Business Standard

Bihar's crackdown on crime has spelt doom for Munger's gun factories

Despite the collapse of Munger's gun industry, illegal guns continue to be manufactured

Thakur Naresh Singh, a gun wholesale shop owner at Munger, wants the government to save the gun factory due to its historic significance | Photo: Somesh Jha
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Thakur Naresh Singh, a gun wholesale shop owner at Munger, wants the government to save the gun factory due to its historic significance | Photo: Somesh Jha

Somesh Jha Munger (Bihar)
“In the 1930s, my forefathers used to sell guns on the streets near the fort area. Back then, guns were manufactured in every home in the neighbouring Maksaspur village,” says Sanjay Kumar, owner of Baijnath & Co, a gun manufacturing unit in Munger.
 
Baijnath & Co is one among the 36 gun manufacturing units in Munger’s gun factory zone. A short distance from the district magistrate’s office, the factory area bears no sign boards, perhaps because the authorities do not want to advertise its existence. Inside, the place wears a deserted look. Stocks of guns lie gathering dust and

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