India police say 15 charged in lynching over beef rumours

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Indian Muslim butchers prepare cuts of beef during the holy month of Ramadan in Hyderabad on August 4, 2011. Like millions of Muslim around the world, Indian Muslims celebrate the month of Ramadan by abstaining from eating, drinking, and smoking as well as sexual activities from dawn to dusk. AFP PHOTO / Noah SEELAM

Indian police Wednesday formally charged 15 suspects over the mob murder of a Muslim man suspected of eating beef in late September, a case that sparked an outcry over communal intolerance.

Mohammad Akhlaq, 50, was dragged from his house in Bisada village in Uttar Pradesh state and beaten to death by around 100 people over rumours he had eaten beef – a taboo in the Hindu-majority nation.

“We have filed a charge sheet against 15 persons… it is a case of murder,” additional director general of police in Uttar Pradesh, Daljeet Chaudhary, told AFP.

The group included a 17-year-old juvenile, he added.

The case fuelled concerns that religious intolerance may be growing under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party government.

While Modi did eventually describe the lynching as “unfortunate”, many commentators pointed out that it took the prime minister several weeks to respond.