![At least 50 people were injured and more than 200 detained in the protest [AFP] At least 50 people were injured and more than 200 detained in the protest [AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Asia/A/1/2/3/4/5/6/Kolkata-riots.jpg) | | At least 50 people were injured and more than 200 detained in the protest [AFP] | Hundreds of soldiers are patrolling the streets of Kolkata a day after violent protests against the killing of villagers and the granting of refuge to a controversial writer.
Shops and schools reopened on Thursday as authorities lifted a curfew imposed on the West Bengal state capital after buses were torched and homemade bombs exploded. "The area is crawling back to normalcy. The army will continue to patrol in the sensitive area of the troubled zone," Gautam Mohan Chakrabarty, Kolkata's police commissioner, said. Anti-riot troops, plainclothes policeman and more than 200 soldiers have been deployed to keep order. At least 50 people were injured and more than 200 detained in the protest called by a Muslim group angered over violence in Nandigram district, where 34 people have died since January. Execution demanded The rural area was earmarked as a petrochemical complex for Indonesia's Salim Group but protests by villagers, unwilling to give up their land, forced the government to give up on the plan. Since then, villagers and communist party members have been battling police for control of the area. "Mostly poor Muslim farmers were at the receiving end in Nandigram when the communists forced their way into Nandigram, and the people are understandably angry," Siddiqullah Chowdhury, leader of one Muslim group, said. The All India Forum, which organised Wednesday's demonstration, said it was also to demand the expulsion of Taslima Nasreen, a controversial Bangladeshi writer who has been given refuge in West Bengal. She fled her homeland in 1994 after radical Muslims demanded her execution, saying that her books critcised Islam.
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Tags: Kolkata India
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