Mr.
Kumarmangalam, is a 40 year old man, who works as a paramedic in
India's Information technology capital, city of Bengaluru. His wife,
Maya is a nurse and works in Lion Club Eye hospital in the city.
They have an eleven year old son studying in school. Kumarmangalam
family used to stay in a modest single story house built on a plot of
land, measuring about 80 ft X 30 ft area, which they have inherited
from Mr. Kumarmangalam's father in the Kaveri Nagar area of the city.
On
Monday, 29th
July 2013, while Kumarmangalam and his wife both were at their
respective work places and their son at his school, he received a
phone call on his mobile phone from one of his neighbours.
Kumarmangalam's world came crashing down as he heard the news on
telephone that his modest house was being demolished by a group of
20 people equipped with a bulldozer, in full view of the police.
Kumarmangalam
rushed home to find out that his home was now a heap of rubble and
people were looting his belongings buried in the rubble. Everything
the couple owned, furniture, television, refrigerator, laptop and
household articles was gone. Kumarmangalam tried to confront the
demolition crew, but he was assaulted, and when he tried to make a
call on his mobile, one of the hired goons snatched the phone and
gave it to a boy who ran away and disappeared into the crowd. The
worst part of the scene was that the the jurisdictional D.J. Police
were present on the spot, when the house was being bulldozed. They
were however restricting themselves only to crowd control, that was
looting the house.
Mr.
Kumaramangalam then rushed to the nearest police station to file a
complaint, the police refused to register a case, saying it a civil
dispute. As a last resort, he made a dash to the office of the Police
Commissioner of Bengaluru, Raghavendra H. Auradkar, seeking help.
Only after that, the complaint was registered.
The
goons, who have demolished the house, apparently are related to a
sitting legislator in Karnataka state legislature and have spread a
reign of terror in the area, where Kumarmangalam had a house last
week. Being just an ordinary middle class citizen, Kumarmangalam now
feels hopelessly insecure. He has spent last two nights, near a
temple entrance on a footpath. He says: “I never in my wildest
dream, imagined that I would have to live on the footpath despite
having my own house. The neighbours have stopped talking to me,
fearing the wrath of the goons.”
A
childhood friend offered help and allowed the family to stay at night
in his house, but his house is too small with one bedroom. The Lion
Club Eye hospital where his wife works as a nurse, has offered to
provide shelter to the family and his relatives from Ernakulam
(Kerala state) are expected to visit him to help. However,
Kumarmangalam wants to build a make shift house on his plot and again
start living there.
Kumarmangalam
is however now really scared about the safety of his family. He says
“I have lost my house in which I grew up. Now, I do not want to
lose my family. What if they kidnap my son and harm my wife to take
revenge on me for filing a complaint.” Additional Commissioner of
Police (Law and Order) Kamal Panth now says that eight persons had
been arrested so far. An investigation has been ordered to ascertain
lapses on part of the police in handling the situation.
I find
the whole incident truly shocking and difficult to imagine even. I
wonder, what kind of rule exists in Bengaluru now? Are state
legislators above the law and can do anything unlawful at their own
sweet will? Preventing such kind of mafia behaviour and protect
ordinary citizens from human rights abuses is the first duty of the
state. The state Government should immediately compensate Mr
Kumarmangalam for the losses and the amounts should be recovered from
culprits, whosoever they may be? Is it too much to expect? One thing
is crystal clear however, Bengaluru city is no longer a heaven for
the pensioners and the middle class, as it was about 50 years ago. It
is now ruled by mafia.
(This
post and included photographs are based on a news item in The Hindu)
2
August 2013
That's shocking and disturbing. If this is the case with Law and Order in IT city of India, is there any hope for ordinary towns and rural areas at all?
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