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Theni couple delivers baby at home, one arrested for abusing medical official

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The husband's father was arrested for verbally abusing a medical officer when the latter tried convincing the family to take the mother and the baby to a hospital.
A woman in Kodangipatti, Theni district, reportedly delivered her child at home with the help of her husband and mother-in-law, on August 2. However, when health officers got wind of the incident and reached the house, Kannan, the husband, refused to let them take the mother Mahalakshmi and the baby to a hospital or cut the umbilical cord. According to a police officer involved in the case, the issue began when the husband refused to cut the umbilical cord, saying that cutting the cord will lead to a weak immune system. However, when the dean from Theni Government Hospital tried convincing him to cut the cord, Kannan’s father Danushkodi and his mother verbally abused the dean. The dean went to the PC Patti police station and filed a complaint against Danushkodi, stating that the family did not allow a government servant to do his duty and insulted him. Danushkodi was then remanded by the police. “The FIR filed against him is not for allowing home birth, but for abusing the doctor who only had good intentions while advising the couple,” said the police official.  Kannan finally agreed to let the health officers provide medical assistance after arguing with them for a few hours. Speaking to Puthiya Thalaimurai, Kannan said that he did not allow the health officers to do their duty as his wife did not want their medical assistance. He also claimed that he and his wife decided to have a home birth after thoroughly understanding the procedure. He also said that his wife and child are well. In an interview to Thanthi TV, Kannan said: “There are no complications in this procedure. We agree now that our age-old food habits and diet are good for us. Why are we rejecting traditional medical practices? My wife and I have been taking only healthy food with the least processing for the past two years. Our ancestors ate healthy food and had a healthy childbirth. Did they have hospitals? You only need hospitals when you cannot deal with your situation. I made sure my wife had a healthy labour and delivered a healthy baby, through a healthy diet.” He also said that contrary to reports, he did not assist or oversee the delivery. “I just took the baby in my hands after my wife delivered it,” Kannan said.    He also claimed that his wife was back to normal the next day and got back to routine. In light of the recent incident where a woman died after attempting home birth in Tirupur, the Tamil Nadu government has announced that home birthing and preventing pregnant women from accessing medical care are punishable offences.

Kovai cops demand CCTV footage from women's hostel after sexual harassment complaint

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Crime
Inmates of a Coimbatore women’s hostel had alleged that the owner and warden had behaved inappropriately with them.
Pixabay
The Coimbatore police have asked for the CCTV footage of a ladies’ hostel to ascertain if the inmates were bothered by the warden asking for sexual favours. On July 23, parents of a few women in the Darshana Working Women’s hostel in Coimbatore approached the police alleging that Jagannathan, the owner of the hostel and Punitha, the warden had behaved inappropriately with the women. The issue was brought to the limelight by the parents, when the young women were taken to a restaurant in Coimbatore to celebrate the owner’s birthday. They had alleged that the Jagannathan and Punitha had asked them to drink liquor. They had also claimed that the owner had later made a WhatsApp call to the warden and told the women that he would book rooms in a hotel if they wanted to rest for a while. The hostel has since been shut down by the authorities. Two days after the police complaint, Jagannathan allegedly killed himself near Alankulam in Tirunelveli district on July 25. Punitha, who went into hiding, surrendered before the magistrate on August 1 and has been remanded to judicial custody until August 14 The police have sought CCTV camera footage from the hostel premises to see if there is proof of the allegedly inappropriate behaviour by the warden and the owner. Speaking to TNM, the investigating officer said, “We are also in talks with the District Social Welfare department to arrange for a meeting with hostel owners and wardens in the city. The legal guidelines to establish and run a working women’s hostel, the procedure to be followed to bring it under the ambit of law etc will be discussed in the meeting.” An employee from the District Social Welfare office in Coimbatore told TNM that the attendees of the meeting will get a detailed table of guidelines to manage hostels in Coimbatore according to the legal requirements. “We haven’t decided the dates yet. We are still deliberating on who all to call for the meeting and the agenda for it. Once we decide and set the ball rolling, we will strictly see that nobody breaks the law when it comes to hostels,” he said.

Filmmaker Divya Bharathi interrogated by cops for two-hours, ordeal repeated again

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Controversy
Divya who is on conditional bail is being questioned by Masinagudi police every day for two hours.
‘How many bank accounts do you hold?’, ‘What is the basis of coming to the conclusion that the government did not do anything for  fishermen (cyclone Ockhi affected)?’, ‘What is the purpose of uploading the trailer of the film Orutharum Varela in You Tube?’, ‘Do you have any political lineage? Do you belong to any political party or frontal organisation of any political party?’ These are some of the questions from a list of 25 posed at filmmaker Divya Bharathi by Masinagudi Inspector of Police. Following the complaint filed against her documentary on Ockhi last month at Gudalur police station in Nilgiris district, Divya Bharathi is currently on conditional bail and is required to sign at the police station every day for the next one week. “I surrendered at Gudalur Police station on August 3 and I’ve been given conditional bail. While it is a simple procedure where I sign at 10.30 am every day and leave, I’ve been subjected to a two-hour inquiry on day one by Masinagudi Inspector Muralidharan,” says Divya to TNM. Divya also observes that it is unclear why an inspector from Masinagudi, which is 25 kilometres from Gudalur where the case has been filed, would conduct the inquiry. “I was cooperative on day one, although it was tiring to answer these questions. They repeated the same questions again on August 5 and that is when I lost my patience,” says Divya. This time, the inspector also gave her a printed list of questions, asking her to return with written answers on Monday. “It is not legal for them to subject someone who is out on conditional bail to these inquiries. I am planning to submit a complaint with the Gudalur Magistrate tomorrow,” says Divya. The police asked her other questions including how she came to the conclusion that fishermen had not received adequate warnings before Ockhi and that they were not given proper help by government agencies and the Indian Navy. The list also included a question on the image of a mutilated flag lying on a boat that was used in the documentary. Divya who is currently staying with a friend in a remote village near Gudalur also shares that she is being followed by uniformed men who are always present around the area she’s currently in. “They don’t let me out of their sight. Even now, as we speak, there are a few standing around that corner, watching me,” she says to TNM over the phone. A few days after the release of her upcoming documentary, Orutharum Varela’s trailer, the filmmaker received threats and unwarranted visits from police officials at her residence and her workplace in Madurai. It was announced earlier this year that Orutharum Varela, a documentary on the devastating effects of Cyclone Ockhi that wreaked serious havoc on coastal India in December last year, would be out soon. After much delay, the trailer of her latest documentary titled Orutharum Varela (Nobody came) was released on YouTube on June 28.

Rajini is welcome to join AIADMK, his stance echoes the party: TN Minister

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Politics
Mafoi Pandiarajan’s clarification comes after he stated that Rajinikanth will join AIADMK soon.
Minister for Tamil Language, Culture and Archeology Ma Foi K Pandiarajan clarified that actor-turned-politician Rajinikanth could join AIADMK because his stand on various issues reflected that of his party. His clarification came after he told Puthiya Thalaimurai on Saturday that Rajinikanth would join AIADMK soon. “We still are not clear about his (Rajinikanth’s) party. He hasn’t officially started a party yet, but we are seeing some disciplinary action in it,” he said in the interview. Pointing out that he was answering to a question posed by the host, he said that since Rajinikanth’s views during the anti-Sterlite movement and the Salem-Chennai Green Corridor project concurred with that of AIADMK, he had said that Rajinikanth was welcome to join them. Pandiarajan also said that the two actors, Rajinikanth and Kamal Haasan posed no threat to AIADMK since they both lacked grassroot level organisation in their parties. Following Pandiarajan’s comments on TV, Minister for Cooperatives Sellur Raju said that the party will accept anybody who accepts the principles of the party and willingly enrols in it. “If any leader is joining, then it is up to the Chief Minister and the Deputy Chief Minister to discuss and take a decision on it,” he said. Sellur Raju also said, “Whoever be it, Rajinikanth or Kamal Haasan, should enrol as a worker and gradually work upwards from that post. The party will surely recognise the hard work of any person and reward them accordingly. Aspiring to become a leader in the party from the start itself is not acceptable.”

Cinema for everyone: Chennai multiplex now screens shows for persons with disabilities

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Cinema
SPI Cinemas launched SENS, which allows children and persons with heightened sensory issues to be themselves inside the movie theatre.
For eight-year-old Vardhana, Sunday was going to be fun. Dressed in a black and cream coloured frock, she hops and skips into the theatre, excitedly holding on to her father’s hand. This is the first time Vardhana, a child with learning disabilities, is getting a chance to be herself inside the movie theatre. Most often than not, the entertainment facilities in the city are under-equipped to accommodate people with disabilities. But all this is beginning to change with the introduction of SENS by SPI Cinemas. “More than the film, she is enjoying the experience. We’ve never sat through for a film for so long, this is our first. We don’t get to take our daughter to many places in the city,” says her father, Anwar Basha, adding, “It is the case with most children with learning and intellectual disabilities. Apart from home and school, if they get to go out, it might be to a different city/town." As Preetha Ramaswamy, Head of PR at SPI puts it, SENS is a part of SPI’s ‘cinema for everyone’ project. “It is an ambitious project. We’ve been looking at ways to use cinema as a social change project. One of it is our inclusive screening. When the pilot show went well, we decided to make it a monthly affair,” she says. Maala Chinappa, co-founder of A Special World, a support group for families with children with intellectual and physical disabilities, is the brains behind this initiative. “We have been doing this for two years. We used to book an entire preview theatre so parents can come with their children to watch films, but with increasing demand we thought it needs to get bigger.” The idea behind SENS is that it allows children with heightened sensory issues to be themselves inside the movie theatre. “If this sound is toned down a bit, the lights are kept at dim and if free movement is allowed, they can experience cinema like everyone else,” says Maala. Maala also adds that people have become more accepting and understanding of such needs. “We recently had a family who had turned up to the wrong theatre to watchPeter Rabbit. But when we told them that the screening here would be different, they were absolutely understanding. People are willing to accommodate and that is important,” she says. “It is usually very difficult to manage my son inside a theatre. He is also not mobile and needs special care. But because of SENS he’s able to have some fun today. He is 22-years-old and this is his third movie experience inside the theatre,” says Murali adding that making this a monthly routine will be of great happiness for children with disabilities and their families. SENS is currently available in Chennai and Coimbatore with plans to branch out to Mumbai and Bengaluru later. Tickets for SENS shows, that’ll be organised on the first Sunday of every month, can be booked online from SPI’s website.

CBI crackdown on gold smuggling: 3 Customs officers arrested from Trichy airport

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Crime
70 passengers who landed in Trichy from Singapore were also questioned by the CBI, 29 of whom have been detained for further questioning.
Pixabay
CBI officials on Monday arrested three Customs officers, including the Assistant Commissioner of Customs, from Trichy airport after reports suggested that the three were aiding the smuggling of gold in and out of the airport. The staff at the airport has also been questioned by a team of 10 CBI officials from Chennai. On Sunday afternoon, a CBI team, led by the Superintendent of Police (CBI), Michael Raj, questioned passengers who had arrived in Trichy from Singapore. After the passengers alighted from the Air India Express flight, around 70 passengers were stopped by the CBI after the team received a tip-off. Out of the 70 passengers, the CBI team have detained 29 people, including 8 women, for further questioning in connection with the smuggling. The team has seized more than 500 bundles of cigarettes and more than 300 bottles of alcohol from those who were detained. Inquiries were also conducted with the airport staff regarding the issue and the officers also conducted searches in the houses of the arrested officers. The CBI team has been carrying out an investigation in connection with gold smuggling at the airport for the past 24 hours. This action by the CBI comes after multiple seizures of noble metals from Trichy airport have been recorded in the recent past. On August 1, the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) officials seized gold biscuits weighing 6.5 kgs from three passengers who landed in Trichy from Kuala Lumpur. The seized gold biscuits were worth Rs 2.15 crores. Baby tortoises were seized from a passenger from Sri Lanka on arrival and were handed over to the forest department officials in July. The tortoises were found packed in eight boxes and weighed around 12.5 kgs. In June, the customs officials had seized gold worth Rs 56 lakhs from four passengers who landed at Trichy airport from Dubai. 

Good Samaritans help accident victims in Chennai, get killed by speeding car

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Accident
A minor boy, who was driving the speeding car, has been apprehended by the police and his father has been booked for negligence.
Pixabay
Three people were killed and four others were injured when a speeding car rammed into a group of people helping out victims of a separate accident that had taken place on the East Coast Road (ECR) near Mahabalipuram on Sunday. As per reports, two men, Karthik and Kumar, were travelling on their motorcycle when they were hit by a car on the ECR. Some passers-by rushed to their aid and called for an ambulance. When the ambulance arrived, the good Samaritans continued to provide assistance to the ambulance staff and the accident victims. However, as they were assisting the ambulance staff, a speeding Honda City car rammed into the crowd of people that had gathered. Two of the people aiding the victims were killed on the spot. A third person, who was grievously injured, was rushed to Chengalpet Government hospital but succumbed to injuries. Four others, including the ambulance driver, were injured in the incident. The two deceased have been identified as Hemachandra (26) and Ekambaram (50). Hemachandra, hailing from Thoothukudi, lived in Nungambakkam and worked in a private company in Chennai and Ekambaram lived in T Nagar. The third victim’s identity is not known yet. The four injured have been identified as Kamala Bharathi (who was driving the ambulance), Ajith, Prem Kumar, and Franklin.  The driver of the speeding car has been identified as a minor boy. The moment he rammed into the crowd, the minor fled the scene. He was later apprehended by the police. A resident of Tiruvanmiyur, the boy is a student of class XII in a private school. He was allegedly on his way to Puducherry when the incident took place. A case under various sections has been registered against the boy’s father for allowing a minor to drive a car. The boy has been sent to a juvenile home. 

Karunanidhi's health on the decline, his response in the next 24 hours crucial

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Karunanidhi
His relatives have been visiting him through the day in Kauvery Hospital.
PTI
The latest medical bulletin issued by Kauvery Hospital on Monday evening said that there has been a decline in Kalaignar's health condition and that the next 24 hours will be crucial. "There has been a decline in the medical condition of Kalaignar Dr M Karunanidhi, DMK President and former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. Maintaining his vital organ functions continues to remain a challenge considering his age-related ailments. He is on continuous monitoring and is being treated with active medical support. His response to the medical interventions over the next 24 hours will determine the prognosis," said the statement.  The DMK supremo was taken to Kauvery hospital in the wee hours of July 26 due to low blood pressure. He was resuscitated and his condition was made stable in the hospital. The hospital stated that he had contracted Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) and had fever because of it.   While the 94-year-old leader’s health deteriorated on July 29 it was normalised with constant medical support through the course of the day. Scores of DMK supporters continue to stand vigil in front of Kauvery Hospital since he was admitted, with many raising slogans for their leader to get well soon. They also undertook group prayers in the nearby temples and shaved their heads praying for Karunanidhi’s wellbeing. Political leaders from across the spectrum have been visiting the leader in the hospital in the past two weeks to enquire about Karunanidhi’s health. President Ram Nath Kovind, Vice President Venkaiah Naidu, TN Governor Banwarilal Purohit, TN Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami and Congress President Rahul Gandhi  were among the leaders who visited Karunanidhi in person to enquire about his health. Kalaignar's family members and prominent leaders from the DMK have been visiting him since morning in the hospital. His wife Dayalu Ammal, who had not visited him in the hospital since he was hospitalised came to Kauvery hospital on Monday morning. 

TN local body polls: Election Commission to complete delimitation by August 31

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Local Body Polls
The Madras High Court had given TN State Election Commission a deadline of August 6 to furnish the election schedule.
A week after being pulled up for failing to implement an order to hold local body elections, the Tamil Nadu State Election Commission told the Madras High Court on Monday that delimitation of local bodies will get completed by August 31. It added that the schedule for elections will be released within three months after the government accepts the recommendations on the delimitation and reservation of wards. SEC was given August 6 as a deadline to give the schedule in writing to the court. The case has been posted for hearing on Tuesday. With Chief Justice Indira Banerjee’s elevation to Supreme Court, the case has been posted before a new special bench of Justices M. Sathyanarayanan and M Sundar. On July 31, the Court had observed that the SEC should be declared guilty of contempt for not following its September 4, 2017 order to hold local body polls by November 2017. Chief Justice Indira Banerjee and Justice M Sundar were hearing a contempt petition filed by DMK when they questioned the government’s inaction in not implementing the order when there was no stay from the Supreme Court. "Do you think that it is up to you to decide to what extent court orders can be implemented?" Chief Justice Indira Banerjee had questioned. The SEC had then reportedly submitted that it was conducting delimitation process as per 2011 census."We have clearly mentioned in the order that the election shall be conducted based on 2001 census. As per your submissions before the Supreme Court, even the present delimitation process should have been completed by January 2018," the bench further added. The court then directed the SEC counsel to furnish election schedule, for which they sought time. Following this, the bench posted the matter for August 6. The petition had been filed by RS Bharathi of DMK against State Election Commissioner Malik Feroz Khan and its secretary Rajasekhar. The counsel for the petitioner had pointed out that the non-implementation of the order meant that central funds worth Rs 4,000 crores due to local bodies were unused. The local body elections that were scheduled for October 2016 had been stalled by the Madras High Court after the Opposition DMK questioned the way the poll process was being carried out. Back then, the DMK had challenged the polls citing law and order problems, irregularities, inadequate ST reservation and a hurried announcement.

Autorickshaws, taxis to stay off roads over amendments to Motor Vehicles Act

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Strike
The main demand of those who are on strike is for the Centre to withdraw the amendments proposed to the Motor Vehicles Act.
Image for representation
Several thousands of autorickshaws and taxis across the country are expected to stay off the roads on Tuesday as a mark of their protest against the proposed amendments to the Motor Vehicles Act. The strike, called for by the All India Motor Transport Organisation (AIMTO), will be supported by most transport workers unions except those affiliated with the ruling AIADMK in Tamil Nadu. Nearly 1.5 lakh autorickshaws are expected to take part in the strike in the state according to reports, thus forcing school children to rely on government buses to commute from their homes to school and back. The main demand of those who are staying off the roads is for the Centre to withdraw the amendments proposed to the Motor Vehicles Act. The organisers of the strike said that the proposed amendments to the Motor Vehicles Act seek to monopolise the motor vehicle industry. Another concern of the vehicle operators is that once the amendments are accepted, the Transport Department will be taken over by corporate companies, which will be in charge of the registration and fitness certificate processes. M Sampath, the General Secretary of the All Autorickshaw Unions Federation also said that their protest is for the reduction in the insurance premium rates. Since the autos have minimal claims every year, the rising insurance premium rates every year is not fair, he told The Hindu. He also emphasised for fixing the fares for application-based cab services like Ola and Uber. The state Transport Department, however, ensured least possible disruption to normal lives of the people. A senior official from the Department told the Times of India that the depot managers across the state have been instructed to not grant leave to drivers and conductors on Tuesday. Besides passenger transport, goods movement is also expected to be hit by the strike. Automobile showrooms and driving schools will also be a part of the strike on Tuesday. Some unions have also announced that they would stage a dharna in front of the Head Post Office on Anna Salai on Tuesday, pressing for their demands to be met. 

Chennai students seen hanging out of moving train in video, cops launch search

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Crime
In the 30-second video, a few students are seen hanging out of the doors of a moving suburban train, banging and shouting slogans.
Image for representation
Chennai Railway Police are on the lookout for students who were seen hanging out of the train doors and creating nuisance, in a video that went viral on social media. According to reports, in the 30-second video, a few students can be seen hanging out of the doors of a moving suburban train and banging and shouting slogans cheering Pachaiyappa College, as the train entered the Putlur station on the Chennai- Arakkonam line.  One of the students could be seen with his feet planted on the window rails. As the train reaches Putlur station, they all get down and continue shouting and creating a ruckus in the station, scaring the passengers who were waiting to board the train. Police suspect that the incident took place on Friday. One of the students who was seen hanging outside the door, had adjusted his body in such a way that it was stretched around three metres away from the train. Railway police have initiated an inquiry into the incident and said that stringent action would be taken once the miscreants are identified.  They also said that a letter has been sent to the principal of the college asking him to take action on the students for creating public nuisance. This incident comes close on the heels of another incident where at least four people died and many others were injured after hitting a concrete fence at the St Thomas Mount station, while they were travelling in a crowded suburban train on July 24.  Eyewitnesses to the incident attributed the cause of the fatalities to a fence that was constructed at a distance that was too close to the train, with the result that the people hanging out from the doors of the overcrowded train didn’t notice it. Three people died on the spot and the fourth died on the way to the hospital. The controversial fence at St Thomas Mount station has since been cleared. The Railways Claims Tribunal took suo motu cognisance of the incident and announced compensation for the kin of victims and the injured.

Updates: DMK chief Kalaignar Karunanidhi’s condition continues to remain critical

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Health
Thousands of DMK cadre and supporters are gathered outside the hospital, and there is a heavy deployment of police ensure no untoward incident takes place.
DMK chief and former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister of M Karunanidhi’s health remains critical as of Tuesday morning, and he is under medical supervision at Chennai’s Kauvery Hospital. The bulletin from the hospital on Monday evening said there was a decline in his condition, and that “his response to medical interventions over the next 24 hours would determine his prognosis”. Thousands of DMK cadre and supporters are gathered outside the hospital, and there is a heavy deployment of police ensure no untoward incident takes place. The 94-year-old leader was taken to Kauvery hospital in the wee hours of July 26 due to low blood pressure. He was resuscitated and his condition was made stable later. The hospital stated that he had contracted Urinary Tract Infection (UTI) and had a fever because of it.   However, due to age-related ailments, he was kept under observation in the hospital. While the 94-year-old leader’s health deteriorated on July 29, it was stabilised with constant medical support through the course of the day. Political leaders from across the spectrum have been visiting the leader in the hospital in the past two weeks to enquire about Kalaignar Karunanidhi’s health. President Ram Nath Kovind, Vice President Venkaiah Naidu, TN Governor Banwarilal Purohit, TN Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami, Union Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari and Congress President Rahul Gandhi were among the leaders who visited him in person to enquire about his health.   

Petitioner withdraws plea to stop construction of memorials in Chennai's Marina

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Court
The petition sought the amendment of the Chennai City Municipal Corporation Act, 1919, to specify the areas where memorials can be built.
The Madras High Court has disposed off a petition seeking a ban on constructing memorials on Marina beach in Chennai. The Public Interest Litigation (PIL), filed by a Chennai-based advocate S Gandhimadhi, stated that the Marina already has the memorials of three chief ministers who passed away while holding office. The tourists who come to visit the memorials and the noise and lights due to this can pose a threat to the marine organisms, the petition said. It was also stated in the PIL that since it is impossible to do away with the structures already constructed, further permissions must not be granted to construct a memorial at the Marina. The petitioner had requested the court to direct the government to bring changes to the Chennai City Municipal Corporation Act, 1919, and to order the officers concerned to specify the areas where the memorials can be constructed in Chennai. The petition was filed last week and was taken up for hearing on Tuesday by the bench comprising Justices Huluvadi G Ramesh and M Sundar. After hearing the plea for withdrawing the petition at the admission stage, the bench disposed off the petition. While the above petition requested the Corporation to not grant new permissions, a few other petitions are already pending with the court opposing the memorial for the former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu J Jayalalithaa. In May, a PIL was filed in the Madras High Court by advocate Jayaseelan, who stated that a convict should not be given a state honour. He added that the proposed structure was in violation of the Coastal Regulatory Zone 2011 notification, which bans the construction of permanent structures on the beach. Similarly, activist Traffic Ramaswamy too had filed a PIL, stating that the memorial should not be built since Jayalalithaa was convicted in the disproportionate assets case.   The BJP youth wing had also voiced opposition to the planned memorial. In a petition addressed to Tamil Nadu governor Banwarilal Purohit, they stated that it was unnecessary to construct a memorial for someone charged with corruption, adding that the state was already facing a cash crunch.

Why the hurry to shift idol theft case to CBI, Madras HC asks TN government

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Law
The HC slammed the government and asked why the same fervour is not shown in issuing orders related to public welfare.
Wikimedia Commons
Madras High Court on Tuesday issued an interim stay on the Tamil Nadu government’s order transferring all idol theft cases to the CBI. A bench consisting of Justices R Mahadevan and PD Audikesavalu was hearing a petition filed by advocate ‘Elephant’ Rajendran to quash the order issued by the government transferring all the idol theft cases to the CBI on August 1. The counsel for the petitioner argued that the state government has not cooperated with the idol theft wing for investigation and that the government was in a hurry to transfer the cases to the CBI with an intention to safeguard interested parties. The petition mentioned that the Supreme Court had upheld the High Court’s 2017 order forming the special wing to investigate idol thefts in Tamil Nadu under the leadership of IG Ponn Manickavel and hence the government’s order violated the court order.  It also stated that the GO was released to save ministers, senior politicians and other people who are involved in the idol theft racket. The plea also sought the removal of Ponn Manickavel from the Inquiry Commission. The Counsel for the government submitted that the decision to transfer the cases to CBI was a policy decision of the government and that all the aspects have been considered before the decision was taken. The Counsel also requested for more time for filing a response on the matter.  The bench, listening to pleas from both the sides, said that this government order was not fit to exist for even a minute and asked the government as to why the same fervour is not shown in issuing orders related to public welfare.“Why was such an order issued by the government and how can such an order be issued when the matter is pending in the court?” the judges asked.  They also said that this act insults the court and would warrant an explanation from the home secretary in person. The court also observed that the state government had not followed any order issued by the court regarding the issue and granted an interim stay to the government order. The judges have posted the matter to Wednesday for the next hearing.  

Chennai on a chariot: Kumar and his horse carriages are remnants of the city's past

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Human Interest
Kumar's chariots are used only occasionally now, but he remembers a time when his family thrived on the business.
Kumar
“Our horses are very well behaved. If you are okay with the rates, you can call me. Here, take my card.” A shiny blue card with pictures of decorated horses and a grand chariot, with the name S Kumar printed in red above the words “Horses and coach for shooting and functions” is handed over to us. When we tell him that we’re not there to rent one of his chariots, confusion looms in Kumar’s eager brown eyes. As President of Chennai Kudhirai Savari Thozhilalargal Nala Sangam - Viduthalai Munnetram (a welfare organisation for people in the trade), Kumar manages the remnants of what was once the city’s thriving tanga horse shelters. “My grandfather Francis was an English man,” he begins with some pride, “and he married my grandmother Sengalamma who was Tamil.” Kumar’s grandfather worked as a horse-drawn chariot driver for the British and his half English, half Indian sons - Standov Murthy and Daniel - followed their father in their family business. “My father Standov owned 10 tanga vehicles in the eighties," says Kumar. These tanga horse vehicles were used by the public before Independence and were also in use for a few decades after it. “The public liked travelling in these to places like Central station, Egmore station, snake park and the beach, among other tourist places. It used to look very grand,” says Kumar. But now, what remains of the quarter-of-a-kilometre long tanga stand near Chennai Central, is a few meters of a cloth covered make-shift stable, supported by bamboo sticks. Six horses, in varying shades of white, stand beneath it and a few chariots are parked on the pavement, covered tightly with plastic sheets and ropes. We are introduced to the well-behaved inhabitants, some busy scouting for straw on the floor and the others vacantly gazing at everyday traffic, swatting flies with their tails while neighing and kicking the ground intermittently. “Meet James, Yakobe (Jacob), Yeshuva (Joshua), Jhansi and Samuel," says Kumar. As we speak, Shyam, Kumar’s 14-year-old nephew jumps up and down from the chariot - red and gold, studded with colourful plastic stones, and still encased in its transparent plastic sheet - untying ropes and removing covers for us to see. Standing right next to the chariot is a white horse with tiny grey specks on its skin, a wisp of white hair on its crown. “She’s Laisa. Kumar mama’s first horse,” grins Shyam. Some of Kumar’s chariots are as old as Independent India. “I currently own only two chariots. My uncle had 20 but only 7 or 8 are in good condition now. I’d show them to you but they’re not in good condition because it’s not being frequently used. I can send photos on WhatsApp if you like,” offers Kumar. “You must have seen one of our old chariots in Madarasapattinam - the caged one,” he adds after some thought. Kumar rents out his horses and chariots for public events and for weddings which brings him a few thousands. “Sometimes, we may not have any event for 6 months. During those times, we borrow money from people we know to feed our horses. Which bank will give us loans? The government in fact is looking at ways to remove us from here. They want their roads to look beautiful, don’t they,” he says with some impatience. While horse/bullock-drawn vehicles went out of use eventually, the DMK regime, back in the 1960s, banned rickshaws hand-pulled by men. Then came the pedal model rickshaws, which many might nostalgically recall riding to school or to the market. These have now been largely replaced by auto rickshaws and rickshaws fixed with motors. Even today, the pedal model rickshaws are still in use in north Chennai, Mylapore and in few other parts of the city. But the future for Kumar and his stable of horses remains bleak. “Now people come to us rarely for functions like weddings or for inviting certain leaders in chariots. Who cares about parambriyam (traditions)?” he rues.

Karunanidhi to rest at Marina: Madras HC rules in favour of DMK

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Karunanidhi
The TN government tried to block a memorial for Karunanidhi at the Anna square, but the Acting CJ HG Ramesh overturned this move.
The Madras High Court ordered the Tamil Nadu government to allot space at the Marina beach for Kalaignar Karunanidhi's burial. In an emergency hearing on Wednesday regarding the allotment of land for burying the mortal remains of Karunanidhi, a bench consisting of Acting Chief Justice of Madras High Court Huluvadi G Ramesh and Justice SS Sundar ordered in favour of the DMK's petition requesting the court to overturn Tamil Nadu government's decision denying burial to the Dravidian stalwart near Anna memorial."Upon hearing, the learned senior counsel on either side and considering the entire conspectus of the matter, the write petition is allowed with a direction to the respondent authorities to provide a place for decent burial to lay the mortal remains of (late) Dr Kalaignar M Karunanidhi, former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu on the Marina beach, within the precincts of the burial place of the founder of DMK party and former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu (late) Mr Annadurai, namely at "Anna Memorial, at Kamaraj salai, Chennai-600005," in consonance with the rough sketch provided by the petitioner. Such exercise shall be carried out by the respondent authorities forthwith," read the order.   The Court also said that considering the exigency involved, the operative portion of the order is being released and the detailed order will follow.   As soon as the court made its announcement, Karunanidhi's family including MK Stalin and Kanimozhi and DMK supporters broke down and cheered at the Rajaji hall where Karunanidhi's mortal remains are kept. Rough Sketch of the burial site provided by the petitioners Following DMK's request to allot land in Marina to lay Karunanidhi to rest, the Tamil Nadu government, on Tuesday, denied the request and reverted with a press release citing legal complications in allotting land for a memorial in Marina. It also stated that two acres of land has been allotted in Gandhi mandapam, where Kamaraj and Rajaji were laid to rest, to bury the mortal remains of M Karunanidhi. The DMK was represented by senior advocates Wilson, Viduthalai, NR Ilango, Veera Kathiravan and Shanmugasundaram and the TN Government was represented by Additional Advocates General PH Arvindh Pandian,SR Rajagopal and senior Supreme Court advocate CS Vaidyanathan. The TN government through its counsels stated that the government is following the protocol and all the leaders buried in the Marina are former Chief Ministers who passed away while in office. The government also submitted that  the former Chief Minister Janaki Ramachandran was also not allotted land in Marina by the then CM M Karunanidhi, following the state protocol. Senior Counsel CS Vaidyanathan, who was appearing for the state government, said that the State is not in any urgency to get orders passed on Wednesday. CS Vaidyanathan also argued that the DMK is pursuing the case out of political agenda and the withdrawal of petitions in a 'stage-managed manner' by others that were pending on the matter was 'very, very unfortunate'. Stating that inspite of being the tallest leader of the Dravidian Movement, Periyar EV Ramasamy was not buried in Marina, he said that the classification of a sitting CM and a former CM is a valid one. The counsel also said that this decision was taken by the Chief Minister based on precedents set earlier. Referring to Karunanidhi refusing land in Marina for former CM Janaki Ramachandran, CS Vaidyanathan argued that not following the actions taken by the leader would amount to insulting his memory. The counsel for the government also argued that the protocol with regard to funeral rites of high dignitaries has always treated incumbent office holders and former office holders differently, to which Justice SS Sundar stated that a former CM is not included in Central Government protocol and hence nobody will raise questions if Karunanidhi’s body is buried in Marina. Justice SS Sundar also said that the arguments about the current and former chief ministers were not mentioned in the press release issued by the Tamil Nadu government on Tuesday. CS Vaidyanathan also submitted to the court that a press release cannot be equated with a government order and hence cannot be challenged. While the state government said that the DMK cannot challenge a press release, the counsel for the DMK, senior advocate P Wilson said that the court must consider the substance over the form of the contention and that the arguments placed by the government counsel are flimsy and not tenable. Article 21 (Protection of life and personal liberty) certainly comes in to play if he is not given a decent burial after he having been CM for 5 times, counsel argued. Praying for a 'decent' farewell for the leader, Advocate P Wilson also said that the area around Anna Memorial was announced as a place to do burial in 1988 itself. He said that Chennai Corporation had given approval for burying bodies and constructing mausoleums in Marina. Since all the petitions against constructing a memorial for J Jayalalithaa in Marina has now been withdrawn, there are no more cases pending and no legal complications as specified by the government in its press release, said P Wilson. The DMK counsel also said that Kamarajar memorial and Gandhi mandapam was in Adyar and not in Marina because the ideology of Kamarajar differed from the leaders of the Dravidian movement and that there is no law that said sitting Chief Ministers be buried in Marina and former Chief Ministers be laid to rest in Gandhi mandapam."The ideologies of ADMK and DMK are similar and hence MGR was allotted space in Marina," submitted P Wilson. He also said that if the court does not allow Karunanidhi’s body to be buried at Marina, it will tantamount to discrimination and will hurt the sentiments of the people. Advocate Veera Kathiravan said that loved one should be buried along with the mentor and only then it can be called a 'decent burial'. He also said that the TN government, in its counter affidavit has not opposed the fact that Anna memorial is a notified burial ground. DMK President and five-time Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Kalaignar M Karunanidhi passed away on Tuesday evening at 6.10 pm in Kauvery hospital. DMK working president MK Stalin along with other senior DMK leaders met TN Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami earlier on Tuesday and presented a letter requesting him to allot land in Marina to lay Karunanidhi to rest. In his letter, MK Stalin had mentioned that as a recognition of Karunanidhi’s service to Tamil and the Tamil people, it was only fitting that he be laid to rest near his political mentor CN Annadurai. After the TN government conveyed its decision through the press release, the DMK submitted a petition to the Chief Justice (Acting) of the Madras High Court, Huluvadi G Ramesh, against the government’s decision to deny a spot in Marina. The Justice scheduled a hearing at his residence at 10.30 pm on Tuesday. The hearings went on till 1 am on Wednesday and the court was adjourned till 8 am on Wednesday by which the state government was to file the counter affidavit. The petition was filed by advocate RS Bharathi, who is the Organising Secretary of the DMK. "One of the forefathers and founder of the DMK,  Annadurai, former chief minister of Tamil Nadu was laid to rest in Marina beach and the place is called as Anna Square. The great ideologies of the great leaders of the Dravidian movement was taken forward by our great leader Dr Kalaignar M Karunanidhi, who has been the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu five times and who is regarded as guardian of social justice by Tamilians all over the world," read his petition. The petition also stated that Kalaignar's contributions to the cause of Tamilians and their welfare are countless."It is only right and  proper to give this leader his due respects by laying his mortal remains next to his beloved Arignar Anna to fulfill the wishes of millions of Tamilians. It is humbly prayed that this honourable court may be pleased to issue a writ, direction, order, particularly in the nature of Writ of Certiorarified mandamus calling for the records of the impugned press release by the first respondent herein by PR number 532 dated 7.8.2018 and quash the same and consequently issue a direction to the respondents to permit and allot land to lay the mortal remains of Dr Kalaignar M Karunanidhi, former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu on the Marina beach within the precincts of burial place of former leader of DMK party and former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Thiru CN Annadurai at 'Anna Memorial' at Kamarajar Salai," read the petition. In the counter affidavit filed by the state government on Wednesday, it said that the TN government is ready to allot land in Gandhi Mandapam and he will be given state honours. “It is very relevant to note in the present context that all the above leaders ( MG Ramachandran, CN Annadurai and J Jayalalithaa) had deceased during their tenure as the Chief Ministers of the state. However, in so far as former Chief Ministers, they have always been provided, if they made a request or by decision of the Government, at the Gandhi Memorial Campus at Sardar Patel Road,” stated the counter affidavit. The counter affidavit further stated,”I further submit there is a memorial for late Thiru Kamaraj, who remained Chief Minister for three consecutive terms, winning elections in 1957 and 1962, at Gandhi Mandapam…I am informed that at the time of demise of Thiru K Kamarajar, the Chief Minister of that period Late Thiru M Karunanidhi had allotted the said place and not any site on Marina since Thiru K Kamarajar was not a sitting Chief Minister when he passed away.” “It is understood that the petitioner is wantonly feigning ignorance of the reason given regarding the allocation of the said place demanded,” stated the counter affidavit. After the decision by the government denying DMK's request was made public, there have been voices from various quarters that Kalaignar must be laid to rest in Marina. DMK cadres took out a procession shouting, ‘We want Marina’ as Karunanidhi’s body was taken to his residence in Gopalapuram from Kauvery hospital.

Marina for Karunanidhi: Rajaji hall erupts in cheer, Stalin breaks down

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Karunanidhi
Stalin folded his hands to the crowd, and, as emotions took over, he stumbled. Kanimozhi and A Raja immediately ran forward to grab him.
Puthiya Thalaimurai screen grab
Cries of 'Muthamizh Arignar Vaazhga’ rent the air outside Rajaji Hall as news of the Madras High Court ruling in favour of Kalaignar M Karunanidhi being buried next to his mentor, Annadurai, was announced on Wednesday morning. Even as the High Court began reading out its judgement, Dayanidhi Maran could be seen speaking to someone on the phone. He broke down as soon as he put the phone down, and Kanimozhi and Stalin could be seen smiling. Emotions ran high as DMK Principal Secretary Duraimurugan then announced to the thousands gathered outside Rajaji Hall that they were victorious, and that the Madras HC had ruled in their favour. Stalin folded his hands to the crowd, and, as emotions took over, he stumbled. Kanimozhi and A Raja immediately ran forward to grab him, even as cadre cheered. Read: Karunanidhi to rest at Marina: Madras HC rules in favour of DMK Thousands of people thronged Rajaji Hall, where Karunanidhi’s body is lying-in-state. Controversy raged as the ruling AIADMK submitted on Tuesday evening that it could not allot land for Karunanidhi’s memorial along the Marina as there were several ongoing cases against the memorials along Marina, and it would lead to legal complications. The DMK  lawyers submitted a petition to the Acting Chief Justice HG Ramesh at his residence on Tuesday night requesting for an urgent hearing on the matter. Emotional cadre could be heard chanting “Marina vendum” even as Karunanidhi’s body was moved from Kauvery Hospital to his residence in Gopalapuram. The DMK was represented by senior advocates Wilson, Viduthalai, NR Ilango, Veera Kathiravan and Shanmugasundaram and the TN Government was represented by Additional Advocates General PH Arvindh Pandian, SR Rajagopal and senior Supreme Court advocate CS Vaidyanathan. A two-Judge bench, HG Ramesh and Justice SS Sundar, heard the case and ruled in favour of Kalaignar getting a spot along Marina. Read: Updates: Kalaignar Karunanidhi to be laid to rest at Marina Beach, rules Madras HC

When Karunanidhi collaborated with AR Rahman for the Tamil anthem

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Karunanidhi
The then CM had insisted that the musician set tune to the lyrics that he'd composed for the World Classical Tamil Conference.
Behindwoods
What happens when a Chief Minister and a musician collaborate? The outcome is an anthem rich with political meaning and artistic flavour. Case in point, in 2010, the then Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi had invited the Mozart of Madras AR Rahman to produce music for the former’s pièce de résistance, 'Semmozhiyaana Thamizh Mozhiyaam', a Tamil anthem. Also titled 'SemMozhi', the song was penned by Kalaignar and composed by AR Rahman for the World Classical Tamil Conference in June 2010. In fact, Karunanidhi insisted that Rahman compose the theme music for the conference, which was a gathering of scholars, poets, political leaders and celebrities to celebrate Tamil language and literature. After almost two months and a half, the video was released in May 2010, and lauded by Karunanidhi. A fierce crusader of Tamil language, Karunanidhi underscored the history of the literature and praised the works of Tamil poets such as Kambar and Avvaiyar. Directed by Gautham Menon, the video album also featured the DMK supremo in a cameo appearance. It featured a long line-up of 70 playback singers, including, T. M. Soundararajan, P Susheela, Bombay Jayashri, Aruna Sayeeram, Shruti Haasan, Hariharan and Nithyasree Mahadevan, too. A report in The Hindu said that the line ‘Semmozhiyaana Tamizh mozhiyaam’ was one of Rahman’s favourite lines penned by Kalaignar. The duo came together for the theme song after 13 years. It was speculated then that Kalaignar wanted the music director to compose music for another film that he had scripted. In 2009, Karunanidhi had congratulated Rahman for bagging two Grammy awards for Slumdog Millionaire.

Dravidian stalwart, revered leader, passionate writer: Rare pictures of Karunanidhi

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Karunanidhi
Karunanidhi was known for his powerful oratory and scriptwriting that changed the course of politics and the way Tamil cinema was made.
He was a passionate writer. A master politician. A revered mass leader. A stalwart of the Dravidian movement. An iconic personality. And when on August 7, five time Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi breathed his last, an era in Tamil politics truly came to an end. Affectionately called Kalaignar, the 94-year-old DMK patriarch had faded from public life for nearly two years, and had been in and out of hospital on account of age-related ailments. Read: ‘This one time, can I call you Appa?’: Stalin's emotional letter to Karunanidhi The news of his death cast a pall of gloom across the sprawling state which he had enticed all his political career through powerful oratory and script writing that changed the course of politics and the way Tamil cinema was made and helped the DMK's growth. He was just 14 when be became a student activist. Karunanidhi is survived by his wife Dayalu Ammal, his partner Rajathi Ammal, sons MK Muthu, Alagiri, Stalin, Tamilarasu, daughters Kanimozhi and Selvi, and several grandchildren. From 1967, when the DMK ousted the Congress for ever from power in the state, Tamil Nadu has been ruled either by the DMK or AIADMK. Succeeding his mentor Annadurai in 1969 as Chief Minister, Karunanidhi maintained a strong hold over the party and government. Read: Marina for Karunanidhi: Rajaji hall erupts in cheer, Stalin breaks down Though he didn't aspire for politics beyond Tamil Nadu, the multi-faceted leader played key roles in national politics starting from when he aligned with Indira Gandhi in 1969 on issues like bank nationalisation and later in the formation of coalition governments under VP Singh, HD Deve Gowda, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh. Once the ethnic conflict erupted in Sri Lanka in 1983, Karunanidhi became a champion of the Tamil cause and, later, the Tamil Tigers, often putting pressure on New Delhi to change its course vis-a-vis Colombo. But the LTTE's assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1991 almost wiped out the DMK, leaving him as the sole winner in Assembly elections. It was one of the 13 Assembly elections he never lost and which helped him rule Tamil Nadu five times. As Chief Minister, he had pioneered several welfare schemes. An avowed atheist, Karunanidhi was known for his trademark dark glasses as well as a yellow shawl. Follow our special page here: Kalaignar bids goodbye  Source: Murasoli Source: Murasoli Source: Murasoli Source: Murasoli Source: Murasoli Source: Murasoli Karunanidhi in Paris Karunanidhi with HD Deve Gowda and GK Moopanar Karunaniddhi with Annadurai Karunanidhi with Kamaraj, MGR and others This picture was taken on 3.10.1969; It shows the then Governor Sardar Ujjal Singh and Karunanidhi receiving Indira Gandhi at the Meenambakkam airport. Karunanidhi with MGR Karunanidhi with Jayalalithaa Durai Arasan with Karunanidhi; Source: By Dtsk77 via Wikimedia Commons Mathialagan, VP Raman, Anna, Rajaji, Karunanidhi; Source: By Mohan V Raman, via Wikimedia Commons Karunanidhi presenting the Kalaimamani award; Source: By KARTHIKLOVESMUSIC via Wikimedia Commons Source: By Tamilfilmsbuff via Wikimedia Commons Read: Kalaignar bids goodbye: One of TN’s last tall leaders, M Karunanidhi passes away Karunanidhi and MGR: A checkered friendship, and a lesson in civility and empathy The Kallakudi agitation: When Karunanidhi became a household name in Tamil Nadu Nepotism or survival? Why Karunanidhi chose family when it came to New Delhi M Karunanidhi: A majestic political career dotted by mistakes (With IANS inputs)

When Karunanidhi refused to fall in line with Indira Gandhi

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Karunanidhi
Revolutionary Jayaprakash Narayan (aka JP) wanted Kamaraj and Karunanidhi to bury their differences and unite to defeat the Emergency.
Anna Arivalaiyam Library
Many facets of Kalaignar Karunanidhi, who is among the senior-most political leaders in the country today, have been spoken and written about. But one important aspect - his passion for freedom and democracy and the willingness to sacrifice for defending and protecting these precious gifts - has not received adequate attention. Most of today’s generation does not know or remember the dark days of Emergency in the mid-seventies that extinguished freedom and democracy in this country. Due to the daring and defiance of freedom-loving people and leaders of calibre, Emergency was defeated and democracy restored within a short time. Kalaignar Karunanidhi was among these leaders who sacrificed his Chief Ministership in this noble effort. During 19 months of active Emergency imposed on the night of 25/26 June 1975, liberty and fundamental rights stood suspended. Press freedom was severely curtailed. People moved in hushed silence, stunned and traumatised by the draconian goings-on. A bulk of the civil service crawled when asked to bend. The higher echelons of judiciary bowed to the dust and decreed that under the Emergency regime, citizens did not even have the ‘Right to Life’. Politicians of all hue and colour, barring honourable exceptions, lay supine and prostrate. There was gloom all around and it looked as if everything was over and the world’s largest democracy was slowly but surely drifting into a dictatorship. But through this all, one single soul, one lonely spirit continued to stir in anguish and agony. Yet, this defiant, indomitable spirit in the person of Lok Naik Jayaprakash Narayan dared the might of Emergency dictatorship and defeated it, thereby restoring India back to freedom and democracy. This he did despite being in the frailest of health and living on borrowed time. And I have been witness to this. Jayaprakash Narayan, popularly known as JP, was among the greatest revolutionaries of modern times. He was the ‘firebrand’ of India’s freedom struggle and inflamed the ‘Quit India Movement’ launched by Mahatma Gandhi on August 8, 1942, by his daring escapade from the high-security Hazaribagh Jail that was followed by a massive manhunt launched by the British regime to capture him ‘dead or alive’. This eventually paved the way for the collapse of the colonial empire and India achieving Independence. It was this man who led the movement against Emergency in defence of freedom and in the vanguard of this was Kalaignar Karunanidhi, who was then the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. As a result, the relationship between the Centre and State governments strained and subsequently, DMK government was dismissed. DMK frontline leaders, district secretaries, former MLAs and MPs were detained under MISA in various prisons. The detainees were ill-treated and tortured. Dr Karunanidhi’s son Mr M K Stalin still bears the brutal marks of Emergency torture. His nephew Murasoli Maran’s health was shattered. Prominent party functionaries like C Chittibabu MP and Sattur Balakrishnan even lost their lives. This was a very heavy price to pay. But, Mr Karunanidhi did not care. His writing skills and speeches that kept party members alive to the situation made the party survive and live to fight another day. During the Emergency, when JP was imprisoned at Chandigarh, I was the District Magistrate cum IG Prisons of the Union Territory and was as such JP’s custodian. During this time, I did come to know him very closely. And having understood the nobility of his struggles and the intensity of his commitment, I partook in all matters concerning him and the State, shared his intimate thoughts and feelings, discussed political events and happenings and played the ‘Devil’s Advocate’. Some of these discussions concerned DMK and its leader Kalaignar Karunanidhi. The first conversation about Tamil Nadu was in the third week of July 1975 when I told JP that government of Tamil Nadu under Chief Minister Karunanidhi was not implementing most Emergency laws and directions, particularly the censoring of the press, which had been taken over by the Centre. He was happy to hear that. After declaring Emergency, the Constitution of India was amended by a pliable Parliament by a vote of 164-0 to make the proclamation of Emergency non-justiciable and 18 State Assemblies ratified the same. This news extremely distressed JP and he was greatly demoralised. But, when I told him that Tamil Nadu and Gujarat assemblies have refused to ratify the amendment, he was thrilled and said: “I am happy. Very happy. The DMK is standing up to it. As soon as I am released, I will ask Kamaraj to talk to Mr Karunanidhi and patch up with DMK because that was the only way to combat authoritarianism and defeat Emergency”. I was touched by one event of that time. In August 1975, Mr Karunanidhi was the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, enjoying all powers and authority. JP was a prisoner of the Emergency regime detained under MISA and the ‘Enemy No: 1 of the Central Government’. Yet, despite all the risks, Dr Karunanidhi sent a special invitation to JP for the wedding of his son, Mr M K Stalin. The invitation letter was received on August 20, the day of the wedding. When I gave the letter personally to JP that very day, he was deeply moved and responded with very warm greetings. Much more on JP’s thoughts about Karunanidhi emerged in the wake of Kamaraj’s death on 2 October, the day of Gandhi Jayanti. When I went to JP the next morning, he was sad and with a deep sigh, lamented that we have lost Kamaraj at this critical juncture exclaiming: ‘Faith seems to be harsh on India’. JP said Kamaraj was a good man, simple and sincere. Next day, JP went on to record his thoughts on Kamaraj in his diary, which was a candid analysis of Tamil Nadu politics and his estimation of Kalaignar Karunanidhi. This deserves to be reproduced in full: “Kamaraj died yesterday in Madras of a massive heart attack. A great and even heroic figure of Indian politics is no more. His life’s work was not complete yet. The last time he met me in Delhi, he said something like this: ‘What you are doing is the only hope for the country’. But when I toured Tamil Nadu later, he was not pleased with my speeches. I could not condemn the DMK and call for a struggle against the DMK government. The reason was that Mr Karunanidhi, unlike the Congress Chief Ministers, offered to meet the Opposition and discuss with them their criticism of the DMK government. He said he was prepared even for an impartial enquiry into their faults, charges of corruption or of any other kind. In fact, he mentioned that in one case, he had actually appointed a High Court judge as a commission of enquiry. He also pointed out the Public Men’s Conduct of Enquiry Act had already enacted, and expressed his preparedness to discuss either with me or opposition leaders any faults that the Act might be found to possess, but such as the deterrent punishment provided in it for anyone for whom the due process of law, as laid down in the Act, found to have willfully made false charges. Under these circumstances, a responsible opposition was expected to take the DMK leader at his word and make a serious attempt to take the obvious steps. In fact, in one of my speeches in Tamil Nadu, I urged Kamaraj to take up this therapeutic line and clean up the murky political climate in the State. “I am not suggesting that whatever Rajaram and Sezhian told me in Madras or Delhi had to be taken at face value, or I took it that way. But, in the absence of any response from Kamaraj and the Opposition, it did not seem fair, at least for me, to attack the DMK government and give a call for a people’s movement against it. A people’s movement could still be developed (because, as I have endeavoured to show, it need not in every case be against the government; the latter may honestly cooperate with the movement because its objectives are far wider - a total revolution) but naturally, opposition leaders in Tamil Nadu, including Kamaraj, were not interested in any movement unless at least its immediate political aim coincided with the Opposition aim….” Kamaraj’s death came as a major setback for JP’s Grand Alliance plan to defeat the Emergency rule as and when the election came. JP had confided in me that he considered Kamaraj the most suitable person to head the united political party he was contemplating. JP also wanted Kamaraj and Karunanidhi to come together so that Tamil Nadu could get into the national mainstream and a powerful regional opposition spearheaded by DMK could be put together. JP said that Kamaraj had agreed to this in principle and was looking for an opportune time. This thinking process by JP was based on his evaluation of the political scenario in Tamil Nadu, which was later described by Nayantara Sahgal in her book ‘Indira Gandhi’s Emergence and Style’. “In Tamil Nadu, DMK was firmly established as the dominant political force in the State. On July 12 1975, Chief Minister Karunanidhi had addressed a mass meeting on the Marina Beach in Madras, declaring there was neither an internal nor external threat to India and called upon the vast concourse to take a pledge to defend their freedoms. His public speeches caustically directed at the Emergency were laced with Tamil folk humour.” Indira Gandhi wanted to take over Tamil Nadu, but found Karunanidhi and Kamaraj as big obstacles, though in different ways. JP had planned to bring about a rapprochement between these two stalwarts personally when Emergency was over and normalcy restored. But that was not to be! And Indira Gandhi did not succeed by dismissing the Karunanidhi government! In the run-up to the Sixth General Election to Parliament, JP merged Congress(O), Jan Sangh, Bharatiya Lok Dal and Socialist Party into the new Janata Party and along with DMK, Akali Dal and CPM, forged a common front to give a straight fight to Congress and its allies, the CPI and AIADMK in the elections to the Lok Sabha in March 1977. This Janata Front won a stunning victory, sweeping the entire Indo-Gangetic belt. The rest is history… Even decades after the Emergency era, Karunanidhi’s passion for freedom has not diminished as would be evident from the DMK manifesto for Parliamentary elections 2004, demanding the repeal of the draconian POTA: “In spite of victim of Emergency, DMK fought fervently against MISA in 1976. It has always been a crusader against oppressive and undemocratic Acts. It is well-known fact that POTA, which was introduced with the intention of curtailing terrorist activities, was used as a political tool to settle scores. The abuse of such Acts will continue to remain as long as such Acts are in force. Hence DMK demands the repeal of POTA immediately.” I have heard people say that Kalaignar has done enough for Tamil Nadu and should make a contribution at the national level. As if he has not done it already! What could be a greater contribution than standing up to tyranny and autocracy and restore freedom and democracy to this ancient land of ours wherein live one-sixth of the human race? And in the process sacrificing the Chief Ministership of one of the major states of India! Bravo Kalaignar Karunanidhi. May God bless and keep you.... Republished from ‘Portrait of a Multi-faceted Legend of Dravidians: His Life and Times’ (2007) Read: When Karunanidhi collaborated with AR Rahman for the Tamil anthem
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