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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, September 29, 2000 |
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Southern States
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Normal life affected in City
By Our Staff Reporter
BANGALORE, SEPT. 28. Normal life in Bangalore was affected on
Thursday following a 12-hour bandh call given by the Rajkumar
Abhimanigala Sangha, the Kannada film industry, etc., to protest
against the delay in securing the release of the actor, Mr.
Rajkumar.
Sporadic incidents of stone throwing at buses were reported from
several parts of the City.
The bandh was almost total in Bangalore city and its outskirts.
Milk supply was affected as was transport, industrial, banking,
insurance, service and trading sectors.
The Railways said there was no major disruption in its services
while the city and mofussil services were hit. Airline services
were normal.
While the Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation ran
skeletal services in the morning, it withdrew it services in some
areas, including Yeshwanthpur, Magadi Road, Dasarahalli,
Hanumanthnagar, Baiappanahalli, Ghousia Hospital in Shivajinagar,
Byatarayanapura, Banaswadi, Hennur Main Road, Seshadripuram and
Kariyanapalya, when agitators started throwing stones at buses.
Majority of autorickshaws were off roads and commuters had a
tough time in reaching their destinations. Residents of outlying
areas were put to hardship as there was no public transportation.
A handful of autorickshaws and private vehicles charged several
times the normal fare.
Some passengers of a BMTC bus, including a woman, bound for the
City Bus Stand from Yelahanka Satellite Town suffered minor
injuries after miscreants threw stones at the bus near Nehru
Circle in Seshadripuram at about 2.45 p.m.
A Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation bus was hit with
stones on Rajkumar Road in Rajajinagar when it slowed down to
negotiate a road hump. Six persons, who threw stones at BMTC and
KSRTC buses, were arrested. Another 10 persons, including Kannada
Chaluvali Vatal Paksha leader and former legislator, Mr. Vatal
Nagaraj, were arrested for violating prohibitory orders and
staging a dharna in front of the Raj Bhavan demanding the
expeditious release of Mr. Rajkumar. In yet another incident,
five persons were arrested in Yeshwanthpur for taking out a
procession.
Some people, who attempted to set up road blocks in Rajajinagar
by setting used tyres on fire, and a group of eight persons who
took out a procession on Baazar Street in Chamarajpet and
attempted to set on fire an effigy of the Tamil Nadu Chief
Minister, Mr. Karunanidhi, fled when police rushed to the spots.
There was tension on 18th Cross, Malleswaram, for some time when
rumours spread that police had "manhandled" a relative of Mr.
Rajkumar. One of the sons of Mr. Rajkumar complained to the
Commissioner of Police, Mr. T.Madiyal, who ordered an inquiry
into the matter.
A majority of the shops and business establishments remained
closed. Banks and insurance companies did not transact business.
Only a handful of petrol bunks remained open. The Government had
already declared holiday for schools and colleges. Many offices
of the State and Union Governments reported thin to average
attendance. Almost all the software firms, including
multinationals, had announced holiday.
Hospitals and nursing homes reported slim attendance and the
normally crowded out-patient ward in Victoria Hospital wore an
almost deserted look. Hospitals used their own vehicles for
transportation of their staff.
While some shops were open in J.P.Nagar and Jayanagar, business
establishments on Avenue Road, Kempe Gowda Road, Magadi Road,
West of Chord Road, Cunningham Road, JC Road, MG Road, Brigade
Road, Residency Road, Commercial Street, Indiranagar, Ulsoor, KR
Puram, Rajajinagar, Malleswaram, Gandhinagar, Majestic, Chickpet,
City Market and Kalasipalyam remained closed.
Industrial production in Bangalore came to a halt with almost all
the small-scale and medium-scale units in Peenya closing for the
day. Industrial estates in Rajajinagar, Kamakshipalya, KR Puram
and Mahadevapura had downed their shutters. All public sector
undertakings and major private industries did not open as their
employees' union had pledged support to the bandh call.
Shops at the vegetable and fruit market in Gandhi Baazar did
business. Road-side eateries, including hundreds of darshinis,
did not function. Post offices too remained closed. However, the
head post offices provided services with skeletal staff. Wine and
arrack shops had downed their shutters.
Police pickets had been posted in front of the Vidhana Soudha,
the High Court, Visvesvaraya Towers, General Post Office,
Telegraph House, Multistoreyed Building, Bangalore University,
University of Agriculture Sciences, the District, City and Civil
Courts, Public Utility Building, State and Union Government
undertakings, etc. The Vidhana Soudha wore a deserted look as a
majority of the secretariat staff stayed away from work.
Pickets of Rapid Action Force had been posted around the Vidhana
Soudha, the office of the Commissioner of Police and other
industrial, private and public sector installations.
Till Thursday night, 600 persons had been taken into preventive
custody even as an uneasy calm prevailed in the City. The City
Police had deployed 6,500 personnel besides 40 platoons of the
City Armed Reserve, 40 platoons of Karnataka State Reserve Police
and 18 battalions of para-military police.
Sensitive areas had been identified and patrolling intensified.
In all, 192 mobiles had been pressed into service.
The Joint Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ajai Kumar Singh, later
told presspersons that the bandh would not have passed off
peacefully without the cooperation of the people.
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