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Friday, November 29, 2019

The uncertain future of the Bangladeshi immigrants taken from Bengaluru to Kolkata

Immigration
The only thing that’s certain is that no one – neither India nor Bangladesh – seems to want these people.
Image for representation. Courtesy: Acagastya [CC0]
The Bengaluru police recently took 59 Bangladeshi immigrants in a train to Kolkata to be deported to Bangladesh. These 59 men, women and children were deemed illegal residents in India, and were taken by the police on a train to West Bengal. According to reports, many of them were not even intimated that they are being taken out of their homes to be detained for about a month before ultimately being deported. Media reports surfaced of the kind of lives they led – most of them did menial jobs, were household helps or labourers in Bengaluru. And now, all that is known since they deboarded at the Howrah Railway Station, is that they are housed at Nischinda in Howrah. “They were brought here in good condition. But now, we have no idea what is happening because no one is allowed to contact them,” says Darshana of Alternative Law Forum, a Bengaluru based legal research organisation, who is following the issue in Kolkata. Even as activists and social workers are trying to make sense of what is happening with these 59 people, there have been reports of many immigrants being ‘pushed back’ along the Indian border by the BSF, into Bangladesh. These people have been arrested or detained by the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) – and 20 of them are reportedly children. Operation Pushback A ‘pushback’ is when the Indian Border Security Force (BSF) allegedly just pushes people across the Indian border, leaving them to find their way into Bangladesh. The procedure is dangerous and illegal. The practice has its roots in the Narasimha Rao government of 1991. Operation Push Back was formulated by him as an “action plan” against Bangladeshis staying in India illegally. In September 1992, when the first operation took place, the 132 men, women and children’s heads were shaved off, so that they could be easily identifiable if they tried to enter India again. The operation received a lot of flak for the inhumane treatment caused by “forcibly pushing Bengali-speaking Indian Muslims into Bangladesh.” The operation was suspended in November 1992 after national and international criticism. However, similar operations have since been undertaken – such as Operation Flush Out which was carried out in Maharashtra against Bangladeshi immigrants. Are Bangladeshi immigrants from Bengaluru being pushed back? On November 22, Daily Star, a leading Bangladeshi newspaper reported that 329 people had been arrested in the last three weeks by the BGB while trying to illegally enter Bangladesh from India. The arrestees were sent to district jails in Bangladesh. A BGB official told the newspaper that most of these people were from Bengaluru, where some had shifted from Assam. Twenty of these 329 people are children, along with 28 women and 67 men. Another Daily Star report said that the BGB arrested 12 persons who were illegally trying to enter Bangladesh on Wednesday. They were caught by the BGB at the Daulatpur camp in Benapole, Bangladesh. Some of them were reportedly from Bengaluru, and had been living in the city for many years. They were reportedly handed over by the Indian police to the BSF, who allegedly pushed them into Bangladesh at the border. It is not yet confirmed if these persons were part of the 59 who were taken by the Bengaluru police to Kolkata. When TNM asked Bengaluru Commissioner Bhaskar Rao about the alleged pushbacks, he washed his hands off. “Our job is to take them to Kolkata and hand them over to the West Bengal police. It is now the responsibility of the Border Security Force (BSF). They are the designated agency to ensure that immigrants cross the border,” he said. The woman left in Bengaluru Meanwhile in Bengaluru, officials speak in hushed tones while describing the illegal Bangladeshi immigrants housed in a facility near Dairy Circle. “They were brought to the centre by the police and they will be taken away by the police. We do not allow anyone to visit them,” a caretaker tells TNM, speaking on the condition of anonymity.  The 59 immigrants taken to West Bengal were initially housed at the facility for a month. However, there is still one Bangladeshi immigrant left here. Her name, according to officials, is Ushnara. According to police officials, she was held along with two other Bangladeshi immigrants in a case under the Foreigners Act. However, while the other two are currently in judicial custody, Ushnara’s name is not even in the FIR at the Attibele police station. She seems to have been left in the detention facility due to delays in paperwork. And no one knows how long she is going to remain there. On visiting the facility, TNM found that Ushnara and the other detained immigrants were kept in two rooms in one corner of the building this facility is in, and were not allowed to go outside, beyond the grilled metal doors, which are kept locked. The building is surrounded on one side by a facility for the Association for the Mentally Challenged, and a Special School for Vocational Training. On the other side is the government home for children and the government homes for senior citizens and persons with physical disabilities. Officials say that Ushnara has two children who are staying at a children’s home nearby. The caretakers said that the women are allowed to meet their children, but only “on occasion”. No takers for the immigrants On one hand, the immigrants are faced with threat of pushbacks in West Bengal. On the other, those like Ushnara stare at uncertainty, where they are only allowed conditional access to their children, and no certainty about when they will be allowed out of the facility, or what will happen after that. The only thing that’s certain is that no one seems to want these people. Nisha Biswas, a Kolkata-based activist with Association of Protection for Democratic Rights (APDR), says that immigrants who are pushed back from India also face a very real risk to life. They could be shot, or the BGB could reverse pushback them. This, even as India and Bangladesh signed an MoU in 2015 which aimed to prevent trafficking, protect the rights of trafficking victims, and lay down Standard Operating Procedures for repatriation of victims which is to be done “as expeditiously as possible”. The home country is also responsible for safe and effective reintegration of these victims, according to the MoU. The treatment being meted out the immigrants right now is inhumane and unjust, activists say. “The problem is that the state looks at them as offenders, and not as victims,” argues Nisha. “Even now, there is no documentation,” she alleges, “The names of those who have been brought to West Bengal have also not been put down. When they came to Howrah, we (activists) were at the railway stations for six hours. But we got no answers.” “The due process should have started in Bengaluru. If the authorities believed that these people were illegal immigrants, then they should have taken the matter to court. The court would then have decided whether they are illegal residents. Then the embassy mandated procedure should have been followed. This whole activity of putting them in a train and bringing them here is illegal,” Nisha adds. The case in Karnataka High Court The Karnataka High Court is presently hearing a bail plea of 14 Bangladeshi immigrants who were arrested in 2018, which could also set a precedent for how issues of illegal residents are dealt with – including in this year’s case involving the 59 people. For instance, the court has sought answers about what steps the Union and state governments plan to take for the children of the immigrants. “If the child is a minor they can be allowed to be kept with their parents but what if he/she is not and the parents don't have the capacity to take their care, outside the detention centre. What is the fate of such children? State will have to make arrangements. If there is no solution, we will have to pass directions," the court said on Thursday, reported Live Law. According to Sirajuddin Ahmed, the lawyer representing the illegal immigrants arrested in 2018, “The two cases are very similar because in both cases, immigrants from Bangladesh were found without documents. But they were handled differently because there are no spaces to detain illegal immigrants in Bengaluru.” As of now, the state government has informed the High Court that it had identified 35 spaces to temporarily detain foreigners without documents in the state. These spaces are government homes for women, children and men.  The developments also come at a time Union Home Minister Amit Shah declared that the National Register of Citizens (NRC), first implemented in Assam, will be extended across the country. The NRC asks residents to prove their citizenship, the citizenship of their ancestors, and their relationship to their ancestors. In Assam, residents were asked to produce documents proving that they or their families lived in India before March 24, 1971, and in the final list published, more than 19 lakh residents were excluded.
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Rebellion brews in BJP ahead of Karnataka bye-polls: Will it end in sabotage?

Politics
Party insiders allege that a certain faction of the Karnataka BJP may be working against the candidates in five of the 15 segments.
A game of one-upmanship is underway in the BJP’s Karnataka unit ahead of the bye-elections. Disqualified Congress and JD(S) MLAs, who are contesting on a BJP ticket, are not only fighting the opposition but also allegedly those within the ruling party. Party insiders allege that a certain faction of the Karnataka BJP may be working against the candidates in five of the 15 segments as they were not happy about the decision to offer tickets to the disqualified MLAs. The rebellion is an open one in Hoskote, where BJP MP from Chikkaballapura – Bache Gowda’s son – Sharath Bachegowda, defied the party decision and filed his nomination papers as an independent. Sharath was unhappy about the BJP offering the ticket to former Congress MLA from the segment, MTB Nagaraj. Although the party expelled Sharath earlier in November for anti-party activities, sources in the BJP’s Hoskote unit allege that a faction of the BJP, who are loyal to him, are unhappy about the party’s move.  BJP insiders claim that Sharath’s followers within the party are actively working against MTB Nagaraj as the two candidates have been arch rivals in the region for over a decade. MTB Nagaraj and Sharath’s father – Bache Gowda have a long-standing rivalry as the two have been in opposing political parties for over a decade. Nagaraju has also defeated Bache Gowda senior in the 2013 and 2018 Karnataka Assembly Elections from Hoskote. “MTB Nagaraj’s base was the Congress. Now that he has shifted to the BJP, he is banking on the fact that people will vote for him and not the party he is contesting from. He has a lot of clout in the region and hence Sharath Bachegowda’s team is trying to undercut him not only from outside but from within the party as well,” the source alleges. In Chikkaballapura, former Siddaramaiah loyalist – Dr K Sudhakar too is facing a similar predicament. With former Water Resource Minister and Vokkaliga strongman DK Shivakumar campaigning for the Congress candidate M Anjappa, sources in the BJP say that the party is struggling to win in the segment, which it has never won. The Chikkaballapura segment has always elected a Congress or a Janata Party (now JD(S)) candidate and the BJP had hoped to make forays into the region by putting up disqualified MLA Sudhakar as the party’s face. However, sources allege that Sharath Bachegowda’s supporters are trying to sabotage Sudhakar’s chances of winning too as well by offering their support to Anjanappa. Another segment worrying rebel leaders is Athani, sources say, where Deputy Chief Minister Laxman Savadi has turned sour for not bagging the ticket to contest elections. Savadi was hoping to get the ticket and ensure that disqualified MLA from the region, Mahesh Kumatahalli would be made an MLC. However, Kumatahalli’s nomination has allegedly been a bitter pill for Savadi to swallow and party insiders claim that his supporters within the party, despite being given strict orders, are working against Kumatahalli in the region. “Savadi was the candidate that BL Santhosh (BJP national General Secretary) wanted the high command to pick. His rivalry with BS Yediyurappa is one of the reasons why the opinions of party workers in Athani have been divided too. It’s not just Savadi but also former BJP leader Raju Kage (now Congress candidate from Athani) and his supporters within the party who are helping him with the elections,” a BJP leader alleges. BJP insiders say that the state leaders and the high command have warned leaders and party workers about stringent action against internal rebellions. Although the supporters of these discontented leaders seem to be working for the party, the situation in these segments are somewhat similar to what happened in Mandya when Congress party workers worked against the coalition candidate and then CM HD Kumaraswamy’s son Nikhil, choosing to support independent candidate Sumalatha Ambareesh, who ended up winning.  “The state intelligence survey has also shown that the BJP may fall back in at least five segments. The fact that BJP party workers are working against party candidates is also a factor to this,” the source says.  The BJP currently has 105 MLAs and the support of one independent. The party needs 7 more seats to gain a simple majority and continue in power.  
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Six injured in explosion at Bengaluru’s Forensic Science Lab

Accident
The incident occurred at around 3 pm on Friday in the Chemistry Lab of the FSL building located in Madiwala.
An explosion took place at the Forensic Science Laboratory in Bengaluru on Friday afternoon and left six people injured.  The incident occurred at around 3 pm on Friday on the first floor of the FSL building located in Madiwala.  According to DCP South East Isha Pant, the explosion occurred at the Chemistry Lab in the FLS building when the personnel were testing an explosive that was sent in as a part of the evidence. A set of nine explosives which were sent in from another district was being examined when the incident occured, police said. Fire and Emergency Services personnel from the Jayanagar Station were pushed into service. According to officials at the control room, the call came in at around 3.02 pm on Friday and fire engines reached the FSL building by 3.15 pm.  "There was no fire as such but the device that the people were testing inside the lab exploded. There was a combustible powder scattered all over the lab's floor. We are currently cleaning it up with water so it doesn't catch fire," a firefighter deployed at the spot told TNM.  DCP Isha Pant said that the six injured persons have been rushed to St John's Hospital in Koramangala and are currently undergoing treatment. "Five of them are injured and one person, who was testing the device is critical," she said.  This is a developing story    
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A royal exploration: Travel back in time with a visit to Karnataka’s Sandur

Travel
The remote town located in the heart of Ballari district is home to Shivavilas Palace, which once belonged to the scion of the ruling family and is now a heritage hotel.
Shivavilas Palace | All pics by Susheela Nair
Overshadowed by the neighbouring UNESCO World Heritage site of Hampi, this remote town located in the heart of Karnataka’s mining district of Ballari remains fairly unexplored as a tourist destination. With its sedate pace, untouched beauty, rustic charm and pleasant weather, Mahatma Gandhi described Sandur as ‘an oasis’ when he stopped over for a few days in 1934 at the invitation of the Sandur royal family. What makes Sandur distinctive is that it is hardly on the popular tourist itinerary and thankfully so. It came to be known only after the picturesque locales of Sandur formed the backdrop of the Kannada movie Manasa Sarovara, directed by Puttanna Kanagal. In times of yore, the place was known as Skandapuri in honour of the temple dedicated to Skanda, or Kumaraswamy, that still stands today. Once upon a time, it sheltered panthers, deer, chinkaras or Indian gazelles, peacocks, set in one of the earth’s oldest rock formations. Thanks to the ban on illegal mining, the land continues to be teeming with flora and fauna, and deposits of iron and manganese ore. Today it is known as Sandur, which in local parlance means ‘town between hills’. It is an apt name for an area that is defined by a valley surrounded by forested hills, with two natural narrow gorges on either side, and the expanse of the Narihalla Reservoir. Following Gandhiji’s travel advisory ‘See Sandur in September’, we embarked on a trip in September. We started with a visit to the 1200-year old Kumaraswamy temple built by the Chalukyas, now a protected monument. It was discovered by the local rulers, the Ghorpades, in the thickly-wooded Swamimalai hill in the 15th century. Though women were allowed to worship at the adjacent Parvathi and Shiva shrines, the Kumaraswamy temple was out of bounds for women for centuries. Initially special tin barricades and a curtain were hung across the precinct to prevent women from taking a peek at the idol of Kumaraswamy. According to a temple priest, the reason for the biased attitude is the belief that Kumaraswamy, the son of Shiva and Parvathi, does not want to look at a woman. Legend has it that when his mother Parvathi found a bride for him, Kumaraswamy was shocked to find that the bride looked like her. He not only decided to forgo marriage but also vowed never to look at a woman. So, in deference to Kumaraswamy’s wishes, women were barred from this temple. The head trustee of the Kumaraswamy temple, MY Ghorpade, a former Congress finance minister of Karnataka and also the last Maharaja of Sandur, felt that religion should not discriminate. Thanks to his progressive outlook, the ban on the entry of women into the temple was lifted in 1996. The Ghorpades, well-loved and respected by the locals, had declared the temple open to Scheduled Castes/ Scheduled Tribes as early as the 1930s. After learning of this on his visit to Sandur, Mahatma Gandhi said, “A small state in south India has opened the temple to the Harijan, the heavens have not fallen.” To delve deeper into Sandur’s history we start our royal exploration at the Shivavilas Palace, home of the scion of the ruling family who handed over his territory to the Government of India in 1949. Built in the 1900s, sprawling over 20 acres, and painstakingly restored in 1941, this palace started its operation as a WelcomHeritage Hotel in 2012. A driveway lined with trees leads to the red-domed palace. Strolling around the palace, we felt we had travelled back in time. A bronze statue of a lady with a lamp in the open courtyard welcomed us. The palace has two floors of about 20,000 sq. ft each. The pillars, the corridors and the arches of the two floors overlook the courtyard. The first floor is the residential section with 12 rooms and suites of which the Maharani Suite is the pièce de résistance. The Maharaja Suite and the deluxe rooms are all equally impressive. The ground floor houses the offices, dining hall, two temples, a billiards room with bar, and a ‘durbar hall’, a virtual museum of regalia and weaponry. The library is a treasure house of ancient books. Around the ground are a swimming pool, a spa, and a garage housing the Maharaja’s collection of vintage cars. This includes a hunting jeep, a Mercedes and a Dodge. The vintage edition photos and relics of the royal family, Lambani wall hangings, antique furniture, weathered cannons, elaborate embellishments on the pillars, delicate jali work – all transported us back to an earlier era. After a tour of the palace, we had Sandur Thali, a platter of north Karnataka dishes for lunch. No trip to Sandur is complete without a visit to the Sandur Kushala Kala Kendra (SKKK), which is just a hop, skip and jump from the palace. The centre was started to revive and market traditional Lambani craft. As we walked into the SKKK premises, we saw a colourful group of Lambani women from the neighbouring settlements engrossed in creating magic and marvels out of scraps. It was fascinating to watch them fashioning rhythms with needle and thread. Using thread pulled from old saris, they sewed together small pieces of cloth to create beautiful garments, linen and accessories. They create wonders with their applique patch work and thread embroidery with mirrors, shells, wooden beads, coins and other tiny metallic jewellery to add more shine and elegance to the fabric. The designs, motifs and colours are inspired by images from their nomadic lifestyle and their folk traditions and rituals. Traditionally, these painstakingly created items were an essential part of the bridal trousseau. In the past, work on a trousseau began as soon as a girl was born! SKKK owes its existence to the initiative and involvement of Sandur Manganese and Iron Ores Limited (SMIORE). The centre has also units for khadi, cane, bamboo, stone and wood sculpting, traditional block-printing and natural dyeing. Susheela Nair is an independent food, travel and lifestyle writer, and photographer based in Bangalore. She has contributed content, articles and images on food, travel, lifestyle, photography, environment and ecotourism to several reputed national publications. Her writings constitute a wide spectrum, including guide books, brochures and coffee table books.
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'Mundina Nildana' review: A charming urban love story that stays with you

Review
The characters are an apt representation of millennials and their state of mind – be it career or love.
Urban love stories have a unique charm. They are engaging, entertaining and most importantly, relatable for the multiplex audience. As far as Sandalwood is concerned, urban love stories are a rarity. Lifeu Ishtene, Ayana, Katheyondu Shuruvagide, Iruvudellava Bittu, Nathicharami are a few that fall in this category. Joining this list is Vinay Bharadwaj’s slice-of-life tale Munidna Nildana (Next destination). Filled with love and beautiful frames, the 1-hour-45-minute long movie leaves you craving for more. The movie opens with Partha Srivatsav (Praveen Tej) explaining his photos to a woman at an exhibition. Partha is an IT professional whose first love is photography. He loves to indulge in nature while playing with the camera. He accidentally meets Meera Sharma (Radhika Narayan), an art curator. A few cuppas later, friendship turns into love and they start living together. But when marriage comes up, there are complications. A medical student Ahana (Ananya Kashyap) also makes an appearance. Unlike your usual love story, the characters here are independent and well-etched, keeping youngsters in mind. Like in the scene where Meera proposes to Partha. She doesn’t care about conventional dating rules and plays by her whims. So does Partha. He hates marriage and stands by his decision. But that doesn’t make his love any lesser. The characters are an apt representation of millennials and their state of mind – be it career or love. The beauty of Mundina Nildana is that just when you think something is a cliché, a brilliant twist awaits you. What could have been just another love story has been carefully crafted as a slice-of-life film, courtesy a brilliant screenplay, rich cinematography and a fitting colour grading. As you walk out of the film, you are left with the feeling of having witnessed something really beautiful, like you have taken a trip to the most beautiful place where you have not only enjoyed the stay, but also the whole journey. A lot of scenes linger within. Cinematographer Abhimanyu Sadanandan is the real hero here. Every frame is gorgeous. Shah Rukh Khan’s Red Chillies Entertainment has done the colour grading and the quality of work stands out. The contrasts, the props, the lighting are placed aptly and they pan out beautifully on the canvas. Be it Partha-Meera’s room’s balcony, the Himalayas, the Netherlands or Sakleshpura, everything has been captured artistically, especially keeping the youngsters and their tastes in mind. Perhaps because it is an urban tale, the actors have gotten into the skin of the characters easily. Praveen Tej, who was earlier known for Simple Aag Innond Love Story and Churi Katte, emerges as a mature actor here. Years of film experience have made a difference in the way he faces the camera. This is also one of Radhika Narayan’s finest performances. She steals the show in the second half. Ananya Kashyap is a revelation. She debuted as a schoolgirl in Neerdose and here, she passes with flying colours. Dattanna in a cameo role is brilliant as always. Ajay Raj as Eka, Partha’s friend, gives much-needed support to the actor. There are no unwanted characters and the film stays true to its roots. Another highlight is that none of the lead actors here are new, but since they have appeared in only a few films, their energy has helped the filmmaker maintain the freshness of the story. It is hard to believe that this is Vinay Bharadhwaj’s debut movie. He has put in a lot of effort to narrate a charming story with the right pauses and frames. Most films in this genre usually end up being slow at some point, but Mundina Nildana maintains the pace throughout. And with the pauses comes Vasuki Vaibhav’s melodious music. The songs 'Manase Maya' and 'Innu Bekagide' stay with you. If you are tired of typical commercial films and want to experience something new and colourful, make sure you book your tickets to Mundina Nildana and enjoy this beautiful journey. Disclaimer: This review was not paid for or commissioned by anyone associated with the series/film. TNM Editorial is independent of any business relationship the organisation may have with producers or any other members of its cast or crew.
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Bengaluru lake breach: BBMP blames encroachment by BDA for flooding

Civic Issues
According to the survey map produced by the Revenue Department, the BDA encroached on 6 acres and 13 guntas of lake land and constructed a road that ran right across the lake.
The flash floods caused in Bengaluru’s Hulimavu on the afternoon of November 24 have left several families of blue-collar workers in the lurch. Living in hutments measuring 10x20 ft, the residents of this colony, located adjacent to the Hulimavu Lake, have lost most of their possessions and life savings. While the Hulimavu Police are still probing what caused the breach in the bund that led to the floods, BBMP Mayor Goutham Kumar says that the colony that flooded was built upon land encroached from the lake. The mayor claims that the Bangalore Development Authority encroached over the lake land around a decade ago to construct the layout in Hulimavu and sold it to willing buyers.  Hulimavu Lake spans across 124 acres and along its northern side stands the layout.  According to revenue maps, the BDA encroached upon 17 acres and 33 guntas of lake land to construct the colony. The planning of the area is so bad, Arekere BBMP corporator Bhagyalakshmi Murali says that since the layout was built on encroached land, it ended up being the first area to face the brunt of the flash floods.   On Sunday afternoon, the bund constructed at the exit of the lake breached and water began flowing into the layout located along the northern periphery. A contractor had dug up a portion of the bund to allow water to flow into the storm drain. However, the walls of the bund gave way and flooded the locality. An entire layout of houses is located in the north-eastern side of Hulimavu Lake and the back walls of the houses have been attached to the walls of the primary stormwater drain. A mud road run across the lake land while apartments stand tall on the north-western end of the lake. This area is also the flood plain of the lake, which means, in case of flooding, the water is most likely to naturally flow in that direction. According to the survey map produced by the Revenue Department, the BDA encroached on 6 acres and 13 guntas of lake land and constructed a road that ran right across the lake. In addition, 11 acres and 2 guntas of lake land were encroached upon by the BDA to construct the layout. In addition, the former Speaker KB Koliwad’s report on Lake Encroachments in Bengaluru had noted that the BDA had encroached upon around 129 acres in the city and out of these, 29 lakes were encroached upon in South Bengaluru. BBMP officials say that the BDA was supposed to hand over the custody of the Hulimavu lake to the Palike in 2007.  “BDA handed over the lake to us (BBMP) only in 2016. We got Rs 6 crore to rejuvenate the lake only recently. If the encroachments had not been there, then the water from the lake would not have crossed the threshold of the bund, as there would have been more space for water to accumulate. There is a temple that is also encroaching on the lake property. These encroachments happened over a decade ago and BDA was supposed to take action. But BDA encroached on lake land so who is responsible?” a BBMP official asked.    
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Former K’taka CMs Siddaramaiah and HD Kumaraswamy booked for sedition

Crime
23 Cong-JD(S) leaders and 9 police officials have also been booked for over a protest held outside the Income Tax Department Office in Bengaluru ahead of the Lok Sabha elections.
The Bengaluru Police registered a case of sedition on Wednesday against former Karnataka Chief Ministers Siddaramaiah and HD Kumaraswamy, along with 23 other Congress and JD(S) politicians and nine police officials for protesting outside the Income Tax Department Office in Bengaluru ahead of the Lok Sabha elections.  Based on a complaint filed by A Mallikarjun, who says he is an activist, the Commercial Street Police registered the case and have booked the 29 people under various sections of the IPC. The FIR was registered after the 82nd CCH Court in Bengaluru issued an order for the same on November 22.   Speaking to TNM, the Commercial Street Police said that they have booked Siddaramaiah, HD Kumaraswamy, Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee President Dinesh Gundu Rao, Korategere MLA Congress Dr G Parameshwara, Kanakapura Congress MLA DK Shivakumar, Krishnaraja Nagar JD(S) MLA Sa Ra Mahesh, Maddur JD(S) MLA DC Thammanna, Mandya JD(S) MLA Shivalinge Gowda, disqualified MLA from Rajarajeshwari Nagar, Munirathna Naidu; and 10 other Congress and JD(S) leaders.  In addition to this, the former Bengaluru Police Commissioner T Suneel Kumar, former DCP East Rahul Shadpurwad, former DCP Central Deveraju and six other police officers have been booked as well.  "The complainant had initially approached us and filed a complaint. But we had taken cognisance of the complaint and registered a non-cognisable report. He went to court and got the order on November 22. We are enforcing court orders," the Commercial Street  Police said.  A Mallikarjun has alleged in his complaint that the then Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy violated the law by allegedly leaking information to the media about Income Tax raids in Mandya even before the raids occurred. He accused Congress and JD(S) leaders of violating the model code of conduct ahead of the Lok Sabha elections by staging a protest outside the Income Tax Department office in Bengaluru.  "They falsely accused the Income Tax Department of being BJP agents and caused inconvenience to public servants in carrying out their duties. The Bengaluru Police Commissioner and other officers did not take any action against them and were complicit in these seditious activities," Mallikarjun's complaint reads.  On March 27 this year, Congress and JD(S) leaders, including the two former Chief Ministers, staged a protest outside the Income Tax Department office accusing the BJP high command of using the central investigative agencies like the Income Tax Department, CBI and Enforcement Directorate to target opposition leaders.  A day after the protest was staged, Income Tax officials conducted a search and seizure operation at the home of former JD(S) MP from Mandya, CS Puttararaju, ahead of the Lok Sabha elections. Kumaraswamy later had accused the BJP of using the Income Tax Department to target JD(S) leaders in Mandya as they were campaigning for his son Nikhil Kumaraswamy, who was the Congress-JD(S) coalition's candidate for the constituency.  "The Income Tax Department had informed Kumaraswamy about the raids but he leaked the information to the media and went against the law," Mallikarjun's complaint adds.  The Commercial Street police have registered a case under sections 217 (public servant disobeying direction of law with intent to save person from punishment or property from forfeiture), 176 (omission to give notice or information to public servant by person legally bound to give it), 121 (waging, or attempting to wage war, or abetting waging of war against the Government of India), 177 (furnishing false information), 506 (punishment for criminal intimidation), 153A (Promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc., and doing acts prejudicial to maintenance of harmony), 503 (Criminal intimidation), 414 (assistance in concealment of stolen property), 149 (unlawful assembly), 143 (punishment for unlawful assembly), 505(2) (public mischief), 124A (sedition), 353 (assault or criminal force to deter a public servant from discharging duty), 409 (criminal breach of trust by public servant), 350 (criminal force), 405 (criminal breach of trust), 417 (cheating), 120(A) (criminal conspiracy), 416 (cheating by personation), 171C (interfering with electoral rights), 119 (public servant concealing design to commit offence), 141 (overawe by criminal force), 142 (being a member of an unlawful assembly), 499 (defamation) of the Indian Penal Code.  Read: EC files case against K'taka CM BS Yediyurappa over 'casteist' speeches  
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