BJP chief Amit Shah gets rousing welcome at Mangaluru Railway Station

[email protected] (CD Network | Chakravarthi)
August 21, 2016

Mangaluru, Aug 21: Bharatiya Janata Party supremo Amit Shah was accorded a warm welcome by the local leaders of his party at Mangalore Junction Railway Station early on Sunday morning.

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As Mr Shah emerged out of Kocchuveli-Chandigarh Express at 4:30 amidst tight security, Dakshina Kannada MP Nalin Kumar Kateel, district BJP president Sanjeev Mathandoor, Chikkamagaluru MLA CT Ravi among others surrounded him while the women gave him a traditional welcome.

Leaders of various Hindutva outfits and hundreds of BJP activists were also present on the occasion.

Mr. Shah will plant saplings in front of the BIP's district office at PVS Circle at 10 a.m. Later, he would inaugurate Tiranga Yatre of vehicles at Pumpwell at 10.20 a.m. No party flags, banners would be used.

The yatre would proceed to Mangalagangotri campus of Mangalore University via Thokkottu. After inaugurating the yatre, Mr. Shah would garland Rani Abbakka's statue at Ullal at 11 a.m. He would address a gathering at the Mangala auditorium of the university at 11.30 a.m. The programme would end by 1 p.m. Mr. Shah is expected to leave the city at 4 p.m.

Also Read: Mangaluru: Youth Congress protestors call Amit Shah a terrorist', court arrest

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Comments

Wonder Kotian
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

Wa Fantastic Gathering around circle, Master Blaster \ANWARANNA BAI\" looks in Night dress might have forgotten to Change?"

Ayman hassan
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

Where is NIA to arrest terrorist

SYED
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

KILLER AMIT SHA,

TERRORIST AMIT SHA,

GOONDA AMIT SHA,

Safety
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

He should be banned to enter any human living residential area.

Tehikikat
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

Gujarat people understood after falling in dump
Kerala its not easy to fool them.
Bihari were smart to recognise their LIES and Media deception.
How come Karnataka has so many stupid people who still doesnt recognise this chapter?
Even after killing their own workers?

Well Wisher
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

Hope majority Mangaloreans spend their week end SUNDAY with their loving family member i/o this b------.

Wait and watch what all drama he will do during his visit.No development program, only yatra,garland and other use less activity. Just a intention to ignite communal harmony i/o our beautiful Tulunadu development.

Jai Hind !

PK
 - 
Sunday, 21 Aug 2016

Devils agent... in Mangalore.

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coastaldigest.com news network
May 13,2020

Mangaluru, May 13: Karnataka revised its standard operating procedure (SOP) for international passengers to allow pregnant women, children and senior citizens to entre home quarantine if they test negative for covid-19. 

The development comes after former minister and Mangaluru MLA U T Khader urged the government to follow the Kerala model in handling the repatriates and take extra care of pregnant women and senior citizens at Mangaluru and Bengaluru Airports.

Passengers will be initially dived into two categories. Category A includes passengers symptomatic on arrival while Category B passengers are those asymptomatic on arrival. 

While category A passengers will be directly shifted to covid-19 hospital, category B passengers will be sent to 14-day institutional quarantine.

If there are pregnant women, children below 10 years of age and senior citizens in category B, they will remain in institutional quarantine until they obtain a negative report (after throat swab testing for covid-19). It may take one or two days to get the throat swab testing report. 

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News Network
June 18,2020

Bengaluru, Jun 18: The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) nominated Prathap Simha Nayak, M.T.B. Nagaraj, R. Shankar and Sunil Valyapure to contest in the June 29 biennial elections for 4 of the 7 Karnataka legislative Council seats, an official said.

"Our high command selected 3 of the 4 candidates the state core committee recommended on Tuesday, excluding H.R. Vishwanath, a former Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) rebel, who lost in the December 5 Assembly by-elections from Hunsur in Mysuru district on a BJP ticket," a party official said.

Nagaraj, a former Congress rebel, who also lost in the Assembly by-election from Hoskote in Bengaluru Rural district on a BJP ticket, was the state housing minister in the 14-month-old JD-S-Congress coalition government, which fell on July 23, 2019 after 17 of their rebels resigned then.

Shankar, who was an Independent and a minister in the former coalition government, was not given the BJP ticket to contest in the December Assembly bypolls though he too resigned from the Ranebennur assembly seat in Haveri district, about 340km northwest of Bengaluru, along with former Congress and JD-S rebels.

Valyapure is the party's grass-root leader from Chincholi in Gulbarga district in the state's northern region, about 586km from Bengaluru.

Valyapure extensively campaigned in the May 2019 general elections and ensured the victory of BJP candidate Umesh Yadav from the reserved Gulbarga Lok Sabha seat, defeating Congress senior leader Mallikarjun Kharge.

Nayak is also the party's grassroot cadre who rose from the ranks to become its Dakshina Kannada district president in the state's coastal region.

As the ruling party has 116 legislators in the 225-member Assembly, all its 4 candidates will need 28 votes each to win the contest.

Of the 7 outgoing Council members, 5 are from the Congress and one each from the Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) and an Independent.

With 68 lawmakers, the Congress will be able to retain 2 seats and the JD-S one as it has only 34 legislators in the lower house.

The Congress has nominated its outgoing Rajya Sabha member B.K. Hariprasad and outgoing Council member Naseer Ahmed to contest for 2 Council seats.

Of the 75-member Council, the opposition Congress has 37, BJP 19, JD-S 16, two Independents and one Chairman.

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News Network
June 10,2020

Bengaluru, June 10: A court in Bengaluru has ejected the bail plea of Amulya Leona Noronha, a college student who has been accused of sedition for saying “Pakistan Zindabad” at the beginning of a speech during a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in the city on February 20.

The court claimed that if granted bail, the 19-year-old student of journalism and English at a Bengaluru college “may involve (herself) in similar offence which affects peace at large”.

Rejecting her bail plea, 60th additional city civil and sessions judge Vidyadhar Shirahatti said in his order, “If the petitioner is granted bail, she may abscond. Therefore, the bail petition of the petitioner is liable to be rejected.”

The police had booked Amulya under charges of sedition and promoting enmity between groups, although her friends claimed she was trying to convey a message of universal humanity by chanting zindabad in the name of all nations, including Pakistan and India.

Amulya, known for her oratory, and often invited at protests against the CAA, NRC and NPR, was arrested on the evening of February 20.

Video clips of the speech showed her chanting “Hindustan Zindabad” soon after saying “Pakistan Zindabad” and trying to tell the audience — her microphone had been taken away by then — that all nations are one in the end. She could not complete the speech; the protest was being held at Bengaluru’s Freedom Park.

Amulya’s bail plea was delayed on account of the lockdown, which came into force on March 25 — around the time hearings were due to begin in a lower court. Bengaluru police did not file a chargesheet against the student during the lockdown.

In the course of bail hearings, which began after lockdown restrictions were eased, the public prosecutor argued that Amulya was trying to incite people to create a law and order problem. The prosecutor also argued that she had earlier been accused of causing hatred and disaffection towards religion and the government established by law in India by holding a placard that stated “F##k Hindutva” during a student protest.

The prosecution argued that the student, if released, may commit similar offences since cases were already registered against her.

Defending Amulya, a friend who was part of the February 20 protest said, “Before she could complete what she wanted to say they surrounded her and grabbed the microphone. She was later placed under arrest on charges of sedition. What she was trying to say was, if we love one country it does not mean we should hate another.” Another friend said, “Please see her Facebook post of February 16, around 8 pm. Loving another country does not mean you are going against your own — this is exactly what she was trying to say (at the protest). She is promoting unity among nations…”

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