The Indian Express and The Hindu called the attackers simply as “mob”, and failed to mention that they opened fire at the police.

The Indian Express, in its report, described the violence as “clashes over the Citizenship (Amendment) Act”.

The Hindu, in its report, said, “A video of the February 24 violence had gone viral on the social media on Thursday in which Shahdara DCP Amit Sharma and other policemen were seen being thrashed by a mob that includes women on Wazirabad Road near Chand Bagh. It was the same place where head constable Ratan Lal was killed. In a two-minute video, a team of policemen, including Mr Sharma, was seen attacked by a mob from left and right. The police team could not move back because of a five-feet high central verge and they got trapped in heavy stone-pelting.”

After releasing the videos, the police shared more details with the media and called the attack as a “conspiracy” by the mob against the cops.

A 12 March report by the Press Trust of India quoted a “senior Delhi police official” saying that, “It emerged during investigation that the spot where the incident took place was the venue for an anti-CAA protest. In the fateful day, a conspiracy was hatched to attack police," a senior Delhi Police official said.

Statements by DCP Sharma’s wife Pooja gives an insight into this “conspiracy”. She told TOI, “My husband had gone to have a dialogue with the protesters. It was a group of only women. They took off his helmet and then the mob attacked him.”

She further told the media that the mob had “pre-planned” the attack. News18 quoted her as saying that anti-CAA women protesters called Sharma at the protest site for a talk, but when he obliged and went for the meeting, the women surrounded him, followed by men. Suddenly, one of the women rioters pulled away his helmet and he was attacked with hockey sticks and iron rods. His wife adds that the rioters were also carrying knives and pistols.

Republic reported on 12 March that the police arrested seven men for the attack on the police, namely Salim Malik alias Munna, Mohammed Jalaluddin, Mohammed Ayub, Mohammed Yunus, Arif, Mohammed Danish, and Mohammed Salim Khan.

Such a brutal assault on the security forces at an anti-CAA protest, that too under what seems like a conspiracy, should have triggered huge criticism of the anti-CAA protests being staged in various corners of Delhi. Far from it, a major section of the mainstream media almost brushed it under the carpet, giving it only token coverage and not revealing the identity of the perpetrators.

Amid this, the Bengaluru edition of the Times of India has gone a step further to altogether deny the anti-CAA protesters’ assault on the police.

In a report published on 14 March, the newspaper wrote that there has been no news substantiating the claims that anti-CAA protesters, women hurled stones, beat and fired at police. Ironically, this ‘misinformation’ was in total contrast to what the Delhi edition of the newspaper reported in the first week of March.