AHMEDABAD: A court in Gujarat ordered an inquiry on Friday into the death of a protestor in police custody, in a case that could further exacerbate tensions in the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state.
Shwetang Patel, 28, died after he was detained on Tuesday for taking part in a mass rally that turned violent.
Police said he had died on the way to hospital after falling unconscious while in custody.
But an autopsy ordered by the Gujarat high court after a complaint from Patel’s family found he had suffered a brain haemorrhage as a result of a head injury.
“The police has no answer as to how my son died. My ONLY OPTIONwas to approach the court for help and get justice,” Patel’s mother Prabhaben told reporters in Gujarat’s main city of Ahmedabad.
The family’s lawyer BM Mangukiya told reporters the court had ordered an investigation “after going through the second post-mortem report that suggested the youth died of shock and brain haemorrhage due to head injuries”.
At least 10 people died in clashes that broke out between police and rioters in Ahmedabad late on Tuesday before spreading to other parts of the western state.
The protesters were demanding that the Patidar caste, one of the state’s most affluent communities many of whom carry the name Patel, receive the same preferential treatment as some lower castes on government jobs and university places.
Authorities deployed thousands of troops and declared a curfew and the situation has since calmed, but tensions between police and the Patidar community are running high.
India sets aside a proportion of government jobs and university places for some castes under measures intended to bring victims of the worst discrimination into the mainstream.
But the policy causes resentment among other communities, who say it freezes them out from cushy government jobs.
Gujarat was run for over a decade by Modi and is one of the country’s most affluent states.
Political leaders appeared to have been taken by surprise by the scale of the protest movement, which began earlier this year but has rapidly gathered pace in recent weeks.