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Monday, December 30, 2019

'Will show videos to educate people': K'taka BJP plans pro-CAA door-to-door campaign

CAA
The BJP will hold mega rallies in major cities in the state, including Bengaluru, Mangaluru, Mysuru, Ballari, Belagavi, Hubballi and Kalaburagi.
The BJP in Karnataka will begin its campaign in support of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act 2019, across the state, from January 1. The move is to counter the protests that have erupted against the legislation across the country. The BJP will hold mega rallies in major cities in the state, including Bengaluru, Mangaluru, Mysuru, Ballari, Belagavi, Hubballi and Kalaburagi. The rallies will be conducted from January 1 to 15. BJP state general Secretary Ravikumar said that the party will hold similar rallies in all 30 district headquarters. This comes in the backdrop of massive protests against the CAA and National Register of Citizens (NRC) across the state. “We are planning a two-week-long CAA awareness campaign to counter the protests launched against it by students. This is being done by the Congress and Left parties to create a false impression against the Act,” Ravikumar claimed. The BJP’s cadre will go door to door and plans to show people video “explainers” in English, Kannada and Hindi during this campaign. “The protests are due to a misinformation campaign. Students and the public are being misguided and we are going door to door to explain it to people through videos,” he added. Massive protests broke out across the country after the Citizenship Amendment Act was notified in the Gazette of India. On December 15, there was a clash between the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University and the Delhi police. Visuals of police personnel barging into Jamia and attacking students in the library had outraged the student communities across the country, who took to the streets to protest against the police excess and also the CAA and NRC. A total of 26 people have died in the country due to police force in areas where the protests took place. The death toll has reached 19 in Uttar Pradesh. Five people were killed in Assam and two in Mangaluru. Protests in Mangaluru began on December 19 when section 144 of the CrPC (curtailing movement of more than five persons) was imposed across the state. Police in the Mangaluru North and Bunder Police stations began firing at the protesters. Jaleel Kudroli and Nausheen died due to bullet injuries. The Karnataka government has also announced that ex-gratia will not be allotted to Jaleel and Nausheen if they are found guilty of rioting. The state government is also mulling over extracting penalties from protesters stating that they caused damage to public property.    
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Bengaluru rail activists urge MPs to use local funds to build six halt stations

Transport
The Hoodi Railway Station in Whitefield was built with the MPLAD funds of Bengaluru Central MP PC Mohan.
With the Centre dragging its feet over setting up a suburban rail authority line in Bengaluru, rail activists are running a campaign to urge the Members of Parliament to build halt stations using its Local Area Development (LAD) funds. A halt station refers to a railway station with minimal facilities, where only a few trains stop.  Incidentally, the Hoodi Railway Station in Whitefield, which was inaugurated in February this year, was built with the MPLAD funds of Bengaluru Central MP PC Mohan. Located between KR Puram and Whitefield Railway station in the Cantonment-Whitefield line in the eastern fringe of the city, the Hoodi station is near many major IT (information technology) and BT (biotechnology) offices on the outer ring road (ORR). The new station has proved to be a boon for many workers and has resulted in the reduction of the traffic gridlock witnessed in the neighbouring areas. Now activists want six new such stations to be built, among which two are in the Bengaluru Rural limits, while two are in Bengaluru North limits. The other two stations are in Chikkaballapur and Bengaluru Central limits. These stations will benefit many travelling to the city from these peripheral areas for work and, in the process, reduce the traffic congestion in the city. According to Sanjeev Dyamannavar, a long-time suburban rail crusader, basic amenities of a halt station can be set up within Rs 2-3 crore. These include setting up ticket counters, foot over bridge, platforms and access roads, among others.  “All new trains added in the suburban rail circuit have been getting huge patronage. The usage will further increase as people are also adapting and readjusting their travel to new train services,” he says.  The activists, under the aegis of Bengaluru Suburban Rail Users, are planning to take up the issue with the respective MPs in the coming days. Work on building a halt station for the Bengaluru Airport has already begun near Devanahalli, which is being funded by the airport authority. The work is set to be completed by February 2020.  Rajkumar Dugar, Convenor of the NGO Citizens 4 Citizens, another suburban rail activist said, “There are already half a dozen trains running through the under-construction airport halt station. So we need trains from different directions around the city to the airport. The number of flyers near the airport is increasing at a high pace as the second terminal is also going to be ready. So it would be good if at least 20-25% of the airport-bound traffic is off the roads.”   He also suggested some alternative train routes to the airport: Ramanagara-Bengaluru (Majestic)-Yelahanka-Airport, Hosur-Heelalige-Carmelaram-Byappanahalli-Yelahanka-Airport, Bangarpet-Baiyappanahalli-Airport and from Tumakuru to the Airport. “There is no need to lay new tracks as they already exist in these routes. With this, much of the traffic problem in Bengaluru can be neutralised,” said Rajkumar. In addition to this, the activists are going to run a Twitter campaign to urge Prime Minister Narendra Modi to approve the special purpose vehicle (SPV), which has already been sanctioned by the Extended Railway Board of the Indian Railways on November 4. SPV, like the BMRCL for the city’s metro, is required for swift allocation and utilisation of funds for numerous projects for the suburban rail network. The campaign will begin when the Prime Minister is set to visit the state in the first week of 2020. Read:New Kolar-Whitefield train launched, will benefit those working in north Bengaluru Read: Railway Board clears long-awaited Bengaluru suburban rail project    
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Sunday, December 29, 2019

Thousands of devotees queue up to pay respects to Pejawar seer Vishwesha Theertha Swami

The seer’s remains were airlifted from Udupi to Bengaluru through a helicopter to the HAL airport at 4 pm.
It was exactly 9:21 am on Sunday morning when a junior seer in the Pejawar Mutt in Udupi confirmed the worst fears of devotees at the Sri Krishna Temple in Udupi- that Vishwesha Theertha swami, the seer of Pejawar Mutt was no more.  Immediately after the announcement, Udupi’s BJP MLA Raghupathi Bhat told reporters outside the Pejawar Mutt that doctors had confirmed that the seer had passed away at the mutt.  Earlier on Saturday evening, doctors at Kasturba Hospital in Manipal had in a bulletin stated that the seer “remains unconscious and continues to be on life support systems. Tests done showed severe brain dysfunction”. The seer was shifted to the Pejawar mutt along with ventilator support early on Sunday morning.  By 10 am, thousands of devotees gathered at the Sri Krishna Temple, to pay their respects to the seer. A procession was held taking the seer’s mortal remains around Car Street, where all eight mutts of the Sri Krishna Temple are located. The remains were later shifted to Ajjarkad Ground in Udupi to allow the public to pay their respects.  Meanwhile, Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa announced a three-day mourning period in the state after paying his respects to the seer in Udupi. The seer’s remains were kept in a bamboo basket and he was honoured by Yediyurappa who placed a national flag in front of the basket. The seer was also given a 21-gun salute, as per full state honours, by police officials in Udupi.  The seer’s remains were then airlifted to Bengaluru through a helicopter to the HAL airport at 4 pm. Thousands of devotees in the city paid respects to him at the National College Grounds. The devotees waited for over three hours patiently to catch a glimpse of the revered seer.  Almost all high-profile BJP leaders in the state were present including Chief Minister Yediyurappa, MPs Shobha Karandlaje and Tejasvi Surya, ministers Basavaraj Bommai, R Ashok, Ashwath Narayan and Govind Karjol. Union Minister of Finance Nirmala Sitharaman also arrived at the ground at 5:30 pm to pay respects to the seer. Opposition leaders including Siddaramaiah, MB Patil, HK Patil and Dinesh Gundu Rao, also paid respects to the seer.  The seer’s remains were laid rest at the Vidyapeetha in Basavangudi after 9 pm, where the last rites were conducted.  “He was a guru who did not differentiate on the basis of caste or religion. He has held iftaar at the Udupi Sri Krishna Temple and he was against the practice of Made Snana. He was a spiritual guide to many of us and he always said that we have to be role models in our society,” Raghottama Acharya, a disciple of the seer told TNM.  Vishwesha Theertha swami was considered one of the most liberal seers in the Ashta mutts of the Udupi temple. He was also a member of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s steering committee constituted to pursue the Ram Janmabhoomi movement.  He had also shot off a letter during Emergency in India in 1975.  
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Exploring the fascinating ruins of the historic town of Srirangapatna

Travel
The Ranganatha Temple, Jama Masjid, Tipu’s Summer Palace, the Gumbaz, the Sangam where two tributaries of the Cauvery meet are some of the town’s tourist attractions.
Tipu’s Summer Palace
Located in the sugarcane rich district of Mandya, Srirangapatna makes a fascinating day trip from the royal city of Mysore. Tales of valour come vividly alive for any tourist visiting this tiny, historic town located where the Cauvery river divides itself into two streams and curls around an island. The island fortress from which Tipu Sultan fought the British was once the capital of the kingdom of Hyder Ali and his son Tipu during the second half of the 18th century. It took us a day for a detailed exploration of the tourist attractions in the fortress city. With scattered ruins such as battlements, gates, ramparts, tombs, and places of worship, the town has earned the sobriquet of ‘open-air museum’. River Cauvery meanders past nonchalantly, providing a welcome relief to the starkness of the ruins in and around Srirangapatna. Coracle rides on the Cauvery We began our trip of the fortified island site in the Cauvery by offering worship at the imposing Ranganatha Temple enshrining a large reclining image of Vishnu. At the heart of the fortress is the temple, a mute witness to the turbulent history that has flowed around it. Srirangapatna derives its name from the temple of Sri Ranganatha. This temple is a unique blend of the Hoysala and Vijayanagara styles. We entered the temple via an imposing gopura with a five-storied pyramidal tower. The temple is dedicated to Vishnu as Ranganatha, and in the sanctuary the god’s immense black stone idol reclines on Adishesha, the seven-headed serpent, whilst at his feet the local river goddess Cauvery holds a lotus. Although they were both devout Muslims, Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan showed great respect for Hinduism. Hyder Ali donated the chariot that stands outside the temple, and Tipu Sultan presented the temple with a sword and ritual vessels of silver. It is believed that in accordance with Hindu tradition, Tipu would never sit at the table until he had heard the temple bell ring. North of the Ranganatha Temple a marble stone indicates the steep steps which descend to Colonel Bailey’s dungeon, an underground prison where the river surged in to lap at the captives chained there. British officers captured by Hyder Ali at Pollilore in 1780 were imprisoned here. Colonel Bailey’s dungeon One of the interesting sites in the town worth visiting is the famous Jama Masjid, whose slender minarets are visible from several kilometres away. An unusually tiny dome and two lofty minarets (each with 200 steps to the top) give the cream painted mosque an unconventional external appearance; equally unconventional is the first floor location of the sanctuary. The 99 names of Allah are inscribed in Persian, together with the mosque’s construction date of 1787. Tipu offered namaz here in the prayer hall which has a row of cusped arches and a ceiling embellished with grapevine designs. Today, an Arabic school is located in the prayer hall where we saw students religiously chanting holy verses. Jama Masjid The Summer Palace of Tipu Sultan, very aptly described as Daria Daulat Bagh – Garden Palace of the Wealth of the Seas, is the most remarkable of the monuments of Srirangapatna. Built in 1784 in the Indo-Saracenic style, the palace has a natural, cool interior that is both exquisite and elegant. The low, wooden colonnaded exterior of the building, located in a Moghul-style garden, looks spartan, but the superbly preserved interiors, displaying ornamental carved arches, tiger-striped columns, liberally gilded wall panels, charming frescoes, floral decoration on every inch of the teak walls and ceiling takes one’s breath away. An “absolute jewel”, the palace is embellished with colourful frescoes of battle scenes, gilded paintings on the teak walls and ceilings, which are full of interesting details. Externally, the timber building is unusually simple in appearance, although the green painted bamboo screens are not an original feature, added later to protect the painted interiors from the weather. In contrast, the interior of the palace is richly decorated in the Saracenic style. The Summer Palace also has a small museum where Tipu’s trivia are displayed, including a gold-embroidered tunic, old paintings, ebony furniture, and a coin collection. Gumbaz Three km east of the palace an intricately carved gateway leads to the Gumbaz, a mausoleum which houses the tombs of Hyder Ali, Tipu Sultan, Tipu’s wife, his sons and military commanders. The mausoleum is a square building set on an arcaded platform and surmounted by a bulbous dome. The interior is lacquered with Tipu’s tiger-striped emblem and the splendid rosewood doors are inlaid with ivory. There’s also an Urdu tablet that records Tipu Sultan’s martyrdom. The doors are black with inlaid marble which is originally said to have been gold. Roman Catholic Church built by Abbe Dubois Facing the Gumbaz is a memorial to Colonel William Bailey, who was captured by Hyder Ali in 1780. Beyond the Gumbaz and toward the river, Sangam is where two tributaries of the Cauvery re-unite in joyful exuberance. Though the steps leading down to it are dilapidated, the rustic charm is enhanced by coracle rides. On the way back from Sangam/Gumbaz, we noticed the Roman Catholic Church built by Abbe Dubois, a Christian missionary, who pioneered vaccination against smallpox in Mysore, and authored a book on the Hindu manners and customs of those days. A commemorative obelisk housed in a small enclosure marks the spot where Tipu fell to British bullets. A plaque reads: “The body of Tipu Sultan was found here.” Srirangapatna has now metamorphosed into a bustling town and its memorable battle- scarred monuments continue to attract thousands of tourists every year. Some of them are drawn by its haunted look while history buffs are engrossed in tracing the lineage of the erstwhile rulers. After sightseeing, we spent some time quietly communing with the river at the Sangam. When we left, the river appeared to be in a mellow mood as she meandered past, flowing silently past a meditating sadhu nearby. 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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Bus services from Kolhapur to Karnataka suspended amid Belgaum dispute

Border dispute
The Maharashtra Ekikaran Samiti has been fighting for the merger of Marathi-speaking villages of Karnataka into Maharashtra.
Image for representation
Bus services from Kolhapur district in Maharashtra to Karnataka have been suspended following the on-going border dispute between the two states over Belgaum, a police official said on Sunday. Maharashtra claims Belgaum, part of the erstwhile Bombay Presidency, but currently a district of Karnataka, on linguistic grounds. Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray earlier this month appointed ministers Chhagan Bhujbal and Eknath Shinde as co-ordinators to oversee his government's efforts to expedite the case related to the boundary dispute with Karnataka. The case has been pending before the Supreme Court since many years. The dispute escalated recently after certain remarks by a Kannada organisation against the Maharashtra Ekikaran Samiti (MES), which has been fighting for the merger of Marathi-speaking villages of Karnataka into the western state. In view of it, the state transport bus services from Kolhapur to Karnataka have been suspended, a senior police official said. "All bus services from Kolhapur to Karnataka have been suspended since Saturday midnight as a precautionary measure," he said. The Maharashtra Ekikaran Samiti (MES), which has been fighting for the merger of 800-odd villages with Maharashtra, recently submitted a memorandum of their demands to Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray. According to reports in a section of media, some days back, Karnataka Navnirman Sena leader Bhimashankar Patil said MES leaders, who have been fighting for the merger of disputed border areas with Maharashtra, should be shot dead on the border between the two states. Shiv Sena MP Dhairyasheel Mane, who represents Maharashtra's Hatkanangale constituency, later condemned Patil's remarks. Thackeray recently raised the issue of the border dispute between Maharashtra and Karnataka over Belgaum in the state Assembly. “The central government has taken Karnataka’s side and ignored Maharashtra in the legal battle before the Supreme Court...it was going on for the last five years and everyone was kept in the dark,” Thackeray alleged during the winter session of the state Assembly in Nagpur. Various Kannada organisations staged a protest in Belgaum on Saturday by burning the effigy of Thackeray. The Shiv Sena has decided to hold a rally here on Sunday in protest against the act of Kannada organisations.  
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Will over 3,500 trees in Bengaluru be axed? Activists await expert committee’s report

Environment
A total of 3,519 trees are slated to be axed in various parts of Bengaluru for multiple infrastructure development projects around the city.
Courtesy: Mokkie via Wikimedia Commons
An expert tree committee, on Friday and Saturday, visited and studied various areas in and around Bengaluru where more than 3,500 trees are proposed to be axed as part of several infrastructure development projects. This comes seven months after the Karnataka High Court had directed the state government and its urban agencies to form a committee of experts (in environment, science, technology and related fields) to study how the trees can be saved. Based on their observations, the team will submit a report to the High Court on January 20, on whether the trees can be saved, and if yes, how many and the methods to save them.  The tree committee was constituted based on a PIL filed by a team of environmental activists led by Devare DT, trustee of the Bangalore Environment Trust (BET).  Environmental activists are now awaiting the report from the expert tree committee, and are preparing themselves for a long fight to protect Bengaluru’s green cover. Meanwhile, activists have begun a petition to attract attention to the tree felling issue, and have collected more than 300 signatures.  The trees to be felled are located in areas across the city. In Kagallipura range in the outskirts of the city, 115 trees are proposed to be cut down for the Bengaluru Metro Rail Corporation Limited (BMRCL) projects. Another 337 trees are set to be cut in the Kagallipura range for road widening projects by the Karnataka Road Development Corporation Limited (KRDCL). KRDCL has further requested the felling of 1,116 trees for another road widening project along the road connecting Anekal, Yelahanka and KR Puram. Meanwhile, the Karnataka State Highways Improvement Project (KSHIP) has requested the felling of 1,822 trees along the Nice Road-Magadi Road Highway. Further, the BMRCL has requested 129 trees to be cut in Kadugodi (near KR Puram) for Metro projects.  This brings the total number of trees slated for felling to 3,519. Arun Prasad, an activist told TNM, “The tree inspection committee will listen to whatever the Bengaluru civic body, BBMP, tells them. I have been told that they (the experts) have approved the tree fellings. We will take further action after consulting with others.”  Activists have begun an online signature campaign to mobilise support from Bengaluru citizens, towards the fight to save the city's trees.  Incidentally, massive tree-felling projects cannot go ahead without public consultation, according to section (8) of the Tree Preservation Act (TPA), 1976, However, the Times of India reported that a public consultation by KRDCL saw very little participation, with around 20 citizens in participation. Venkatesh Murthy, an official with the Forest department, told TOI that only about 100 trees could be saved by transplantation. This is not the first time that the tree cover in Bengaluru has come under threat. In February this year, thousands of trees were slated to be axed for an unapproved elevated corridor project. The project has since been approved, despite criticism from scientists and activists. Read: K'taka govt sends proposal to cut 3,700 trees for yet-to-be-cleared elevated corridor Over 3000 trees to be axed, lakes will be impacted by Bengaluru elevated corridor: EIA Karnataka CM orders cancellation of Bengaluru elevated corridor project tender ‘Don’t need another flyover, give us metro’: Residents of Koramangala-Ejipura  
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Union Home Ministry advises K'taka govt to procure red corner notice against Nithyananda

Crime
The state govt has been advised to approach a court for a non-bailable warrant against Nithyananda and follow the due process for extradition/ deportation of the godman
File image
As rape accused self-style godman Nithyananda remains absconding in a foreign country, the Union Home Minstry has asked the Karnataka government to consider steps to secure a Red Corner Notice against him. TNM has accessed a “most urgent” letter dated December 19, written by Deputy Commandant (Legal) Anurag Kumar in the Union Home MInistry to Rajneesh Goel, Additional Chief Secretary to the Home Department. While Nithyananda in many of his videos published on social media claims to have set up his own country called 'Kailasa', he is believed to be in the Caribbean islands, according to whistleblowers. The Karnataka government has been advised to approach a court for a non-bailable warrant against Nithyananda and follow the due process for extradition/deportation of the godman. The Union government communique to the state government, as stated in Kumar’s letter, is in the wake of applications made to Home Minister Amit Shah by the survivor in the rape case against Nithyananda, and the mother of a woman who died under mysterious circumstances inside Nithyanada’s ashram. While the trial in rape case is going on in the Ramnagara III Additional District and Sessions Courts, the Karnataka High Court is hearing a plea seeking a CBI probe over the mysterious death. Read: K’taka HC pulls up police for not probing Nithyananda disciple's death in ashram The letter also had an attachment of a directive from the Consular, Passport and Visa (CPV) division of the Ministry of External Affairs, on how to seek extradition/deportation with a foreign country. The letter reads, “In this regard, it is informed that if an accused person is in a foreign country, then for securing his presence for trial in India, the said person needs to be extradited/deported as per legal procedures contained in the Extradition Act, 1962 and the treaty on the issue with the concerned country." It adds, “Further, (for) the extradition procedure to obtain the presence of the accused from the concerned country, the Investigation agency concerned needs to approach the concerned Court for issuance of an open dated Non-Bailable Warrant in the name of alleged accused.” Kumar’s letter also advised that if Nithyanada’s whereabouts are not known, the concerned investigation agency (CID and state police) may consider approaching the Central Bureau of Investigation, NCB, INTERPOL, New Delhi for getting a Red Corner Notice issued. “Once the present location of the accused is ascertained, the investigation agency concerned may prepare formal extradition request in respect of the accused person and send to this Ministry," it said. Read: K’taka HC quashes non-bailable warrant issued against rape accused Nithyananda Meanwhile authorities in Gujarat razed down Nithyananda’s ashram in the outskirts of Ahmedabad on Saturday in continuation with the crackdown against him and the institution since November. Gujarat police have booked Nithyananda and arrested two of his aides under Sections 365 (abduction), Section 344 (wrongful confinement), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 504 (intentional insult to provoke breach of peace) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code along with sections of the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act. The suspects, Pranapriya and Tatavapriya, continue to remain in jail. The police had started taking action against his organisation after a Bengaluru-based man approached the Gujarat State Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (GSCPCR) in November and also the Gujarat High Court. The complainant, Janardhana Sharma, is a former disciple of Nithyananda, who was once closely associated with him and had alleged that his children were brainwashed and tortured at the ashram. While his two younger daughters returned to him following police action, his two elder daughters refused to leave Nithyananda’s cult. While the Ahmedabad HC had ordered both the women to be present in court on more than two occasions, they continue to send affidavits from Barbados, which the HC does not admit.
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