Speaking to reporters here, IAS officer V Umashankar also said that the district authorities had ordered attachment of the Sirsa-based Dera's accounts and compensation to those affected in the violence could be given from these.
"There was no report of any untoward incident and I hope that peace will be maintained," Umashankar said.
He said that excluding the permanent residents of the area, many of whom were also Dera followers, the number of others in the sect's headquarters in Sirsa now was not more than a thousand.
Umashankar is presently posted as the Commissioner, Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG), but has been assigned special duty to assist the Sirsa administration, which is on a high alert keeping in view the Dera chief's conviction.
Talking about the possibility of firearms being there in the sect headquarters, Umashankar said that some weapons were in the name of Dera and some were registered in the names of individuals.
We were conscious that if such a mob comes towards the city and indulges in violence and arson, then it would have been very difficult to control and accordingly we deployed our forces, he said.
Our second objective was that if violence occurred, we have to contain it in a specific area and prevent it from spreading, he said.
The third objective was to exercise maximum restraint, which was not entirely possible in this kind of situation, but still we had to exercise it and not allow it to escalate, Umashankar added.
Further, a joint command of police, Army and administration will take a decision about relaxing curfew imposed in Sirsa, he said.
IG (Hisar), A S Dhillon, who was also present, said that maintaining law and order was the top priority of the police and administration.
"We have registered criminal cases in violence and nobody will be spared. Presently our priority is to maintain law and order," he said.
His conviction in a 2002 rape case last week had triggered massive violence that left 38 dead and scores injured in Haryana.
CBI Judge Jagdeep Singh, who holds the court in Panchkula, near Chandigarh, pronounced the sentence in a special courtroom set up inside the Sunaria jail where Ram Rahim, the 50-year-old self-styled godman, is lodged since last Friday after he was convicted.
The judge was brought to Rohtak by a chopper from Chandigarh and landed in a helipad near the jail located on the outskirts of Rohtak.
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