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Hyd reported encounter: NHRC takes cognisance, human rights orgs condemn action

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Encounter
Amnesty India, Foundation for Democratic Reforms and the Human Rights Forum have condemned the reported encounter of the four accused in the Hyderabad gangrape and murder case.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) on Friday took suo motu cognisance of the reported encounter of four people in Telangana who were alleged to have gangraped and murdered a 26-year-old Hyderabad veterinarian, Disha*.  The NHRC stated that it is of the opinion that the matter needs to be probed very carefully.  “Accordingly, it has asked its Director General (Investigation) to immediately send a team for fact-finding on the spot investigation into the matter. The team of the Investigation Division of the Commission, headed by an SSP, is expected to leave immediately and submit their report, at the earliest,” the Commission said in a release.  While many are terming the police action as ‘justice’ for the victim, the reported encounter has also been condemned. Jayaprakash Narayan, the founder of the Foundation for Democratic Reforms (FRD) said that “extra-judicial killings will only make innocent people victims over a period of time.” In a tweet, Jayaprakash Narayan said: “The perpetrators of such heinous crimes deserve the harshest punishment, but by swift due process in a court of law. The police were obviously under unbearable pressure, but extrajudicial killings will only make innocent people victims over time. Due process protects all of us." There are no shortcuts to strengthening rule of law - investigation, forensics, police capacity, prosecution, judicial procedure, trials. Weak, ineffective, arbitrary/selective rule of law will endanger the whole society. The first task of state is speedy and efficient justice. https://t.co/LPMHBUZBXJ — Jayaprakash Narayan (@JP_LOKSATTA) December 6, 2019 “There are no shortcuts to strengthening the rule of law — investigation, forensics, police capacity, prosecution, judicial procedure, trials. Weak, ineffective, arbitrary/selective rule of law will endanger the whole society. The first task of the state is speedy and efficient justice,” he further added.  The reported encounter was also condemned by the Human Rights Forum (HRF), which termed it to be “arbitrary and extrajudicial killings".  Speaking to TNM, S Jeevan Kumar, HRF Coordination Committee member (Andhra Pradesh and Telangana) said, “The judicial process should have been completed and punishment could have been given according to Indian law. The government has taken advantage of emotional public anger. We are compelled to believe that the government has no faith in the judiciary and its own law." In a press release, HRF demanded that the policemen involved in the killing of the four be arrested and prosecuted for homicide, and for the investigation in the case to be handed over to the CBI.  “The investigation into this case must be handed over to the CBI since the Telangana police cannot be trusted to be fair in the matter. The judiciary must also take cognizance of these killings and respond appropriately,” the release stated.   Questioning if such killings were going to make women safer, HRF said, “Endowing police with the sanction to commit murders of accused is no answer; they only distract and shield the State from accountability”. On Friday, the country woke up to the news of reported encounter of the four accused — Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu — in the horrific gangrape and murder of a woman from Hyderabad. The incident is said to have taken place when the accused were taken to Chatanpally village (the scene of the crime), under Shadnagar police station limits, allegedly for evidence collection and scene reconstruction. The police reportedly killed the accused when they tried to take one of the guns from cops and flee.  The Cyberabad police took the four accused into custody with the court’s permission earlier this week. The Telangana High Court had also set up a fast-track court at the Mahabubnagar District Court earlier this week.  Read: Hyd vet rape case: Top cop Sajjanar had led a similar encounter in Warangal in 2008
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Telugu stars cheer on police for reported encounter of accused in Hyderabad vet rape

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Encounter
While the deaths have been questioned by many, most Tollywood actors and filmmakers appreciated the police for the killings.
Soon after the reported police encounter of the four accused in the Hyderabad vet’s gangrape and murder case came to light, many people took to social media to express their views on the incident. Among those to react to the news were Tollywood celebrities, who also took to social media. Many actors and directors expressed their approval and support for the police, saying that the killings of the four accused, Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu, have served justice to Disha (name changed) and her family.   “JUSTICE SERVED! Now, Rest In Peace Disha,” wrote actor Jr NTR.  JUSTICE SERVED! Now, Rest In Peace Disha. — Jr NTR (@tarak9999) December 6, 2019 The plot of Jr NTR’s 2015 film Temper revolved around a case of a gangrape and murder, where Jr NTR plays a cop who ensures that the four men who committed the crime are sentenced to death.  During the public outcry following the gangrape and murder of the 26-year old veterinarian Disha, scenes from the film were widely shared on WhatsApp and social media platforms, demanding justice for Disha by killing the accused. The actor’s tweet also received several replies with visuals from the film.  Akkineni Nagarjuna also tweeted that the deaths had served justice to Disha.  “This morning I wake up to the news and JUSTICE HAS BEEN SERVED!! #Encounter,” tweeted actor Nagarjuna Akkineni.  This morning I wake up to the news and JUSTICE HAS BEEN SERVED!! #Encounter — Nagarjuna Akkineni (@iamnagarjuna) December 6, 2019 Samantha Akkineni, his daughter-in-law, too was happy with the reported encounter.  “I (heart emoji) TELANGANA. Fear is a great solution and sometimes the only solution,” she said on the microblogging site.  I ❤️ TELANGANA . Fear is a great solution and sometimes the only solution . — Samantha Akkineni (@Samanthaprabhu2) December 6, 2019 Rashmika Mandanna also tweeted that justice was served through their deaths.  “I hope your soul now rest in peace #priyankareddy. For all the good you did in this world - justice is served- god’s always watching. #Encounter #RIPPriyankReddy,” Rashmika wrote.   I hope your soul now rest in peace #priyankareddy. For all the good you did in this world - justice is served- god’s always watching. #Encounter #RIPPriyankReddy — Rashmika Mandanna (@iamRashmika) December 6, 2019 Actor, producer and television host Lakshmi Manchi thanked the Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar, and his son and Minister KT Rama Rao and daughter and former MP Kalvakuntla Kavitha for setting ‘an example to our nation’.  “I do NOT feel bad. I was always against capital punishment but I've changed my mind over the years. Rapists MUST hang! Thank you kcr garu for standing as an example to our nation and showing respect to women! @RaoKavitha @KTRTRS,” tweeted actor Lakshmi Manchu.  I do NOT feel bad. I was always against capital punishment but I've changed my mind over the years. Rapists MUST hang! Thank you kcr garu for standing as an example to our nation and showing respect to women! @RaoKavitha @KTRTRS pic.twitter.com/DdXrDmyzSJ— Lakshmi Manchu (@LakshmiManchu) December 6, 2019 Rakulpreet Singh, who also thanked Telangana police, tweeted, “How far can you run away after committing a crime like Rape .. #JusticeForPriyankaReddy #Encounter thankyou #Telangana  police” How far can you run away after committing a crime like Rape .. #JusticeForPriyankaReddy #Encounter thankyou #Telangana police — Rakul Singh (@Rakulpreet) December 6, 2019 Actor Nandamuri Kalyan Ram also congratulated the police for the killings.  “Nothing can erase the pain of the grieving family! But, this will hopefully bring some closure. Justice has been served. Rest in Peace Disha! Kudos to @hydcitypolice @cyberabadpolice,” wrote actor Nandamuri Kalyan Ram on Twitter.  Nothing can erase the pain of the grieving family! But, this will hopefully bring some closure. Justice has been served. Rest in Peace Disha! Kudos to @hydcitypolice @cyberabadpolice — Kalyanram Nandamuri (@NANDAMURIKALYAN) December 6, 2019 Director Puri Jagannadh, who made the film Temper, tweeted, “Salute Telangana. I join my hands in front of the police department. You are the real heroes. I always believe one thing. Whenever we are in trouble, it is the police who come to our aid. Even if we pray to god seeking help, god sends a police officer.  SALUTE Telangana పోలీస్ డిపార్టుమెంటుకి చేతులెత్తి మొక్కుతున్నాను you are the real heros .I always believe one thing మనకి కస్టమొచ్చిన కన్నీళ్లొచ్చినా పోలీసోడే వస్తాడు . నువ్వే దిక్కు రక్షించాలని దేవుడికి మొక్కినా ఆ దేవుడు కూడా పంపించేది పోలీసోడినే @TelanganaDGP @KTRTRS — PURIJAGAN (@purijagan) December 6, 2019 Actor Nani tweeted, “Every town must have only one rowdy, and that rowdy must be a police officer.” ఊరికి ఒక్కడే రౌడీ ఉండాలి వాడు పోలీసోడు అయ్యుండాలి#Disha — Nani (@NameisNani) December 6, 2019 Ravi Teja called the killings a starting point to preventing such crimes. “Serving justice to #Disha doesn’t stop here but starts from here by preventing such heinous crimes through education, empowerment and enlightenment from childhood. JaiHind. Now Rest in Peace Disha,” he tweeted.  Serving justice to #Disha doesn’t stop here but starts from here by preventing such heinous crimes through education, empowerment and enlightenment from childhood. JaiHind. Now Rest in Peace Disha. — Ravi Teja (@RaviTeja_offl) December 6, 2019 Actor Rahul Ramakrishna, however, said that the deaths are not a form of justice but an act to merely deal with public anger. “That wasn’t justice. That was a safety valve set in place to diffuse unmanageable public anger. Actual justice comes from enforcing laws that seek to prevent crime from happening,” he wrote.  That wasn’t justice. That was a safety valve set in place to diffuse unmanageable public anger. Actual justice comes from enforcing laws that seek to prevent crime from happening. — Rahul Ramakrishna (@eyrahul) December 6, 2019 “This is a good time to note how brazen the police force has become with no regard for the law of this land. Also a good time to understand how the Constitution of India holds very little value among its own citizens,” he added.  Filmmaker Ram Gopal Varma also questioned the encounters, advocating for due process of the law. "With regard to encounter killings ,the fundamental foundation of any society is to control emotional outbursts and apply rationality in a due process of the rule of law ..so encounters cannot be justified under any circumstances," Ram Gopal Varma tweeted.  With regard to encounter killings ,the fundamental foundation of any society is to control emotional outbursts and apply rationality in a due process of the rule of law ..so encounters cannot be justified under any circumstances — Ram Gopal Varma (@RGVzoomin) December 6, 2019 The point of a criminal justice system in any civilised society is that police will arrest,investigate and furnish evidence to the judiciary which will study the veracity of the facts and then decide on the quantum of punishment . — Ram Gopal Varma (@RGVzoomin) December 6, 2019 On a similar vein, many people have questioned the extra-judicial killings, with legal experts saying that an immediate probe must be conducted into the reported encounter as per law, since the deaths occurred in police custody.  The four accused Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu were taken to the spot on Friday morning to recreate the scene for collection of evidence. Police claim the accused attempted to escape by taking the guns of the policemen who accompanied them, and were subsequently shot in an encounter.  
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Hyderabad encounter fake? HC orders bodies of accused to be preserved till Dec 9

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Judiciary
On Friday, the four accused were killed in a reported encounter during evidence collection in the Hyderabad vet rape and murder case.
Following a writ petition by civil rights activists seeking judicial intervention into the reported encounter of the four accused in the rape of murder of a Hyderabad vet, the Telangana High court on Friday directed the government to preserve the bodies of the four men till Monday, December 9. The four persons — Mohammed Areef, Jollu Shiva, Jollu Naveen and Chennakeshavulu — were accused of rape and murder of 26-year -old Disha (name changed). On Friday, Cyberabad police said that the four accused were killed by police in an “encounter” as they tried to overpower the officers during evidence collection, and attempted to flee by snatching guns away from the police officers, according to Cyberabad Commissioner VC Sajjanar. Responding to the writ petition, which suspected foul play in the incident, the High Court directed officials to submit a video recording of the post-mortem in a CD to the Principal District Judge, Mahaboobnagar for all the accused. The Court has also further directed that the dead bodies of the four deceased be preserved till 8 pm on Monday.  The Principal District Judge, Mahaboobnagar will receive and submit the CD of the post-mortem to Registrar General of the HC Telangana by Saturday evening as directed by the HC. The activists in their writ petition stated that the police’s version of events has raised serious concerns. “It would be a fallacy to even imagine that some kind of justice has been served by abandoning all due process and committing such killings. Is it permissible for police personnel to play judge, jury, executioner and mete out fatal justice in this manner? Is the ‘satisfying of the collective conscience’ in such a brazenly unlawful and murderous way healthy for a democracy? This is absolute violation of rule of law and constitutional guarantees," the petition noted. Citing media reports, the activists said, "It is clear that all the four accused/suspects were in police custody, thus completely unarmed, and in all probabilities handcuffed. The recreation of the events at the crime scene at 3 am in the morning raise further serious concerns into these extra-judicial killings." Cyberabad Commissioner VC Sajjanar however clarified on Friday that the accused were not handcuffed.  The postmortem of the bodies was conducted at Mahaboobnagar District Hospital under the supervision of the Superintendent of the Hospital and a team of forensic experts from Gandhi Hospital in Hyderabad. On Friday, the four accused were killed when they were taken to Chatanpally to recover the phone, wallet and power bank of the victim, Disha. Disha’s burnt body was found close to the spot of the reported encounter near the underpass of Shadnagar Outer Ring Road (ORR) on November 27. 
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Telangana govt gives compensation, jobs to families of deceased RTC employees

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TSRTC
As many as 22 families were given cheques of Rs 2 lakh each as ex-gratia, while the remaining 16 families will get the money on Saturday.
Image: Telangana CMO
In some relief to family members of the TSRTC employees who died in the backdrop of the 56-day strike over a set of demands, the Telangana government has handed out ex-gratia payment and given appointments to 33 people in RTC. As many as 22 families were given cheques of Rs 2 lakh each as ex-gratia, while the remaining 16 families will get the money on Saturday. According to Sunil Sharma, RTC managing director, as many as 33 eligible family members were given appointments on Friday.  According to estimates, around 38 employees have died, either as a result of killing themselves or due to stroke resulting from distress. This comes less than a week after CM K Chandrashekar Rao’s assurance in the meeting with RTC employees that the government would ensure to take welfare measures for them. The recruited candidates will be working as junior assistants, conductors and as RTC constables as per the RTC norms. In Karimnagar, BC Welfare and Civil Supplies Minister, Gangula Kamalakar, handed over the appointment orders to the children of the deceased families.  Out of 38 deceased, around 13 staff who died are from the Greater Hyderabad limits, while the remaining are from different depots in the state. Earlier, the CM had also stated that the retirement age for RTC employees will be increased to 60 years from 58. The CM had also stated that within 20 days, exclusive toilets, change rooms for dressing, and lunchrooms for women staff will be created, besides sanctioning of three months maternity leave on par with other government employees. 
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Hyd-based badminton stars Saina and Jwala express different views on encounter

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Encounter
Most celebrities from Telangana have lauded the police, only a handful have questioned the cops.
Adding to the many opinions voiced by celebrities on the reported police encounter in Hyderabad where the four accused of rape and murder of 26-year-old veterinarian Disha (name changed) were killed on Friday morning, sportspersons Jwala Gutta and Saina Nehwal also took to social media to express their views. The two badminton stars, however, had contradictory views to share on the much contested and debated actions of the Hyderabad police.  Saina, like many others, congratulated the Hyderabad police. “Great work #hyderabadpolice ..we salute u,” she tweeted.  Great work #hyderabadpolice ..we salute u — Saina Nehwal (@NSaina) December 6, 2019 Jwala, however, questioned the actions of the police, asking whether the killings would indeed stop sexual violence against women, and moreover, whether the killings were selective, based on the social location of Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu, the four accused in the case.  “Will this stop the future rapists?? And an important question Will every rapist be treated the same way...irrespective of their social standing?!” Jwala tweeted.  Will this stop the future rapists?? And an important question Will every rapist be treated the same way...irrespective of their social standing?! — Gutta Jwala (@Guttajwala) December 6, 2019 Many people, including celebrities from the film industry, have lauded the Telangana police, with several media outlets and internet users hailing Cyberabad Commissioner of Police V C Sajjanar, who had led a similar encounter in Warangal back in 2008. Rajyavardhan Rathore, former Union Sports Minister and Olympic medalist in shooting, also cheered the police, while adding that the police had acted in self-defence.  “I congratulate the hyderabad police and the leadership that allows the police to act like police Let all know this is the country where good will always prevail over evil (Disclaimer for holier than thou- police acted swiftly in self defence) #Encounter #hyderabadpolice”, Rathore tweeted.  I congratulate the hyderabad police and the leadership that allows the police to act like police Let all know this is the country where good will always prevail over evil (Disclaimer for holier than thou- police acted swiftly in self defence)#Encounter#hyderabadpolice — Rajyavardhan Rathore (@Ra_THORe) December 6, 2019 Many Twitter users critiqued Saina, calling the tweet an irresponsible statement coming from a sportsperson with a wide reputation and influence.  Even prior to the reported encounter, in the midst of the huge public outcry surrounding the incident, Jwala had said that the police must try to talk to the accused to understand the mindset that leads to such horrifying incidents of violence against women.  “In my opinion...the govt should first appointment few psychologists and make them speak to the accused and find out and ustand what’s driving them to commit such horrific crimes against women...and then the punishment should follow!!” Jwala had tweeted.  In my opinion...the govt should first appointment few psychologists and make them speak to the accused and find out and ustand what’s driving them to commit such horrific crimes against women...and then the punishment should follow!! #inmyopinion — Gutta Jwala (@Guttajwala) December 3, 2019 Many Tollywood actors and filmmakers also lauded the police for 'serving justice', with only a couple of exceptions. Actor Rahul Ramakrishna and filmmaker Ram Gopal Varma questioned the encounter saying justice must happen through law enforcement.  “That wasn’t justice. That was a safety valve set in place to diffuse unmanageable public anger. Actual justice comes from enforcing laws that seek to prevent crime from happening,” Rahul Ramakrishna wrote.  That wasn’t justice. That was a safety valve set in place to diffuse unmanageable public anger. Actual justice comes from enforcing laws that seek to prevent crime from happening. — Rahul Ramakrishna (@eyrahul) December 6, 2019 On a similar note, Ram Gopal Varma tweeted, "With regard to encounter killings ,the fundamental foundation of any society is to control emotional outbursts and apply rationality in a due process of the rule of law ..so encounters cannot be justified under any circumstances." With regard to encounter killings ,the fundamental foundation of any society is to control emotional outbursts and apply rationality in a due process of the rule of law ..so encounters cannot be justified under any circumstances — Ram Gopal Varma (@RGVzoomin) December 6, 2019 Many people have said called the incident a case of extrajudicial killings, with legal experts saying that an immediate probe must be conducted into the reported encounter as per law, since the deaths occurred in police custody. The Telangana High Court has directed the government to preserve the bodies of the four men till December 9, following a writ petition by civil rights activists seeking judicial intervention into the reported encounter.  The four accused Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu were taken to the spot on Friday morning for collection of evidence. Police claim the accused attempted to escape by taking the guns of the policemen who accompanied them, and were subsequently shot in an encounter. 
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10th edition of Hyderabad Children’s Theatre Festival all set to begin on Dec 8

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Theatre
The 10-day festival will consist of performances, workshops and exhibitions by artists from across the country.
The newly renovated auditorium at Hyderabad’s MCR HRD Institute is packed – mostly children, some still in their school uniforms. The stage is dimly lit and the excitement is palpable. Kids are heard asking their parents where Rosa is and why Rosa hasn’t come yet. Just as the kids start getting impatient, Rosa comes on stage in a bright pink long frock and a red nose, riding her bicycle. She stutters while talking and trips while walking. Six-year-old Rosa is clumsy and alone at home. Rosa, eager to find someone she can play with, tries her hand at magic and what follows is a laughter riot for the children. Rosa, played by Norwegian theatre artist Katja Brita Lindeberg, is a character from Katja’s famous solo clown act If Only Rosa Could do Magic. Though on stage Rosa’s magic spells failed, Katja had an entire auditorium of young audience laughing at her clumsiness and consoling her every time she horribly messed up a spell. The one and only theatre festival for children in Hyderabad, the curtain raiser of the 10th Hyderabad Children’s Theatre Festival took place amid much glitz with Katja’s show on November 28. The 10-day fest is set to begin on December 8. The brainchild of three women theatre artists, the children’s theatre festival was started in 2010 by Vaishali Bisht, Priyankaa Vir and Deepthi Pendurty. Speaking to TNM, Vaishali, who has been running theatre workshops for children for the past 20 years, recounts how the theatre festival came into being and why it is important for children to be exposed to art apart from mainstream entrainment. “It was an oft-heard complaint in theatre circles that while cities like Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata had a vibrant theatre scene, Hyderabad had very little to boast about when it came to theatre for kids. Priyankaa, Deepthi and I were classmates from drama school. In India, unfortunately, theatre doesn’t help you pay all your bills. Yet, we were hopeful, and thought of starting something new for the kids, and that’s how the theatre festival kickstarted in 2010,” Vaishali recalls. The festival will consist of performances, workshops and exhibitions. This year’s edition has performances from a gamut of theatre artistes from across the country. Dur Se Brothers, a theatre company from Mumbai, will open the festival with their play Elephant in the Room. “It took us a lot of efforts to convince the Dur Se team that the play was suitable for children. The play is about Ganesha who is on a journey to discover his own identity. We felt that kids must watch since they too are in the process of building their own identity and they should be able to empathise with someone else’s struggle too,” Vaishali says. The founders Talking about the kind of content that the festival offers, Vaishali says that the team does not prefer to be preachy or pedantic and doesn’t believe in talking down to children. “Since I have been closely working with children, I know the way kids today perceive things. They are incredibly complex. They don’t need to be talked down to. As adults, we may feel that since we too were once kids, we can decide what’s appropriate and inappropriate for their age. We are wrong. No subject is off limits as long as it is dealt with in a manner that helps young people to understand the complexity of the world they inhabit,” opines Vaishali. This year’s festival will include performances by the Theatre In Education Company of the National School of Drama; puppetry workshops by French artist Sabrina Arusam; a workshop on set design with recycled materials; and a troupe from Telangana’s Ammapuram village showcasing their puppet show called the Bommala Kala Brundam. “We do not promise that all our events will enjoyed by every kid in the audience. It’s a fine balance of shows that are spectacle heavy, spectacle plus use of speech, and others like Basti Mein Masti which is pure fun. There will be something for everyone at the festival,” Vaishali says. Every year the theatre festival receives funding from corporates and the state, but this year the organisers say they are running tight on cash. “We are yet to receive any money from the government and most of our funds have been crowd-sourced. We hope to find more sponsors so that at no point in time we have to compromise with the quality of our events,” Vaishali notes. The festival will begin on December 8 and on till December 15 at the MCR HRD Institute, Telangana. The event is open to children above the age of four.
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Four accused killed in Hyd encounter booked for 'attacking cops'

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Crime
According to police, two of the accused opened fire at cops by snatching their guns and attacking with stones and sticks.
A case was registered against four accused, arrested for the alleged rape and murder of a woman veterinarian in the outskirts of Hyderabad last week and killed in an encounter, for 'attacking' the police personnel. A case under IPC sections 307 (attempt to murder), 176 (omission to give notice or information to public servant by person legally bound to give it) and relevant sections of the Indian Arms Act were registered against the accused. Based on a complaint filed by the in-charge of police team that accompanied the four accused, the FIR was booked on Friday, a senior police official said. Meanwhile, the National Human Rights Commission team is scheduled to visit the place on Saturday where the encounter took place. All the four arrested accused in the rape and murder of the 26-year-old woman veterinarian were killed in 'retaliatory' firing by police at Chattanpalli, almost 50 km away from Hyderabad, on Friday morning, when they were taken to the scene of crime to recover the victim's phone, and others pertaining to the case. The Cyberabad Police said its personnel resorted to "retaliatory" firing after two of the accused, Areef and Chennakesavulu opened fire at them by snatching their weapons besides attacking the latter with stones and sticks, resulting in injuries to two policemen. “They kept firing. They continued to fire and attack despite us asking them to surrender,”Cyberabad commissioner VC Sajjanar said. In the incident, two police officers named Arvind Goud and Venkateshwarulu were seriously injured, including on their heads, according to the police. While briefing the nature of injuries that cops received, he said, “There are no bullet wounds on the police officers.” The post-mortem of four accused was done in the Government District Hospital at Mahabubnagar district and it was video-graphed. The four men, all lorry workers, aged between 20 and 26, were arrested on November 29 for allegedly raping and killing the woman by smothering her and later burning her body.  
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Hajipur serial rape-murders: Trial in case will end soon, say investigating officials

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Due process
"All the evidences and DNA samples that match with the accused have been handed over to the fast-track trial court,” ACP Bhongir, Bhujanga Rao told TNM.
File image :TNM
Amidst the clamour and cheers over the reported encounter of four accused in the rape and murder of the Hyderabad veterinarian, investigation officials in the infamous Hajipur serial rape-murders which took place between 2015 and 2019, claimed that the trial of the accused M Srinivas Reddy is seeing significant progress. Earlier in April, police arrested Srinivas on charges of raping and murdering three minor girls while they were investigating a missing case of one of the deceased girls. Srinivas was also accused in the rape and murder of another woman besides the three minors. Speaking to TNM, ACP Bhongir and Investigation Officer Bhujanga Rao said, "All the evidences and DNA samples that match with the accused have been handed over to the fast-track trial court. We can say that the trial will end soon and the court will convict the accused." While the accused Srinivas Reddy is in Warangal Central Jail, the trial in the case began in the last week of October before a local fast track court in Nalgonda. During the course of the investigation, police found out that Srinivas had killed two other minor girls from the same village after raping them, and disposed of the bodies by burying them in an abandoned well. In July, months after unearthing the cases, police filed three separate chargesheets and submitted forensic lab reports, technical evidences and eyewitness accounts to the court as part of the evidence. Meanwhile, the parents of the deceased girls are demanding "justice" similar to what was meted out to the accused in the Hyderabad vet rape and murder.  Read : Hyd vet rape case: Top cop Sajjanar had led a similar encounter in Warangal in 2008
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Hyderabad encounter: NHRC officials begin on-the-spot investigation

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Probe
The National Humans Right Commission on Friday said the encounter was a matter of concern and ordered a probe.
A team from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) on Saturday reached Hyderabad and started on-the-spot investigation into the alleged police encounter on Friday in which four men accused in the gang-rape and murder of a woman veterinarian were killed. The team reached the city on Saturday morning and is staying at the Novotel Hotel. Security has been beefed up around the premises with restrictions on entry of media too. The team is expected to first meet the Cyberabad cops and then visited the Tondupally toll plaza and the Chatanpally bridge, where the alleged encounter took place. Official sources said the team has visited the government hospital at Mahabubnagar, where the bodies of the accused were kept after post-mortem. The NHRC took cognisance of the encounter killings of the four accused in the case and ordered a probe on Friday. The apex human rights body in the country had said the encounter was a matter of concern and needed to be investigated carefully. “The commission is of the opinion that this matter is required to be probed very carefully. Accordingly, it has asked its Director General (Investigation) to immediately send a team for a fact-finding, on-the-spot investigation into the matter,” the NHRC said. The post-mortem of the four accused was done at the Government District Hospital in Mahabubnagar district and videographed. The Telangana High Court on Friday directed the state government to preserve the bodies of the four accused till 8 pm on December 9. All the four accused were shot dead by police on Friday during a pre-dawn exchange of fire near Hyderabad. The four suspects were arrested on November 29 for allegedly raping and killing the 26-year-old veterinary surgeon last week.  
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Do cops have license to kill? What SC and NHRC guidelines on encounters say

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Human rights
After the alleged encounter in Hyderabad that killed the suspects in Disha murder case, the NHRC has recommended an independent investigation into the case.
Opinions stand divided on the death of the four accused in the rape and murder of Disha, who were killed in an alleged “retaliatory firing” by the Hyderabad police on Friday morning. Though the investigation team, led by Cyberabad police commissioner VC Sajjanar, claimed in a press conference that the killings were in self-defence, critics have expressed their reservations on the police's explanation and also on people applauding the deaths. Andhra Pradesh, later bifurcated into Telangana, has a notorious history of extra judicial killings in which numerous Maoists, tribals and gangsters like Nayeem have been killed during their “attempts to escape” from the hands of the police. VC Sajjanar, known as the “encounter cop”, was responsible for the killing of three men in Andhra Pradesh in 2008. He had said that the three, who were accused of throwing acid on the faces of two women, had to be shot dead by the police in self-defence. Parallels can be drawn between both cases- the manner in which the accused were taken to the crime spot for recreating the crime scene and later cops shooting them down in an alleged crossfire. The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) on Friday recommended for an independent investigation and said the police were not “properly alert” and were not “prepared for any untoward activity” which resulted in the death of all four accused on Friday morning. When is the killing of a suspect or accused justified? Are police officers immune to legal action if there is lack of circumstantial evidence justifying the encounter? Here is what the NHRC and Supreme Court (SC) guidelines say: Do police have the right to take lives? The police have not been conferred any right to take someone's life except under two circumstances: 1.       If the death is caused by the right to private defence and the police is attacked by the suspects. 2.       Using force, extending up to the causing of death, necessary to arrest the person accused of an offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life. NHRC guidelines in 2010 say that if the use of force cannot be justified and the death falls outside the jurisdiction of the above mentioned, it is a crime and the police officer would be guilty of culpable homicide.  Who investigates the case? In its judgement in September 2014 on the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) vs government of Maharashtra, the Supreme Court laid down certain guidelines.  An FIR should be immediately filed by the police at the police station concerned based on the information received. Since the police officers at the station are a party to the encounter, it is appropriate for an outside agency such as the state CID or officers from another police station to investigate the case. A magisterial inquiry must be held in the case, preferably in a span of three months and the report should be handed over to the judicial magistrate. Prompt disciplinary action should be taken against the police officers found guilty. What’s the role of NHRC? The SC guidelines say that the involvement of NHRC is not mandatory unless there is serious doubt that the investigation was not impartial. However, it says that within 48 hours of the encounter, a preliminary report should be sent to the commission with the briefs of the incident. A second report should be sent to the NHRC with details of post-mortem, inquest report, magisterial enquiry and results from forensic and ballistic experts, within three months of the encounter. Are cops involved in encounters worthy of praise and rewards? No. No promotions or gallantry awards should be presented to the officials who were a part of the encounter immediately after the incident. Rewards should be given only when the gallantry of the officer is established beyond doubt. What recourse do families have? If any of the above procedures are not followed, families of victims who died in the encounter can approach a Sessions Judge asking for a probe, say the guidelines.  What if the police personnel are found guilty? The police personnel will be charged under Section 299 of the Indian Penal Code for culpable homicide. Compensation should be granted to the kin of the deceased in case the police officers are prosecuted on the basis of investigation.
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Woman goes missing in Warangal, police station registers Telangana’s first ‘zero FIR’

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Administration
The zero FIR is a first information report that can be registered by any police station for a cognizable offence even if it does not fall under its jurisdiction.
For the first time in the state, a zero FIR was registered at the Subedari police station in Warangal.  The zero FIR is a document that can be registered by any police station for a cognizable offence, without bothering about whether the case is in their jurisdiction or not.  The FIR was registered on Saturday morning and was later transferred to the Shayampet police station. According to police, the FIR was registered following a police complaint by a man named Boora Raj Kumar, after he approached the Subedari police after he was informed over the phone that his elder brother’s daughter, Sri Vidya, 24 years old, had gone missing. Raj Kumar had come to Hanamkonda for work and he was near the Subedari police station when he learnt the news from his elder brother. He approached the Subedari police station and Sub-Inspector at Subedari police station immediately registered an FIR which was later transferred to Shayampet, in Warangal rural district, where Raj Kumar and his family originally belong. The move assumes significance after the Disha rape and murder case where the victim’s family alleged that they were made to run from one police station to another in order to file a missing complaint. The parents first approached the RGIA police station from where they were directed to the Shamshabad police station. The family said they lost a lot of precious time in completing the procedures, and that their daughter could have been saved if the police had filed an FIR quickly and started investigation little earlier. Also read: What is zero FIR and why cops cannot cite jurisdiction and refuse complaints The concept of Zero FIR was first suggested by the Justice Verma Committee in 2013 after the brutal rape and murder of Nirbhaya in December 2012. In 2013 and in October 2015, the Ministry of Home Affairs had issued advisories to chief secretaries of all states and union territories, to instruct the departments concerned to compulsorily register FIRs. In these advisories to the states, the Home Ministry had made it clear that a police officer is duty-bound to register a case on the basis of such information disclosing a cognizable offence and FIR has to be registered irrespective of territorial jurisdiction.
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Hyderabad encounter: NHRC begins probe, 2 PILs filed in HC seeking action against cops

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Probe
One of the petitions allege that the encounter was a case of extra-judicial killing and probe against cops should be conducted.
Beginning its fact-finding probe, a seven-member NHRC team on Saturday visited the site where the four men arrested on charges of gangrape and murder of a veterinarian were shot dead in an alleged encounter. Meanwhile, two PILs were filed in the Supreme Court seeking investigation by a Special Investigation Team (SIT) into the killings and action against the police. A day after the pre-dawn 'encounter', Telangana police said that they have registered a case in connection with the incident and the four accused killed by it in "retaliatory firing" have been booked for "attacking" the cops who had accompanied them. The team from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), including a forensic medicine expert, reached Chatanpally village, about 50 km from Hyderabad, and visited the spot where the charred remains of the victim were found beneath a culvert on November 28 as also the encounter site nearby. “They visited the scene of the crime and are in the process of investigation,” DCP (Shamshabad Zone), N Prakash Reddy, told the media. Officials said the team examined the bodies of the accused kept at the mortuary at the government hospital in Mahabubnagar. An expert who is part of the team that conducted the autopsy said the NHRC team checked whether the post-mortem was conducted as per protocol, among others. He said the post-mortem report would be prepared in two days. Meanwhile, two petitions were filed on Saturday in the Supreme Court seeking a SIT probe into the killings and compensation for the families of the four men. While the Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filed by advocate M L Sharma said that the SIT probe should be monitored by former apex court judges, a separate petition filed by lawyers G S Mani and Pradeep Kumar Yadav said that independent investigation against concerned police officials should be conducted. Sharma alleged that it was a case of "extra-judicial killings" and sought prosecution of policemen involved in the incident. Also read: Do cops have license to kill? What SC and NHRC guidelines on encounters say The PIL, which may come up for hearing next week, also seeks action against Samajwadi Party MP and Bollywood actress Jaya Bachchan and Chairperson of Delhi Commission for Women Swati Maliwal for alleged "provocation" and "pressuring police for extrajudicial killing of arrested persons in police custody without trial." The Cyberabad Police had said its personnel had resorted to "retaliatory" firing after two of the accused opened fire at them by snatching their weapons besides attacking the latter with stones and sticks, resulting in injuries to two policemen. Police had said they had taken the accused to the scene of crime to recover the victim's phone and for reconstruction of events. 
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Citing fund crunch from Centre, Telangana CM KCR orders budget cuts

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Budget
K Chandrasekhar Rao has written to the Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman seeking the release of funds for the state of Telangana.
Due to the economic slowdown prevailing in the country, the state has not been receiving 14 per cent of GST collections, a release from the Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao's office said. The Chief Minister held a meeting with officials on the state’s financial position, funds due from the Centre and other issues. Observing that substantial funds are due from the Centre, KCR has written to Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman seeking the release of funds. The Chief Minister said due to lack of funds, implementation of many welfare schemes can run into problems in the state. He also accused the Centre of making tall promises in the Parliament on how there is no economic slowdown in the country. KCR plans to visit Delhi soon to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sitharaman to apprise them of the difficulties that arose because of funds not being released from the Centre. Following the sharp dip in revenue, the CM has instructed the Principal Secretary (Finance) to reduce funds for all departments in tune with the decrease in funds from Centre and has also asked all departments to cut down on expenditure. For the financial year 2019-20, for Telangana State under the taxes sharing, the Centre announced in its budget that it will give Rs 19,719 crore. This is 6.2 per cent more than the allocations made in the 2018-19 Budget of Rs 18,560 crore. However, in the last six months, the Centre has given only Rs 10,304 crore only as the tax share, the press release notes. In the last financial year, for the eight-month period, the Centre has allocated Rs 10,528 crore. The Centre had also failed to give Rs 2,812 crore IGST funds as part of the GST for 2017-18, it alleged. The Centre, while implementing the GST Act, had assured states that it would compensate them if the GST revenue was less than 14 per cent. Moreover, the Centre is yet to give Rs 1,719 crore as GST compensation dues. The state claims it has got 8.3% lesser amount in its tax share account. Due to the economic slowdown prevailing in the country, the Telangana state is not getting 14 per cent of GST collections, it said. In other words, compared to 2018-19 financial year, this fiscal, the Centre gave Rs 224 crore less till date, the press release said. Responding to the state’s claims, the central government officials said that situation is grim and cautioned that the decrease may well go up from 8.3 per cent to 15 per cent, the release said. (With inputs from PTI)
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Hyderabad encounter: NHRC meets families of accused, records statements

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Human rights
The family members of the accused were brought to Telangana State Police Academy where NHRC team interacted with them.
The seven-member NHRC delegation that is tasked to hold an independent probe into the alleged extrajudicial killings of four accused in the gangrape and murder of the Hyderabad veterinarian, has recorded the statements of the accused’s families. The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) team including a forensic medicine expert earlier visited the encounter site on Chatanpally outskirts, following their visit to Mahbubnagar District Hospital where the dead bodies are being preserved. The family members of the accused were brought to Telangana State Police Academy where NHRC team interacted with them. Mohammed Areef's father Hussain, Chennakeshavulu's father Kurumaiah, Jollu Shivas' father Rajappa, and Jollu Navven's mother Lakshmi deposed and expressed their objections and contentions with the police version. According to reports, the NHRC investigative team asked the family members if they have any doubts and suspicions about the encounter which Cyberabad police claimed as a "retaliatory" attack. The team also met and interacted with the Disha* rape victim’s family members, after the family's initial reluctance to come before NHRC. Disha’s mother didn't appear before NHRC as she was reportedly unwell. Earlier this week, in a reported pre-dawn encounter, the police killed four people — Mohammed Areef, Jollu Shiva, Jollu Naveen and Chennakeshavulu — who were accused of the Hyderabad vet’s gangrape and murder. The NHRC has also sought reports from Police, Revenue and Forensics about the incident. According to reports, the team is expected to continue its probe. (*name changed)  
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Telangana government forms SIT to probe Hyderabad encounter

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Crime investigation
This development comes even as petitions have been filed before the Supreme Court as well as the Telangana High Court seeking a probe into the reported encounter.
Image : Facebook/Rachakonda Police
Two days after the reported encounter of the four accused in the gangrape and murder of the 26-year-old Hyderabad veterinarian, the state government on Sunday appointed a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to investigate the case. On December 6, in a reported encounter, the Cyberabad Police shot dead four accused in the case —  Mohammed Areef, Jollu Shiva, Jollu Naveen and Chennakeshavulu — in an alleged "retaliatory firing" while the accused were taken for scene recreation at the crime spot. This development comes even as two petitions have been filed before the Supreme Court — by SC lawyer ML Sharma and one by petitioners GS Mani and Pradeep Kumar — seeking a probe into the reported encounter. The encounter, which was hailed by many as "instant justice" was also met with criticism, including the Chief Justice of India Sharad Arvind Bobde, who stated that justice should never take the form of revenge. The SIT will probe the case under IPC sections 307 (attempt to murder), 394 (Voluntarily causing hurt in committing robbery), 224 (Resistance or obstruction by a person to his lawful apprehension), 332 (Voluntarily causing hurt to deter public servant from his duty) read with Section 34 (Acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) and 176 (omission to give notice or information to public servant by person legally bound to give it) along with other all related cases registered in Telangana state as per the Supreme Court guidelines. Comprising of seven Telangana state police officials, the SIT will be headed by Rachakonda Commissioner of Police Mahesh Bhagavath. Wanaparthy SP K Apoorva Rao, Mancherial DCP Uday Kumar Reddy, Rachakonda Addl DCP Surender Reddy and Sangaredy DSP Sridhar Reddy, Rachakonda IT cell officer Sridhar Reddy, Koratala CI Raja Sheker Raju along with Venu Gopal Reddy, Inspector DCRB, Sangareddy are part of the SIT. However, the SIT does not have any third party official as the member or supervisor. The Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filed by advocate ML Sharma had sought an SIT probe under the scrutiny of the former apex court judges, while the separate petition filed GS Mani and Pradeep Kumar Yadav has sought an independent investigation against the concerned police officials. Earlier, following a writ petition by several women civil rights activists who raised doubts and foul play by the police, the Telangana High Court directed the government to preserve the bodies of the four men till Monday, December 9. Meanwhile, the Principal District Judge, Mahaboobnagar has reportedly submitted the CD (video-recording) of the post-mortem to Registrar General of the Telangana High Court. 
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Why scores of Adivasis from Telangana are protesting for their rights in Delhi

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Ground report
For decades, Adivasi groups have alleged that the Lambadas are “taking away” job and educational opportunities as a result of their inclusion under the Scheduled Tribe category.
All images: Charan Teja/By arrangement
"If Delhi doesn't bother, we will even go to the United Nations to end this injustice," said Pushmak Bhaskar, a primary school teacher hailing from Mamidiguda a tiny village in Adilabad. The tribal belt across erstwhile Adilabad, Khammam and Warangal has been simmering in anger for decades as Adivasi groups have alleged that the Lambadas are “taking away” their opportunities in jobs and education as a result of their inclusion under the Scheduled Tribe category. Bhaskar is one among the thousands of indigenous tribal persons who are heading to attend the Chalo Delhi meeting in Ramleela maidan on Monday, December 9. Several aboriginal tribes in agency areas of Telangana state are demanding for exclusion of the Lambada community from the ST category. "Our past generations suffered and we are suffering,” said Mesram Suchitra Bai, a 27-year-old woman, who is part of the Gond tribal community. “We don't want our future generations to go through the same." The conflict S Jangu Patel is the head of a Gond hamlet, Kotturguda. Now in his late 50s, he wore a traditional dhoti with green shawl around his neck as he stepped down from his bike to discuss the issue at hand.  The Lambadas were included in the ST list in 1976 during the Emergency period in India. Adivasi organisations allege that their inclusion is unfair to the tribal persons who are in greater need of aid."In all jobs, be it education sector or Revenue Department or Health Department, there is no representation from our communities. Our jobs have been taken away by people who entered into the category through the back door,” Jangu Patel said.  He added, "We are pooling our own money — what we earned through selling cotton and through coolie work — to go to Delhi. We are not depending on others for money since it's our fight." Though the conflict between the Adivasis and Lambadas has been ongoing for decades, the dispute boiled over on October 5, 2017 — the death anniversary of Adivasi Gond leader Komaram Bheem. On that day, the tribal museum at Jodeghat in Asifabad district was vandalised when statue of 'Lambadi woman' was burnt allegedly by Adivasi persons. Since then, areas with predominant Adivasis populations in the state have witnessed numerous protests and counter protests that have revived the simmering rift.  In the backdrop of the existing turmoil, TNM travelled to some of the villages in esrtwhile Adilabad and met several Adivasis who travelled to Delhi earlier this week. Along with demand for removal of Lambdas from ST category, Adivasis are also demanding the implementation of the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act and Land Transfer Regulation Act 1 of 1970, Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act (PESA) 1996, which safeguards the interests of tribals in Scheduled areas as per the Indian Constitution. Telangana has a tribal population of 31.78 lakh, which is 9.08% of the state’s population, with a total of 32 tribal communities, including four particularly vulnerable groups. Speaking to TNM, Adilabad MP and Tudum Debba state president Soyam Bapu Rao said, "In 1976, Lambadas population was 1.30 lakh and remaining Adivasis were 11 lakh. After 43 years, we are same 11 lakh and they're over 20 lakh. How did this happen if not due to invasion from other states?" It’s believed that Lambadas are a nomadic community that migrated centuries ago from Rajasthan to other states. In 1976, erstwhile Andhra Pradesh declared Lambadas as part of the Scheduled Tribe, a categorisation that was continued by Telangana from 2014 onwards. However, not all states follow this categorisation. In Karnataka, for example, Lambadas are included under Scheduled Caste.  But the inclusion of Lambadas under ST resulted in a massive migration of its people into undivided Andhra, according to Scroll, quoting a Central government report from 2004. “No Constitutional procedure was followed or Parliament discussion was held. Everything happened during the period of Emergency, To announce a group as a tribe, there must be an official study that should endorse or the Governor of the state should endorse. Nothing as such has happened,” Soyam said.  The Lambadas are the major dominant tribal group inhabiting through the Telangana State. They are also known as Banjara. Their population according to 2011 census is 2,046,117. The remaining are from communities such as Gonds, Guthikoyas, Pardhans, Nayakpods, Kolams, Gotis, Chenchus and several others, which are relatively low in number.   Umra Yashwanth Rao, a 65-year-old Gond sat amongst his neighbours in Chinchughat, a tiny remote village that sits quietly in the hills of the Adilabad rural mandal. He said, "When we all are the same and studying at the same schools and colleges, how come only Lambadas get the job?”  From Chinchughat and few other surrounding villages, at least 500 members of the Gond and Pradhan communities are set to leave for Delhi, as well as estimated 30,000 people from the two districts (Asifabad and Adilabad).  Along with a separate train from Adilabad to Delhi, two other trains from Asifbad and Khammam will ferry thousands of Adivasis to Delhi, besides multiple private vehicles. Speaking on the issue, Godam Ganesh, the Thudum Debba district Vice President from Maleborigaon village, said, "Our fight is obviously with the government and not with the Lambadas, but the government has allowed them to continue as STs though they aren't. Constitutional procedure was not followed when they included them in tribes." He added, "If they're tribal, they should be tribes in all states. How come they're Scheduled Castes, Backward Castes and forward castes in other states?" Kumra Devidas, a tractor driver from the community, said, "Even smaller jobs which require Class 10 and intermediate graduation qualification were at times filled by Lambadas." Like Devidas, there are many young persons who complain that contract jobs, teacher posts through Teacher Recruitment Test (TRT), forest beat officers and police constable positions are being taken by Lambadas. Additionally, they allege that fake agency certificates were procured in order to secure these jobs within the Integrated Tribal Development Agency (ITDA) areas. Allegations of violation against GOs Earlier in 2018, the State Tribal Welfare Department brought GO 24 to restrict and prohibit non-local tribals from getting Local Scheduled Tribes certificates. However, Adivasis allege that several people are securing 'agency certificate' and 'local Scheduled Tribe' certificates through "unfair means." ITDA Utnoor Project Officer Krishna Aditya said, "If anyone was given a false Local Scheduled Tribe (LST) certificate, they can always raise this in the committee headed by Project Officer. If they have substantiating evidence we will always act upon the same." He further stated that all the LST certificates were issued according to the rules adhering to GO number 24. History Adivasis have been fighting for their rights since the days of Komaram Bheem, an Adivasi freedom fighter who battled for the land rights and self rule against the last Nizam of Hyderabad and exploitation of local landlords in the early 20th century. But despite more than 70 years of independence and the Constitutional safeguards in place, Adivasis continue to struggle, most recently in the face of threats to evict them from their native places and the forests they’ve depended on for generations.  Soyam Bapu Rao further stated that the 1970 Act and Forests Rights Act should be implemented in letter and spirit. In Scheduled Areas, united Andhra Pradesh has a Land Transfer Regulation Act 1 of 1970. It checks the transfer of tribal land to non-tribals with due regard to the special status that the Constitution has given to tribal lands. But it's alleged (across the  Scheduled areas in Telangana) that their lands have been handed over to the non-tribes in the guise of development or using loops in the system. Umra Bapurao, another Gond youth from Chinchughat said, "Most of us have no land pattas though we have been cultivating these lands for generations. Our march to Delhi is also about land rights" The Telangana Adivasis from nine Scheduled Area districts are on the forefront of the fight for the land rights from the government. The state is witnessing a major conflict over land rights for traditional forest dwellers, including Adivasis, according to a study conducted by Rights and Resource Initiative and Oxfam. In Telangana, forest rights claims were made over land spreading over 7.61 lakh acres, most of these claims are from the tribal areas. Earlier this year, a Supreme Court's order for the eviction of 1.1 million forest dwelling families was stayed. Most of these who are facing threat of eviction hail from native tribal communities across India, including Telangana. The meeting in Delhi's Ramleela maidan will be attended by Adivasi groups from Karnataka,, Telangana, Andhra, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Jharkhand.  What the Lambadas are saying Rathod Sunil, Sarpanch of Eshwarnagar in Utnoor Mandal said, "We agree that those who came later than 1950 should be restricted from getting LST certificates as it will damage the local tribals interests, but we will not agree for removing us from the ST category." He further added "We are getting jobs in ST reservation as there are no qualified candidates among other tribes" A Lambada youth, from the village who said that he is a primary school teacher, said that the Adivasi demands are politically motivated due to some people with "vested interests." Speaking to TNM, Shyam Naik, state president of the All India Banjara Seva Sangh, said that the conflict is a result of lack of reservations to the STs in their proportionate number but not because Lambadas are taking away their opportunities. He said, "This demand is a larger political ploy. Following the formation of Telangana, reservations were not increased as per the proportion of tribes in the state. While the STs comprise almost 10% of the state population, the government is giving a mere 6% as per the united state population." Shyam Naik further added, "Governments have to increase the reservations to the STs in the state to pacify and address the concerns of those tribals who are feeling left out." When asked about the allegation of Lambadas' inclusion into ST category, Shyam Naik said, "The inclusion happened by following Constitutional procedure, historical evidence shows that different invaders and rulers have treated Lambadas as tribes only owing to the features." He stated that an increase of reservations and classified sharing of the opportunities to tribes as per their proportion would solve the unrest. 
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Movie-goers can carry their own food, water bottles to theatres, reveals RTI query

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RTI
The Hyderabad police was responding to an RTI query filed by city-based activist Vijay Gopal.
Image for representation
The Hyderabad City police, in an RTI query, have said that multiplexes and theatres cannot restrict movie-goers from carrying food and water bottles to the cinema hall. Responding to the RTI query filed by Hyderabad-based anti-corruption activist Vijay Gopal, the police have clarified there are no curbs by law to carry food and water, and a complaint can be filed with the Legal Metrology Department who will check if there are any violation of law. Under the Cinema Regulation Act of 1955, there are no restrictions in letting a customer carry his own snack box or water bottles. Despite the law, most multiplexes do not allow customers to carry food or beverages citing security issues. Two years back, after Vijay Gopal had filed a complaint with the Hyderabad Consumer Forum, INOX multiplex was ordered to pay up Rs 5,000, along with another Rs 1,000 to Vijay for charging extra on water bottles. The forum had then noted that there cannot be two MRPs for the same water bottle, and asked INOX to discontinue the unfair trade practice. The recent RTI response has also brought to light that no single screen theatres can charge a customer for providing 3D glasses. However, the police say that few multiplexes are permitted to do so for screening 3D movies as per the representations and GOs issued by the government. Interestingly, there is also no provision that stops a customer from carrying his/her own 3D glasses to a theatre if they do not wish to pay for it. There are no prescribed charges for 3D glasses in theatres. Since most of the stand-alone theatres do not provide a bill/receipt for charging extra, a complaint regarding the same can be submitted to the legal metrology department. Though the police in the RTI response say that no information regarding standard ticket prices can be published on any website as it pertains to third-party information, it has clarified that certain theatres are allowed to collect extra money on tickets during the time of big movie releases. The issue raged during the release of Mahesh Babu’s film Maharshi, after single screen theatres hiked the ticket prices by 20%. Telangana Cinematography Minister Talasani Srinivas Yadav was quick to issue a press statement clarifying that the government had not given any permission to the theatre owners to increase the ticket prices. In states like Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, the government has decided price slabs and theatres can only charge according to the slab they fall into. However, according to the RTI response, in Hyderabad, single screen/multiplexes are allowed to collect extra amount for the first 2-3 weeks according to respective orders by the High Court. Since the government is yet to frame any guidelines on the price hike, the court has given permission to the theatre owners to increase the rates.
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From 1924, a look at the history of encounter killings in the two Telugu states

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Law
Since the 1960s, encounters have been used as a form of suppression of peasant and tribal movements, say activists. Now, the ambit of who is encountered has gotten murky.
Vivek Kodamagundla wanted to be a people's lawyer, seeking justice for the marginalised in the Indian judicial system, where cases are often tangled in red tape. But at the age of 19, he left his law degree midway and joined the banned CPI Maoists group. He and two women comrades were killed in June 2015 near the Telangana-Chhattisgarh border while doing a supply run. The Telangana police called it an encounter. A fact-finding report by the Telangana-based Civil Liberties Committee (CLC) says that all three Maoists killed that day were allegedly caught and tortured before being shot dead. “The police said that the Maoists fired first and they fired in response and the Maoists got killed. This is the same story that keeps recurring for every encounter killing – not just in the Telugu states but across India,” says N Venugopal, Editor-in-Chief of Veekshanam, a Telugu magazine. The term encounter is as old as erstwhile Andhra Pradesh itself, or perhaps even older. The first-ever recorded case of an encounter in present-day Andhra was in 1924. The dead man was Alluri Sitarama Raju, a leader of the 1922 Rampa rebellion, a tribal uprising at Visakhapatnam against British forces. Between 1946 and 1951, more than 3,000 people were killed in encounters during the Telangana peasant struggle. The then-Hyderabad state has "the dubious distinction of being the first state to kill its own people in the name of encounters in post-1947 India," writes Venugopal in Fake Encounters: Story from Andhra Pradesh for Economic and Political Weekly in 2007. Encounter by definition would mean an unexpected or unplanned meeting. First used to describe the quelling of farmer agitations, encounter killings later became associated with the gunning down of members of banned armed groups. Over the years, nearly all encounter killings tell the same story. The police were fired upon first. They demanded that the accused surrender and put down their weapons, before firing and killing in retaliation or self-defence. The latest encounter In the latest encounter killing, the Cyberabad police on December 6 shot dead all four accused in the gangrape and murder of a Hyderabad veterinarian. The police say all four accused, who were truck drivers and cleaners by profession, managed to gang up and pelt stones at the 10 trained police officers. They then managed to snatch two pistols from the policemen and started firing at them. And in the return fire, all four of them were killed. The reported encounter took place when the police brought the accused for evidence collection at 3 am.   The four accused were shot dead in an agricultural field barely 500 meters from where they allegedly burnt the veterinarian’s body. The reported crossfire took place between 5.45 am and 6.15 am. But the bodies of the four men remained there through the day, and only removed that evening after the media was given access to a spot close to the crime scene, with visuals telecast live. In the police press conference that followed, questions as to how two of the four accused managed to get hold of the pistols in the presence of 10 armed police officers went unasked. “The lower courts would have given these four the death sentence, it would have then gone to the High Court, then the Supreme Court, then review petitions, mercy petitions and justice gets delayed. It’s an open secret they were killed. It’s instant justice. There is no point in asking such questions,” says a reporter with a prominent English daily.  The silence of vultures “Most crime stories are written by crime reporters and they go along with the police,” points out Venugopal. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the press and the upcoming electronic media started investigating these encounters and presented a different picture of these killings, he says. “Then the coverage suddenly stopped. Now there is fear. The police and state are vindictive towards journalists who show them in poor light, they face harassment. Also, if a journalist writes anything negative, they risk losing access to information from the police for their daily reporting,” he adds.  Venugopal highlights the encounter of Gulam Rasool, an investigative reporter with Udayam newspaper. Rasool and his friend Vijay Prasad Rao were killed on December 28, 1991, by the Hyderabad police in the outskirts of the city, for allegedly being Naxalites. “Rasool had done stories on the nexus between land mafia and the police. A Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) in Hyderabad was involved according to his report, and this made the reporter a target. The reporter is now dead, and the DSP had an honourable retirement from service,” says the editor. After Rasool’s extra-judicial killing, the journalists in Hyderabad protested and the government eventually appointed a judicial commission. “The commission came out with an irrelevant conclusion that the deceased were Naxalites. They ignored the main issue of whether an encounter took place or if it was a cold-blooded murder,” states Venugopal. Those who have protested at each instance of encounter killings over the decades in erstwhile Andhra Pradesh call encounter killings by the police an “instrument of suppression.” A history of suppression  Since the 1960s, encounters have been used as a form of suppression of the Srikakulam peasant and tribal movement under the leadership of communist revolutionary organisations, say civil rights activists. Many leaders of these movements were gunned down in encounters that some believed to be staged. In the period of the Emergency rule in India from 1975 to 1977, several such killings of political activists were documented by the Civil Liberties Committee and the Organisation for the Protection of Democratic Right (OPDR).  Post Emergency, due to pressure from civil rights groups, the Andhra Pradesh government was forced to appoint a committee headed by Justice V Bhargava in 1978. The committee was to inquire into the encounter killings of 300 alleged Naxals during the time of Emergency. By July 1978, Justice Bhargava would leave Hyderabad citing difficulties and obstruction from the then Congress-led AP government. The commission was soon wound up. “The commission was investigating the Giraipally encounter in which four activists were killed. The Yellandu encounter in which a former MLC and leader of a Marxist-Leninist organisation along with a student leader were killed. The Chilakagutta encounter in which five were shot to death including the state Secretary of the CPI(ML) party. As the evidence presented before the commission was clear enough to damn the police story of the encounter, the government midway wound up the commission,” alleges Pradeep, General Secretary, Indian Federation of Trade Unions. There was a brief respite in fake encounters between 1977 and 1980 but it witnessed a revival in 1981 with the killing of two alleged Naxals in Warangal district, says Pradeep. From then until today, reports of ‘fake; encounters come in from across the country. “We can see a difference in the killings that took place during and before the Emergency, and the later killings. Fake encounter killings became more brazen in the sense that the earlier killings needed the cover of a forest, but post-Emergency they were happening in plain areas, villages and now in cities,” he observes. The ‘80s, ‘90s and the new millenium K Parsaiah and M Ravindra Reddy, who were activists with the CPI (ML) Re-Organising Committee, were arrested separately on July 19 and 21, 1981 respectively. The duo, however, was not produced before the court after the arrest. On July 23 at Suryapet in Nalgonda district, they were taken in a jeep to the magistrate’s residence. They were made to wait outside while the police got the paperwork done. Minutes after the police got their custody, they were shot and killed. The police termed it an encounter. Two other members of the CPI (ML) Re-Organising Committee, Pingili Bhoopathi Reddy and Kavatam Saraiah were arrested on May 27, 1985, when they were sleeping at their lawyer’s residence in Warangal. Within hours of being picked up, they were killed in an encounter at Narsapur, about 60 kilometres from Warangal. These instances of encounter killings were recorded in K Balagopal’s 1988 book Probings in the Political Economy of Agrarian Classes and Conflicts.  On August 8, 1998, the AP police killed 13 activists at Kopardang in Orissa, now known as Odisha. The police reportedly crossed jurisdiction into the deep forests of Rayagada district in Orissa with helicopters and bombs to attack a Naxalite camp. CLC would report that some of the activists were apprehended in the raid and later killed. In 1999, three central committee members of the CPI(ML) People’s War were arrested in the afternoon of December 1, in Bengaluru. They were later taken to Koyyur forest at Karimnagar district, presently in Telangana where they were killed along with two others, reports a joint fact-finding committee of Organisations of Democratic Rights and Civil Liberties. It found that of the five people killed by the police one was a local youth who had no involvement. Friends and family members of the victims had alleged that there were telltale signs of torture on the bodies and post-mortem reports corroborated their allegation.  With the start of the millennium, the ambit of who is encountered gets murky. In 2005, Riaz (Ch Venkateswarlu), a leader with CPI(ML) Janasakthi and three others were killed in an alleged encounter. Over the years, farmers, folk artists, witnesses to encounters and even persons with disabilities have been victims of encounter killings.  A complaint filed by the CLC before the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in 1994 put the number of encounter deaths for the previous three years at 496. Of these, 204 were Naxal activists, rest were students, youth, petty criminals and even elected representatives. Many more complaints and reports have been filed with the NHRC since then.  Setting up a new normal In 2008, for perhaps the first time, encounter killing was seen as a form of ‘instant justice’ by the public at large. There was much anger against three men accused of throwing acid on the face of two women engineering students. One of the women died after a few weeks in the hospital. The three accused were killed in an encounter by the police under the supervision of VC Sajjanar, the then Warangal Superintendent of Police. The encounter took place while the three were out for evidence collection. Sajjanar at present is the Cyberabad Police Commissioner, under whose jurisdiction the December 6 encounter took place. The four men accused of gangrape and murder were also encountered while being taken out for evidence reconstruction. “Now a mentality of lynching is growing. Whenever a crime happens, because there is no justice system and proper investigation, people are getting angry and thus are asking for vengeance. But people have to remember that there is a rule of law and procedure. You cannot take the law into your own hands. If the police takes the law into their own hands anyone can do so, and we would go back to barbaric rule,” notes Venugopal.  A year after the formation of Telangana on April 7, 2015, Viqaruddin Ahmed, and four others accused of terrorisim were killed in a reported encounter. All five men were undertrial prisoners and were being taken from Warangal Central Prison to Hyderabad. According to the police, they attacked personnel, snached a weapon and opened fire while handcuffed to their seats, the other policemen returned fire killing all five. Three months later in June, Vivek and two others would be killed in an encounter. The encounter of Mohammed Nayeemuddin, in August 2016 was even made into a movie by Ram Gopal Varma, titled Cobra. The former Maoist-turned-extortionist and gangster was infamous in erstwhile Andhra Pradesh. He was killed in an encounter at Shadnagar about 50 kilometers from Hyderabad.  On August 1, 2019 Linganna and seven other Maoists were surrounded near the Rollagadda forest area of Bhadradri-Kothagudem district bordering Chhattisgarh. According to the police the Maoists shot first while the police insisted that they surrender. Only Linganna was killed in the return fire, the police claim. CLC members say he was first shot in the right leg, caught and tortured before being killed. The two eyewitnesses who the police say are Maoists managed to escape from custody. Article 21 of the Indian Constitution states, “No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedures established by law.” However, Venugopal and those from the civil rights groups allege that the police have been given a free run to bypass the Constitution. They criticise the state government’s inclination to grant acceleratory promotion to officers involved in encounter killings.  “So if you are an SI and involved in an encounter, you get promoted to CI which would happen in two years as opposed to 10 years. In the name of killing Naxals, the police were given immunity, now they have started extending it to everybody,” says the journalist. “The Indian Police Service was launched by colonial rulers, their basic training is that people are their enemies, and the trend continues now. It has become more sophisticated now,” says Venugopal. “With the help of media and popular culture they are trying to project themselves as heroes, because of that they are able to get away with illegal activity,” he adds. The Hyderabad police this year in November had booked Venugopal as a seventh accused in a case of alleged Maoist conspiracy against the state.
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Hyd vet case: CCTV footage shows truck which had victim's body leaving toll plaza

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Crime
The four accused were killed in a reported encounter on December 6.
CCTV screen grab
Footage from near the Tondupally toll plaza, where veterinarian Disha (name changed) was raped and murdered on November 27, turned out to be a crucial piece of evidence for the Telangana police to crack the case. The four accused in the murder of the 26-year-old were nabbed two days after the crime, and later shot dead in a reported encounter that took place on the morning of December 6. In the CCTV footage that television channel India Today has accessed, a truck is seen entering from the right side of the frame near the Tondupally toll plaza at Shamshabad. The cursor moves along the truck that comes from the direction of the toll plaza and slowly leaves the area. According to the police’s version of events, Disha was carried in this truck after she was raped and smothered to death by the accused. The CCTV footage turned out to be of immense importance as the police were able to track the accused after taking note of the truck’s registration number. CCTV footage shows truck driven by the accused carrying Disha's body leaving the Tondupally toll plaza on Nov 28.@thenewsminute pic.twitter.com/PJl4NkMrFr— Priyanka Richi (@priya_richi) December 9, 2019 According to the details revealed about the case during a press conference held on November 29, the lorry moved from near the toll gate at 10.08 pm, which is when they say the body was put in the lorry. Another CCTV video shows the truck near what is presumably a petrol pump around 1am on November 28. Another CCTV video shows the truck in which Disha was taken by the four suspects near what is presumably a petrol pump around 1.00 am of Nov 28 pic.twitter.com/esUjFAuJK0— Priyanka Richi (@priya_richi) December 9, 2019 By around 10.30 pm, two of the accused who were on the victim’s bike, bought petrol from an Indian Oil pump at Kothur. They then travelled to Shadnagar and stopped on the road above the underpass. Parking the lorry there, they covered the body in a blanket and carried it to the underpass and set it on fire. According to the police, this was done around 2-2.30 am. The accused were arrested, and later shot dead in a reported encounter on December 6. Areef, Shiva, Naveen and Chennakeshavulu – the four accused – were taken to the site of crime in order to reconstruct the crime scene. According to the Hyderabad police, the accused tried to escape and attacked the police during which all four were killed in retaliatory firing. A probe has been ordered and an SIT team will be investigating the alleged encounter.   
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Hyderabad encounter: HC asks state to preserve accused’s bodies till Dec 13

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Judiciary
The Telangana High Court, hearing a plea seeking a probe into the encounter, has appointed Advocate Prakash Reddy as amicus curiae to assist the court in the case.
Image: PTI
In a fresh development, the Telangana High Court, which is hearing petitions seeking a probe into the Hyderabad encounter, has asked officials to preserve the bodies of the four accused till Friday, December 13. The four men, Mohammed Areef, Jollu Shiva, Jollu Naveen and Chennakeshavulu, accused in the 26-year-old Hyderabad veterinarian’s rape and murder case, were shot dead on Friday last week during an alleged exchange of fire. The high court on Monday also directed the officials to move the bodies in air-conditioned ambulances to Hyderabad’s Gandhi Hospital and ordered that they be preserved there till the court’s next hearing.   The high court also appointed Advocate Prakash Reddy as an amicus curiae to assist the court in the case. The court has ordered the Advocate General to produce documents with regards to filing an FIR against police as per the Supreme Court guidelines on the investigation of encounters. The High Court also stated that PUCL V/S State of Maharashtra judgement, where the SC issued these guidelines, is law under Article 141 of the Constitution and therefore must be implemented.  The court has adjourned the case till Thursday, December 12, which is a day after the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear the two petitions filed over the reported encounter. Two Public Interest Litigations (PILs) have been filed in the Supreme Court — one by Advocate ML Sharma who has sought an SIT probe under the scrutiny of the former apex court judges and the second petition has been filed by GS Mani and Pradeep Kumar Yadav, who have sought an independent investigation against the concerned police officials involved in the reported encounter. Earlier this week, soon after the reported encounter on December 6, where the Cyberabad Police gunned down the four accused in alleged "retaliatory firing" during a scene recreation at the crime spot for investigation, a petition was filed in the high court seeking a probe into the incident.  Several women civil rights activists had filed the petition seeking judicial intervention in the probe. Agreeing to hear their plea, the court had directed officials to preserve the accused’s bodies until today (Monday).  On December 9, a CD (video-recording) of the post-mortem was also submitted as per the court’s orders. Read: Do cops have license to kill? What SC and NHRC guidelines on encounters say 
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