The Sunday Guardian

SociAl mEdiA AddEd To BEngAluRu fiRE

Along with the videos, some instigatin­g and inflammato­ry messages went viral on WhatsApp groups, Facebook and Twitter.

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Ayoung, primary school boy was seen asking around if it were safe to head towards his house after he witnessed a truck being set ablaze and stone being pelted at the police. Just half a kilometre away a mob had forcibly driven a goods lorry to the middle of the busy Mysore Road and set it ablaze. Such scenes were common in Bengaluru this past week as the Karnataka capital burnt over the modified order of the Supreme Court on 12 September, asking the state to release Cauvery water to Tamil Nadu. Nobody knew what was happening as public transport came to a standstill, people got stuck in offices and the city police struggled to take control of the situation as mobs at various places carried out full-fledged riots.

A little past 11 am on Monday, the Supreme Court, hearing Karnataka’s petition asking for modificati­on of the Apex Court’s 5 September order, asked the state to release 12,000 cusecs of Cauvery water to Tamil Nadu every day till the next hearing on 20 September, 2016.

Initially, many in Karnataka rejoiced that the state had been given a relief as it had to release 12,000 cusecs of water instead of 15,000 cusecs every day according to the earlier order. But soon it dawned upon everyone that the Apex Court had asked the state to release water until the 20th of the month— that is for five extra days. Thus, Karnataka in totality would be releasing more water than a total of 150,000 cusecs that it would have released until 15 September, going by the 5 September SC order. Soon after, around 12.30 pm, first reports of the backlash emerged. A Tamil Nadu registrati­on number bearing truck was set ablaze near NICE road toll booth in south west Bengaluru. This was the start of a riot that stretched for more than 12 hours, a riot that the city had not witnessed since it became the famed IT capital of the country.

Soon multiple reports emerged of trucks being set ablaze, establishm­ents with Tamil Nadu connection­s being targeted and roads being blocked by agitators. Fearing trouble, schools shut down abruptly and asked parents to take their children home. IT companies and start-ups asked employees to stop work and get back home safely. Bengaluru’s metro service, the Namma Metro, suspended service. The city’s public transport corporatio­n, the BMTC stopped the majority of its bus services across the city. Cab drivers didn’t log on to Uber or Ola, neither did autos. The city came to a standstill.

The riots were largely spo- radic incidents around west and south west Bengaluru. In Timber Yard Layout, a mob of more than 100 had set five trucks ablaze, some of them carrying plywood. The local police, outnumbere­d as it were, came under stone pelting and caught in this cross-fire were innocent and clueless civilians and journalist­s, including this one.

On Mysore Road, at various places, the roads were blocked, tyres were burnt and any trucks bearing Tamil Nadu registrati­on number plates were set ablaze.

With the situation getting out of hand, the Bangalore police commission­er, by 5 pm, imposed Section 144 across the city. The special riot control unit of the Rapid Action Force, Karnataka State Reserve Police, Quick Response Teams, City Armed Reserve, ITBP, CISF all of them numbering around 15,000 were pressed into stopping the riots in the city. They could not.

By sunset, there were more reports of violence. 42 buses belonging to KPN Travels were gutted in the inferno after miscreants hurled petrol bombs. Several other vehicles were also damaged at various points in the city; a few showrooms also suffered extensive damage due to stone pelting.

As the city was slipping into an uneasy sleep on one of its most violent days, it became clear that it was not over yet. The riot had taken its first casualty: 25-year-old Umesh Kumar was killed in police firing after a mob at Hegganahal­li in west Bengaluru tried to torch a police patrol jeep. Another person was seriously injured. Anticipati­ng further trouble, Bengaluru police commission­er, N.S. Megharik immediatel­y declared a curfew in 16 police station limits of the city — a first for Karnataka’s capital in this century. This brought on the city an uneasy calm.

By the end of the day, 78 trucks and buses were com- pletely gutted and nearly 50 vehicles were damaged. Industry body Assocham claimed that Karnataka, specifical­ly Bengaluru, suffered losses to the tune of Rs 22,000-25,000 crore from damage to public infrastruc­ture and interrupti­ons in transport and business.

A desperate Karnataka Chief Minister, Siddaramai­ah wrote to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalith­aa, seeking protection for Kannadigas in her state and also put out a video message appealing for calm. Siddaramai­ah said that every Kannadiga was pained that the state had been at the receiving end of unfair allocation as far as Cauvery water distributi­on was concerned but people should not resort to violence. “I appeal to people in both states to maintain calm. Despite this if someone indulges in vandalism they will be dealt with an iron hand,” he said.

By Tuesday morning, the Union government had sent additional paramilita­ry forces to the city after a telephonic conversati­on between CM Siddaramia­h and Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh the previous day. Except for a couple of stray incidents, the city largely remained peaceful and limped back to normalcy. The riots that started around noon in the western and south-westerns parts of the city, went on for hours, with the police nowhere to be seen in action for the initial few hours. The Special Forces called in were deployed only by evening.

At the Timber Yard Layout in south-west Bengaluru, where this reporter was present, the mob had set four trucks on fire and while the trucks were reduced to ashes, neither the fire brigade nor the police made it to the place. The jurisdicti­onal police, which came under stone pelting from the mob, started hitting the streets and acting only after the Rapid Action Force was deployed in the late evening. At several places, the police reportedly showed absolute restrain while the situation demanded them to deal it with an iron hand.

Head of Aarin Capital and Bengaluru resident, Mohandas Pai hit out at the state government for being lax in not anticipati­ng the trouble and increasing security after the order by the Supreme Court: “We know that these places where the riots happened and Mysore Road are prone to trouble. Why didn’t the state government deploy more forces there? By the time they deployed the forces, enough damage had been done. The Supreme Court order is definitely a blow to the state, but the state government cannot allow lawlessnes­s.”

To prove that the state had not gone soft on hooliganis­m, more than 300 people were arrested and booked, while the Deputy Commission­er of Police ( DCP) of West and Southwest Division was transferre­d.

The BJP has hit out at the state government, saying it failed to take adequate measures. City MLA and BJP spokespers­on S. Suresh Kumar says that the state government failed in anticipati­ng the riots: “They were caught off guard, they should have made necessary law and order arrangemen­ts keeping in mind the chequered past over the issue and violence witnessed in 1991.” Ever since the Supreme Court ordered the Karnataka government to release 15,000 cusecs of Cauvery water to Tamil Nadu, there have been largely peaceful protests in Mandya and Bengaluru every day. So why did the protests turn violent on Monday? By Saturday night, several WhatsApp messages and posts on Facebook showing one Santhosh, an engineerin­g student in the south Bengaluru locality of Banashanka­ri being thrashed by a fringe proKannada group went viral. Santhosh was attacked and made to apologise under duress for posting photograph­s of Kannada stars during a Cauvery protest and ridiculing them and making derogatory comments. Several news channels on both sides of the border picked up the video and played it on loop.

Similarly, there were other videos including one which showed a Bullet bike on fire which social media messages attributed to the Cauvery protests. While in reality it was an accidental fire reported a few days earlier. Along with the videos, some instigatin­g and inflammato­ry messages went viral on WhatsApp groups, Facebook and Twitter.

This perhaps triggered a backlash in Tamil Nadu as the Tamil news channels aired the videos, and by Monday morning most of the Kannada news channels carried images of Kannadigas being attacked in Rameswaram, their vehicles being vandalised and hotels owned by Kannadigas coming under attack in Chennai. This again was played on loop.

The Bengaluru City Police are truly pioneers when it comes to the use of social media in policing and it can be safely said that they are ahead by miles in this aspect when compared to their counterpar­ts in India. Bangalore City Police’s Twitter handle @BlrCityPol­ice has more Twitter followers (307K) than New York City Police Department’s Twitter handle @NYPDnews (235K).

But unfortunat­ely, this social media-savvy police department failed to sense the anger that was being fuelled on by social media and was going viral. On 12 September, all Twitter handles related to Bengaluru City Police started to send out messages asking citizens not to believe rumours on social media. The city police commission­er’s Twitter handle, @cpblr tweeted, “Please do not pay heed to rumours floating on WhatsApp reg #CauveryPro­tests. Rely on @ BlrCityPol­ice & @blrcitytra­ffic for authentic updates.” But perhaps it was too late as the fire on social media had spilled on to the streets of the IT city. We definitely have not heard the last in the Cauvery water sharing tussle in this monsoon season. The Chief Minister has written to the Prime Minister, seeking his interventi­on, but the BJP sees it as a political ploy. The BJP spokespers­on says that the Congress state government is doing politics on a sensitive issue: “When the state agreed to release 10,000 cusecs as a goodwill gesture and then later agreed to obey both the court orders and the matter is pending in court, how can the executive or legislatur­e or the Prime Minister intervene? They are trying to pass the blame on to the Prime Minister.”

In the meanwhile, the Supreme Court will once again hear the matter on 20 September, where Karnataka will be hoping for a relief. But the state is pinning its hope on the special leave petition that Karnataka has filed challengin­g the Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal award given in 2007. The final hearing is on 18 October.

But the latest riot adds to the chequered and often violent history that the two states have had over this water sharing tussle, which is more than a century old.

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