As the village, about 60 km from the national capital, continued to struggle to return to normalcy, a fringe Hindutva outfit founded by BJP MP Yogi Adityanath offered all help to the majority community "including guns" if they were harassed by the police.
Mohammad Sartaj, the elder son of Iqlakh, confirmed the family moved over to Delhi last night, eight days after his father was dragged out of his home by a 200-strong lynch mob and bludgeoned to death, as Bishada held on to fragile peace.
Iqlakh's younger son Danish, 22, who was critically wounded in the attack and is undergoing treatment at a Noida hospital, has come out of the ICU and is able to communicate with the family, he said.
Bishada, meanwhile, continued to be out of bounds for outsiders including saffron seers, who tried to steamroll their way into the village but were prevented by the the authorities.
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The welcome arch to the Rajput-dominated village, with a towering statue of Maharana Pratap atop it, is still heavily barricaded and there is large scale police presence. The civil and police authorities took out peace march and held peace committee meetings to cool frayed tempers.
"I wanted to meet families of Jay Prakash and Rahul Yadav but I was denied entry. I had requested the SDM in this respect. Owaisi, who comes from Hyderabad can meet, why I am not allowed entry? This is a conspiracy," Prachi said.
A resident of Bishada, Jay Prakash (24) was found dead under mysterious circumstances yesterday, while Yadav received bullet injury during protests against the administration in the aftermath of lynching of Iqlakh.
"His letter to the United Nations has tarnished India's image," she said, branding Khan a "traitor" who should be prosecuted.
Prachi also demanded a compensation of Rs 50 lakh each for the families of Yadav and Jay Prakash. "Prakash was tortured to the extent that he committed suicide," she alleged.