People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 48 December 01, 2013 |
KARNATAKA Jathas
Highlight Women’s Unnatural
Death
B
Madhava A HUGE
mass rally, held on November 26, 2013 in front of the
deputy commissioner's office
of Mangalore marked the culmination of two padayatras
which had started on November 21 from Belthangady and
Sullia and covered every
part of the Dakshina Kannada district. These jathas were
organised by the
CPI(M) district committee to demand that the government
of Karnataka must
entrust all the cases recorded as unnatural deaths ---
numbering over 450 ---
over a period of more than three decades in Dharmasthala
and Ujire villages of
Dakshin Kannada district to the CBI for investigation.
These cases must also
include the one-year old case of rape and murder of
Soujanya, the CPI(M)
insisted. The
jatha which started from the banks of river Nethravathi
in Belthangady was
inaugurated by senior CPI(M) leader U B Lokayya and led
by B M Bhat and K Yadava
Shetty, members of the CPI(M) district secretariat. The
other jatha which
started from Sullia was inaugurated by Siddabasava
Kabirananda Mahaswamy of
Gulbarga Singarahalli Marula Shankara Devara Gurupeeta
and led by CPI(M) district
secretariat members Vasantha Achari and Sunil Kumar
Bajal. The inaugural
function was presided over by CPI(M) state secretariat
member K R Sriyan. In
the face of a statewide protest unleashed by the CPI(M)
and spontaneously
joined by vast sections of the people, the state
government announced that the Soujanya
issue would be entrusted to the CBI. By then, more than
13 months had elapsed
since the rape and murder of Soujanya and all the
traceable evidence including
two eye witnesses has been eliminated. One Ravi Poojary,
said to be an eye
witness in the Soujanya case, died under mysterious
circumstances and the case
was treated as suicide. Very recently, then, one Dinesh
Gowda who was active in
the protests to demand a CBI
probe, was killed by a vehicle
dashing against
him and it was treated
as an accident. A domestic servant of one of the accused
died under suspicious
circumstances. Vinaya
Kumar Sorake, a minister of the state government, openly
declared at a public
meeting in Dharmasthala that the government would not
allow this case to be
treated as one of rape and murder. This highlighted the
utter shamelessness of
the minister. Though the state government has already
announced its decision to
entrust the Soujanya case to CBI, surprisingly the said
minister continues in
his position and may well try to influence the
investigation. This
being the situation, the CPI(M) state committee has
declared that justice to
Soujanya would be ensured only if all the cases of
unnatural deaths which
occurred in Dharmasthala and Ujire villages during the
last three decades,
including those of Padmalatha and Vedavalli, were handed
over to the CBI for
investigation. The number of cases closed by the police
as unnatural deaths in these
two villages during the last two decades comes to a
total of more than 450,
according to information collected by some
organisations. Therefore the two jathas
demanded that, along with the investigation into the
rape and murder of
Soujanya already handed over to the CBI, all the cases
of unnatural deaths in
the last three decades in these two villages should also
be reopened and handed
over to the CBI. This demand caught the imagination of
the people in the
district who braved all threats and welcomed the jathas
everywhere in large
numbers. Addressing
the huge protest rally before the deputy commissioner's
office, CPI(M) Central
Committee member and leader of the party in the Lok
Sabha, Basudeb Acharia, pointed
out that the right to Life is a fundamental right
guaranteed under the constitution.
But the unnatural deaths of more than 450 persons in
Dharmasthala over the last
three decades or more are nothing but a clear violation
of this fundamental
right. It is therefore not an issue confined to the
Dakshina Kannada district
or Karnataka state. It is definitely a national issue
and he declared that he would
raise it in Lok Sabha. At
the same time, there are widespread complaints of
grabbing of the lands
belonging to poor backward and dalit families by
powerful forces in
Dharmasthala. It is said that many of the persons who
died an unnatural death were
related to the persons who resisted the land grabbing.
Basudeb Acharia therefore
demanded that all the cases of land grab in Dharmasthala
must also be entrusted
to the CBI. CPI(M)
Central Committee member and AIDWA leader Vasuki said it
was strange that all
these vices were being perpetrated in a place called the
"seat of
dharma," in the land of a great social reformer,
Basavanna, who propagated
"kalabeda, kolabeda, husia nudialubeda" (don’t steal,
don’t kill,
don’t tell lies)! She said that in order to ensure an
unhindered investigation,
it should be done under the aegis of the Supreme Court.
She said the police
officers responsible for distorting the process of
investigation should be
punished. It is strange that political parties like the
Congress, BJP and JD(S)
are keeping mum on this serious issue, she pointed out. Addressing
the gathering, CPI(M) state secretary G V Srirama Reddy
asked the chief minister
to clarify the government's stand in the context of the
minister Vinaya Kumar
Sorake’s open support to Soujanya’s killers. He declared
that the struggles would
continue till the government conceded the demands of the
people. The
meeting was presided over by CPI(M) district secretary B
Madhava and attended among
others by state secretariat members K R Sriyan and K
Shankar, state committee
members J Balakrishna Shetty, Vasantha Achary and Udupi
Balakrishna Shetty, and
district secretariat members Yadava Shetty, U B Lokayya,
B M Bhat, Krishnappa
Salian, Sunil Kumar Bajal and writer Athrady Amritha
Shetty. The parents of
Soujanya, Chandappa Gowda and Kusumavathi were also
present on the dais. At
the outset, B M Bhat and Vasanth Achary, leaders of the
two jathas, narrated
their experiences en route.