28 people die in continuing violence in Ahmedabad.
Police shoot and kill five while attempting to control rioters.
Hindu rioters with tridents, iron rods, knives and fuel canisters, chanting "Victory to Ram!" set fire to a cement block apartment complex. It again took hours for police or firefighters to arrive. 12 women and girls and 6 men had been burned alive.
In retaliation for the previous day's attacks, in Ahmedabad Hindu rioters set fire to about 50 buildings, mostly Muslim-owned, killing more than 60 people.
A Hindu mob of about 2,000 stoned six Muslim-owned homes in Ahmedabad's mostly Hindu neighborhood of Meghaninagar[?] , then poured kerosene on them and set them on fire. Ehsan Jefri[?], a former member of Parliament and Muslim, had tried to scare off the mob when it had reach 200 by firing a gun into the air. He called the police when the mob began setting fire to the homes, including Jefri's. Hindu rioters set up road blockades, so it took the police two hours to reach the site, and fire fighters six hours. By that time 38 people were dead, including at least 12 children. Jefri had been dragged into the street and burned alive.
Curfews go into effect in 30 towns in Gujarat.
58 people died in Godhra[?] when a Muslim mob set fire to a carriage on the Sabarmati Express[?] filled with Vishwa Hindu Parishad activists. These activists were returning from Ayodhya, where they had lobbied for the erection of a Hindu temple to Ram on top of the ruins of a Muslim mosque which had been razed in 1992. The train was en route to Ahmedabad. After detaching the burned carriages, the train continued to Vadodara[?], where Hindus beat and stabbed people leaving the train, killing one. A 17-year-old was later killed in Godhra by police trying to disrupt mobs.
Hindus razed a 16th-century Muslim mosque in Ayodhya, sparking nationwide riots between Hindus and Muslims that killed more than 2,000 people.
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