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Dulal Chand Yadav, Jan Suraj party leader, met a brutal end in Mokama's Ghoswari market. Etched itself into local lore as two assailants on a speeding motorcycle unleashed bullets, striking Yadav fatally. This brazen attack, mere days before the heat of elections intensifies, has ignited fears of escalating violence, with police suspecting deep-seated electoral rivalries as the trigger—rival factions eyeing the Mokama assembly seat with predatory intent. Yadav, no stranger to the rough-and-tumble of polls, making him a marked man in this tinderbox of ideologies. Locals, roused by the gunfire, converged on the bloodstained spot, turning to demands for justice as they alerted authorities.
The Ghoswari police descended swiftly, cordoning off the scene and whisking Dulal Yadav's lifeless body for postmortem, while forensic teams scoured for clues amid the chaos of a bustling market now frozen in horror. No arrests yet, but raids are underway across suspected hideouts, with officers grilling potential witnesses and delving into Yadav's recent feuds—conversations laced with threats from opposing camps.The ripple effects are already churning Bihar's political waters, transforming a personal tragedy into a statewide cautionary tale.
Jan Suraj leaders have decried the killing as a blatant assault on democracy, vowing to rally supporters in protest, while rivals maintain a guarded silence that speaks volumes. With heavy police boots patrolling the tense streets to stave off reprisals, Mokama braces for what could be the opening salvo in a fiercer pre-election skirmish. As investigations probe every shadowy angle—from old grudges to fresh alliances—Yadav's death underscores a grim reality: in the quest for power, some battles are fought not with ballots, but with bullets, leaving communities to mourn and wonder who might be next.