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The body of an 11-year-old student studying in a madrasa was found in Haryana's Nuh district on Monday, 5 September. The boy had been missing since Saturday evening.
The police have registered a case of murder after the boy's family alleged so.
"We reached here after we got information about a dead body being found in the madrasa. We have called the Forensic Science Laboratory (FSL) team here and are investigating the incident," Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Usha Kunda was quoted as saying by news agency ANI.
The victim had reportedly been studying in the madrasa for a year.
Suspecting that he was murdered, the boy's kin said, "I was told that my nephew had left the madrasa (on Saturday) but did not reach home. We searched for him but couldn’t find him anywhere. This is murder."
Maulana Zakir, the director of the Islamic Madrasa, Dargah Shah Chaukha, said that the boy was present during the evening prayers but went missing when the attendance was being taken.
He also said that the boy's body was found in one of the rooms of the mosque.
He also added that when he wasn't found, his family was informed, and several people also searched for him in the nearby villages and mosques.
The family has demanded that strict action be taken against the accused.
This comes amid a raging controversy concerning madrasas, especially in Assam, where several of them have been demolished in recent weeks.
On 29 August, the Himanta Biswa Sarma-led government demolished a madrasa in the state's Barpeta district, alleging that it was used for "anti-national activities."
They alleged that the people who managed the madrasa were connected to the dreaded terrorist outfit Al Qaeda.
Meanwhile, the Assam Congress wrote to the National Commission for Minorities (NCM), urging them to launch a probe into the demolition of a madrasa in Bongaigaon.
Giving justifications for the demolition, CM Sarma had said that the madrasa was razed under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and the Disaster Management Act as it did not have permission from the local panchayat or the district administration to be built on that specific plot of land.
Sarma alleged that the madrasa's mufti was an important financial conduit for Ansar ul Islam, a militant Islamic group, and that money was deposited in his account often.
(With inputs from ANI.)
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