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November
11
Security tightened ahead of
India, WI tie
AHMADABAD: Security has been tightened in the western
Indian state of Gujarat ahead of three limited-over
international cricket matches between India and the West
Indies, police and officials said Sunday. Police in
strife-torn Gujarat, where more than 1,000 people died
earlier this year in the worst Hindu-Muslim riots in
India in a decade, were geared up for any kind of
trouble, including spectator violence or a terrorist
attack, said Sanjay Srivastav, superintendent of police
of Gandhinagar, the state capital.
"More than 1,000 policemen will be deployed in and
around the stadium. Thorough frisking of spectators will
be carried out at the entry gates,'' he said. The
one-day matches are to be played in three Gujarat towns,
Rajkot, Ahmadabad and Vadodara starting Nov 12.
Srivastav said police would also be on alert to prevent
any outbreak of spectator hooliganism. Policemen in
plainclothes and officials of the Gujarat Cricket
Association will be positioned in the stands to keep
watch. More than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were
killed in sectarian rioting and fighting this year in
Gujarat.
The violence began in February after a Muslim mob burned
a train carrying Hindu pilgrims, triggering a wave of
reprisals by Hindus against Muslims. In September, two
suspected Islamic militants attacked a Hindu temple in
Gujarat's capital, Gandhinagar, killing 33 people.
Officials said stringent security guidelines had been
put in place in the three towns.
"Sniffer dog squads will be kept on standby while
anti-sabotage checks will carried out before play
begins. Metal detectors will be used to check all those
entering the stadium. The match organizers have also
been asked to provide a second line of security at all
the venues besides the police force,'' said K.
Nityanandam, a top Gujarat official. Even state-run
hospitals in the three cities have been put on a state
of alert, a top health official said. "Doctors and
staff of government hospitals will be on high alert.
Medical services will be in a state of readiness to
handle any emergency,'' said S.K. Nanda, Gujarat health
secretary.
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