DHULE, India: This photo shows Indian women whose relatives were murdered in a lynching incident being led away from the crime scene area by villagers in Dhule district, some 330 kilometers from Mumbai. — AFP

NEW DELHI: Indian police said yesterday they have arrested 23 people after five men were bludgeoned to death by a crazed mob in yet another horrific lynching to rock the country. Indian media estimate more than 25 people have been killed in recent months in similar cases sparked by false rumors spread on smartphones of child kidnapping or allegations of thievery or sexual harassment. The latest gruesome incident saw eight men set upon in Dhule district, 330 kilometers from India's financial capital Mumbai in the western state of Maharashtra on Sunday.

Police said the attack began after locals spotted one of the eight talking to a child after they disembarked from a bus near the village of Rainpada. "They were confronted by the locals who had gathered at the Sunday market after suspecting them to be child kidnappers," Dhule police chief M Ramkumar said. Three of them escaped but five were dragged to the village council office and battered to death with sticks and blunt objects.

Police said they identified the alleged attackers from a video shot during the assault. Another 17 suspects were still on the run, they added. Those killed were from Solapur district of the same state but some 450 kilometers away. Separately police rescued four people including a couple and their two-year-old child from a 1,000-strong horde in Malegaon, 50 kilometers southwest of the first incident. They took refuge inside a house and police were able to arrive just in time, arresting five people, local police officer Vittal Sase said.

The current spate of lynchings started in May last year in eastern Jharkhand state after rumors on WhatsApp about child kidnappers led to the lynching of six men. The rumors have since resurfaced, with attacks reported in at least 11 states. The attacks-usually targeting outsiders-have left authorities scrambling to mount an effective response, with awareness campaigns and public alerts having a limited effect. Last week a "rumor buster" official tasked with alerting the public to such hoaxes was lynched by a mob in the remote northeastern state of Tripura.--AFP