NEW DELHI: The mortal remains of Indian icon Mahatma Gandhi’s remains have been stolen on what would have been his 150th birthday.
According to local police, the ashes were taken from a memorial in central India, where they had been kept since 1948, the year of Gandhi’s assassination by a Hindu extremist.
The thieves also scrawled “traitor” in green paint across photographs of the independence leader.
Some Hindu hardliners view Gandhi as a traitor despite Gandhi being a devout Hindu himself.
Police in Rewa in Madhya Pradesh state are investigating the theft on the grounds of actions “prejudicial to national integration” and potential breach of the peace.
Mangaldeep Tiwari, caretaker of the Bapu Bhawan memorial, where the ashes were being held, said the theft was “shameful”.
“I opened the gate of the Bhawan early in the morning because it was Gandhi’s birthday,” he told Indian website The Wire. “When I returned at around 23:00, I found the mortal remains of Gandhi missing and his poster was defaced.”
Police took action after Gurmeet Singh, leader of the local Congress political party, filed a complaint.
Gandhi led a non-violent resistance movement against British colonial rule in India, inspiring people across the world. Most Indians still revere him as the “father of the nation”.
But Hindu hardliners in India accuse Gandhi of having betrayed Hindus by being too pro-Muslim, and even for the division of India and the bloodshed that marked Partition. He was assassinated by a Hindu extremist in January 1948.
After his death, he was cremated, but his ashes were not scattered in a river, in accordance with Hindu belief.
Because of his fame, some were held back and sent around the country to various memorials – including the one in the Bapu Bhawan.