Police in northern India
have arrested four men over allegations that they burnt alive two
low-caste children, an official said on Wednesday, a case that triggered
a street protest and drew condemnation from an opposition leader.
Authorities
ruled out caste violence as a motive for the crime but India has a long
history of such incidents, and the attack will feed concerns over
rising intolerance after the rumour-fuelled killing of a Muslim man by a Hindu mob recently. .
On
Wednesday, two men carried the bodies of the dead children wrapped in
white shrouds during a protest by about 1,000 people who blocked a major
highway to the northern city of Agra, home to the Taj Mahal monument, and argued with police.
Police
in the northern state of Haryana said a group of men killed the
children, a girl of 8 months and her two-year-old brother, by setting
alight gasoline poured through the windows of their home in Ballabhgarh district, about 50 km (31 miles) from the capital, New Delhi.
The
parents, who hail from the bottom rungs of India's millennia-old social
hierarchy rooted in the Hindu religion, were also injured in the
attack, a state police official said.
The incident was a family feud and not related to caste violence, however, said Jawahar Yadav, an official from the office of Harayana's chief minister.
"This is a fight among families, not about castes. It is an unfortunate incident," Yadav told television channel CNN-IBN.
The
family has alleged it was attacked by men belonging to a higher caste,
in revenge for separate killings a year ago, the state police officer
said, asking not to be named because he was not authorised to discuss
the case with the media.
Family members could not immediately be reached for comment.
Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh has asked the state government for a report on the incident.
Rahul Gandhi,
leader of the opposition Congress party, visited the district and
criticised federal and state officials for not making better efforts to
protect poor people.
Caste-related violence has gripped India for decades.
In August, clashes erupted in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
western home state of Gujarat after police arrested a young leader of
the influential Patel clan who organised a rally to demand more
government jobs for his community.
Last month, a
village council denied allegations that it ordered two young sisters to
be raped because their brother eloped with a higher caste woman. The
disavowal followed an international outcry triggered by the purported
ruling.
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