Police wrongly slapping Dalit Atrocity cases during communal clashes'

July 1, 2012

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Mangalore, July 1: Police are misusing their power by slapping Atrocity cases against culprits involving in communal clashes, Shekhar Belthangady, a Dalit representative said.

He raised the issue at the monthly SC/ST grievance meet held at the SP's office in Mangalore on Sunday.

Citing an instance of a communal clash that took place in Kuvettu of Puttukere in Belthangady Taluk following blocking of cow transportation on June 14, Mr. Shekhar said that the police had booked cases under the Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, against the members of another community when people of other castes where also involved and injured.

“Under Atrocity Act, one gets six months of imprisonment. The group which involved in a clash with another community consisted of Dalits but there were people of other castes too. It does not come under Dalit atrocity as such because the intent was not to harm Dalits specifically. Why are Dalits and Dalit laws being used to target a community and settle personal scores? Dalits always end up being the middlemen and the victims. In one of the communal clashes that took place almost 80% of the people who were put in jails were Dalits. In many cases of communal clashes that took place in the district, Dalits were among the ones who got injured so if filing a Dalit atrocity case is the norm, why weren't similar cases filed in communal clashes all these years?” Mr. Shekhar told Coastaldigest.com

Responding to the query, Abhishek Goel, SP, DK, said that the police file cases on a case to case basis and a lot depends on the nature of complaint that the police receive.

SP Anand, District President, DSS (Ambedkar Vada) raised the issue of delay in compensations to victims of atrocity cases stating that many Dalits have been coming all the way from places like Sullia and going back after spending money and time. The SP in his response assured that by next grievance meeting a report would be prepared as to how many compensations have been settled and how long would it take to settle the remaining ones.

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News Network
March 24,2020

Bengaluru, Mar 24: Eight new positive coronavirus cases were confirmed in Karnataka on Tuesday, taking the tally to 41 in the state, the health department said.

"Till date 41 COVID-19 positive cases have been confirmed in the state which includes one death and 3 discharged," the department said.

According the department bulletin, 37 positive patients are in isolation at designated hospitals and their condition is stable.

Of the 41 confirmed cases, six are transit passengers hailing from Kerala who have landed in airports and being treated in Karnataka.

Among the eight passengers confirmed on Tuesday also three men and a woman are from Kasaragod in Kerala with a history of travel to Dubai and Saudi Arabia respectively.

All the four had landed in Mangaluru, where they are being treated.

The others are: two men, aged 40 and 65, from Uttara Kannada district in Karnataka with travel history to Dubai;

a 56-year-old woman, a resident of Chikkaballapura district, who is a family member and co-passenger of person who tested postive with travel history to Mecca, and a 56-year-old woman, resident of Bengaluru, a contact of another person who has tested positive for the virus,

Among the 41 cases, 24 has been reported from Bengaluru, five from Dakshina Kannada, three each from Kalaburgai and Chikkaballapura, two each from Mysuru and Uttara Kannada, and one each from Kodagu and Dharwad.

All the three discharged patients are from Bengaluru, while one death was reported in Kalaburagi earlier this month, which was the country's first COVID-19 related death.

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News Network
January 17,2020

New Delhi, Jan 17: The Supreme Court on Friday closed the monitoring of the killing of rationalist M M Kalburgi in 2015 in Dharwad.

A bench of Justices R F Nariman and S Ravindra Bhat noted that the charge sheet has already been filed and the matter was assigned to the sessions court. The court, however, noted two accused had absconded and could not be arrested till date, according to reports.

Senior advocate Devadatt Kamat, appearing for the Karnataka government, submitted that the High Court had also stopped monitoring of the matter.

The top court had in early last year directed that the Karnataka High Court's Dharwad bench to monitor the probe. The Karnataka police SIT, which investigated Gauri Lankesh case and filed the charge sheet, was allowed to take over the Kalburgi case.

Umadevi, in her 2017 plea, drew a parallel between Kalburgi's murder and killings of Narendra Dabholkar and Comrade Govind Pansare in Maharashtra and sought an SIT probe by a retired Supreme Court or a High Court judge. She urged the top court to monitor the probe till it reached its logical conclusion as there was no progress in the investigation conducted so far by the Karnataka police.

The court had earlier sought to know if there was a "common thread" in murder cases of Communist leader Pansare and rationalist Dabholkar in Maharashtra, and Kannada writer Kalburgi and journalist-activist Gauri Lankesh in Karnataka.

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News Network
May 4,2020

The government of India today said it will begin evacuating its nationals stuck abroad due to the coronavirus pandemic from May 7 in a phased manner. This facility would be made available on payment basis. 

A Standard Operating Protocol has been put in place and the travel would be arranged by aircraft as well as naval ships and will be available on a payment-basis, the government said.

"Medical screening of passengers would be done before taking the flight. Only asymptomatic passengers would be allowed to travel. During the journey, all these passengers would have to follow the protocols, such as the health protocols, issued by the ministry of health and the ministry of civil aviation," it said in a statement.

Specifying the protocols upon entry in India, the government said the returning Indians would be medically screened and will have to be quarantined for 14 days, either in a hospital or in an institutional quarantine on payment-basis, by the respective state government.

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