The Chauri Chaura
Incident took place on 4 February 1922 at Chauri Chaura in the Gorakhpur
district of United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh) in British India. The police
there fired upon a large group of protesters participating in the
non-cooperation movement. In retaliation, the demonstrators attacked and set
fire to a police station, killing all of its occupants. The incident led to the
deaths of three civilians and 22 policemen. Mahatma Gandhi halted the
non-cooperation movement on the national level on 12 February 1922 as a direct
result of the incident. Nineteen arrested demonstrators were sentenced to death
and 14 to life imprisonment by the British colonial authorities.
Background –
From 1920 onwards,
Indians, led by Mahatma Gandhi, were engaged in a nationwide non-cooperation
movement. Using non-violent methods of civil disobedience known as Satyagraha,
protests were organized by the Indian National Congress to challenge oppressive
government regulatory measures such as the Rowlatt Act, with the ultimate goal
of attaining Swaraj.
The incident –
Two days before the
incident, on 2 February 1922, volunteers participating in the non-cooperation
movement led by a retired soldier of the British Indian Army named Bhagwan
Ahir, protested against high food prices and liquor sales at Gauri Bazaar. The
demonstrators were beaten back by the local Daroga (inspector) Gupteshwar Singh
and other police officers. Several of the leaders were arrested and put in the
lock-up at the Chauri Chaura police station. In response to this, a protest
against the police was called on 4 February, to be held at the Bazaar.
On 4 February,
approximately 2,000 to 2,500 protesters assembled and began marching towards
the market lane at Chauri Chaura. They had gathered to picket the Gauri Bazaar
Liquor Shop. Armed police were dispatched to control the situation while the
protesters marched towards the bazaar, shouting anti-British slogans. In an
attempt to frighten and disperse the crowd, Gupteshwar Singh ordered his 15
local police officers to fire warning shots into the air. This only agitated
the crowd who began to throw stones at the police.
With the situation getting out of control, the sub-inspector Prithvi Pal ordered the police to open fire on the advancing crowd, killing three and wounding several others. Reports vary on the reason for the police retreat, with some suggesting that the constables ran out of ammunition while others claimed that the crowd's unexpectedly assertive reaction to the gunfire was the cause. In the ensuing chaos, the heavily outnumbered police fell back to the shelter of the town chowki (police station) while the angry mob advanced. Infuriated by the gunfire into their ranks, the crowd set the chowki a blaze, killing all of the policemen trapped inside, including Inspector Gupteshwar Singh.
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