Quantcast
Channel: Kerala
Viewing all 17592 articles
Browse latest View live

Kochi home guard caught on camera groping minors, women in broad daylight

$
0
0
Crime
The traffic home guard stretched and positioned himself strategically to brush his hand against every woman or girl who walked past.
Still from YouTube
A man in what seems to be police uniform is standing on the side of a road. It’s broad daylight – perhaps just before school starts or just after school ends, considering the number of students who are walking past. The man stretches his hands and scuttles left and right every time people walk past. And every time a woman or a minor girl passes by, he finds a way to touch her inappropriately. The entire sequence was caught on camera, over several minutes, by a bystander. The video is of a traffic home guard named Sivakumar, on duty outside the Lourdes Matha Church in Thevara, Kochi on Tuesday, and the visuals have gone viral on social media platforms. Home guards are an auxiliary force to help the police – and standing as he was in uniform as he touched the women and minors he was supposed to be protecting, with practiced ease, the visuals have led to massive outrage among the people. 58-year-old Sivakumar from Elamakkara did not spare even young girls who were dressed in school uniforms. Two of the young girls in school uniform even turned back in shock after feeling Sivakumar’s hand brush against them, but upon looking back and seeing that he was a policeman in uniform, they either concluded that the touch must have been accidental, or choose to walk away without confronting him. But despite the video going viral, Sivakumar has not been suspended; he has been relieved of his duties as a home guard traffic policeman, and returned to the fire and rescue services department from which he was temporarily recruited to the home guard. Cases have been filed against him under IPC 354 (assault or criminal force to woman with intent to outrage her modesty) and sections 7 and 8 of the POCSO (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences) Act. According to reports, after the video came to the attention of the city police commissioner, it has been recommended that Sivakumar be removed from the fire and rescue department services as well.

No need to carry original licence, docs on digi-locker can be used: Kerala DGP

$
0
0
Documentation
Registration certificate, driving license and insurance policy papers can be stored on the app.
Following complaints from many motorists about document verification, Kerala DGP Loknath Behera issued a circular to stating that the digital document would suffice, and that motorists would no longer be required to carry their original license with them. Driver’s license stored on the digi-locker and produced before any official requesting to see the same would be accepted under the Motor Vehicles Act of 1988, as per the circular. Many had complained the centre that police officials were not accepting a license stored on the digital platform. Registration certificate, driving license and insurance policy papers can be stored on the app to access as required. However, in case someone is not able to access the same, they do have the option to scan and store physical copies of their documents in the digi-locker with their digital signature. The app also contains several transport-related information. As part of this initiative introduced in the state, the state police chief also reached out to all district police chiefs, asking them to ensure that the circular is passed on to all officers, particularly all traffic police. Officials have stated that the app would help ensure that drivers did not lose the original copies of their documents. The digi-locker is a part of the Centre’s Digital India campaign. All documents stored on this digital platform are taken to be valid. They are all self-attested or include a digital signature. Launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2015, the digi-locker can be accessed through its website or through its app for Android and iOS.

Over 5000 ducks found dead in flood-hit Kuttanad, sparks panic

$
0
0
Animals
Farmers in the region have suffered losses amounting to more than 1 crore rupees after several of their ducks died.
Image for representation.
The Upper Kuttanad region is seeing a peculiar epidemic after a flock of ducks reportedly died in the past few days alone. The farmers in the region noticed that a mass number of ducks were dying. On Wednesday over 5000 ducks were found dead in the region. Farmers have stated that the birds would die a day or two after they appeared sick and drowsy. The state Animal Husbandry Department officials collected samples and sent them for testing to the Avian Disease Diagnostic Laboratory in Thiruvalla. “The examination has revealed the cause of death as bacterial infection. Duck deaths were reported from flood-hit areas. The dead ducks were infected while being reared in contaminated waters. We have directed farmers to shift ducks from areas where infection has been reported. Distribution of medicines to prevent the disease has been started. The situation is under control and there is no need for panic,” said an official to The Hindu. Other regions which reported large numbers of duck deaths included Budhanoor, Veeyapuram, Pallipad, Mannar, Kadapra and Niranam. A farmer from Mannar had earlier lost over 3000 ducks. PC Sunilkumar, an official from the Animal Husbandry Department stated that the ducks appear to have contracted a bacterial infection which they may have developed as a result of drinking contaminated water post the floods, “We have given directions to the farmers to quarantine the sick ducks to save the remaining ones and check the spread of the disease in other places. We have also started distribution of medicines for prevention,” he said to the media. Three years ago, over 5 lakh ducks had been culled following an H1N1 outbreak to curb the spread of the infection. While a few messages are being circulated on social media, warning people about an H1N1 spread, officials have stated that this is false information and has cautioned the general public against spreading and believing such news. Last year, over 5000 ducks in the region were lost due to an epidemic of pasteurella. Following the deluge, it was reported that over 98,000 ducks had died in the state, incurring farmers a loss estimated to be over Rs 1 crore.   This article has been produced in partnership with Oxfam India. In the last 10 years, Oxfam India has delivered over 36 impactful humanitarian responses in India. Oxfam India is providing critical relief to the affected families and communities in Kerala: clean drinking water, sanitation, and shelter kits. Click here to help #RebuildKerala.

Abhimanyu murder case: Key accused arrested by Kerala police

$
0
0
Crime
Arif bin Salim, district secretary of the Campus Front of India, was named as the second accused in Abhimanyu’s murder at Maharaja’s College.
On Thursday, the Kerala police registered yet another arrest in relation to the murder of Abhimanyu, a Student's Federation of India (SFI) leader and a second year Bsc student at the Maharaja's college in Ernakulam. Arif Bin Salim, who is the second accused in the case and the district secretary of the Campus Front of India (CFI) of the Ernakulam district was arrested from the Kodanad area near Perumbavoor in Ernakulam district. According to a report by The New Indian Express (TNIE), Assistant Commissioner of Police, PS Suresh Kumar, who is also the investigating officer is reported to have said that, "He is the main brain behind the murder. Arif is the one who summoned all the other accused to Maharaja’s College and a key person in the conspiracy. He is the district president of Campus Front." With the arrest of Arif, nineteen people have been arrested so far in connection with the Abhimanyu murder case. The police on September 17 had given out a lookout notice for eight people in connection with the case. Abhimanyu was killed on Sunday, July 1, when SFI students clashed with workers of the Campus Front of India (CFI). The incident was allegedly triggered by an argument about sticking posters on the campus walls. 19-year-old Arjun, a BSc philosophy student of the college, was also injured in the attack and was admitted to the Ernakulam Medical Trust Hospital in the city and had undergone an emergency surgery. Police had arrested CFI member Adhil, was arrested on Saturday July 14 in connection the case. The Special Investigations Team conducting the probe had stated that Adhil was directly involved in carrying out the crime. The 20-year-old Aluva native had been absconding since the time of the murder. Adhil had told the police that an argument about painting slogans on a wall had led to the murder. The CFI allegedly decided to paint the wall and would not allow the SFI to do so. He’d further stated that some of them had even carried weapons.

After a life of stress, Kerala scientist Nambi Narayanan is a happy man

$
0
0
ISRO spy case
His family has suffered more than him, says the scientist implicated in the 1994 fake ISRO spy case, who has fought a battle for justice for 24 years before it was served.
PTI
It was not the first shock of his life. On a November day in 1994, a jeep stopped outside his house and policemen asked him to come with them. Nambi Narayanan, a scientist at ISRO, leading a regular life, went with them quietly. Papers would scream for days about an ISRO spy case that they would later call fake. He would fight for two decades despite the Supreme Court clearing his name in 1998. Last Friday, the Supreme Court made another declaration - that Nambi be paid Rs 50 lakh as compensation. After decades of a life of stress, Nambi says, that day, he could finally be happy. But for him, the life of stress began a long time ago. He has had a few rude shocks in his lifetime, the first one coming as a telegram when he was a young man in a Madurai college. His father, who took care of the family of five, had died. Young Nambi had not expected it. He was till then a playful lad, who managed to ‘get through with good grades and ranks’, as the old Nambi remembers, sitting at his home in Thiruvananthapuram. “I was an 18-year-old boy with a sick mother and two sisters to get married. There began a difficult life. I worked in different firms. When other students took money from home, I sent some home. I always had a stressful life, one that was thrust upon me when my father died. I continued with it till this thing landed on me,” Nambi says. The charge may have landed on him suddenly but a lot of planning seems to have gone behind it. Nambi, a scientist who was instrumental in developing the Vikas engine that would be used for the first PSLV that India launched, talks of the know-how and the know-why of the case. Just as he talks of the know-how and know-why of rocket science. The charges against him were of acting as a spy to send rocket drawings from ISRO to Pakistan. He kept repeating during his interrogation by the Kerala Police, the IB and then the CBI, that you cannot do anything with the drawings even if one were to send it, because you need the know-why, not just the know-how. “They fixed a crime, they fixed a criminal, they created evidence. The platform is set. But they knew I would come out. So what is the know-why. They wanted to keep me away from my seat (at ISRO),” Nambi says. In his book Ready To Fire co-written with Arun Ram, Nambi tries to piece together this know-why, this conspiracy that he knows has happened but could give no evidence of. The Russian-Indian deal of the transfer of cryogenic technology had suffered when the Soviet Union collapsed and there was US interference. Nambi, as the head of ISRO’s cryogenic division, wanted to go ahead with it. It also happened to be a time when there were factional differences within the ruling party of the State – Congress. Many theories had then been floated. That one faction wanted the late K Karunakaran to step down as Chief Minister and used the ISRO spy case for it. “They – and I don’t know who it is – have stooped so low that they were calling a leader like Karunakaran, a pacca gentleman and a freedom fighter, a spy!” In the years that had passed after he became a free man, Nambi would wonder about what started it, what the root cause was, and feel sad. But the people that suffered more than him are his family, Nambi says. His wife Meena, who used to go to the temple every day, had one day come back home and said she would not go anymore. “The temple refused to give her prasadam,” Nambi says, his eyes brimming with tears. There is the love that he confesses at the beginning of his autobiography. Not a good father, nor an ideal father, he wrote, this book is for Meena and the children. He would write another book, about the behavioural patterns of all the people in the case – the police and the advocates and the media. He would write about all the people who have come to his rescue and later been elevated to a good position in life. “I am a strong believer of god,” he says. “Even on the day I was arrested, I knew I would come out. Not I 'believed', but I 'knew'. Like that, I know now that these people (behind the conspiracy) would pay for it.”

‘Will fight till I die’: Father of victim of 2003 Kerala sex racket at nuns’ protests

$
0
0
Sexual Assault
Justice is still elusive for the victim of the Kiliroor sex racket, but her father has vowed to fight for those struggling to survive the system.
The 13th day of the nuns’ protest in Kochi saw the presence of 59-year old Surendran, the father of the victim in the infamous Kiliroor sex racket which shook Kerala back in 2003. A minor girl was lured with opportunities in the television industry and was raped by 5 men in different parts of Kerala and Tamil Nadu back in 2003. The teenage victim died in a private hospital in Kottayam in 2004. “The CBI special court in Thiruvananthapuram awarded 10 years of rigorous imprisonment, when the case came to light. The next day they (the accused) filed an appeal at the High Court and walked out,” says Surendran. Fourteen years have passed since, but justice remains elusive for the Kiliroor victim and her family, with the chargesheet rotting away in the halls of the Kerala High Court. Today, the girl’s father sits in the protest of the nuns, demanding that rape accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal be arrested immediately. And he vows to battle for those who’ve been wronged by the system and denied justice. “Until I die, I will lend my support to such causes. From my experiences, I know that I don’t want anyone to have to go through such a trauma and I will fight for all those who have undergone this,” says Surendran. In many ways, the Kiliroor case and the nun’s protest have several threads in common, Surendran believes. Both victims were betrayed by people they trusted. In the first case an aunt and cousin were complicit in the crime. In the second case, a Bishop - the head of the Diocese -  responsible for protecting those under him, allegedly raped the nun. Both involve powerful institutions that are silently and openly lending support to the accused. The Missionaries of Jesus resorted to slandering and revealing the identity of the survivor nun. The church is stubborn in its decision to not permanently remove the rape-accused Bishop, as is the police in not arresting him. In his daughter’s case, Surendran is firm in his belief that certain political forces in the state are silently lending support to the accused, a reason for the never-ending delay in the case. “Cases go on for years and years. The district court charges the accused and then it moves up to the High Court. From the High Court it reaches the Supreme Court. People - both the accused and the victims die - and justice is nowhere in sight. That’s the issue I have with this system,” he says. Acts of resistance against big and powerful institutions - be it organised religion or the government - are not easy and are almost always never won. And nobody knows this better than those like Surendran, the nuns and the hundreds of  others who battle against these institutions everyday. “Yet, the important thing is to keep fighting and to fight together,” he says. Read: Pope obliges Bishop Franco Mulakkal’s request, temporarily relieves him of duties

Malayalam TV channel cameraperson Binu passes away

$
0
0
Media
Binu Ulloor was covering Bishop Franco Mulakkal’s interrogation for the past two days.
Binu Ulloor, a cameraperson who worked for Malayalam television channel JayHind died on Friday morning. 48-year old Binu was covering the interrogation of rape accused Bishop Franco Mullakal for two days at Tripunithura in Kochi and the death came as a shock for other media persons who had seen Binu active in his work. Binu died following a cardiac arrest at a private hospital in Kochi.A senior cameraperson Binu used to work for JayHind since the launch of the channel in 2007. He is known for his coverage of the Sabarimala pilgrimage season. Binu would be at the shrine throughout the pilgrimage season from November to January every year. He was known among fellow camerapersons as the ‘Library of Sannidhanam of Sabarimala’ as he used to store all the visuals.  On finishing his duty, he would distribute water for the devotees apart from rendering them other servicesThe death happened after a cardiac arrest at a private hospital in Kochi.

How Cyclone Ockhi and Kerala floods inspired new plans for ocean waste management

$
0
0
Environment
Whether people dump plastic in the beach, into the sea directly, or in water bodies inland, this waste ultimately makes its way to the sea itself,” says an activist.
File Photo
Public streets lined with piled-up trash, both bio-degradable and non-degradable, in Chengannur, Idukki, Karimban, Vazhathope, Aluva and others towns. Bridges over Muvattupuzha, Malayattoor and other rivers literally carpeted with tonnes of plastic bottles, plastic bags, diapers and other medical and hospital waste. Plastic choking Vembanad Lake, threatening its delicate ecological balance. These are just some of the realities that greeted residents of flood-affected regions in Kerala as they returned to their homes and hometowns, in addition to finding plastic bags and other waste washed up right onto their doorsteps, with still more festooning trees and poles.  This isn’t a problem whose effects can be contained on land: as Trivandrum based NGO Friends of Marine Life founder Robert Panapilli points out, “Whether people dump plastic in the beach, into the sea directly, or in water bodies inland, this waste ultimately makes its way to the sea itself.”  But if all goes to plan, in three years, the 6-kilometre coast of Vadakara is set to become a zero-waste seabed and coast, and a proposal is being prepared to implement a similar program through-out the state.  Robert points out the particular danger Kerala’s coast and ocean bed faces in the aftermath of the floods in the face of the amount of waste thrown up from the rivers, and says that as of now, there’s no government project working in managing plastic waste dumping in the ocean, except one project in Nindakkara where fishermen are encouraged to bring back plastic packets they use to carry food on long fishing expeditions back to the shore for disposal instead of dumping them into the sea. However, Robert hopes that the government will begin to take notice of this issue after the recent natural disasters in Kerala, and told TNM some details about the pioneering project underway in Vadakara. This project, which is proposed to be conducted as a joint venture between the Vadakara municipal corporation and Friends of Marine Life, was first discussed after the effects of another recent natural disaster: Cyclone Ockhi. The recent Kerala floods have only inspired officials in Vadakara to pick up the pace on their pioneering planned project for a zero-waste coast and seabed, and will hopefully serve as an inspiration for other coastal areas in the state.   Mapping the sea bed This project will be conducted in three stages in Vadakara. In the first stage, they plan to carry out a thorough mapping and video recording of the sea beds to a distance of up to four nautical miles to identify eco-sensitive regions. Manavil Mohanan of the Vadakara Municipal Corporation says that such a study will help identify both areas particularly rich in various kinds of marine life, and areas where waste and other materials tend to get trapped.  Bini, Municipal Secretary of Vadakara, says that this stage of the project will also involve local indigenous knowledge holders, or fishermen familiar with the area. “Indigenous fisherman, who go to the sea for months and days, know the rocks and geography of the region, particular areas rich in say, mussels, and other local knowledge better than anyone. So we want to involve them as well.” Based on these studies, they plan to prepare a biodiversity register and detailed seabed map of the area.  Ocean Literacy to address the problem After preparing this seabed map and biodiversity register, they aim to begin an ocean literacy program with the help of “blue volunteers”, which will comprise of students from coastal areas, indigenous local knowledge holders and environmental organisations working in the area. These blue volunteers will impart lessons on ocean literacy to students and locals, and, Robert says, also do a survey on how plastic ends up in the sea. Bini points out, “Simply collecting waste that has been dumped doesn't solve the problem. Ocean literacy starting at the school level is necessary to address the problem.” Finally, Robert says, “These findings will be shared with the corporation authorities, and based on this they will make new regulations. In the third phase of the project, with the support of the corporation, we will try to implement these plans to make Vadakara a zero-waste coast and seabed by the third year of the commencement of the project.”  Robert says that while this project is already set to commence in Vadakara with the cooperation of local authorities, Friends of Marine Life is planning to submit a proposal to the Government of Kerala under its new Haritha Kerala, or Green Kerala, scheme as part of the rebuilding projects post the recent floods.  Individuals working in the field say that the floods have opened the eyes of both the government and the public to the magnitude of the plastic waste disposal problem, and particularly that of dumping plastic waste in water bodies, in Kerala. Sachin, who works with the Clean Fort Kochi Foundation, an NGO, says, “People are concerned now because the floods hit them where it hurts and dumped the hidden waste right at their doorsteps. So now there’s a mentality shift, but facility provision has to catch up.”  Hopefully, the recent natural disasters and the rebuilding activities being carried out in their aftermath will be cognisant of the urgency and magnitude of the work required to be done in terms of managing waste dumping in oceans and water bodies, and take the opportunity to implement pioneering projects like that planned in Vadakara in other coastal areas in Kerala, to truly make Kerala a zero-waste seabed and coast.

‘It's time the church drops its silence’: Sr Anupama thanks supporters at nun's protest

$
0
0
Sexual Assault
Even as the crowd was eagerly awaiting the official confirmation of the Bishop Franco’s arrest, sister Anupama addressed the media and those gathered at the protest site in Kochi.
On the 13th day of the protest demanding the arrest of rape-accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar Diocese, Sister Anupama, one of the five nuns who started the protest, gave an emotional speech to those gathered at the Vanchi square, near the Kochi High Court in Ernakulam. The interrogation of Bishop Franco by the Kerala Police continued on the third day after he was summoned to Thrippunithura Crime Branch Police Station for questioning in this case on Wednesday. Even as the crowd was eagerly awaiting the official confirmation of the Bishop’s arrest, Sister Anupama addressed the media and those gathered at the protest site. “We are not fighting against Franco, the person, or the church. We are fighting against the crime committed by Bishop Franco,” she said. An emotional Sr Anupama said, “We abandoned our families at the age of 15 to serve society through the church. They tried trapping the sisters who came forward to support the nuns protesting here. It's time that the church drops its silence, at least at this moment, to support the nuns.” She reiterated, “We want justice for the sister. If the arrest is not declared today, we will continue our protest tomorrow.” Sr Anupama also mentioned how the nuns began their protest even against the advice of their families and appreciated everyone who had come to support the nuns’ protest. “On behalf of ourselves and our families, we thank everyone who has come out to support us,” she said with a smile.   Bishop Franco was accused of raping a nun 13 times between 2014 and 2016. After their complaints were ignored by the Church, five nuns began a protest demanding his arrest, and soon received a phenomenal support from the public, students, the media and other groups across Kerala.

3 months after nun files rape complaint, Bishop Franco Mulakkal finally arrested

$
0
0
Kerala nun rape case
The Bishop was arrested from the Thripunithura Crime Branch Police Station after he was questioned by the police for the third day.
Bishop Franco Mulakkal, accused of raping a nun belonging to the Missionaries of Jesus congregation in Kottayam, was finally arrested on Friday. The Bishop was arrested from the Thripunithura Crime Branch Police Station after he was questioned by the police for the third day. After third day of questioning, Kottayam SP Harishankar told the media that there was enough material with the investigating team to show that Bishop Franco Mulakkal had committed the crime, which is why they decided to go ahead with his arrest. The Bishop will be taken for a medical examination to a Taluka hospital and then to Kottayam tonight. Fr Franco Mulakkal will be produced at Pala court on Saturday. On Thursday, the Jalandhar Bishop was interrogated for the second time for nearly eight hours. After the questioning concluded, Kottayam SP Harisankar addressed the media and stated that three fact-finding police teams were formed to verify the statements of the Bishop. "The grilling has been positive, we have been able to get clarity on many things," the SP had told the media. The interrogation over three days was conducted by Kottayam SP Harisankar and DySP Vaikom K Subhash.  The statement that didn't match According to sources in the police department, the Bishop had maintained that he had not stayed at the Kurivalangad convent on May 5, 2014, the day the nun alleged she had been raped for the second time. The bishop and his supporters in the diocese had claimed that he had stayed at the Muthalakodam convent in Idukki district on May 5th night. However, according to sources, the investigating team has procured statements from his driver and another nun in the Muthalakodam convent that alleged that the bishop had stayed at the Kurivilangad convent itself that night. Though the bishop has not confessed to any crime, the legal team advising the investigators reportedly said that the statements from other witnesses were enough to arrest the bishop. Temporarily removed from administrative duty On Thursday, the Apostolic Nunciature (Pope’s Ambassador) to India accepted the request of the rape accused Bishop to relieve him of his religious duties temporarily. Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Agnelo Rufino Gracias, the Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus of Bombay, to take over the duties of Bishop Franco Mulakkal. The police had issued a summons to the Bishop of the Jalandhar Diocese on September 12 directing him to appear before the police by September 19 in relation to the sexual harassment charges levelled against him by a nun. The nun had filed a complaint in June alleging that she was sexually assaulted by the bishop multiple times between 2014 and 2016 in the Kuravilangad convent in Kerala. The police had questioned the bishop once on August 13, almost two months after the complaint was filed but the case had been kept in cold storage after that. Raising questions over the police inaction on the issue, sisters of the Missionaries of Jesus (MJ) in Kottayam - Anupama, Alphy, Josephine, Neena Rose and Anaitha - sat in protest near the Kerala High Court, demanding that the bishop be arrested. Though the police maintained that there was substance to the complaint against the bishop, their reluctance to take the bishop into custody was criticised by many. With more common people joining the protest expressing solidarity with their cause, the pressure on Kerala police to act has been high. Police affidavits The police had filed an affidavit in the Kerala High Court, which stated that there was indeed evidence to confirm the charges levelled against the bishop by the nun. The affidavit that was submitted to the court on August 13 stated, “During the course of the investigation so far conducted and the available evidences collected so far, it is revealed that the accused Bishop Franco committed unnatural offence and committed rape repeatedly on different dates from 05/05/2014 to 23/09/2016 on the complainant against the will and consent of her abusing his dominance over her as Bishop of Jalandhar after confining her in the guest room number 20 of St Francis Bishop Home Kuravilangad.” On September 13, the Kerala police filed another affidavit in the Kerala High Court citing that the discrepancies in the statements of the bishop, the complainant and the witness led to the delay in arresting the bishop. Victim shaming Meanwhile, the Missionaries of Jesus (MJ), to which the survivor belongs, and which is headed by Franco Mulakkal, has resorted to blaming her and thereby shielding the bishop. The congregation also said that the way the nun went on with her life after the alleged assault was enough proof to show that the allegations are not true. MJ also accused the police of going out of their way to help the nun.

Bishop Franco admitted to hospital after complaints of chest pain, discharged later

$
0
0
Kerala nun rape case
The Bishop was on Friday arrested on charges of raping a 44-year-old nun between 2014 and 2016.
Jalandhar Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who was on Friday arrested for raping a nun from the Missionaries of Jesus (MJ) congregation, was taken to hospital after he complained of chest pain. The Bishop was being taken to Kottayam from Kochi after his arrest when he complained of uneasiness and was admitted to Government Medical College in Kottayam. According to Manorama News, the Bishop was kept under observation for 6 hours and medical reports had stated that his blood pressure was high. However, after tests were concluded, he was discharged from the hospital. He will be produced before the magistrate’s court on Saturday. The Bishop has been arrested on charges of raping a 44-year-old nun between 2014 and 2016. He was questioned in the case of three consecutive days and was taken into custody on Friday night. Addressing the media after his arrest, Kottayam SP Harishankar told the media that there was enough material with the investigating team to show that Bishop Franco Mulakkal had committed the crime, which is why they decided to go ahead with his arrest. The Bishop’s arrest led to quiet celebrations at Kochi’s Vanchi Square, where sisters of the Missionaries of Jesus in Kottayam – Anupama, Alphy, Josephine, Neena Rose and Anaitha – along with many others had been protesting for the past 14 days demanding the arrest of the Bishop.  The nun had filed a complaint in June alleging that she was sexually assaulted by the bishop multiple times between 2014 and 2016 in the Kuravilangad convent in Kerala. The police had questioned the bishop once on August 13, almost two months after the complaint was filed but the case had been kept in cold storage after that. On Thursday, the Apostolic Nunciature (Pope’s Ambassador) to India accepted the request of the rape accused Bishop to relieve him of his religious duties temporarily. Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Agnelo Rufino Gracias, the Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus of Bombay, to take over the duties of Bishop Franco Mulakkal.

David vs Goliath: Meet the five nuns who waged a 14-day battle for justice

$
0
0
Protest
The Sisters from a little known convent in Kuruvilangad, Kottayam, decided to take on the mighty church.
If you are not from Kerala, you may not know their names but they will go down in history as women who stood up for justice, refusing to be cowed down despite the looming opposition. Sisters Alphy, Anupama, Josephine, Nina Rose and Ancett are the Kerala nuns who've risked their prospects for their colleague and friend, a survivor of rape. And in their battle, there has come a David vs Goliath moment within the clergy itself. The first victory in their battle against the  Catholic Church came with the arrest of Bishop Franco Mulakkal, the head of the Jalandhar Diocese, a powerful leader accused of raping a Kerala nun multiple times 4 years ago.  The news announced late on Friday was bittersweet for many. While most celebrated the arrest with marches and cries of victory, those in the thick of the fight for justice were unusually solemn.  Activist P Geetha was hardly amused by the announcement. Addressing the media she said, “What should have been a natural process took several months and the sweat and blood of many to achieve. But this is still a tiny hurdle crossed in the long journey to justice.” Activist Stephen Mathew who resumed his 14th day of hunger strike after being discharged, vowed to protect the nuns in the days to come, as they would be most vulnerable now.  “The land they stand on is his (Bishop Franco), the convent they live in is his. These nuns will face a tough time in the days to come and we will stand by them till the Bishop is convicted,” he said.  But among the solemn promises and cries of happiness, what was missing were the voices of the five nuns. They had left to their convent hours before the arrest was announced.  Addressing the crowd on Friday before leaving to the convent, Sister Anupama said:  “We aren’t fighting against the Bishop as a person, we are fighting against his ways and the silence of the church.” A long-time friend of the survivor, Sister Anupama was part of two major developments in the case. Her father Varghese leaked the letter she had written to him, detailing the threats issued by Bishop Franco’s men to silence those supporting the survivor. Later, Varghese even released an audio tape which exposed a Catholic priest bribing Sister Anupama to withdraw her support to the cause.  Yet, despite several attempts to silence her, Sr Anupama sat on the dais on all 14 days, speaking on behalf of her friend and many others. As Sr Anupama spoke to the crowd, another nun addressed a few reporters on the side.  “We know we are going to face a tough time after this. But if the church plans to ostracise us for standing up for justice, we will fight it legally,” Sr Josephine stated.  Another vocal nun in the protest, Sr Jospehine had moved to the Missionaries of Jesus convent after a teaching stint in Bihar. Soon enough she lent her support to the cause and has stood in solidarity with the survivor ever since.  Today, she believes that if the Church fails her, the laws of the country will help her.   Sr Alphy  Sister Alphy did not speak much during the 14 days of protest. After giving short responses to questions posed by the media, she would go back to being silent, while holding a poster with ‘We want justice’ written in bold letters.  It was during her stint as a teacher in Bihar that the complaint was registered by the survivor in Kuruvilangad. Soon enough, Sr Alphy decided to return to Kerala for two months to lend her strength to the cause and fight for the Bishop’s arrest.  Sr Nina Rose Another close aide of the survivor who has been in the convent since 2015, Sr Nina lent her support to the cause right from the beginning when news of the complaint received public attention.  Sr Ancett  Three years with the survivor nun in the same convent, St Ancett knew of the events that had unfolded and has been by the complainant’s side through thick and thin over the past few months.  The 5 nuns believe that it was God who gave them the strength to battle against the ways of the Church. Whether it is their faith or their strong desire to undo a wrong done to one of their other own, these women have fought hard for justice and won a crucial battle. But the war has just begun and will continue till the courts convict the accused, they promise.  Read:3 months after nun files rape complaint, Bishop Franco Mulakkal finally arrested

Bail denied to rape accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal, remanded to 2-day police custody

$
0
0
Kerala nun rape case
Bishop Franco Mulakkal, arrested on Friday night in the Kerala nun rape case, will remain in police custody till September 24
PTI
Bishop Franco Mulakkal was on Saturday remanded to police custody till September 24 by a magistrate’s court in Kottayam in connection with the rape case of a 44-year-old nun of the Missionaries of Jesus (MJ) congregation. Bishop Franco’s bail plea has also been rejected by the court. The police produced a remand report produced before the magistrate, which states, “Franco Mulakkal came to the convent with the intention of sexually assaulting the victim.”  According to reports, the police told the court that they needed three days custody in order to take the bishop to the spots where the crime took place and collect more evidence. In the court, the bishop’s lawyer did not oppose custody but put forward a condition that Mulakkal's blood samples and saliva must not be taken without his permission citing that it can be misused, reports ANI. The bishop’s counsel had also filed a bail application, which was later rejected by the court.  The Bishop was on Friday arrested on charges of raping a 44-year-old nun between 2014 and 2016. He was questioned in the case for three consecutive days and was taken into custody on Friday night. Addressing the media after his arrest, Kottayam SP Harishankar told the media that there was enough material with the investigating team to show that Bishop Franco Mulakkal had committed the crime, which is why they decided to go ahead with his arrest. After his arrest, he was being taken to Kottayam from Kochi after his arrest when he complained of chest pain and was admitted to Government Medical College in Kottayam. Bishop Franco Mulakkal has been charged with the rape of a 44-year-old nun between 2014 to 2016. The nun had filed a complaint in June alleging that she was sexually assaulted by the bishop multiple times between the two years in the Kuravilangad convent in Kerala. On Thursday, the Apostolic Nunciature (Pope’s Ambassador) to India accepted the request of the rape accused Bishop to relieve him of his religious duties temporarily. Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Agnelo Rufino Gracias, the Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus of Bombay, to take over the duties of Bishop Franco Mulakkal. Also read: David vs Goliath: Meet the five nuns who waged a 14-day battle for justice

Kerala man lives a double life as DJ on social media, arrested for duping minors

$
0
0
Crime
20-year-old Fayaz used to pose as a high-profile DJ on social media, post edited pictures of himself and then lure girls into falling for him.
Facebook
Fayaz Mobeen seemed like a typical 20-year-old who loved bikes, racing, funky hairstyles and dreamt of living a larger-than-life lifestyle. But he was hiding a dark secret. At present, Fayaz, who is a native of Kumbalam in Kochi, is currently lodged in Kozhikode district jail. He was arrested by the Karnataka police from Mangaluru and on Tuesday he was handed over to the Chevayur police, for duping a minor girl, making her fall in love with him and then taking her with him to Mangaluru. He has been charged under Sections 7 and 8 of the POCSO Act. Along with this, he has also booked for stealing a bike. He has been remanded to 14 days custody by the Kozhikode district court. The police, after interrogating Fayaz, realised that this was not the first time that the youngster tried to elope with a minor nor was it the first time he was involved in stealing. Talking to TNM, the head constable of the Chevayur police station said that Fayaz used to pose as a DJ on social media, post edited pictures of himself and then lure girls into falling for him. “He used to lure girls into becoming friends with him by telling them that he performs as a DJ in various five-star hotels. He also used his bike to impress girls and in many instances, he was successful in doing so,” says the head constable. In this particular case, after completing his schooling from an institution in Kozhikode, Fayaz joined an entrance coaching class in Chevayur where he met the minor girl. They later became friends and Fayaz convinced her to elope with him to Mangaluru. The girl’s father filed a complaint at the Chevayur police station saying that his daughter is missing. Banking in on the popularity he used to experience on social media, Fayaz used to try to exploit his fan following, says media reports. The youngster was reported to have created a WhatsApp group which consisted of both girls and boys who had a fixation for superbikes. Through this group, Fayaz is alleged to have used his popularity to meet women and get money from them. However, his real life is in stark contrast to his image on social media. His mother worked as a domestic help and his father had left home. His sister is in school and reportedly lives in an orphanage in Palakkad. The head constable at the Chevayur police station said that the youngster had stolen a bike from a bike yard in Kochi during the floods. It was this bike that he used to go on trips with the girls he met on social media.

'She had to argue to get her posting': Remembering Anna, India's first woman IAS

$
0
0
Inspiration
Hailing from Kerala, Anna went on to become an IAS officer and learnt to never submit to the 'No's she heard because she was a woman.
Grace was then about 11 years old. She could just about remember her big sister doing something incredible, something women in those days never did. Anna Rajam George had just joined the Indian Administrative Service and had become the first woman to do so. The year was 1951. Today, Grace has just landed in India from the US. Her sister – now Anna Rajam Malhotra - who made history, passed away five days ago. Anna didn’t want to be put in a coffin, she wanted to be cremated and the ashes floated ‘in a good place’. Sujith Damodar, who looked after her, fulfilled her last wish, and floated the ashes in Rameswaram. Sujith is Assistant Manager, Material Receiving at the Leela group in Mumbai. Krishnan Nair, the founder of the Leela group, had been very fond of the late Anna Rajam and made sure she was taken care of properly. “I have been looking after her for the last 15 years. She stayed at a flat near the hotel and every day she would lunch with Mrs Leela Nair, Krishnan sir’s wife. After his death, his children Dinesh, Vivek and Dinesh’s wife Madhu looked after Annama (that’s how I called her)," he says.  Every year in January and February, Grace would come from the US and the two sisters would go to stay at a villa in Kochi. “I am 12 years younger than her. She was a hard act to follow. She was the top of her class forever,” Grace says now, with distinct memories of the milestones her sister had achieved, never learning to submit to the ‘No’s she heard in life. She heard it when she qualified for the civil service and appeared for the interview, preferring to join the IAS. It was not considered suitable for women back then. But Anna didn’t back down. “It was a sensation then. She went through the training process which included military training. She had to learn how to ride, to shoot, she had to do everything that men had to,” Grace says. There was resistance again when she had to be posted to a district. “They were hesitant because she was a woman and they questioned how she would handle law and order as a woman. At that time, Rajagopalachari, former governor general of India, was chief minister (of Madras). He interviewed her and he told her that he didn’t approve of women being in public service. But she argued with him. You should give me a chance, she said. And he was persuaded to post her to Hosur, which was on the border of the then Madras and Mysore states,” Grace remembers. There was no electricity in Hosur at that time. It’s Anna who persuaded the Madras government to give the people electricity. She had foreseen a problem, Grace says. Hosur was on the border and there was a lot of Mysorian culture and influence. If the people should feel part of the Madras state, the government should take care of their needs. Anna Rajam Malhotra with Sujith Damodar Another time, Grace remembers, Anna went out to catch a team of smugglers. “She just took a driver and someone else with her. A young woman going out to stop a team of smugglers. She caught them but her boss was upset. It was not wise, she could have been hurt. So then she was given a revolver to protect herself!” The story of her dealing with a case of six elephants entering a village in Hosur and how she solved it without having to shoot the animals is also famous. Then of course there came the building of the Nhava Seva port in Mumbai that impressed Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi so much and won Anna the Padma Bhushan in 1989. Anna had also gone on an eight-state tour with his mother and former PM, Indira Gandhi, in her capacity as an agricultural secretary. But Anna never worked in Kerala where she hailed from. She was born in Ernakulam but the family moved to Kozhikode and that’s where she grew up with her four siblings – they were three boys and two girls. “She was this down to earth, no ceremony, no fancy person, who always batted for the underdog," says Grace.  Grace remembers a recent incident from two years ago. It was one of those times she had come down and the sisters were spending time in Kochi. There was a woman who used to come to sweep and clean the villa and Anna got talking with her. “My sister learnt that the woman had a BSc in Mathematics and she had appeared for the UPSC exam. Her name was also on the list but she never got a call. So every morning Anna would call the officials, the deputy secretary and the joint secretary and ask about the woman. This was in 2016 and suddenly elections were declared. She was disappointed she couldn’t do anything for the woman. But in June, when she had got back to Mumbai, she got a call from the woman who finally got the job.” Anna fought conventions all through her life, except when it came to her own life. She had fallen in love with her batch mate RN Malhotra but the two of them decided to wait. He was a Hindu from Punjab, she a Christian from Kerala. They thought of the ramifications their union would bring to the family and kept their love tucked away for 25 years before getting married. 

Rape accused Bishop Franco smiles on his way to court, even as crowds boo

$
0
0
Crime
While being taken to court, the rape accused Bishop was seen smiling as he got into the police van, even as crowds badly booed him.
On Saturday, videos showed rape accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal being taken to the local magistrate court in Pala with heavy police security, even as scores of people were seen thronging the court premises to see him. And as the crowds booed collectively, the rape accused was seen wearing a smile as he moved through the crowds and entered the police van. According the reports, he was even smiling through the hearing in the court. The Pala magistrate court denied bail to the accused Bishop and sent him to police custody for two days, until the 24th when he will be produced before the High Court in Kochi for an anticipatory bail application plea hearing. #WATCH Former Bishop of Jalandhar, Franco Mulakkal, being taken into police custody, at magistrate court in #Kerala's Kottayam. pic.twitter.com/GkbMiQKov1— ANI (@ANI) September 22, 2018 The accused Bishop was finally arrested on Friday evening after three days of rigorous questioning at the Thripunithara SP office in Kerala. Superintendent of Police Harishankar told media persons late on Friday evening that they have found evidence of rape against the Bishop and hence have decided the arrest him. The news lead to celebrations at Vanchi Square near the High Court in Kochi where protestors - led by 5 nuns from the Catholic Missionaries of Jesus congregation - were on a strike for the past 14 days to get the accused Bishop arrested. Activist and writer P Geetha who was on a hunger strike for 5 days said that the arrest was but a small victory and there was a long road of struggle ahead. “What should have happened naturally (the arrest) was achieved only after several people and fought and suffered several hardships to achieve this. There is still a long way to go,” she said. Meanwhile the Bishop was admitted to a government hospital in Kottayam on Friday after he complained of chest pain following his arrest. He was discharged on Saturday and brought to the court after this.  

Sister Lucy, who joined protest with nuns in Kochi, banned from church activities

$
0
0
Protest
Sister Lucy Kalappura of Mananthavady diocese, Wayanad, has reportedly been banned from prayer, teaching the Bible, attending worship service and other activities of the parish, including offering holy communion.
Facebook
Have dioceses started taking action against the nuns who joined the public protest led by five nuns, demanding the arrest of rape-accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal? According to Malayalam media outlets, Sister Lucy Kalappura, one of the nuns who joined the protest outside the Kochi High Court, has been banned from church activities and relieved of her duties. Sister Lucy Kalappura of Mananthavady diocese, Wayanad, has reportedly been banned from prayer, teaching the Bible, attending worship service and other activities of the parish, including offering holy communion. Joining the protest in Kochi, she had said that the Church should be prepared to correct themselves if any lapses had occurred, and expressed her unwavering support to the nuns seeking justice in this case.   On Sunday morning, she learnt that she had been barred from church activities, including teaching the Bible to class X students, when she arrived for prayer. She later clarified to the media that she had not received any written notice on this, but was deeply saddened that she had been barred from the church activities. She also pointed out that she joined the protest to support her fellow nuns, and that she had not spoken against the Church. She also said that she has received plenty of support from other nuns in the diocese for having joined the protest.   Action is being taken against Sister Lucy for allegedly going against the Church, for taking a loan to buy a vehicle and for not wearing her nun’s habit at a public event. Reports indicate that the Mother Superior of her Church had recommended action be taken against Sister Lucy three months ago, although this has clearly been provoked by the nun’s support to the protest demanding the arrest of rape-accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal. The St Mary's Church, however, has denied that any action has officially been taken against Sr Lucy. According, to a press release, the church claimed that Sr Lucy used to be involved in the training of believers and baptism activities of the church. Some churchgoers disapproved of her recent criticism of the church through social media and other publications, and this was informed to the priest, Fr Stephen Kottakkal. Churchgoers had a problem with her training their children on faith, and being involved in baptism activities, the church said. "Sister Lucy has only been informed of the public sentiment through her superior. No restrictions have been imposed on Sister as a Catholic believer and a nun," the church said, putting the blame squarely on churchgoers. After five nuns began their protest outside the Kochi High Court on September 9, there were reports of many congregations, such as the Congregation of the Mother of Carmel (CMC), issuing internal circulars, barring other nuns and priests from joining the protest.

Meet Bhoomika, the mascot doll woven from the ruins of Kerala floods

$
0
0
Flood Relief
Bhoomika dolls are made entirely from discarded and waste fabric of any material and colour. Proceeds from its sale will go towards flood relief work and to the women making these dolls.
Photos: Sreekesh Raveendran Nair
Kerala’s Chekutty doll has a friend now, Bhoomika. Swaying by a thread in the courtyard of a naalukettu (a traditional homestead) in Thiruvananthapuram, this tiny doll has long black hair tied into two plaits, a big red bindi and no lips. She sits in a boat, contemplating, perhaps, on life. A room away, more Bhoomikas are being made. Four women are weaving and stitching with an impressive sleight of hand, while Sobha Viswanath, who runs the Weavers Village, a handloom centre in this naalukettu, is constantly guiding her team. Bhoomika’s story is similar to Chekutty - the birth of these dolls began with the idea of helping the flood survivors. However, they have one difference. While Chekutty dolls, which were upcycled from the sarees of Chendamangalam handloom that were destroyed by the floods, was a one-time initiative, Bhoomika will be a sustained project, says Sobha. “It is a long-term initiative to give employment opportunities to women, to work for a self-sustainable Kerala and a green gift for the rebuilding of the state,” she says. How Bhoomika is helping rebuild lives Sobha conceived the idea of creating Bhoomika along with Deepak of Pava Creative Studios. “The dolls, designed by Deepak, are made entirely from discarded and waste fabric of any material and colour,” she says. Half of the proceeds from the sale of Bhoomika dolls would go for flood relief, in kind. The remaining amount will go to the women making these dolls. On Saturday, four women from the Mahila Mandiram, a home for destitute girls, arrived at the Weaver’s Village to learn the process of making Bhoomika. These women will, in turn, teach the women at the Mandiram. Girls from Nirbhaya, home for victims of sexual assault, are also involved in creating Bhoomika dolls. Sobha Viswanath On not adding a mouth on Bhoomika’s face, Deepak says he did not know what expression to give her. “She is speechless, I guess. But then, her bindi is a symbol of hope. That’s why it’s loud and red,” he says. The boat in which Bhoomika sits is symbolic of the boats that saved thousands during the devastating floods. The price of one doll is Rs 101. “The first doll was bought by cinematographer Ravi Varman, who gifted it to actors Katrina Kaif and Sidharth Malhotra. The second doll was bought by little Thumbi, daughter of a couple who happen to run a school called Bhoomi in Kochi,” Sobha says, pointing to a little girl playing with the doll. Thumbi with Bhoomika Sobha, who has been instrumental in setting up Anbodu Trivandrum for the flood relief work from the capital city, says she got a hang of the problems working at grassroot level. Like Tsunamika was made at the time of the 2004 Tsunami, Sobha wanted to create a mascot from waste. When it came to naming her, they couldn’t think of anything better than Bhoomika, daughter of Mother Earth. (All photos are by Sreekesh Raveendran Nair)

Injured Indian sailor Abhilash Tomy to be picked up in 16 hours by French vessel: Navy

$
0
0
Sailing
Abhilash, who is known for his solo cruise around the world in 2012-2013, suffered a back injury when he was sailing on a vessel, representing India in the Golden Globe Race 2018.
Injured Indian Navy naval officer Abhilash Tomy will be rescued from the sea by the French vessel Osiris, in the next 16 hours. Thereafter, he is likely to be taken to R/V Australian Naval ship HMAS Ballarat, which has left Perth to bring him.  @abhilashtomy shall be picked up in next 16 hrs by french vessel Osiris. Thereafter likely to R/V @Australian_Navy HMAS Ballarat, which has left Perth to bring him. Earliest arrival of our ship #INSSatpura in current location later @DefenceMinIndia@nsitharaman @ggr2018official — SpokespersonNavy (@indiannavy) September 23, 2018   Abhilash suffered a back injury when he was sailing on the vessel ‘Thuriya’, representing India in the Golden Globe Race 2018. Thuriya got dismasted in rough weather condition on Friday when Abhilash was in the South Indian Ocean, approximately 1,900 nautical miles WSW from Perth and about 2,700 nm from Cape Comorin. “The Australian Rescue coordination centre at Canberra is coordinating the rescue mission in conjunction with many agencies including the Australian Defence Department and the Indian Navy. Continuous watch over the boat is being maintained by Indian Navy and RAAF aircraft till the rescue is completed,” said a note released by the Indian Navy. The Indian Navy ship INS Satpura is expected to arrive at Abhilash’s location only by Friday. “All our efforts are being made to rescue commander Abhilash Tomy. Capability of our P8i has been a humongous force multiplier who has given us and the Australian Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre a huge input into the state of Thuriya for planning purposes,” the note said. Abhilash in his last text message has indicated that he is safe on the boat, however, is immobile due to the back injury. Abhilash became popular when he completed a solo circumnavigation across the world under sail in 150 days. This was back in 2012 when he sailed on Mhadei, his boat, and faced the seas. “This has not only been the most thrilling experience of my life, but it was also something that I had wished would never end,” Abhilash had told in an interview after the journey. “We (Mhadei and I) faced many difficulties, but there was a bliss in the solitary existence that made returning undesirable,” he said.

Actor Joy Mathew booked for protesting in prohibited area in support of nuns

$
0
0
Nuns Protest in Kerala
The actor along with 24 others had taken out a silent march in the recently renovated 'Mittayi Theruvu' in Kozhikode, which according to the police is a prohibited area.
Actor Joy Mathew, and 24 others, have been booked by the Kerala police for taking out a protest against rape-accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal in the recently renovated 'Mittayi Theruvu' area of Kozhikode. The protest march was organised on September 12 and there was prohibitory order in force in the area, state reports.  According to the police, the actor and others flouted the law despite being warned against protesting in the area. A case has been registered under the following sections of the Indian Penal Code: unlawful assembly, breach of practice, rioting and obstructing public way, the police added. Reacting to this, Joy Mathew said that he had not been aware of the prohibitory order before taking out the protest. He even added that he felt 'this in an attempt to scare me for supporting the nuns'. The actor even emphasised that the protest march was a silent one where protesters held placards. The actor has been one of the prominent voices lending his support to the nuns' protest to arrest Jalandhar Bishop Franco Mulakkal who has been accused of raping a nun. The actor even participated in the 14-day protest held by the 5 nuns of the Missionaries of Jesus congregation before the Kerala High Court in Kochi to get Bishop Franco arrested. After three days of rigorous questioning, the Bishop was finally arrested on Friday night and taken to the Pala magistrate court on Saturday morning. Meanwhile for showing support to the nuns' protest in Kerala, the Orthodox Church in Kerala banned Sr Lucy Kalappura of the Mananthavady diocese of Wayanad from taking part in pastoral activities including teaching the Bible, worship service and offering holy communion the church. Following this a priest in the Jacobite Syrian Christian Church - Ramban Yuhanon - has been warned against lending his support to the nuns' protest by the Syrian Christian church.
Viewing all 17592 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>