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Thursday, February 14, 2019

Rape and murder of minor girl jolts Kodagu, residents protest

Crime
The duo accused led the police to the dead body of the girl after she went missing on February 4.
Protest at Siddapura in Kodagu district of Karnataka
The murder and rape of a Dalit 17-year-old pre-university student has put residents of Siddapura in Kodagu district of Karnataka on edge in the last two days. Kodagu district police arrested migrant labourers Ranjith (21) and Sandeep (30), who both hail from West Bengal, in connection with the case, and the duo led the police to the dead body of the girl who had been missing since February 4. The girl went missing from Emmegundi coffee estate in Siddapura on February 4 while returning home after attending her classes. There was no trace of the missing girl for almost a week until her bag and footwear were found in a bush near the estate on Monday. This led to the police interrogating labourers in the coffee estate. During the interrogation, the police found out that Ranjith had quarreled with the girl. This led to the police detaining and interrogating Ranjith on Wednesday. He confessed to kidnapping the girl with Sandeep and raping her after she rejected his advances. Later, the duo strangulated her and killed her to ensure that the she does not disclose the rape, police said. Her body was hidden amidst boulders near a Ganapathy temple close to the estate and it was decomposed when it was recovered by the police. The latest incident also comes a week after a labourer from Assam was among the persons accused of murdering a coffee merchant in Virajpet in the district.   The violent nature of the two crimes prompted an uproar from residents of Siddapura on Thursday and has brewed tension between local residents and the population of migrant workers in the district. The protests were supported by Congress, BJP, JD(S) and Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) workers. There is anger and resentment among the protestors against migrant labourers, who are now being viewed with suspicion in Siddapura. The protestors demanded the district administration to quicken the process of verifying the details of migrant labourers working in the district. Most migrant workers in Kodagu are paid the minimum government-mandated wages of Rs 275 per day, making them an attractive option for estate owners in the district. In the last ten years, estate owners have increasingly hired migrant labourers, mainly from Assam and West Bengal, to work in the coffee plantations. The workers in turn are happy with the meagre wages since they prefer the income to searching for work in their home state. Read: Displaced by landslides, migrant workers in Kodagu estates face threat of dismissal The district administration began collecting details of migrant workers in the district in 2017. The information was collected through plantation owners and included the names, permanent addresses and identification proofs, like Aadhaar and PAN card, of migrant workers. The process was hastened during the floods and landslides in Kodagu in August 2018 when a separate list of migrant workers was prepared by district authorities and plantation owners were urged to let go of migrant workers if their plantation was damaged. "Even now, after this incident, we have appealed to plantation owners to provide details of workers in their plantations. It is not constant so we have to keep updating the list since migrant workers keep moving in search of work. It is the responsibility of owners to provide the details regularly," says Dr Suman Pennekar, Superintendent of Police (SP), Kodagu. The police revealed action will be taken against plantation owners who do not divulge details of workers in their plantations.
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Standard Chartered employee alleges sexual harassment by 11 colleagues, FIR lodged

Sexual harassment
In her complaint, the woman stated that she was sexually and mentally harassed since May 2018 and her complaints to the HR department and the CEO of Standard Chartered Bank had not prompted any action over the issue.
A business development executive working with Standard Chartered Bank in its Koramangala branch in Bengaluru has lodged a sexual harassment complaint against 11 persons including the manager.  In her complaint, the woman stated that she was sexually and mentally harassed since May 2018 and her complaints to the HR department and the CEO of the company had not prompted any action over the issue. She has been working in the same branch for the past nine years but claimed that it was only for the past eight months that she was facing harassment from her co-workers. All 11 employees of the bank facing allegations have been booked by police under sections 354 A (sexual harassment), 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace) and 506 (criminal intimidation). She stated in her complaint that she was touched inappropriately on several occasions by the men in her office. The 11 employees named also includes women, who she claimed had gossiped and passed lewd comments about her. “My pleas and complaints to the heads concerned, including the HR and the CEO, went unanswered. I have been forced to work during holidays. Often, the manager forces me to stay back late while other colleagues leave. Men insult me by passing lewd comments. Now, the accused are forcing me to withdraw my complaint with the HR and CEO and are threatening to get me sacked if I don’t,” she said as per Times of India. In November 2018, a law intern was found dead in Bengaluru after filing a sexual harassment complaint with the police just days before she was found dead. Over the past six months, several cases of sexual harassment have come to light in the city, including in banks and in public sector jobs. 
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4 'rebel' Congress MLAs attend Karnataka assembly session

Politics
All 4 legislators -- Ramesh Jarkiholi, Umesh Jadhav, B Nagendra and Mahesh Kumatalli - returned to Bengaluru on Tuesday night and attended the session.
File image
Four 'rebel' Congress legislators, who defied the party whip to absent themselves from the budget session since February 6, came to the assembly on Wednesday and were seen sitting on the treasury benches. "All our four legislators -- Ramesh Jarkiholi, Umesh Jadhav, B Nagendra and Mahesh Kumatalli - returned to Bengaluru on Tuesday night and attended the session today (Wednesday), sitting along with our party members," a Congress leader told IANS in Bengaluru. Congress Legislature Party (CLP) leader Siddaramaiah had on Monday petitioned Speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar to disqualify the four under the anti-defection law for skipping the session for five days since February 6 in defiance of the whip and two notices served on January 18 and February 8. "The legislators' return is timely, as the assembly is set to debate the budget (presented on February 8) and vote for passing it," said the Congress leader. Denying that they were in touch with BJP to join the party, the legislators said they would not resign from the assembly or the party. "As I had written to Siddaramaiah in response to his February 8 notice, I could not attend the session since February 6 as I was indisposed and in hospital," said Kumatalli. Chincholi legislator Jadav told reporters outside the assembly building that he could not come to Bengaluru for the session till Tuesday as he was pre-occupied with constituency work. Though the rebels responded to the notice Siddaramaiah served on them for skipping the session till Tuesday, the latter earlier said the unanimous opinion of the CLP was for legal action against them under the anti-detection law, as sufficient opportunity was given to them to fall in line. In the 225-member Assembly, including one nominated from the Anglo-Indian community, the Congress has 80, including the Speaker, the Janata Dal-Secular 37, the BJP 104 and the remaining are an Independent and one each from the Bahujan Samaj Party and regional outfit KPJP.
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BBMP set to present budget for 2018-19, here are some unkept promises from last year

Budget
Lack of free WiFi, no safety gear for pourakarmikas are some of the major misses.
As the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) gets ready to present its budget at the end of this month for financial year 2018-19, before the Model Code of Conduct kicks in, here are some of the big misses from the budgetary promises made in the previous year. Safety kit for pourakarmikas— While pourakarmikas work tirelessly to keep the city clean and presentable, they are being denied their fair share. The promise of safety kits is yet to be fulfilled and they are also forced to sit in protests for timely disbursement of wages. Free WiFi— The BBMP had announced that free Wi-Fi will be provided in Bengaluru with assistance from the state government in 400 hotspots across the city. While the project has seen many false starts in the past, there has been some movement with a pilot project started in Ganganagar ward. ABC  and Kennel— Even though there were an alarming number of dog bite cases and even death of minors, BBMP did not live up to its promise of not downsizing the Animal Birth Control (ABC) programme and of setting up kennels at Panathur in Mahadevepura zone and at Halasuru Veterinary Hospital in East zone. Waste segregation and decentralisation of waste management— Despite many warnings by the Karnataka High Court, the BBMP has failed to segregate waste at source after multiple attempts. It continues to dump significant amount of mixed waste at landfills. However, for the next financial year, it has issued fresh tenders for collection of dry and wet waste separately. Rainwater harvesting— While the budget speech did have mention of adopting a prudent rainwater harvesting programme within the city and making it mandatory and construction of rainwater harvesting pits in all types of drains constructed by the Palike, there has been no action on the ground. There is also no account of Rs 5 crore earmarked for constructing pits in parks around the city for the same purpose. Tree plantation— Last year’s budget had earmarked Rs 1 crore to plant 200 saplings with tree guards and another Rs 45 crore was kept aside for enhancing greenery in the city, but no progress has been made in this regard. The long-awaited tree census has also been a non-starter.   Helipads— The BBMP had promised to build eight helipads— one in all the zones and had earmarked Rs 5 crore for the first phase for this purpose. However, BBMP officials say no work has begun on this front.
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FIR against BS Yeddyurappa, three others over audio tape row

Controversy
Sharanagouda, who is the son of Gurmitkal MLA, has also named Devadurga MLA Shivanagouda Nayak, Hassan MLA Preetham Gowda and former journalist M Maramkal in his complaint.
JD(S) worker Sharanagouda Kandkur, son of Gurmitkal MLA Naganagouda Kandkur, submitted a complaint at the Devadurga police station over the audio tape incident involving BJP state chief BS Yeddyurappa. He also furnished the audio evidence to Raichur SP Kishore Babu. “I have given a CD, which has all the details of money, place and who had called me from the BJP to the police. When I turned down their offer, they threatened me that they will finish me off politically,” Sharanagouda said as per Deccan Herald. Raichur district police registered an FIR against Yeddyurappa and three others under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, for his alleged attempts to lure Sharanagouda with the promise of money and ministerial positions, reported The Hindu.    On February 7, Sharanagouda became embroiled in the drama surrounding the coalition government when he claimed that he had received a call from BS Yeddyurappa allegedly asking him to make his father resign from his MLA post. He then made explosive allegations against Yeddyurappa after he had recorded the purported conversation between the two during a meeting at the Yadgir Circuit House in the early hours of Friday morning.  Sharanagouda has also named Devadurga MLA Shivanagouda Nayak, Hassan MLA Preetham Gowda and former journalist M Maramkal among the persons he met on that night.    Two short audio clips were released by Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy on February 8 while a longer 80-minute audio clip has been handed over to Raichur Police for investigation.   The audio tape, which was released hours before the state budget led to an uproar in both the floor of the Assembly and the floor of the Parliament this week. While BJP legislators insisted that the audio tape should be probed judicially and not discussed in the House, Speaker Ramesh Kumar ordered an SIT probe into the incident.
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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Push for Medicare buy-in picks up with '50 and over' bill



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Bengaluru’s dance bars: Why it’s so hard to bust this organised crime ring

Human Trafficking
The women are contacted by agents from Bengaluru, who promise them jobs in restaurants and bars as the maĆ®tre d’ or as bartenders.
Pixabay
Late on Sunday night, the Bengaluru Central Crime Branch sleuths raided a “couples only” bar and restaurant in Majestic’s Gandhinagar area and arrested the 32-year-old manager C Sudesh. Police say Port of Pavilion Bar and Restaurant was using the girls at the dance bar to extract money from male clients by charging them Rs 2,500 per head in order to meet the bar’s “couples only” criteria. CCB sleuths said that the women were forced to dance with the male clients and also perform lap dances. Police say that the women were from North India and were brought to Bengaluru with the promise of jobs in restaurants. The women were lodged at several paying guest accommodations in the city and were picked up for work by a vehicle owned by the bar. Every now and then, we wake up to the news of how several women, sometimes minors, were rescued from dance bars after the jurisdictional police conducted surprise raids. Every time, the women are rescued and either the bar manager or the owner is arrested. Police always say that they are in the process of hunting down the trafficking agents. More often than not, there are no reports on whether the agents were arrested and whether the police managed to arrest the people behind the organised crime racket of sex trafficking. “Hunting for agents is like looking through a smokescreen. When a lead is followed up, there is a dead end. While bringing down the racket is difficult, it is doubly difficult to track down the customers and book them,” police say. Which brings us to the question – why is it so difficult to prove that the women in these dance bars were trafficked? Random raids do not help Sherlin, an activist with Justice and Care, which works with victims of sex trafficking, says that one of reasons sex trafficking rackets are so hard to bust is the random raids conducted by police officers. “When surprise raids are conducted, the person who is generally arrested is the manager. Most of the time, the owner absconds. Even if they manage to catch the owner, they are nowhere close to knowing who the kingpin is, let alone the true identity of the agents and other middlemen,” she adds. Speaking to TNM, a senior police official who has worked on numerous sex trafficking cases says that many a time, the rescued women are scared to speak about the trafficking and abuse. “They say that they were there as employees to serve alcohol and were dancing of their own free will. When it is a minor, we have every right to take suo motu cognisance of trafficking. But most times they are all majors in dance bars and we are unable to register an FIR under section 370 (human trafficking) of the IPC and the ITPA (Immoral Trafficking Prevention Act),” the officer says. Police also say that in such situations, they are forced to let the women go and most of the times, it is the trafficker who comes to the police station to pick them up. “We know that these women are going back into the same cycle, but there is nothing we can do to stop them because there is no evidence of trafficking. Soon after the raid happens, a lot of things happen parallelly where the agents and those involved in trafficking these women become alert. Even if there is a woman who is willing to open up and talk, by the time we verify the identity of her handlers, they would have all absconded and their names would turn out to be aliases,” the police official adds. According to Sherlin, one of the reasons investigation is so difficult is that the police do not treat cases of sex trafficking in dance bars as organised crime. In most cases, the surprise raids leave room for the agents to abscond and disappear. “When the police investigate an organised drug racket or any other organised crime, it takes months of careful investigation, where they obtain all the evidence they need before conducting the raid. In the case of dance bars, the raids are conducted randomly without obtaining material evidence. They act on a tipoff and that is why the true culprits are hard to catch,” she says. New modus operandi in a digital world With changing times and the increased use of technology, the traffickers too are moving away from the modus operandi of secret meetings with clients and physical detention of women by keeping them under lock and key, police say. “I have seen many cases of trafficking in my time. There were cases where women would be kept in large houses or warehouses, locked up in rooms and allowed to go out only when they had to move from point A to point B to meet the customers. Now the traffickers too have figured out loopholes in the legal system and it is much harder to catch them or even identify or suspect them because of this,” an officer with the Anti Human Trafficking Wing of the Bengaluru Police reveals. According to the officer, women from remote areas of the North East and from tribal areas are contacted by a local agent. This is a person trusted by the parents of the women, who promises them well-paying jobs in big cities. “The idea is to create the dream of a better livelihood. They bring in an elderly man or woman if necessary, to convince the parents and show them pictures of where the women would be working,” he says. But most importantly, the agent promises the family that they would be rid of poverty and can eat three square meals a day without having to struggle. The women are asked to produce their original identity documents and marks sheets, under the pretext of attaching the same with the job application. The women are then brought from their hometowns to a transit spot. “So far we believe the transit spot could be New Delhi since most of the women are from the North East. There are people from neighbouring states too who are trafficked to the city but in relatively smaller numbers. Once they are brought here, they may be raped by the agents or sexually assaulted. They take pictures and videos of the assault and begin to threaten them. The women are told that the pictures and videos would be uploaded online and shown to their family members,” the police say. The women are then brought to Bengaluru and put up at a paying guest accommodation. The women are informed that if they do not comply with the handler’s commands, their parents would be told that they eloped with another man and that they were now working in dance bars and bringing shame upon their families. “This fear is drilled into the minds of the women every single day until they believe it and accept it as a reality. They don’t need any huge warehouse space to lock the women up and don’t even fear that they would get caught because after a certain point, the women are too scared to speak up,” says Geeta Menon, an activist with Stree Jagruti Samiti. Once the women are trafficked, police say that they are given employee ID cards by the dance bars as waiters or bartenders but are made to dance. “Traffickers have become clever. They don’t organise secret meetings anymore where the girls are brought in for the customers to pick. This is because traffickers know that such meetings can easily be busted. Since 2015, they have switched to using WhatsApp and other encrypted chatting platforms, where the pictures of the women are sent to customers and then the women are picked up and dropped off to their paying guest accommodations after the engagement with the client,” the police officer adds. Another change in MO, police say, is that the dance bars in Bengaluru do not have rooms in the bar where the women are made to engage with the customers. Over a decade ago, the surprise raids were fruitful as the police were able to find the rooms where the crimes took place. “Now, it’s all on WhatsApp or some forum on the dark web. The women are taken to pre-determined locations. This makes gathering evidence during a raid difficult,” he adds. So, what can be done? According to Praveen Sood, the CID officer heading the Anti Human Trafficking Wing in Bengaluru, the primary reason the women are reluctant to speak or come out of the vicious cycle is because they are made to feel that they have no other option at earning a good livelihood. “Most of these women are trafficked very early in life, when they are just 17 or 18. For them it’s either go back to their village, live in poverty, face the stigma and the fear of being disowned by parents, or make a living in the only way they know,” Praveen Sood says. Police officers who spoke to TNM say that the handlers have the women convinced that they cannot make a living any other way. “If your parents don’t want you, why will someone else trust you in doing some other job?  What other skills do you have?” – these are the ways the women are conditioned into believing that they have no other option,” the senior police officer says. According to Geeta Menon, the best solution to the problem is for the state to provide better employment opportunities for these women and rehabilitate them in a way that they do not feel the need to go back into the vicious cycle just to make a living. “Firstly, most of the victims I have seen believe that what they are doing is wrong. In that case, the government must ensure that they feel safe to come out of the shell and work in jobs that they feel are respectable. We cannot get into questions of morality here because the state government itself has not done much to support them. The least it can do is empower NGOs to offer this support and work with the NGOs to rehabilitate the women by figuring out what they are interested in and training them in those fields,” the senior police officer adds.    
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