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Thursday, January 9, 2020

Day after altercation on pro-CAA banner, Bengaluru Jyoti Nivas students hold silent protest

Controversy
On Wednesday, a group of students got into an argument with BJP Yuva Morcha members, who told the students to 'Go to Pakistan' and that 'they weren't Indians'.
Students of Jyoti Nivas College (JNC) in Bengaluru’s Koramangala held a silent protest in front of the college on Thursday afternoon. The silent protest was to mark their opposition to BJP Yuva Morcha members heckling and name calling a bunch of students on Wednesday who had opposed a pro-CAA banner that was put up on the college wall. The protesting students held placards and the national flag as they stood along the pavement outside their college and then went inside the college to continue with their protest. Some of the placards read, “Show us your degree, we will show our documents”, “No CAB (CAA), No NRC”. While some said, “Don’t force your opinion on us” and “Stop turning colleges into war zones, revoke CAA”. Few other students from other colleges also joined them in the silent protest.  Speaking to TNM, Megha*, a second year B.Com student said she was angry with BJP members for targeting their college. “Why did they have to come to our college which is a girl’s college? There are many other colleges which are co-ed or even boys. Targeting us, thinking we are weak is not right? And they (BJP workers) used certain words which should not be used. They told Muslims to ‘go to Pakistan’.“ She added, “How come they come and ask us to sign a petition in something we don’t believe in. This is not right. And they wanted us to say that we as JNC students support the CAA. How is that acceptable?” As reported earlier, an altercation had broken out between the students after they had objected to a pro-CAA banner stuck to their college wall by BJP Yuva Morcha members. In videos that had since then got viral, BJP workers can be seen calling the students “uneducated” and telling them, "You are not concerned about citizenship, you are concerned about yourself… you are not Indians." Manasa*, a second-year BA student, whom TNM spoke to said, “Our college took an apolitical stance and advised us not to protest. But we said we are outside college and not wearing our ID cards, so we will protest. But the administration was always like something could happen to us, let’s not make anything big out of it.” Read: BJP workers heckle Bengaluru students for opposing pro-CAA banner, students fight back Many other JNC students TNM spoke to wished to remain anonymous primarily fearing backlash from the college administration. They said they had sought permission to protest from South East DCP Isha Pant despite reservations from the college authorities and the same was granted. Koramangala Inspector Sashidhdhar who was present at the spot confirmed the same. The students stood in protests within the college premises for a while before they dispersed through the post-graduate entrance gate instead of the main gate. According to students, the college administration feared for their safety in case all of them got through the main gate.Meanwhile, when the majority of the protesting students were inside the college or had dispersed already, a group of less than 10 men wanted to make their way inside the college. A group of policemen present on the spot forced them back as they shouted slogans against the BJP. In a meeting that was held earlier in the day between the students, teachers and administration, a decision was taken not to carry out a protest outside the college premises primarily fearing safety issues of the students.An official comment from the college administration is awaited. 
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Film city to come up in Bengaluru outskirts, not in Roerich Estate: Karnataka Dy CM

Governance and policy
Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister Ashwath Narayan said the state government had decided to forego the proposal to construct the film city in Roerich Estate as it is an eco-sensitive zone.
The Karnataka government has decided to construct a film city in the outskirts of Bengaluru. The state government, however, has dropped the plan to construct it in the eco-sensitive Roerich and Devika Rani Estate. Speaking to the media, Deputy Chief Minister Dr CN Ashwath Narayan said that the state government has decided to forgo the initial proposal to construct the film city in the Roerich Estate as there were several complaints that it would amount to encroaching on an eco-sensitive zone. “We have decided to construct the film city in the outskirts of Bengaluru. Since there is not much space inside the city, we have decided that it should be built close to the city. The place and area are yet to be decided. We will announce that soon,” he said. Ashwath Narayan said that the purpose of the film city would be to encourage the animation industry and also ensure that it drives tourism. “Bengaluru is becoming the hub for animators. Movies like Lion King were made here. Places like Disney Land drive commerce because they contribute to the economy as it is a tourist hub. We are looking at various film cities across the world so that we can have one of the best ones close to Bengaluru,” he said. Successive Chief Ministers have proposed the plan of a “world-class film city” in Karnataka starting with SM Krishna in 1999, when he proposed to construct one in Hesaraghatta. Chief Minister Siddaramaiah then wanted one to come up in Mysuru and had allotted 100 acres in his home constituency Varuna. This plan was shifted to Ramanagara after Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy came to power in 2018. The plan was once again changed after BS Yediyurappa came to power in July 2019. The BJP government, however, is planning to turn the Roerich Estate into an arts and crafts village. “There will be no ecological damage to the estate and we are trying to chalk out a plan for the same,” Minister Ashwath Narayan added.   
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‘Medicare for all’ debate sidesteps cost of current system.

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Catholic Archbishop of Bengaluru Peter Machado speaks out against CAA

CAA
“There is no harm in backtracking; changing course if this is necessary for the good of the people and our people,” the letter added as a message to the government.
Rev Peter Machado (center) in a screengrab
The Catholic Archbishop of Bengaluru, Rev Peter Machado has now spoken out against the controversial Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). In a letter to President Ram Nath Kovind, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Governor of Karnataka Vajubhai Vala, the Archbishop said that religion should never be the criterion for granting citizenship, and asked the government to change course if necessary for the good of the country and the people.  The letter begins by saying that this letter is a response from all the Christian citizens of Karnataka to the controversial CAA. “While appealing to the citizens to maintain peace and harmony and that they should not recourse to violent methods to fight for their cause, we appeal to the central government to grant citizenship to the illegal migrants not on the basis of their religions but on the merit of each individual case,” the letter said.  “There is a danger that there could be a polarisation of our people along religious lines which is very harmful for the country. Religion should never be the criteria for the citizenship of our country. Nor is violence the solution when there is a difference of opinions. It is necessary that the government dialogues with those opposing the Act and come to an agreement about the way forward with justice, equity and fairness,” it added.  “There is no harm in backtracking; changing course if this is necessary for the good of the people and our people,” the letter added as a message to the government.  “We also express our solidarity with those who have been discriminated on the basis of religion and assure them of our support and fellowship that justice may be granted to them and that all of us may live as one family as brothers and sisters in this motherland,” the Archbishop’s letter said.  The recently passed amendment to the Citizenship Act makes it easy for refugees from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan to get citizenship in India, but only if they are Hindu, Christian, Sikh, Jain, Parsi, or Buddhist. The exclusion of Muslims has been criticised by several people across the country; there have been massive protests in several parts of India as the combination of CAA and the proposed nationwide National Register of Citizens could potentially make it difficult for Muslims in India to prove their citizenship. The CAA also does not help Sri Lankan Tamils, which has become a point of contention. 
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Avoid abusive language, inflammatory posters: Ramachandra Guha to students at protest

CAA
Hundreds of protesters occupied Maurya Circle in Bengaluru in a 24-hour-long protest CAA, NRC, and the violence that broke out at JNU on Sunday.
Historian Ramachandra Guha turned up at the student protest organised in Bengaluru condemning the violence that broke out in Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) on Sunday. Ramachandra was detained by Bengaluru police on December 20 while protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens (NRC). Ramachandra Guha stood in solidarity alongside students who protested for 24 hours from 6 pm on Tuesday evening to 6 pm on Wednesday. The students were opposed to the CAA, NRC and violence in campuses across India. "I would like to urge to students the importance of non-violence. We are against the authoritarianism of the right - Savarkars and Golwalkars. But if we are true to the heritage of Gandhi and Ambedkar, we must also be opposed to the authoritarianism of the left - Naxalites and worshippers of Mao and Stalin," Ramachandra said. He urged students to refrain from using abusive language in responding to adversaries. "Speak out against the discrimination that the CAA and NRC represents. But don't use rhetorical abusive language and don't display inflammatory posters," he said. He reiterated that Gandhi and Ambedkar were united on several issues including the harmony of Hindus and Muslims. "Gandhi and Ambedkar had their differences but they were united on several things. One was an absolute commitment to ending untouchability and to women equality. They were both committed to maintaining Hindu-Muslim harmony," he added. The historian spoke alongside students and activists who raised slogans and sang songs criticising the ruling government. The protest had started at 6 pm on Tuesday with around 50 people. But by midnight hundreds of people gathered to show solidarity with the students and faculty members injured in the assault that took place in the JNU campus on Sunday. The protesters began the day on Wednesday by reading the Preamble of the Constitution at 7 am and continued the sit-in protest throughout the day until they were dispersed by the police at 6 pm. The protest was planned by a collective of students along the lines of the protests held at Shaheen Bagh in New Delhi and Gateway of India in Mumbai. Read: Bengaluru's Maurya Circle turns into all-night protest site against violence at JNU
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BJP workers heckle Bengaluru students for opposing pro-CAA banner, students fight back

Controversy
The BJP workers called the students of Jyoti Nivas College "anti-national" and told them to "Go to Pakistan."
Screengrab
A few students of the Jyoti Nivas College in Bengaluru’s Koramangala were in for a rude shock on Wednesday when a group of BJP Yuva Morcha workers got involved in an altercation with them and called them “uneducated” and “anti-nationals”. According to a student, they were told to “Go to Pakistan”.   Videos of the incident which has since then got viral showed that the altercation had almost escalated to physical jostling between the BJP men and the female students. The police were eventually called in and they asked the BJP workers to leave. The issue broke out at around 3 pm, when a group of BJP workers stuck a pro-CAA banner on the college wall. The banner had the pictures of PM Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah, Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa and Lok Sabha MP Tejasvi Surya. A bunch of students objected to the banner on the college wall. The BJP workers then insisted that the students and pedestrians sign the banner irrespective of their objections. In the video, a man is seen saying, “You are not concerned about citizenship, you are concerned about yourself… you are not Indians.” He later goes on to say that the students are not the owners of the college and only the owner can only object to the banner being stuck to the wall. As the men shout menacingly at the girls, they refuse to back down and tell the men to remove the banner. As one man says let's have a debate, a student can be heard retorting that this was no debate as the men were shouting at them. One of the other men then says that they were just general public, to which the girls reply that they weren't just general public, and to look at what was written on their banners.  @under25official @fayedsouza @ndtv @BlrCityPolice @ReallySwara @indiatimes @BBCWorld Hats off to the girls of Jyothi Nivas College (Autonomous) Bangalore!! Who bravely stood up against current political suppression.#StandwithJNC#GirlPower#revokecab #StandWithJNU pic.twitter.com/V6xOJosuJr — Mir Mohammed Ali (@mirmohd_ali) January 8, 2020 TNM spoke to a professor who had come out to help the students after the altercation. On condition of anonymity, she said, “Thankfully, there was no major physical confrontation as a lot of people in the street had gathered by then. But as seen in the video, there were a lot of personal comments made by the BJP workers against our students. They called our students “uneducated” and “anti-national”. Noting some students were Muslims, they asked them to go to Pakistan and other forms of personal attack. Thinking of the safety issues, we had to ask the students to leave.” The professor added that the student body is apprehensive about their safety and security even though the police had eventually driven the BJP workers away on Wednesday. The college administration is expected to issue a statement later on Thursday. The professor further said, “This incident is not isolated. A similar thing happened with my flatmate in Koramangala. I think they have formed a pattern and they target unsuspecting women who are just stepping out of office and bully them into signing pro-CAA banners.” Taking to Twitter, Jayanagar MLA Sowmya Reddy said she and her father the local MLA Ramalinga Reddy had taken up the matter with DCP South East Isha Panth and the college principal.
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Two motorists killed in Bengaluru as ambulance coming from wrong side hits bike

Accident
Following the incident, the ambulance driver abandoned his vehicle and ran away. He was later arrested.
Representational image
In a tragic road accident, two Bengaluru-based salesmen were killed after a speeding ambulance coming from the wrong side of the Inner Ring Road, hit their two-wheeler.  The incident took place at around 6:45pm on Tuesday evening. The deceased have been identified as 28-year-old Mohammed Mansoor and 28-year-old Ibrahim Khaleel. Police said both of them were relatives and were residing at Nagawara on the northern fringe of Bengaluru. Khaleeel had been staying with Mansoor since November when he came to the city looking for a job. Following the incident, the ambulance driver abandoned his vehicle and ran away. The police control room was alerted and other ambulances were rushed to the spot to take the patient and the two motorists to a hospital. The patient was due to be taken to St John’s Hospital. The injured Mansoor and Khaleel were admitted in Manipal Hospital by 7:30 pm. The Hindu reported that Mansoor was riding the bike while Ibrahim was riding pillion. The duo were declared dead on Wednesday morning after they succumbed to their injuries. Ashok Nagar Traffic Police have registered a case of death due to negligence. Police said they arrested the ambulance driver Abhishek R later on Wednesday. He is currently in judicial custody after he was produced in a court. He is a resident of Jeevanbhima Nagar. Police said there was peak-hour traffic at the time of the accident. The collision took place when the ambulance went on the wrong side just 300 metres into the carriageway near Srinivagilu Junction.  Speaking to The Times of India, Joint Commissioner of Police (Traffic) BR Ravikanthe Gowda said this was a case of rash and negligent driving and ambulance drivers cannot flout the rules.
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