Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Ahead of Ivanka visit, beggars told to keep off Hyderabad streets

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu letters@hindustant­imes.com

HYDERABAD: The Hyderabad police declared begging an offence and banned people from seeking alms on the city’s streets for two months, days ahead of Ivanka Trump’s visit here.

Sources said the ban has been brought in to avoid any inconvenie­nce to foreign delegates, who will be arriving in the city for the Global Entreprene­urship Summit from November 28-30.

In a late night order issued on Tuesday, Hyderabad police commission­er M Mahendar Reddy said begging has been banned from Wednesday to January 7, 2018 under Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code.

“The beggars are also employing children and handicappe­d persons to solicit or receive alms at the main junctions of the road. These acts are dangerous to the safety of the vehicular traffic and public in general,” reads the commission­er’s order.

Within hours of the ban coming i nto force, t he police launched a drive to shift beggars from popular areas like Jubilee Hills, Madhapur, Banjara Hills and Punjagutta junction to the temporary rehabilita­tion centre set up near the Hyderabad central prison in Chanchalgu­da.

The Global Entreprene­urship Summit is being jointly organised by US and Indian government­s. It will be inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump’s daughter, Ivanka.

Hyderabad is also scheduled to host the World Telugu Conference in December and the Indian Science Congress in the first week of January.

In 2000, the then Chandrabab­u Naidu government of then nonbifurca­ted state of Andhra Pradesh had imposed a similar ban on the movement of beggars during the visit of then US President Bill Clinton to Hyderabad.

 ?? AFP ?? Beggars in Hyderabad take shelter inside a temporary rehabilita­tion centre, where they were shifted after the police’s ban order.
AFP Beggars in Hyderabad take shelter inside a temporary rehabilita­tion centre, where they were shifted after the police’s ban order.

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