
During the Ghudla procession in Lakhayan Mohalla, Jodhpur, miscreants resorted to stone-pelting at a religious tableau. The incident was caught on video, sparking concerns over law and order and communal harmony.
What’s remarkable is not just the attack, but the confidence with which it was carried out. A public procession, a crowded locality, cameras around and yet the perpetrators acted as if consequences were optional. That kind of audacity doesn’t appear overnight. It usually grows when accountability becomes predictable only on paper.
The obvious question lingers: why do such elements feel so comfortable testing the limits every single time? Is it because past incidents have taught them that urgency fades faster than outrage? Law enforcement isn’t judged by statements after the fact, but by whether potential offenders believe they’ll face immediate consequences. When stone pelting happens in broad daylight during a religious event, and the attackers still appear unfazed, it raises a simple, uncomfortable question when will decisive action actually replace routine assurances?
@CP_Jodhpur @Igp_Jodhpur @PoliceRajasthan
#jodhpur #ghudla #rajasthan
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