Those who refuse to cede land are branded naxalites'

[email protected] (The Hindu)
April 2, 2012

dwarakanath


Mangalore, April 2: Vittala, a boy from the Malekudiya community, who was not willing to be driven away from his home in the forests, had been labelled a “naxalite” and jailed, the former chairperson of the Backward Classes Commission C.S. Dwarakanath said here on Saturday.

Delivering the valedictory address of a seminar on the impact of development on indigenous people organised by Mangalore University, Mr. Dwarakanath said that a company such as Vedanta was given as much land as it required by the Government and the adivasis who opposed it were called “naxalites” and jailed. One did not have to go far to find such an example.

A student of Mangalore University had also been branded a “naxal” and jailed, he said.

All that was found in his house were 250 grams of tea power, some sugar, and a book on Bhagat Singh, Mr. Dwarakanath said.

Mr. Dwarakanath gave several examples of what he called lack of connectivity between tribal and nomadic communities and the Government. During his tenure as chairperson of the Backward Classes Commission, he located members of a community called “Dhakkaliga” living 170 km from Bangalore in Chikkanayakanahalli. This community was considered untouchable for untouchables, Mr. Dwarakanath said.

The Dhakkaligas had told him that no one came to even ask them for votes, because it was considered the candidate would lose. “Even votes have acquired untouchability now,” Mr. Dwarakanath said. “The Government does not know that the Dhakkaligas exist and they don't know that the Government exists”.

A community called “Karadi Kalandar” worked with bears, he said. “They talk about their bears in the same way that they talk about their own families.”

However, when wildlife activists got the bears “rehabilitated” to forests “they knew nothing about, the bears died and the Karadi Kalandar people became destitute,” Mr. Dwarakanath added.

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April 27,2020

Bantwal, Apr 27: Following the meeting at a guest house here, district in-charge Minister Kota Srinivas Poojary instructed the officials to stringently impose the lockdown in the taluka.

He stated that there will be no relaxation and exemptions in Bantwla till May 3 and ASHA workers will be continuing surveying houses in Bantwal Kasba and Narikombu.

Two people have already died from COVID-19 in the taluka and two new cases were reported in the past week.

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News Network
June 12,2020

Hubli, Jun 12: An inspector of Hubli Rural police station on Friday was suspended for delaying the submission of a charge sheet in the matter relating to sedition charges against three Kashmiri students for making a video with pro-Pakistan slogan.

A second Joint Magistrate First Class (JMFC) court in February sent the three students, identified as Basit Ashik Sophi (19), Talib Majid (19) and Amir Mohiuddin (23), to police custody till February 28.

The Kashmiri students are under judicial custody since February 17 following their arrest for raising pro-Pakistan slogans and posting a video of the same on social media on the night of February 16.

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News Network
February 16,2020

Mangaluru, Feb 16: An elderly woman from Tamil Nadu was on Saturday reunited with her daughter and son after 14 years at the Mangaluru's White Doves destitute home.

"Mary only knew her name when she came here 10 years ago. Recently, she told us about her home town," Corrine Rusquinha, founder of White Doves told media.
Mary had gone missing 14 years ago from her hometown Kortampet in Tamil Nadu.

"Ten years ago, she was spotted by Mangaluru police who brought her to White Doves home late one evening. Initially, she could only speak Tamil, so it was presumed she was from Tamil Nadu. She was on psychiatric treatment," Rusquinha said.

A few days back, a visiting priest at the White Doves home spoke to Mary in Tamil and asked about her hometown.

"Surprisingly, she could recall the name of her hometown, following which the visiting priest contacted the pastor at Kortampet. Mary's family, including her daughter Gnana Anthony, who is a paramedic student in Coimbatore, was informed about Mary," she said.

Soon after, Gnana and her elder brother came to Mangaluru to take their mother back to their home.

Mary's husband Jhonson, who worked as a cook, had died within a year of losing his wife.

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