, become a magnet for campaigning politicians. One BJP lawmaker accused of instigating the Muzaffarnagar riots came to Bisara on Sunday and warned of a “befitting reply” if the suspects were prosecuted, according to news reports.
During India’s 1940s-era constitutional debates, conservative Hindus had argued for a ban on cow slaughter to be included as one of constitutional fundamental rights - which would have put protection of cows on par with constitutional guarantees such as the human right to life and equality. At the time, that proposal was rejected. Sixty-five years later, that appears to be India’s new reality.