CHAPTER I: PRELUDE TO THE VIOLENCE
Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister of India, was shot by two of her security guards at 9.18 A.M. on October 31, 1984. She was rushed to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (in South Delhi). Her son Rajiv Gandhi, was away in West Bengal at that time and he returned to Delhi at about 4 P.M. President Zail Singh who was away in the Middle East, returned at about 5 P.M. and at 6.55 P.M. Rajiv Gandhi was sworn in as Prime Minister of India.
The media focused on the fact that the two assassins were Sikhs. As it by design, the entire blame of this grave tragedy was put on these two Sikh individuals and later transferred to the entire Sikh community.
The first incidents, any where in the country, started in Calcutta. According to the Statesman of November 1, a Sikh was beaten up at 11 A.M. near Writers’ Buildings and one more Sikh was attacked in the Kidderpore area around the same time. A Sikh was assaulted in front of the Tea Board at about 1.30 P.M. The national Press reported that Congress-I workers and volunteers ran amuck in different parts of Calcutta from the forenoon. The Army was called in to control the situation and it had taken charge of the city by 2.30 P.M.
In Madras city, mobs took over, smashing shop windows, forcing shopkeepers to close down, and burning two buses of the Adarsha Vidyalaya run by the Punjab Association.
In Madhya Pradesh, angry mobs attacked shops and petrol pumps belonging to Sikhs in Jabalpur and Indore. The Army was put on the alert.
In Uttar Pradesh, witness to terrible incidents of arson, loot, and killing from November l onwards, particularly in Kanpur, few incidents were reported for October 31. Huge crowds gathered in the streets on getting the news of Mrs. Gandhi’s assassination. Shops were closed. But that was all.