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          Mumbai, Aug 21 (IANS) MNS chief Raj Thackeray Tuesday demanded   the resignation of Maharashtra Home Minister R.R. Patil at a mass rally called   to denounce the Aug 11 violence for which be blamed Bangladeshis.
 The   show of strength that brought some 50,000 supporters marching to the Azad Maidan   - the very site of the earlier violence that left two dead and dozens injured --   defying a police ban.
 
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        Speaking in his usual aggressive style, Thackeray warned that similar outbreaks   of violence, blamed on Muslim groups who were protesting against attacks on   Muslims in Myanmar and Assam, would not be tolerated.
 Besides Patil,   Thackeray also called for Mumbai Police Commissioner Arup Patnaik's resignation   for failing to foresee the violence of Aug 11 during which mobs attacked police   personnel and journalists.
 
 Some policemen were critically injured while   there were attempts to molest policewomen. Police officers later said there   would have been a bloodbath had they allowed police personnel to open fire at   will.
 
 Thackeray flashed what he said was a green colour passport found at   the venue Aug 11 purportedly belonging to a Bangladeshi, and said the Aug 11   gathering had many outsiders who dared to attack police and the   media.
 
 "This will not be tolerated and limits cannot be crossed. We will   not tolerate anybody who dares to take on Maharashtra," he thundered, drawing   huge applause.
 
 The MNS founder leader pointed out that many Muslims came   prepared for violence that day armed with iron rods, bamboos and stones. He   asked both Patil and Patnaik to resign.
 
 "If they have an ounce of shame,   they should immediately quit," Thackeray said to widespread applause from the   gathering.
 
 But he underlined that the MNS show of strength was not   directed against any religious group but was called to express solidarity with   the ordinary Marathi policemen and policewomen and the Mumbai media.
 
 He   denied that he had a Hindutva agenda.
 
 Thackeray also sought a probe into   Raza Academy's record, saying its gatherings usually ended in   violence.
 
 He did not spare other politicians including Samajwadi Party   state chief Abu Asim Azmi, who he said won elections from two constituencies as   these housed many Bangladeshis and Pakistanis.
 
 Thackeray also ridiculed   the Republican Party of India (RPI) and other parties for not speaking against   the Aug 11 violence.
 
 "Except demanding Indu Mills land, what has (RPI   chief) Ramdas Athawale done? Does he want to construct a bungalow there?" he   asked sarcastically.
 
 After the speech ended, a policeman in uniform   handed Thackeray a rose flower -- to show his appreciation of the MNS   leader.
 
 
    
	
	
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