KJP founder-prez alleges threat to life from BSY

February 7, 2013

KJP_founder-prez

Chennai, Feb 7: Founder-president of Karnataka Janata Party (KJP) Padmanabha Prasanna Kumar on Wednesday disclosed here that he was seeking political refuge in Tamil Nadu owing to “threats to me and my family members” from former Karnataka chief minister B S Yeddyurappa.

Yeddyurappa, on quitting the BJP, was admitted into KJP after he agreed to share all the posts in the new party “with our already existing members on a 50-50 ratio,” but the former BJP leader reneged on his promise and “has hijacked my party (KJP),” Kumar told a news conference in Chennai.

Charging Yeddyurappa with sidelining all the original KJP members, including himself, Kumar said they did not agree with the former chief minister’s attempt to topple the Jagadish Shettar-led BJP government with just a few months to go for the Assembly elections. “Any such move would have brought a bad name to the KJP just before the elections,” Kumar said.

These developments led to the expulsion of Yeddyurappa from KJP’s primary membership recently, he said.

Stating that he had conveyed the decision of the KJP’s Emergency Executive Committee meeting held in Bangalore on December 20, 2012, to the Election Commission, duly informing it that Yeddyurappa had been removed as the State president of KJP, Kumar said since then he had been receiving threat calls.

“Without personal security, I cannot move around in Karnataka and hence I have come to Chennai for political asylum and will meet Chief Minister J Jayalalitha in this regard,” he said.

“I am still the president of KJP,” he said, adding, he chose Tamil Nadu for political asylum as both states had long-standing ties as part of the erstwhile Madras Presidency.

Kumar said he had also written to the President of India, the Union Home Minister and the Karnataka Governor, explaining his predicament.

“When Yeddyurappa left the BJP, he was in need of a party; after we accommodated him, in the subsequent conventions at Haveri, Bangalore and Mysore, we (KJP) members were totally sidelined,” said Kumar and added that he fell prey to Yeddyurappa’s false assurances.

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News Network
February 28,2020

Feb 28: For 30-year-old Shabana Parveen, it was nothing sort of a miracle — giving birth to a healthy baby boy after surviving a brutal attack by a mob who kicked and assaulted her and her husband in northeast Delhi's Karawal Nagar.

Their home set afire by the mob, Ms Parveen's family is now pinning their hopes on the newborn who they called a "miracle baby".

Ms Parveen, her husband, two kids and mother-in-law were sleeping inside the house on Monday night when a mob barged into their house.

Narrating their ordeal, Ms Parveen's mother-in-law Nashima told PTI, "They hurled religious slurs, beat up my son. Some of them even kicked my daughter-in-law in the abdomen...as I went to protect her they came charging at me... We thought we would not survive that night. But with God's grace we somehow managed to escape from the clutches of the rioters."

"We rushed Parveen to a nearby hospital but doctors there asked us to go to Al-hind Hospital where she delivered a baby boy on Wednesday," she added.

Despite having lost their home for over two decades and all belongings, her family has overcome the initial shock and are now overjoyed with the birth of the "miracle baby".

Ms Nashima said she had no clue where the family would go after Ms Parveen was discharged from the hospital.

"It's all gone there. Nothing left. Maybe, we will go to some relative's place and see how we can re-build our life," she said.

Ali, 6, who held his one-day-old brother, caressing his forehead, said, "I will take care of him forever and save him from every ill."

The violence over the amended citizenship law in northeast Delhi has claimed 38 lives so far and left over 200 people injured. Frenzied mobs torched houses, shops, vehicles, a petrol pump and pelted stones at locals and police personnel.

Jaffrabad, Maujpur, Babarpur, Yamuna Vihar, Bhajanpura, Chand Bagh and Shiv Vihar are among the areas mainly affected by the clashes.

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News Network
April 11,2020

Thiruvananthapuram, Apr 11: The effective handling of Covid-19 pandemic by the Kerala Government has received a big endorsement in the International media with the latest being a report in Washington Post which suggests that the State’s success could prove instructive to the entire country.

The Washington Post quoted Kerala Health Minister K K Shailaja Teacher as saying “We hoped for the best but planned for the worst. Now, the curve has flattened, but we cannot predict what will happen next week.”

"The Minister said six states had reached out to Kerala for advice. She, however, noted that it might not be easy to replicate Kerala’s lessons elsewhere," according to the Minister's office quoting the report here on Saturday.

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Agencies
January 21,2020

Kochi, Jan 21: A special court here on Tuesday sent two students, who were arrested under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) case in Kozhikode last November, to the custody of National Investigation Agency (NIA) for a day.

The NIA court ordered that the duo, who were in judicial custody till now, to be produced before it tomorrow.

In its application, the NIA had said that the accused must be interrogated on the basis of digital records and sought custody of the duo for a week.

However, the defendant argued that no new evidence had been found against the accused and therefore no custody should be granted.

During an earlier hearing, the two had told the court, "We are not Maoists. We are CPI (M) activists. The Chief Minister, who says we are Maoists, should bring proof of whom we killed and where we bombed. In the last election, we have served as CPI (M), booth agents. We are the ones who went out to vote and pasted posters for the party."

The two were charged under Sections 20 (punishment for being a member of terrorist gang or organisation), 38 (offence relating to membership of a terrorist organisation) and 39 (offence relating to support given to a terrorist organisation) of the UAPA.

Allen and Thaha, students of law and journalism respectively of Kannur University, were taken into custody by the police from Pantheerankavu in Kozhikode on November 1 last year.

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