Journalist shot dead at home
BANGALORE: An Indian journalist was gunned down outside her home in the southern city of Bangalore — the latest in a string of deadly attacks targeting journalists or outspoken critics of religious superstition and extreme Hindu politics.
The assailants fled on a motorcycle after spraying a hail of bullets at Gauri Lankesh on Tuesday night as she was leaving her car outside her home in the Karnataka state capital.
Police said they were searching for leads, but that it was too early to say who killed her. Top police officer RK Dutta said he had met Lankesh recently, but that she did not mention any threat to her life.
Members of Indian journalism associations expressed outrage and said they would protest in New Delhi.
“The silencing of a journalist in this manner has dangerous portents for democracy,” the Indian Women’s Press Corps said in a statement.
Lankesh, 55, was the editor of the independent Kannada-language magazine Lankesh Patrike.
In November, she was found guilty of defaming lawmakers from the governing Bharatiya Janata Party in a 2008 story — a case she said was politically motivated, vowing to challenge her conviction in higher court.
Within hours of Lankesh’s killing Tuesday night, Indian politicians from all parties condemned the attack.
Karnataka’s Chief Minister Minister Siddaramaiah called the death “shocking” and said three police teams were investigating.
India has seen a string of killings in recent years targeting independent journalists and critics of religious superstition, stoking worries about the rise of extremism and intolerance.
In 2015, scholar Malleshappa M Kalburgi was shot dead at his Bangalore home, following death threats from right-wing Hindu groups after he criticized idol worship and superstitious beliefs by Hindus.