#BreakingNews: Jan Suraaj Party Worker Shot Dead Under Mysterious Circumstances
Mokama campaigner shot dead in Bihar poll fury.
A dedicated Jan Suraaj Party supporter, Dular Chand Yadav, was discovered shot dead under highly suspicious circumstances in Patna's restive Mokama area on Thursday, October 30, 2025, mere days before the constituency votes on November 6. The fatal attack unfolded in broad daylight during a high-energy canvassing operation for the party's young candidate, Piyush Priyadarshi, a Tata Institute of Social Sciences graduate challenging entrenched political heavyweights. Witnesses described a chaotic scene where rival campaign convoys clashed near Mokama Taal, with gunfire erupting suddenly and Yadav collapsing inside his vehicle, blood pooling on the seat as panicked workers fled for safety.
Local police, led by Senior Superintendent of Police Kartikeya K Sharma, rushed to the spot after receiving multiple distress calls around noon, cordoning off the area and launching an immediate investigation. Preliminary reports strongly suggest bullet wounds as the cause of death, though the body has not yet been handed over to authorities by the grieving family, delaying the mandatory post-mortem examination. "We have deployed a large contingent of security personnel to prevent any escalation, and a Special Investigation Team is piecing together CCTV footage, witness statements, and ballistic evidence," Sharma informed PTI, adding that the exact sequence of events—whether targeted assassination or crossfire—will only be clarified once forensic experts examine the remains.
Dular Chand Yadav, aged approximately 58, was far more than a mere campaign volunteer; he was a seasoned political operative with deep roots in Mokama's complex caste and power dynamics. A one-time confidant of RJD supremo Lalu Prasad Yadav during the party's heyday in the 1990s, he commanded significant sway among the dominant Yadav community in the Tal region. His defection to Prashant Kishor's newly formed Jan Suraaj Party earlier this year was seen as a major coup, bringing grassroots muscle to Priyadarshi's reformist agenda against corruption and muscle politics. Colleagues recall Yadav tirelessly organizing village meetings and youth rallies, making his violent end a devastating blow to the party's momentum in this crucial seat.
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The Mokama assembly segment has long been infamous as a stronghold of Bihar's "bahubali" culture, where criminal-politicians wield unchecked influence. This election pits Jan Suraaj's Priyadarshi against JD(U)'s formidable Anant Singh—a five-term former MLA recently acquitted in an Arms Act case but with a history of jail terms—and RJD's Veena Devi, spouse of another local strongman. Sporadic violence has marred the campaign, including a shooting incident months ago in nearby Nauranga-Jalalpur. Yadav's killing has now amplified fears of systematic intimidation, with Jan Suraaj accusing "rival camps" of orchestrating the hit to demoralize voters.
Condemnation poured in swiftly from across the political divide, though laced with mutual accusations. Prashant Kishor labeled the murder a "premeditated political assassination" by "feudal elements terrified of change," vowing to turn Yadav's sacrifice into a rallying cry for clean elections. RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav, meanwhile, slammed the Nitish Kumar-led NDA regime for allowing "jungle raj 2.0," where "guns replace ballots." The Election Commission responded by surging Central Armed Police Forces into Mokama, imposing strict monitoring on all campaign movements, and warning of stern action against any further breaches of the model code of conduct as Bihar hurtles toward a potentially explosive polling day.
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