The Asian Age

Sabarimala shrine opens, no women of 10- 50 enter

30- year- old woman at base camp; shrine a fortress

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celibate deity, the police said a 30- year- old woman had reached the base camp at Pamba along with her husband and two children. However, the woman, Anju, a native of Cherthala in Alappuzha district, told the police that she was not keen to visit the shrine and admitted she had come to Pamba following pressure by her husband Abilash. The police claimed it was her husband who was adamant that the family, including their children aged seven and four, do the pilgrimage.

The Kerala police spoke in conflictin­g voices about the developmen­t, with a local official claiming the woman had sought police protection, while superinten­dent of police Rahul R. Nair said the woman had not sought a police escort.

As the husband continued to stick to his stand, the police decided to ask

their relatives to come to Pamba to take a final decision. Anju and her family are waiting at the police control room as the temple closed its doors at 10 pm. Sabarimala virtually turned into a fortress with hundreds of police personnel, including armed commandos, dotting the place where surveillan­ce cameras and mobile phone jammers were installed. Thousands of pilgrims entered the temple as temple tantri ( head priest) Kandararu Rajeevaru and melshanti ( chief priest) Unnikrishn­an Namboothir­i jointly opened the portals of the sanctum sanctorum at around 5 pm. No special puja will be performed Monday, the temple authoritie­s earlier said, adding the doors will be closed at 10 pm. It will open again on Tuesday for the “Sree Chitira Atta Thirunal” puja to mark the birth anniversar­y of the last king of the princely state of Travancore Chithira Thirunal Balarama Varma.

Several BJP leaders and Ayyappa Dharama Sena president Rahul Easwar reached “Sannidhana­m”, the temple complex, in the evening.

Security at Sabarimala was stepped up following violent protests by fringe Hindu groups and mainstream political parties like the Congress and the BJP against the Kerala government’s decision to enforce the Supreme Court order lifting the ban on girls and women of menstruati­ng age from entering the temple.

Frequent checking and frisking by the police did not go down well with devotees and right- wing activists who protested at several places. TV channels showed heated exchanges between devotees and the police over the frisking. Devotees complained of lack of amenities at the base camps that were damaged in the unpreceden­ted floods in August. Even journalist­s were not allowed to leave the Nilackal base camp for Pamba on way to the temple in the morning, but the restrictio­n was lifted later in the day.

 ?? — PTI ?? Devotees arrive at the Sabarimala temple in Kerala’s Pathanamth­itta district on Monday. This is the second time the hill shrine opened for “darshan” after the Supreme Court allowed the entry of women of all age groups.
— PTI Devotees arrive at the Sabarimala temple in Kerala’s Pathanamth­itta district on Monday. This is the second time the hill shrine opened for “darshan” after the Supreme Court allowed the entry of women of all age groups.

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