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Friday, December 20, 2019

Two dead, two people still critical after police firing in CAA protests in Mangaluru

CAA
Police sources also told TNM that a total of 11 people in Thursday's firing.
Violence during the protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act left two dead in Mangaluru on Thursday, and two persons are now in a critical condition. Police sources have told TNM that while there is a total of 11 people injured in the aftermath of violence, and a source at the Highland Hospital in Mangaluru has confirmed to TNM that they presently have two persons admitted in the ICU. One has bullet injuries in his abdomen area. Mangaluru Commissioner PS Harsha told media persons that while there were prohibitory orders (section 144) in the city, there were some people who turned violent, causing threat and damage to people and public property in many places. “The situation turned very grim around 4 pm yesterday. In the North Mangaluru police station limits, 5000-6000 people had collected and then turned violent. They surrounded the police station and started attacking civilians,” he alleged. The Commissioner added that they used “legitimate force” to bring the situation under control. While the police have maintained that they just fired in the air, some visuals that have emerged from Thursday show police firing in the crowd. “When things got out of control, two shots were fired in the air. Around eight to ten people attacked the police then and beat them up with stones," Harsha had said on Thursday. The two people who died have been identified as Jaleel Kudroli (49) and Nausheen Bengre (23). “Both of them had bullet injuries. One had the bullet injury on his head, near his eye. A bullet had made a clean break via the stomach of the other patient. Both were declared dead and the police was informed as it was a medico-legal case,” the source from Highland Hospital had told TNM. Later, on Thursday night, CCTV videos also emerged from Highland showing the police personnel barging into the hospital and throwing tear gas shells. Another video showed some protesters – who had gathered near the hospital hearing news of the two deaths – pelting stones at the police, and then running inside the hospital. The police, who ran after them inside, also took the caregivers, and relatives of other patients in the hospital to be protesters and threw tear gas shells at them. Read: CCTV footage shows Mangaluru cops barging into a hospital, use tear gas shells
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Section 144: HC asks Karnataka govt if it can ban each and every protest

CAA
The Karnataka government has been asked to reply by 4 pm whether it will consider allowing peaceful protests if organisations re-apply for permission.
PTI/Represntational image
The Karnataka High Court on Friday asked if the state government intends to ban each and every protest and questioned how permission for a protest following due process was withdrawn. The Karnataka High Court was hearing a plea filed by Congress Rajya Sabha MP Rajeev Gowda against the imposition of Section 144 across Karnataka. The prohibitory orders came in the light of multiple collectives seeking permission to protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act.   The bench led by Chief Justice AS Oka asked the state government whether it will consider allowing organisations to hold a peaceful protest if they give in a fresh application seeking permission for the same. The state’s counsel has been asked to appear before the court at 4 pm with the government’s response. The court also said that it will examine the legality of the Section 144 order put by the government. The bench also questioned if an author or artist can protest or not if he/she disagrees with a government decision. The court further questioned if the state can assume that every protest will become violent.  Congress’s Rajeev Gowda was one of many petitioners who approached the high court after the state government imposed prohibitory orders under Section 144 on Wednesday evening till midnight on December 21.  Speaking at a press conference then, Bengaluru City Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao had said, “As many as 60 groups, both for and against CAA, had requested permission for protests on Thursday. We took a decision that both groups should not be allowed. Taking into consideration what's been happening in various parts of the country where protests and processions have resulted in violent actions, resulting in large scale law and order problems, including injury, death and police firing, buses being stoned and burnt, we do not want such a situation in Bengaluru." He added that action will be taken on those who violate prohibitory orders under section 188 of the IPC. (Disobeying orders promulgated by a public servant). However, defying Section 144, large crowds of protesters gathered in Town Hall on Thursday morning and more than a 100 protesters, including historian Ramachandra Guha, were detained. As waves of protesters continued to arrive at Town Hall and due to the huge numbers, the police were forced to allow a sit-in protest.   
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Kerala TV journalists detained in Mangaluru, police cite no accreditation

CAA
Amongst those detained are camerapersons and reporters from prominent Malayalam news outlets like Asianet, Manorama, News18 and Mathrubhumi.
Over 15 journalists were detained by the Mangaluru police on Friday, while they were covering the post-mortem of two people who died in police firing at the Wenlock hospital. The City Commissioner's office claimed that that they were being questioned because they were not carrying 'accreditation cards' issued by any authority. A majority of the journalists detained are from Malayalam channels. Mangaluru police commissioner Dr Harsha told News 18 that, "Few people not having any accreditation cards issued by any authority, not from any formal media and in possession of many things unconnected to reporting are being questioned." Accreditation cards, which are issued to journalists by the state and central government, grant access to state Assemblies, Parliament and other government events. However, it is not compulsory for journalists to possess the card to cover regular events and news, and there are no inter-state accreditation cards. According to the Commissioner's office, the journalists were detained around 9 am and other journalists were not allowed to talk to them. Amongst those detained are camerapersons and reporters from prominent Malayalam news outlets like Asianet, Manorama, News18 and Mathrubhumi. They were forced to sit inside a van outside the Wenlock Hospital morgue. They had come there to report and speak to family members of victims of yesterday's incident. When asked about the journalists detained from his state, Kerala Revenue Minister E Chandrasekharan said, "Once I received the information that Kerala journalists including those from Kasaragode have been taken into custody by police in Mangaluru, I asked Kerala Chief Secy to contact Karnataka Govt and conduct an inquiry into it. " This detention comes after two persons died following violence in Mangaluru on a day of protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act in the city. The people who died are Jaleel Kudroli (49) and Nausheen Bengre (23). The police have not officially said what injuries the two people sustained, but sources in the hospital say they were bullet injuries.    
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CCTV footage shows Mangaluru cops barge into a hospital, use tear gas shells

Protest
“The police thought that even the caregivers at the hospital were part of protesters and started lathi charging everyone,” a source told TNM.
CCTV footage from 6.56 pm on Thursday from the Highland Hospital in Mangaluru shows two Karnataka police personnel rushing through a corridor and trying to open a door in a ward by kicking it down. Initially, the policemen successfully open the door and go inside, when the people inside push them out. Within seconds, more police personnel join them and try to break open the door using lathis, shields and by kicking at it. In another video, around the same time, the police can be seen charging at people in the hospital’s lobby, where the waiting area is located. A few people can be seen wearing masks, some covering their noses and running into the Intensive Care Unit and closing the door before the police can get to them. This, hospital sources say, happened after the police threw tear gas shells into the hospital. Video 1: Shows that a tear gas shell was thrown in Highland Hospital lobby in Mangaluru and people including caregivers rushing inside. Police entered highland hospital and kicked at ICU doors. People can be seen running. @thenewsminute #CAAProtests pic.twitter.com/Jt8RYILZPM — Theja Ram (@thejaram92) December 20, 2019 Video 2- Shows police trying to kick and enter a room in the Highland Hospital ward in Mangaluru. They were looking for protesters, but hospital authorities say they lathicharged everyone including attenders. @thenewsminute #CAAProtests pic.twitter.com/LiYvhJqM83 — Theja Ram (@thejaram92) December 20, 2019 A source in Highland Hospital told TNM that two persons – Jaleel Kudroli (49) and Nausheen Bengre (23) – were brought into the hospital around 5 pm on Thursday with injuries. The attenders at the hospital allegedly did not realise that they were dead and called for senior doctors to examine the injuries. “Both of them had bullet injuries. One had the bullet injury on his head, near his eye. A bullet had made a clean break via the stomach of the other patient. Both were declared dead and the police was informed as it was a medico-legal case,” the source said. In the meantime, a small crowd had started gathering at the hospital as news spread that the two men had died. When police personnel reached the hospital, a few patients and attenders too went out to see what was happening. “There was a confrontation between police and protesters, both sides started throwing stones. But the police thought that even the caregivers at the hospital were part of protesters and started lathi charging everyone. They used two tear gas shells. One at the parking area and another at the entrance lobby.” “The stones hit two cars belonging to hospital doctors and one window was shattered. Then the police barged into the lobby, and started banging on the doors of hospital wards. There were around 60 inpatients, their caregivers and relatives were also there. Police mistook them for protesters,” the hospital source said. Other then the two men brought dead, a third person with bullet injuries is also at the hospital; he remains critical. The police personnel then reached the lobby near the ICU where several people who had brought Jaleel and Nausheen were waiting in the lobby. Hospital sources say that the police then threw tear gas shells in the lobby and people began grabbing masks at the counter and running away. “The people got scared and they ran inside the ICU and closed the door. The police kept banging on the ICU door, it has been damaged too,” the source added. The police then tried to open the rooms in one of the wards, as a few people had rushed inside and locked themselves in. The police were allegedly in the hospital for close to 45 minutes and left the premises later when doctors assured them that the people who had come out on the roads outside the hospital were relatives of patients who were curious about the ruckus and all were not protesters. The hospital administration was alarmed at the behavior and began telling the police to leave. When police allegedly refused to take away the bodies Speaking to TNM, a police source said that they were reluctant to take the bodies from the hospital. This was confirmed by a source in the hospital. “The police just told us to keep the bodies with us. We had to persuade them saying that it’s a medico-legal case and we cannot keep the bodies here longer as we did not have a mortuary,” the source said. Finally, after negotiations with the police and heads of the Muslim community in the area, the police agreed to shift the bodies to Wenlock Hospital and allow the family members of the deceased persons to stand guard at the mortuary. “The relatives of the deceased were convinced that the police would hurriedly conduct an autopsy and cover up the bullet injuries. They wanted them to be kept in a mortuary in a private hospital. Finally after negotiations, all parties agreed to the deal and the bodies were shifted to Wenlock around 8 pm,” the source said.
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‘Can’t wait and let it happen’: First-time protesters join anti-CAA protests in Bengaluru

CAA
Hundreds of people were protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act as well as Section 144 imposed in Bengaluru since 6 am on Thursday.
PTI
Archana S, who works at a non-profit organisation in Bengaluru, has always been cautious about putting up or sharing anti-government posts on social media. She even feared speaking out anything overtly about political parties, be it online or at the office. But on Sunday, visuals of police action against the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University and Aligarh Muslim University shook her. “I thought if I, with all my privileges, do not protest now, then when will I?” And thus, Archana reached Town Hall in Bengaluru on Thursday morning. She was one among those who were protesting, for a cause, in a public space for the first time.  Some young professionals and students who took to the streets for the first time told TNM what spurred them to come out and protest along with thousands of other citizens across India. “I have fallen in love with the country once again after coming out to protest,” says Archana. “The National Register of Citizens and the Citizenship Amendment Act are supposed to divide us. But, on the contrary, I believe it has only strengthened our belief in secularism. Initially, I thought I would be one of the few who would come out today, but I was surprised to see a large crowd of protesters who reached before me.” Swapnil, an undergraduate student from Kolkata studying at Christ University, is concerned about how the CAA targets one community.  Read: 2 persons dead after violence in anti-CAA protest in Mangaluru “Things have been bad for a while in the country with the government keen on taking forward policy decisions without having a concern for the effect it has on people. But this particular issue, we cannot wait and let it happen. NRC and CAB combined directly attacks one community and if this happens once, there will be no recourse left,” he said Joshua, a journalism student at a private university in Bengaluru and a native of Kerala, has only been voicing his dissent over CAA on social media. “When I heard there will be a large protest, my friends and I decided to join. I am against the decision as it is discriminatory. How are persecuted Hindus from our Muslim-majority neighbouring countries different from a Rohingya or a Sri Lankan Tamil? Why should we allow such a discriminatory law in our secular country?” he asked.  Vernetta Namshum, a native of Arunachal Pradesh and student of the National Law School University of India in Bengaluru, has been against the Citizenship Amendment Bill ever since it came to the fore in 2016. “And once the Bill was passed and made into an Act, the whole of Northeast India was burning. Hence, there is a need to hit the streets now to make the government realise that we are against it,” he said.   Read: Did imposition of Section 144 backfire in Bengaluru? Hundreds turn up to protest According to Vernetta Namshum, the people of Assam asked for NRC due to historical reasons as the region went through demographic changes. “But it was not exclusionary with respect to any particular religion. Moreover, CAA is arbitrary when the government proposed December 31, 2014 as the cut-off date for citizenship. How will this help the cause of NRC?” he asks.  Section 144, which restricts assembly of more than five people in public place, has been imposed across Karnataka since 6 am on Thursday and will be in place until the midnight of December 21. Prohibitory orders were declared even as several protest marches were planning for Thursday. However, despite the order, the city saw simultaneous and peaceful protests at Town Hall and Mysore Bank Circle, among other places. Over 200 protesters were detained. Meanwhile, cities like Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad saw similar peaceful protests, where celebrities also participated. There were also reports of internet and mobile connectivity shut-down in parts of the country, including the national capital.  Also read: Mobile internet services suspended in Mangaluru city and Dakshina Kannada for 48 hours
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Two bike-borne men attack BMTC woman bus conductor with acid in Bengaluru

The victim, Indira, suffered severe burn injuries on her face, neck and chest.
Image for representation
An employee with the Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) was attacked on her way to work by two men on motorbikes. She was walking to the bus stop in the morning to begin her duty in Peenya, when the acid was suddenly thrown on her. The culprits escaped on the motorcycle, leaving Indira to scream for help from passers-by. The Hindu reported that the victim is from Tumakuru district, and works at the Peenya bus depot. Her husband is also an employee with the BMTC. The victim was rushed to a hospital in Hessarghatta and is now admitted to the ICU. Police are waiting to record the victim’s statement after she recovers. Police suspect that the attackers were waiting for Indira as this is her usual route to work. The victim’s husband told Deccan Chronicle that there was a previous attempt to take her life in a hit and run incident by her relatives, but they had not succeeded. However, a case was not filed with the police at that time. He told DC that these people are the main suspects. The Bagalgunte police are investigating all angles of the case, and are looking into local CCTV footage of the incident. In a 2017 pan-India survey undertaken regarding the number of acid attack victims in each state, Karnataka recorded four cases. The survey found that Uttar Pradesh had the largest number of such cases, with 56 acid attacks being reported. The data was taken from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB).
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Boris Johnson eyes sweeping agenda for health care



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