Tag: Bengaluru

  • Highly Derogatory Facebook Post Against Prophet Muhammed by Hatemonger Nephew Naveen of Congress Legislator Srinivasmurthy; 3 Dead in Police Firing; 110 Protestors Arrested in Bengaluru

    Highly Derogatory Facebook Post Against Prophet Muhammed by Hatemonger Nephew Naveen of Congress Legislator Srinivasmurthy; 3 Dead in Police Firing; 110 Protestors Arrested in Bengaluru

    Days after hardcore Hindutva leanings by Congress leaders Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Rahul Gandhi, and Kamalnath, the Congress cadre in Bengaluru seems to have taken it as a license for hate-mongering and abuse. Bengaluru and other parts of Karnataka are tense after a highly derogatory Facebook post by one Naveen, nephew of Congress legislator from Pulakeshinagar Akhand Srinivas Murthy. Massive protests and reported police inaction to register an FIR against the hate monger Naveen led to violence in which several vehicles were burnt down. Three people died and several others were injured in the police firing. Scores of policemen were also injured. The extremely hateful and derogatory post against Prophet Muhammed (Peace Be Upon Him) by Naveen cannot be published here for the sake of peace.

    Some protestors believe that those who resorted to violence and attacked the police stations are Naveen’s supporters, who infiltrated the crowd. They wanted to scare the police from arresting Naveen but he was taken into custody. However, police have arrested 110 protestors between the age of 17 to 70. Two of the dead are identified by locals as Wajid Khan and Yasin Pasha.

      ‘After yesterday’s incident, we have taken firm action. Police firing was done, three people are dead and a few others injured. 110 people have been arrested and now the situation is under control and there is peace in the area now. Both KG Halli and DJ Halli police stations have been reinforced. Karnataka State Reserve Police (KSRP) is also present there’, Karnataka Home Minister Basavaraj Bommai disclosed to the media. He elaborated that the additional security is being intensified in sensitive places in Bengaluru.  “As a precautionary measure, we are strengthening forces across the state. We have requisitioned the central home ministry for additional forces and they are sending three companies of Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) from Hyderabad and three from Chennai. We will deploy them in critical and sensitive places,” added Bommai.

    Congress leaders DK Shivakumar and Siddaramaiah have condemned the violence and the derogatory post. Their soft approach to Naveen is resented by the locals. It seems the Congress is competing with the original hate mongers. True to his ideology, Karnataka Chief Minister Yeddyurappa has come out strongly against the protestors but he did not condemn hate and bigotry.

    Bengaluru – the cosmopolitan city of gardens should not be allowed to be a simmering cauldron of hate and bigotry. The fight should be against Covid-19 and not against each other. A case should be booked against Facebook for allowing the hateful and incendiary post by Congressman Naveen. Naveen deserves to be booked under sedition for promoting enmity between two communities and for tearing apart peace in the city.

    Perhaps Naveen thought that he is rewarding the Muslims for electing his maternal uncle Srinivas Murthy as a legislator by more than 80,000 votes in Pulakeshinagar! The legislator’s house also came under attack. A fair inquiry into the entire episode will establish the truth. Meanwhile, social media should be banned in India. The people misuse and abuse social media to peddle hate and Facebook or WhatsApp or Twitter look the other way for their profits!

  • Stop Harassing Koodankulam Activists

    Stop Harassing Koodankulam Activists

    Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNPD) and Indian Social Action Forum on Monday released a statement signed by several eminent citizens urging government to stop harassing the activists who are protesting construction of the nuclear power plant in Koodankulam.

    They have asked the government to drop concocted charges against them, and instead to resume dialogue. 

    PK Sundaram of CNPD also announced ‘Koodankulam Chalo rally’ on March 15 where people from across the country will be urged to visit the proposed site and see the truth themselves.

     

    Please find below the complete statement:

    We are dismayed and pained at the government’s campaign of vilification of the sustained popular movement against the Koodankulam nuclear plant, which has raised vital issues of atomic safety. These issues have assumed pivotal importance worldwide after the Fukushima disaster, the world’s first multiple-reactor meltdown. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has trivialised the movement, and the five months-long relay fast by thousands of people, by attributing it to “the foreign hand”, or Western non-governmental organisations, without citing even remotely credible evidence.

    This is part of a growing, dangerous, tendency to delegitimise dissent. If we reduce genuine differences and disagreements with official positions to mere plots of “subversion” by “the foreign hand”, there can be no real engagement with ideas, and no democratic debate through which divergences can be reconciled. Absence of debate on nuclear safety, itself a life-and-death matter, can only impoverish the public discourse and our democracy. The “foreign hand” charge sounds especially bizarre because the government has staked all on installing foreign-origin reactors and tried to dilute the nuclear liability Act under foreign pressure. 

    The claim that all is well with our expansion-oriented nuclear power programme sounds hollow in the absence of an independent, thorough, transparent review by a broadly representative body, which includes non-Department of Atomic Energy personnel and civil society representatives. Some of us called for this 10 months ago. But the government ignored our plea.  Its attitude to nuclear hazards is worrisome given its abysmal and persistent failure to protect Indian citizens’ lives and rights in the Bhopal gas disaster.

    We urge the government to cease harassment and persecution of activists of the anti-nuclear movements in Koodankulam and other sites, to drop concocted charges against them, and instead to resume dialogue. Until people’s fears and concerns are allayed, all nuclear power-plant construction must be halted. There must be no use of force—categorically, and regardless of the circumstances. Ramming nuclear plants down the throats of unwilling people will usher in a police state. 

    A Gopalakrishnan

    Abdul Raheem TM

    Abhay Vir Singh

    Ajay Kumar

    Ajay Patnaik

    Ajaya Kumar Singh, Bhubaneshwar

    Alaka Basu

    Ali Javed

    Amar Jesani, Editor, Indian Journal of Medical Ethics

    Amartya Paul

    Amit Bhaduri

    Amita Baviskar

    Ammu Joseph

    Anuradha Chenoy

    Arun Mitra

    Aruna Rodrigues, Bangalore

    Arundhati Roy

    B K Pal

    B N Thakur

    Bindu Desai

    Capt. J. Rama Rao, Hyderabad

    Chaitali Bhowmick

    D Sucharitha

    Deepa Dhanraj

    Deepak Nayyar

    Dinesh Abrol

    Dipankar Gupta

    DR. EAS Sharma, 

    Elisa Morsicain

    Gabriele Dietrich, NAPM

    Gargi Chakravorthy

    Gauhar Raza, New Delhi

    Harsh Mander, 

    Himanshu Thakkar

    Imrana Qadeer

    Janaki Nair

    Jaya Mehta

    Jayati Ghosh

    Justice B G Kolse-Patil

    Justice H. Suresh

    Kamal Mitra Chenoy,

    Kamayani Bali Mahabal, Advocate, Mumbai

    Kumkum Roy

    L S Chawla

    Lakshmi Kutty

    Lata Mani, Bengaluru

    M G Devasahayam

    M V Ramana 

    Maj Gen. S G Vombatkere

    Malobika

    Mary John

    Meenakshi Ganguly, Human Rights Watch

    Meha Dixit

    Meher Engineer, Kolkata

    Mili Sahu

    Minati Panda

    Mira Shiva

    Moggallan Bharti

    Mohan Rao

    Muhammaed Muhassin

    Mukul Kesavan

    Mukul Sharma

    Nabita Baruah

    Nandini Gooptu

    Nandini Sundar

    Navroze Contractor

    Neeladri Bhattacharya

    Nirupam Sen

    P M Bharagava

    Pijush Kanti Das, Secretary General, Committee on People’s and Environment, Silchar

    Pooja Ravi

    Prashant Bhushan, New Delhi

    Pratihar Sharma

    Rajaneesh S R

    Rajesh Tandon

    Ram Manohan Reddy

    Ramchandra Guha

    Ramila Bisht

    Rupa Chawdhary

    S Alok Kumar

    S N Malakar

    S P Shukla

    Sankar Narayan, Bhubaneswar

    Seema Mustafa, Journalist, New Delhi

    Shabnam Hashmi, New Delhi

    Shankar Sharma, Mulubagilu, Karnataka

    Shripad Dharmadhikari

    Shruti Dubey

    Shruti Jain

    Soumya Rajan

    Sudhir Chella Rajan, IIT Madras

    Sumit Sarkar

    Supriya Varma

    Susan Visvanathan

    Suvrat Raju

    Swathi S Senan

    Tanika Sarkar

    Uma V Chandru, Member, PUCL, Bangalore

    Umasankar Behera

    V K Yadavendu

    V.N.Sharma, Jharkhand Vigyan Manch

    Vineet Tiwari

    Vineeta Bal, National Institute of Immunology, New Delhi

    Vinod Koshti

    Vivek Sundara, HRA, Mumbai

    Zoya Hasan

    (Courtesy: Pratirodh)