Khaleej Times

Sabarimala shrine opens amid tight security and protests

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sabarimala — The Sabarimala temple on Monday opened at 5pm for a one-day special pilgrimage amid tight security.

The temple was to close at 10pm, and then reopen on Tuesday morning before finally closing at 10pm.

According to figures till 4.15pm, 5,540 devotees had taken the pathway to the temple hilltop, compared with less than 1,000 devotees the same day last year.

The famed temple had witnessed massive protests against the September 28 Supreme Court verdict allowing hitherto banned age group of girls and women to enter the Lord Ayyappa shrine. On Monday, many devotees complained and raised slogans as the police stopped them for checking in the morning.

At 8am, the police opened the barricade and started allowing devotees to walk to Pamba — the base town of the temple. Hundreds of devotees at Nilackal and Erumely were seen arguing as they faced repeated obstacles from the police for advancing.

What irked them the most was the policemen’s insistence to check their identity proofs and the need to answer several questions as they tried to reach the sanctum sanctorum that would close at 10pm on Tuesday.

At Erumely, all devotee vehicles were stopped. The devotees protested and raised Lord Ayyappa slogans as they arrived at a bus depot of the Kerala State Road Transport Corporatio­n (KSRTC), demanding transport to proceed to the hilltop shrine.

“We have been asked to wait since last (Sunday) night. We are all on a pilgrimage and we have no other intention. We are not particular that our vehicles should be allowed. The KSRTC should then operate the buses to take us forward,” said an angry devotee, as others echoed his demand.

Following the growing number of protesters, the police agreed to allow private vehicles from Erumely till Nilackal.

Vishnu Das, 70, was angry at the way the police were managing the devotees’ progress. He said it was the first time in his 56 years of visit

to the shrine that he has been put to such difficulti­es.

“The police are out to create trouble and the scene here is as if it’s a battlegrou­nd. The police is very intimidati­ng. Till last year, there were no issues at all. The visit to Sabarimala is supposed to bring solace, but this time everything has changed,” said Das, as he walked towards Pamba.

The arrangemen­ts at the temple town are such that all devotees arriving by their vehicles have to get down at Nilackal and then take a KSRTC bus to Pamba, about 20km,

and then start the trek to the temple, situated on a hilltop.

Sreekumar Varma of the Pandalam Royal family, the custodian of the jewellery of the Sabarimala temple, said he was hurt by the way things have unfolded.

“All along it has been a peaceful pilgrimage to Sabarimala. But today the temple has been turned into a ‘police station’. It pains us all,” said Varma.

Senior BJP leaders M.T. Ramesh and K. Surendran were spotted at the temple top and both of them said they are there as devotees.

“Our only request to the temple authoritie­s is that the devotees should be given facilities, and we seek nothing else,” said Surendran.

The temple town is witnessing one of its most stringent security arrangemen­ts. There were more than 2,300 police officials posted at various points up the pilgrimage path after the state took over the shrine’s security on Saturday.

Several metal detectors have been kept at various points and crowd combating arrangemen­ts are also in place. The media was allowed to go up the pathway at 9.15am.

The Kerala government has announced it would implement the apex court’s ruling, pitting it against the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and numerous Hindu groups which have been up in arms against the verdict.

Meanwhile, the Kerala Police on Monday installed mobile jammers near the Sabarimala temple to prevent the tantri and other shrine officials from interactin­g with the media and to dissuade live visuals.

From October 17 to 22, when the temple was open for the monthly puja, the temple tantri and officials said they would close the shrine if any female devotee in the 10-50 age group tried to enter the sanctum sanctorum, as it was against the temple tradition. —

 ?? PTI ?? devotees trek from the nilakkal base camp towards the Sabarimala temple in Pathanamth­itta on Monday. this is the second time the hill temple opened after the Supreme Court allowed entry of women of all age groups. —
PTI devotees trek from the nilakkal base camp towards the Sabarimala temple in Pathanamth­itta on Monday. this is the second time the hill temple opened after the Supreme Court allowed entry of women of all age groups. —
 ?? AP ?? Policewoma­n, above the age of 50, who have been deployed for security return after worshippin­g at the Sabarimala temple on Monday. —
AP Policewoma­n, above the age of 50, who have been deployed for security return after worshippin­g at the Sabarimala temple on Monday. —

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