moral policing and hooliganism in Bangalore
By SVAKSHA on 2009 February 20 [Friday], 22:46:00 - WOMEN - Permalink
There is more to Bengaluru than the "Indian silicon valley" tag and there is no dearth of self-styled criminals and goons masquerading as culture-vultures.
From, http://vishshanker.sulekha.com/blog/post/2009/02/this-happened-in-bangalore-bengaluru-shocking.htm
A few of my friends and I were just paying our bills and coming out of our
regular Friday night watering hole and dinner place in Rest House Road, just
off Brigade Road, and most of the women in the company were already standing
outside. Some of us outside were smoking, people were happy, there was laughter
and jokes, as there were many other people in the street, all coming out,
satiated, in the closing hour of the various pubs and restaurants around.
Suddenly from up the street a massive SUV comes revving and speeding, hurtling
down, and stops in a scream of brakes and swirling dust, millimeters away from
this group of 4 women, barely missing one of their legs. A white Audi,
imported, still under transfer, with the registration plate of KA-51 TR-2767.
Some millionaire's toy thing, that in the wrong hands can kill.
Naturally the women are in shock. And quickly following the shock comes
indignation. These are self made women running their own businesses, managing
state responsibilities for global NGO firms, successful doctors. They are not
used to being bullied. So they turn around, instead of shrinking back in fear.
They protest.
And as soon as they turn around in protest, the car doors are flung open, and a
stream of 4-5 rabid men run out towards these women, screaming obscenities in
Hindi and Kannada against women in general, fists flailing. Some of us who came
in running at the sound of the screaming brakes now stand in the middle in
defense of our women, and then blows start raining down. One of the goons make
a couple of calls over the cellphone, and in seconds a stream of other equally
rabid goondas land up. They gun straight for the women, and everyone – a few
well-meaning bystanders, acquaintances who know us from the
restaurant, basically everyone who tries to help the women – starts getting
thoroughly beaten up.
Women are kicked in the groin, punched in the stomach, slapped across the face,
grabbed everywhere, abused constantly. Men are smashed up professionally, blows
aimed at livers, groins, kidneys and nose. A friend is hit repeatedly on the
head by a stone until he passes out in a flood of blood.
A plain-clothes policeman (Vittal Kumar) who saunters in late stands by
watching and urging people to stop, but doing absolutely nothing else. A
'cheetah' biker cop comes in, with our women pleading him to stop this madness,
but he refuses action, saying a police van will come in soon and he cannot do
anything. Everyone keeps getting hammered. Relentlessly.
The carnage continues for over 20 minutes.
Finally when the police van does come in it is this vandals who are raging and
ranting, claiming to be true "sons of the Kannadiga soil", and we are
positioned to be the villainous outsiders, bleeding, outraged. How do the cops
believe them, especially seeing the bloody faces of our men and the violated
rage of our women, while they carry nary a scratch on their bodies? Don't ask
me! Yet, it is us who these goondas urge the newly arrived law-keepers to
arrest, and the police promptly comply, and we are bundled into the van, some
still being beaten as we are pushed in. Some blessed relief from pain inside
the police van at least, even if we are inside and the real goons outside,
driving alongside in their spanking white Audi. The guy who was hit by the
stone is taken separately by the women to Mallya hospital.
Inside the police station at Cubbon Park it becomes clear that these goons and
the police know each other by their first names. The policeman in charge
(Thimmappa) initially refuses to even register any complaint from me, on the
purported grounds that I am not fluent in Kannada and I have taken a few drinks
(3 Kingfisher pints, to be precise) over the evening. No, it doesn't matter
that I didn't have my car and was not driving, and no, it doesn't mater that
the complaint will be written in English. We watch them and the goons exchange
smiles and nods with our our bloodied and swelling eyes and realize in our
pain-clouded still-in-shock brains the extent of truth in the claim of one of
the main goons when he claimed earlier in the evening in virulent aggression:
we own this town, this car belongs to an MLA, we will see how you return to
this street!!
This was the turning point of the saga, I guess. For we refused to lie down
quietly and be victims.
One of our girls, a vintage and proud Bangalorean who is running one of the
town's most successful organic farming initiatives, took upon herself to write
the complaint, when I was not allowed to write the same. Another Bangalore
girl, a state director of a global NGO firm, wrote the other molestation
complaint separately on behalf of all the girls. Some of us called our friends
in the media and corporate world. Everyone stepped up. And even when the odds
were down and we were out, we did not give up, and as a singular body of
violated citizens we spoke in one voice of courage and indomitable spirit. That
voice had
no limitation of language, not Kannada, nor English, or Hindi. It was the voice
of human spirit that cannot be broken.
And in the face of that spirit, for the first time, we saw the ugly visage of
vandalism, hiding behind the thin and inadequate veil of political corrupt
power, narrow-vision regionalism and self-serving morality, start to
wilt.
We spent 6 hours next day in the police station. The sub-inspector of police
who filed our FIR, Ajay R M, seemed a breath of fresh air inasmuch that he did
not appear a-priori biased like others, even though the hand of corruption and
politico-criminal power backing these goons was still manifest in many ways: a
starched, white-linen power-broker walked in handing over his card to the
sub-inspector in support of the goons; the goons got an audience with the
Inspector because of this intervention, while we had to interact one level
lower down in the hierarchy; the plains cloth policeman of last night, even
though he had arrived far too late in the crime scene, gave a warped statement,
passing it off as a "neutral" point of view, repeatedly stressing that we came
out of a pub and hence were drinking, positioning this as a 'drunken brawl',
while completely forgetting to mention the unprovoked attack against the women
and the one-sided vandalism and violence that ensued. I guess one cannot blame
the low ranked police officer – the criminal connections of these goons must be
pervasive enough for him to be careful.
Thanks however to the impartial handling of the situation by Ajay, soon the
goons were all identified. The lead actor was one Ravi Mallaya (38), a real
estate honcho and owner of a small property off Brigade Road which he has
converted into a "gaming" (you know what that means, don't you?) adda. The
others identified are Mohan Basava (22) of Chamarajapet 12th Cross, R. Vijay
Kumar Ramalingaraju (25) and Shivu Rajashekar (20). All are residents of 12th
& 13th Cross in Vyalikaval. Their bravado and machismo were by that time
evaporated. It was good to see their faces then.
Of course nothing much happened to them, nor did we expect it. They were
supposed to be in lock up for at least the weekend till they were produced in
court, but we understand that they were quickly released on (anticipatory?)
bail. The car, purportedly belonging to an MLA, also does not figure in the
FIR, apparently for reasons of "irrelevance to the case".The media also have
given us fantastic coverage and support so far, strengthening the cause.
The goons meanwhile, as an after thought, also filed the customary reverse
complaint on the morning after we filed our own complaint: the women have
apparently scratched the car! (Why did they not file the complaint the same
night, considering they came to the Police Station in the same car? Why was the
car allowed to be taken off police custody? Why is the car still irrelevant to
the case and not in the FIR? Questions.. questions..).
Is this the end of this saga? Probably not. Are these women, more precious to
us as friends and wives than most things in our lives, safe to walk or drive
down Brigade Road from now on or are the goonda elements, slighted by this
arrest and disgrace, are lying in ambush, waiting, biding their time to cause
some of us more grievous harm? We don't know. Is there reason for us to remain
apprehensive of future attacks and victimization? Perhaps.
But here is the point.
We stood up.
We believed in the power of individual citizens even in the face of
hooliganism, intolerance, corruption and power mongering. Even though many of
us have the option of leveraging political or government connections, we
deliberately chose to fight this battle as individuals. Sure, these connections
have been activated and they have been kept informed, should the worst case
scenario unfold tomorrow. But we have chosen to not leverage them. And in every
small win we
register as a group of individual outraged citizens of Bangalore and India,
however insignificant these milestones may be in the larger scheme of things,
there is one small notch adding up in favor of what is right, one small notch
against what is wrong. And we believe that every such small notch counts, each
such mark is absolutely invaluable.
It is the people who make this city, this country, this world. It is you and I,
as much as the terrorists inside and outside. And in our small insignificant
little ways, it is my responsibility and yours to not shirk from investing
effort – not just lip service or any token attempt, but real effort – in
backing up what we ourselves believe in. It is so easy to logically argue that
everything is corrupt, nothing is worth it, there are so many risks involved.
We must not fall trap to this escapist trend. We must not fail to try.
Next time you feel outraged, violated, abused, don't let it go by and add up to
your list of litanies and complaints. Stand up and take it to the limit - at
least your own limit. Not in the same way as they wrong you, but in the way
that every citizen, at least in theory, is entitled to complain and protest. Do
not let the hooligans power rant scare you or prompt you into submission. Do
not allow the corrupt cop make you give up trying. Carry the flame forward. Try
harder.
If are up to it, start right now.
Forward this note to everyone you want to be made aware of this. Post it in
your own blogs. Talk about it amongst your circles. And if anyone of you should
like to step forward with a word of empathy or advise, talk to me.
Comment.
It is not Bangalore that is going to the dogs. It is us. We have far
too long become accustomed to let everything go. And the more we let things go
without any protest or fight, the dormant criminal and dark elements of the
society get that much more encouraged. Every time we turn the other way, the
hooligan next street gets incentivized to push the boundary a little further,
provoke a little more, try something a little more atrocious. It is time for us
to refuse to let this go on. We are responsible for making ourselves proud.
Lets believe in ourselves. We can do this.
My name is Saugata Chatterjee. And I am standing up.I refuse to let
Bangalore go to the hooligan slumdogs, even if some of them are pets of corrupt
power millionaires.
Comments
I am with you .
The trouble is not with the stereotypical "corrupt politician" or someone with an agenda. This is out of a complex mix of insecurity, foolhardiness, group mentality, an overdose of the supposed "traditional values", and the incredible solidarity in feeling that "yes, I'm doing the right thing". It's almost similar to what the standard issue terrorist would be feeling.
At the end of the day, the difference between us and them is that when they disagree with something, they get violent. And people getting violent over something that makes them uncomfortable - especially when they are in a large group feeling similar feelings is nothing new to this world.
The safest thing is to avoid these places for a while and wait for it to spill over, because this has all the makings of a "fad", twisted as it might be. Larger and larger groups of people who didn't feel strongly about something like this would like to suddenly take action.
Everyone argues with me about this. They say that everyone should stand up and not let them win, but nobody can put their money where their mouth is.
@Abhishek : thanks
@Anirudh : ...But you will agree that CORRUPTION is the root cause of problems in our country and this current scenario is just another manifestation of the insecurity that you so rightly mentioned in your comment. The insecurity of losing power and control makes people behave irrationally. India has are bigger problems to be solved but our politicians dont want to address important issues. Instead they spend all their energy in wasting the tax payers money on creating divisions on the basis of religion, caste and regional politics.
Violence (whether in thought or action) is the last resort of a person who is deeply insecure. I strongly disagree with "lets hide" mentality because some insecure religious fundamentalist decides he/she is going to push other people around for power or fame in politics or earn more money by extortion. Corruption and negativity should not be tolerated and its time we all screamed "NO, STOP !". A collective roar will be heard.
Good for writing this and for Standing UP .
We believed in the power of individual citizens even in the face of hooliganism, intolerance, corruption and power mongering.
I feel individual citizens can come together and become a power to reckon with ONLY when they understand the political dynamics of VIOLENCE - be it local intimidation, an ALL party agenda to divide & rule, To murder, rape, lie, cheat, defraud ... with impunity, a supposed war-on-terror etc - these are linked .
Research the web. Understand the agenda and then you will know where to direct your energies.
Power and courage to you.
Mahrouk
Hi, Yes it is true that the society of the hooligan slumdogs is increasing and that may not undergo alot of change as long as there are politicians that feed them. It is sad but I do hope the gang is all ok and like they say "what doesn't KILL you only makes you STRONGER!" so you have all of my support from DownUnder!
"Good on ya guys for standing up and standing strong!"
Cheers
Esther