The death toll in ongoing communal riots in India’s capital New Delhi has risen to 34, a Health Ministry official said on Thursday.
The number of fatalities was 27 on Wednesday but seven more deaths were reported overnight, said the official, requesting anonymity due to restrictions on speaking to the media.
He added that more than 170 people have been injured in the violence.
However, local media broadcaster NDTV reported that death toll has climbed to 35, leaving more than 200 people injured.
Clashes between pro- and anti-citizenship law protesters started on Sunday and have devolved into communal violence between Hindus and Muslims.
The northeastern part of New Delhi has been affected the most as rioters ransacked and set ablaze mosques, houses, schools, and businesses.
- Opposition demands action
“We met the president to tell him that what has happened in Delhi over the past four days is a national shame and a matter of great concern,” he said.
“It is a reflection of the total failure of the Central [BJP] government.”
- OIC condemns 'anti-Muslim' violence
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) strongly condemned the "alarming violence against Muslims" in India.
In a statement on Thursday, the 57-member body called for the "instigators and perpetrators of anti-Muslim violence" to be brought to justice.
"The OIC condemns the recent and alarming violence against Muslims in India, resulting in the death and injury of innocent people and the arson and vandalism of mosques and Muslim-owned properties," read the statement.
The bloc also called on the Indian authorities "to bring the instigators and perpetrators of these acts of anti-Muslim violence to justice and to ensure the safety and security of all its Muslim citizens and the protection of Islamic holy places across the country."
- Inciting violence
The violence in India's capital escalated a day after Kapil Mishra, a local leader of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), warned Muslims to end protests in Delhi's Maujpur area.
He said the protesters would face the wrath of BJP supporters if they failed to heed his warning.
"We are giving the Delhi police three days to clear the roads in Jaffrabad and Chand Bagh [areas in Delhi]. After this, we will not listen to you," Mishra said at a rally on Sunday, with videos of the speech posted on his Twitter account.
The lax response from Delhi's police force has also been criticized by India's Supreme Court and the Delhi High Court.
High court judge Justice S. Muralidhar denounced the police for failing to stop the violence and also the delay in registering a hate speech complaint against BJP leader Mishra.
"We cannot have another 1984 ... under your watch," he said in reference to the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, in which over 3,000 members of the minority community were killed.
Hours after his remarks, the Indian government announced Justice Muralidhar's transfer from the Delhi High Court to the northern state of Punjab.