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No one has been arrested yet, though the local intelligence unit and crime branch are among three police teams investigating the case. Are they a genuine manifestation or a cover for illegal smuggling activities. The posters asked Muslim residents to leave the village by this year-end. The Kargaina incident follows the appearance of similar posters in Jianagla village a week ago. The BJP formed the government in Uttar Pradesh last weekend and appointed Yogi Adityanath, a five-term parliamentarian and head priest of Gorakhnath mutt in Gorakhpur, as chief minister after winning an unprecedented 325 seats with its allies in the February-March assembly elections. “The poster also says ‘sarkar hamari aa gayi hai, sudhar jao (mend your ways, our government is in power)’ and was signed ‘gaon ke sabhi Hindu (Hindus of the village)’,” said Taqi Ahmed, a mosque caretaker. Police have collected the papers, registered a case against unknown people for promoting enmity between two groups, and started an investigation. But we have alerted our sources in the village and those behind the incident will be arrested.” “Prima facie, it appears to be a cheap prank of miscreants. “Two papers were found inside the village mosques,” said superintendent of police Sameer Saurabh. Of its population of 9,000, around 3,000 are Muslims, who mostly live on one side of the village. Kargaina is a thickly populated village on the Bareilly-Badaun highway. The message printed on a white paper further said namaz or prayer would not be allowed in mosques if loudspeakers are continued to be used. Villagers at Kargaina in Subhashnagar said on Friday that posters were found in the local mosques, asking Muslims to stop using loudspeakers for the azaan - the muezzin’s call to prayer five times a day. Anti-Muslim posters have surfaced in two villages of Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly district over the past week, prompting a police investigation against suspected hate-mongers trying to provoke communal tension.