A 20-year-old Muslim migrant worker from West Bengal was allegedly lynched by locals in Odisha’s Sambalpur district after they demanded his Aadhaar card and accused him of being Bangladeshi, exposing deep anxieties and prejudice around identity, migration and belonging.
In a chilling incident that has shocked both Odisha and West Bengal, 19-year-old Juel (also reported as Juyel) Sheikh, a construction worker from Murshidabad, was brutally assaulted by a group of local men in Sambalpur on the night of 24 December and later died in hospital.
He was among several Bengali-speaking migrant labourers working at a construction site in the area. According to his colleagues, a group of four to six locals first accosted them near their accommodation, asked for a bidi (hand-rolled cigarette) and soon began questioning their identities.
The men allegedly demanded to see their Aadhaar cards, insisting the workers were Bangladeshi nationals who had entered India illegally. Despite the labourers showing their Aadhaar cards, the assailants reportedly claimed the documents were fake and launched a violent attack using bamboo sticks and other blunt objects.
During the assault, the attackers allegedly grabbed Sheikh and smashed his head against a hard surface, leaving him critically injured. At least two other workers suffered fractures and serious injuries as the group rained blows and hurled abuses before fleeing the spot.
The injured were rushed to a nearby hospital, where Sheikh succumbed to his injuries during treatment. His death has left his family in Murshidabad devastated, as he was reportedly the main breadwinner who had migrated to Odisha seeking work and a better income.
His colleagues and contractor say the group had faced suspicious questioning before but had never experienced such extreme violence.
Police Probe, Conflicting Versions And Political Fallout
Sambalpur Police have registered a murder case and arrested six local men in connection with the incident. Officials said they moved swiftly after receiving the complaint from the contractor and co-workers, recording statements and collecting forensic evidence from the crime scene.
However, police have suggested a different trigger for the violence, saying preliminary investigation indicates that the clash began as a quarrel over a bidi that escalated into a fatal assault, rather than being directly motivated by the workers’ identity or religion.
“We are treating this as a case of murder and have arrested all the accused. Evidence so far points to a dispute over a bidi that turned violent,” officers were quoted as saying, adding that they are awaiting post-mortem and medical reports to strengthen the case.
Investigators say they are examining possible prior enmity, checking CCTV footage where available and tracing the movements of both the accused and the victims in the hours before the attack.
The victim’s colleagues, though, strongly contest this version. Co-worker Majhar Khan has told the media that the locals repeatedly called them Bangladeshis, demanded their Aadhaar cards and accused them of carrying fake documents, even after being shown valid Indian identity cards.
“They checked our Aadhaar, said it was fake and started beating us,” Khan recounted, insisting that suspicion over nationality, not a bidi argument, triggered the mob’s rage. The contractor, Paltu Sheikh, has echoed this, describing it as a targeted assault on Bengali migrant workers.
The killing has quickly taken on a political dimension. Leaders in West Bengal have condemned the incident as a hate crime fuelled by xenophobia and majoritarian politics. They have demanded that the Odisha government ensure a transparent investigation, provide adequate compensation to Sheikh’s family and guarantee safety for all Bengali migrant labourers working in the state.
Parties have traded charges, with some accusing right-wing groups of creating an atmosphere where questioning someone’s citizenship or “othering” them has become normalised. Odisha officials, meanwhile, have urged people not to communalise or politicise the case while the investigation is in progress.
Precarious Lives Of Migrant Workers And Rising ‘Identity Policing’
The Sambalpur lynching has drawn attention to the precarious lives of millions of migrant workers who travel across state borders for employment in construction, manufacturing, mining, domestic work and services.
Away from home and often lacking strong local networks, they can be especially vulnerable to exploitation, unsafe workplaces and, in extreme cases, xenophobic violence. Many depend on contractors or middlemen who may not always have the capacity or willingness to ensure their safety and legal protection.
In recent years, there has been a worrying rise in incidents where people’s identity is questioned in public spaces-whether over language, dress, food habits, religion or perceived nationality.
Demanding Aadhaar or other documents on the street, at workplaces or in markets is neither legal nor acceptable; only authorised agencies following due process are empowered to verify citizenship or residency status. Yet vigilante-style “checks” have led to harassment, intimidation and, as in this case, deadly violence.
Civil society groups and rights activists point out that rhetoric around “infiltrators” and “outsiders” can fuel such behaviour by painting entire communities as suspect. They warn that when public discourse normalises questioning someone’s right to belong based on appearance, accent or language, it creates fertile ground for mob violence.
For many Bengali-speaking Muslims from border districts like Murshidabad, this can mean carrying a double burden-of economic vulnerability as migrant workers and of being automatically doubted or profiled.
The tragedy has sparked broader calls for better protection mechanisms for migrant labourers, including stronger registration of workers at project sites, clear responsibilities for contractors, better liaison between host and home states, and proactive police outreach in areas with high concentrations of interstate migrants.
There are also demands for fast-track trials in lynching cases, so perpetrators do not feel emboldened by delays in justice.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
The brutal killing of a young worker who left home simply to earn a living is an indictment of how quickly fear and prejudice can strip a person of their dignity, and ultimately, their life. When ordinary citizens begin to feel entitled to demand Aadhaar cards or question nationality at will, it signals a dangerous slide from rule of law to rule of suspicion.
Identity concerns, border anxieties and security issues are real and must be handled soberly, but they can never justify mobs taking the law into their own hands or targeting someone based on language, religion or where they come from.
At The Logical Indian, we believe that India’s strength lies in its diversity and in the millions of people who move across states to build roads, homes, cities and futures.
They deserve protection, respect and empathy-not interrogation and violence. Governments must enforce strict legal consequences for lynching and hate crimes, while also investing in social harmony programmes, worker protections and clear messaging that “outsider-bashing” is unacceptable.

