Thursday, 19 December 2013

Devyani Khobragade case: Full statement issued by US attorney Preet Bharara
[Editor: A spoof video which takes a dig at Indian Deputy Consul General, Devyani Khobragde in the US has been placed below. This video is not in very good taste, as far as Hindus and Hinduism are concerned]
U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara
December 19, 2013: In a highly unusual move for a federal prosecutor, US Attorney Preet Bharara issued a lengthy statement on Wednesday explaining the arrest of Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade and saying she was accorded courtesies most other defendants wouldn't get.

Here's the full statement:

There has been much misinformation and factual inaccuracy in the reporting on the charges against Devyani Khobragade. It is important to correct these inaccuracies because they are misleading people and creating an inflammatory atmosphere on an unfounded basis. Although I am quite limited in my role as a prosecutor in what I can say, which in many ways constrains my ability here to explain the case to the extent I would like, I can nevertheless make sure the public record is clearer than it has been thus far.

First, Ms. Khobragade was charged based on conduct, as is alleged in the Complaint, that shows she clearly tried to evade U.S. law designed to protect from exploitation the domestic employees of diplomats and consular officers. Not only did she try to evade the law, but as further alleged, she caused the victim and her spouse to attest to false documents and be a part of her scheme to lie to U.S. government officials. So it is alleged not merely that she sought to evade the law, but that she affirmatively created false documents and went ahead with lying to the U.S. government about what she was doing. One wonders whether any government would not take action regarding false documents being submitted to it in order to bring immigrants into the country. One wonders even more pointedly whether any government would not take action regarding that alleged conduct where the purpose of the scheme was to unfairly treat a domestic worker in ways that violate the law. And one wonders why there is so much outrage about the alleged treatment of the Indian national accused of perpetrating these acts, but precious little outrage about the alleged treatment of the Indian victim and her spouse?

Second, as the alleged conduct of Ms. Khobragade makes clear, there can be no plausible claim that this case was somehow unexpected or an injustice. Indeed, the law is clearly set forth on the State Department website. Further, there have been other public cases in the United States involving other countries, and some involving India, where the mistreatment of domestic workers by diplomats or consular officers was charged criminally, and there have been civil suits as well. In fact, the Indian government itself has been aware of this legal issue, and that its diplomats and consular officers were at risk of violating the law. The question then may be asked: Is it for U.S. prosecutors to look the other way, ignore the law and the civil rights of victims (again, here an Indian national), or is it the responsibility of the diplomats and consular officers and their government to make sure the law is observed?

Third, Ms. Khobragade, the Deputy General Consul for Political, Economic, Commercial and Women's Affairs, is alleged to have treated this victim illegally in numerous ways by paying her far below minimum wage, despite her child care responsibilities and many household duties, such that it was not a legal wage. The victim is also alleged to have worked far more than the 40 hours per week she was contracted to work, and which exceeded the maximum hour limit set forth in the visa application. Ms. Khobragade, as the Complaint charges, created a second contract that was not to be revealed to the U.S. government, that changed the amount to be paid to far below minimum wage, deleted the required language protecting the victim from other forms of exploitation and abuse, and also deleted language that stated that Ms. Khobragade agreed to "abide by all Federal, state, and local laws in the U.S." As the Complaint states, these are only "in part" the facts, and there are other facts regarding the treatment of the victim - that were not consistent with the law or the representations made by Ms. Khobragade -- that caused this Office and the State Department, to take legal action.

Fourth, as to Ms. Khobragade's arrest by State Department agents, this is a prosecutor's office in charge of prosecution, not the arrest or custody, of the defendant, and therefore those questions may be better referred to other agencies. I will address these issues based on the facts as I understand them. Ms. Khobragade was accorded courtesies well beyond what other defendants, most of whom are American citizens, are accorded. She was not, as has been incorrectly reported, arrested in front of her children. The agents arrested her in the most discreet way possible, and unlike most defendants, she was not then handcuffed or restrained. In fact, the arresting officers did not even seize her phone as they normally would have. Instead, they offered her the opportunity to make numerous calls to arrange personal matters and contact whomever she needed, including allowing her to arrange for child care. This lasted approximately two hours. Because it was cold outside, the agents let her make those calls from their car and even brought her coffee and offered to get her food. It is true that she was fully searched by a female Deputy Marshal -- in a private setting -- when she was brought into the U.S. Marshals' custody, but this is standard practice for every defendant, rich or poor, American or not, in order to make sure that no prisoner keeps anything on his person that could harm anyone, including himself. This is in the interests of everyone's safety.

Fifth, as has been reported, the victim's family has been brought to the United States. As also has been reported, legal process was started in India against the victim, attempting to silence her, and attempts were made to compel her to return to India. Further, the Victim's family reportedly was confronted in numerous ways regarding this case. Speculation about why the family was brought here has been rampant and incorrect. Some focus should perhaps be put on why it was necessary to evacuate the family and what actions were taken in India vis-a-vis them. This Office and the Justice Department are compelled to make sure that victims, witnesses and their families are safe and secure while cases are pending.

Finally, this Office's sole motivation in this case, as in all cases, is to uphold the rule of law, protect victims, and hold accountable anyone who breaks the law - no matter what their societal status and no matter how powerful, rich or connected they are.

Courtesy: NDTV Ltd
Was Devyani’s maid an American Spy
~RSN Singh
When the senior officer in R&AW MrRavinder Singh was spirited away with his family by the Americans, the then National Security Advisor of India had commented that the issue was not that there was a mole but why was he so important to the US establishment.

In the instant case the same question becomes relevant, i.e. why Sangeeta Richard, a domestic help of the Deputy Consul General (DCG) DevyaniKhobragade, was so important to the Americans that her family was whisked away to the US two days before the criminal treatment meted out to the DCG by the authorities in that country.

Was Sangeeta recruited by the US Intelligence Agencies to gain information of Indian diplomatic mission in the US?

The desperation to protect Sangeeta Richard and her family by the US authorities says it all. Such desperation betrays that possibly Sangeeta had been recruited and had been converted into what is called in Intelligence parlance ‘asset’.

Plausibly this asset was discovered and uncovered by the Consul General. It could be this fact that compelled Devyani to seek intervention of Delhi High Court, which issued an interim injunction against Sangeeta, preventing her from taking legal action in the US.

Further the Metropolitan Magistrate of the South District Court issued an arrest warrant against her and requested the US government to locate her. The sudden grant of Visa and escape of Sangeeta’s family members to the US implies that the authorities in that country were closely monitoring the situation with regards to its ‘asset’ and its family.

This abrupt development may have been engendered by the imminent possibility of the Indian judiciary tightening its noose on the family members of Sangeeta.

It is therefore evident that Sangeetawas not absconding but in the safe-custody of the American authorities. The exposure of such assets, it must be remembered compromises the entire espionage framework of the hostile country. Any price therefore to protect the framework is less.

Devyani, it seems has paid the price.

The entire family could not have been spirited out of India, the manner in which it was done, without engineering some extremely sensational diplomatic incident, which carried both the stamp of morality and the object of provocation.

In any country in the world such incidents involving diplomats is rare of the rarest. Say in India, if a diplomat, at any level, of any country were to be involved in an accident, for instance running over a pedestrian by an automobile the matter would be reported right up the chain, i.e. from constable to SHO to Assistant Commission to Deputy Commission to Commissioner of Police to Home Secretary to Home Minister and finally to the Prime Minister.
It is because the factor of ‘diplomatic immunity’ is of overwhelming consideration.

In Devyani’s case, therefore, it was not a matter of ‘law taking its natural course’, but a clear case of deliberate provocation which entailed hand cuffing and stripping her. India has been provoked and outraged, the Americans have tried to gain a moral high-ground and the US intelligence ‘asset’ or ‘assets’ (Sangeeta and her other family members) have gained sympathy and credibility. A perfect script!

The attempt by the US to acquire a high-moral ground is nauseating. The morality part in favour of the Devyani has been more than upheld by the stance of the Court's in India.

They would not have taken the position, they did, if it was a matter only confined to wages.

The espionage angle seems to be very strong in the instant case.

Morality and the US diplomacy have always been contradiction in terms, rather antagonistic. If the US was so concerned about the sensitivities and laws of other countries, it would have extradited David Headley to India.

If it was so sensitive about disparity in wages, it would not have outsourced the job of call centers to other countries.

Indian youth working in these call centers spend sleepless nights to make America move during the day, for pittance.

Moreover the discerning people of India have abundantly understood the consummate skill with which American spin-doctors create agendas for destabilizing a country so that the economic and other strategic agendas could be pursued.

It began with a concept called 'march of democracies'. It then graduated to 'human rights'.

Then many countries like India were told that they were sitting on the mountain of 'AIDS bomb'. Now the latest in the inventory is a concept called 'modern slaves'.

This theme is being flogged on Western television channels. It seeks to say that 50 percent of India constitutes 'modern slaves', who are hostage to the remaining.

This is clever device to drive a wedge right through the middle of the Indian population. It is also a propaganda to convey the impression in the world that most countries including India are despotic, cruel and uncivilized.

With regards to slaves, it is another matter that the Father of America, George Washington, bequeathed his property to his wife, which included 'slaves'.

The purpose of this article is not to delve into the details of the wages angle being justified to outrage the diplomatic and personal sanctity of Devyani.

Nevertheless, it would be pertinent to mention that the arrangement and contract between the DCG and the Sangeeta Richard is laudable by any standards, and anybody who questions it is doing so due to motivated considerations.

The US has used this device of Sangeeta Richard to propagate this concept of 'modern slaves' and thus cause disaffection in the Indian society. In this bid they are being served by many Indian-Americans, who love to decry their motherland at the slightest behest of their adopted fatherland.

Echoing the same 'modern slaves' concept but in different tenor, is a newly created political party, known to be receiving huge funding from American entities. Apart from the Maoists, the Church and the jihadis this is a new political US leverage.

This author has taken the opportunity to stick his neck out and proclaim with all the emphasis that Devyani issue is only a veneer to protect a espionage network.

(All views expressed in this article are the author's personal opinion.)

Courtesy: www.sify.com
Father aspired for berth in RS, daughter has Adarsh flat & more
Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade’s
father Uttam Khobragade
PhotoThe Hindu
Mumbai, Thu Dec 19 2013: Uttam Khobragade, a 1984-batch IAS officer and father of India's deputy consul-general in New York, Devyani Khobragade, aspired to become a Rajya Sabha MP following his retirement. Khobragade, who was BEST General Manager, FDA Commissioner, MHADA CEO and suburban Mumbai collector, had approached political parties soon after his retirement early last year.
He is not affiliated to any party but confirmed that he is "in talks with some parties". Khobragade, 62, has been vocal about the alleged ill-treatment meted out to his daughter by US authorities.

He comes from a scheduled caste family in Chandrapur district. He approached the Republican Party of India (Athawale) in the hope of a Rajya Sabha nomination from the party.

While RPI(A) president Ramdas Athawale said Khobragade approached him first, Khobragade claimed it was the party that got in touch with him offering to make him its executive president.

"Ramdas Athawale approached me to become the executive president of the party. I asked for a Rajya Sabha nomination which he was not willing to promise. So the talks ended there," said Khobragade.

Athawale, who is himself known to be seeking a Rajya Sabha nomination, said Khobragade was offered a Lok Sabha seat from Ramtek in Latur which he rejected. Sources said Khobragade is believed to have approached several factions of Dalit parties.

Asked if he has joined Ram Vilas Paswan's Lok Jan Shakti Party, he said: "I did have talks with them but the party has no presence in Maharashtra so I opted out. I am in talks with some parties at present whose names I am not willing to disclose right now."

Khobragade's name had also figured in the Adarsh Housing Society scam and he was accused by the CBI of helping Adarsh use higher FSI than permitted by allegedly transferring an adjoining plot reserved for a BEST bus depot to Adarsh. He and Devyani, it was alleged, had got a flat each in the society as quid pro quo.

Khobragade, who had denied any wrongdoing in the case, Wednesday said he and Devyani would not return the apartments.

"We purchased the flat under the reserved quota after paying the correct price. Why should we return the flat?" he asked.

Devyani, who already owned a house in Mumbai — which too was allotted under the state government's 10 per cent quota — got the Adarsh flat after she applied for it.

The Adarsh apartment is one of 11 immovable properties listed by Devyani in her returns for the year ending December 31, 2012, on the external affairs ministry website.

The other 10 comprise 25 acres of farmland (inherited) in Chandrapur district, 8 acres of farmland (inherited) in Ratnagiri district, 2 acres of farmland (inherited) in Raigad district, a 5,000 sq ft plot (purchased) in Alibaug, an 800 sq ft flat (purchased by father, inherited) in Pune district, a 500 sq ft flat (purchased) in Aurangabad district, a 10,000 sq ft plot (purchased by father, inherited) in Raigad district, a 200 sq m plot (purchased) in Greater Noida, a 3.97-are plot (transferred by father) in Kerala's Ernakulam district, 2-02 and 2-70 ares of land (gifted by father) in Ernakulam district.

— with inputs from ENS, New Delhi.



CourtesyThe Indian Express

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

India judge ordered to release daughter held over lover
Chittorgarh Fort, Rajasthan, India
NEW DELHI, December 17, 2013: India´s top court Monday ordered a judge release his 30-year-old daughter who was being detained because he disapproved of her marrying her boyfriend from a different caste.

The Supreme Court ordered Supriya Rathore be reunited with her boyfriend who was forced to take legal action to have her released from her father, a high court judge in the northwestern state of Rajasthan. “She is a major and has the liberty to make her choice in marriage,” judges H.L. Dattu and C. Nagappan told the couple, who were in the court in New Delhi for the ruling.

The boyfriend, Siddharath Mukherjee, had petitioned the court, saying the father, who belongs to the Hindu Rajput warrior caste, opposed his daughter marrying a man from the Bengali-speaking Brahmin caste. Rathore herself had also emailed police and the courts during her month-long detention at the family home in Jaipur city, seeking their help to get her released and reunited.

Acting on the boyfriend´s petition, the court ordered police on December 12 to transport Supriya to New Delhi for Monday´s hearing.

“I have no complaints against anyone including my parents,” Supriya told the court during the hearing. “I love them all but I want to go with Siddharath Mukherjee as I want to marry him,” she said, as the court offered her protection if she felt threatened in any way.

India has officially banned its hereditary caste hierarchy but the rigid system still exists. Young couples are targeted by their families, clans or communities who disapprove of relationships outside of their own castes.

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

You know I am attracted to you' Justice AK Ganguly told intern & kissed her arm
[Editor: It seems that the best way to remove a person from an important positions is to bring in a sexual harassment case and then BUY the GREAT INDIAN MEDIA; half the job is done. If any case has to be initiated against any former judge of the honourable Supreme Court of India, then it has to be done by the application of standard procedures and not by publishing the affidavit of the "alleged victim". The office of the Additional Solicitor General of India has gone BONKERS or what?]
New Delhi, Dec 16, 2013: The law intern who has accused Justice AK Ganguly of sexual harassment told a court panel that the ex-SC judge kissed her and said that he loved me.

Following the allegations, the Chief Justice announced that he had set up a committee in his administrative capacity, of three judges, two being incumbent chief justices and a woman judge, to investigate and give a report to the Chief Justice.

Justice Ganguly, who now heads the West Bengal Human Rights Commission, had expressed “shock” over the allegation and said he was “shattered“.

“I am denying everything. I have told the committee that all the allegations levelled by the intern are wrong. I don’t know how such allegations have been levelled against me,” he told

According to Indian Express, in his statement before the court, apart from denying the allegations, Ganguly said the new law of 2013 making sexual harassment an offence did not apply to him as the alleged incident was of 2012, forgetting that outraging the modesty of a woman was always an offence, a law under which K P S Gill was prosecuted successfully by Rupan Deol Bajaj.

Courtesy: The Daily Bhaskar

Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Need to Rethink Article 370: Sunanada Pushkar Backs Modi
Photo: www.filmitadka.in
New Delhi | Dec 03, 2013: BJP prime ministerial candidate and Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who in his recent rally in Jammu said that there was a need for debate on Article 370 has received unexpected support from Congress MP and Union Minister Shashi Tharoor's wife Sunanda Pushkar.

In an interview to CNN-IBN, she said that Article 370, which gives special status to Jammu and Kashmir, needs to be reconsidered because it discriminates against women.

She said that there is definitely a need to rethink beacuse there is a lot of discrimination against women. "My friends from Kashmir called me and said that we girls do not get government jobs once we marry someone who is a non-Kashmiri. The girls who get married into Kashmiri families, who are not Kashmiri girls, they get government jobs and their children have all of the rights," she added.

However, she said that Article 370 has not impeded development in the in J&K, adding that she agrees that the Kashmiri Pandits need to be rehabilitated.

Courtesy: Outlook
Rare thalassaemia gene detected in Bengal family
Kolkata, Nov 29, 2013, 03 A rare thalassaemia gene mutation that could be specific to Bengali Brahmins has been detected by researchers in Kolkata.

The 'Fannin Lubbock' mutation is a silent one, which cannot be detected in regular thalassaemia screening and has so far only been traced in a group of thalassaemia carriers in the Mediterranean region of Europe.

 What the discovery means is that unwitting carriers of the gene can now get a confirmatory test so that they don't end up marrying another carrier and putting their child at risk of this deadly disease. A team of experts under the guidance of senior scientist Jayasree Basak is researching the mutation and its origin.

Fannin Lubbock mutation had not been reported from anywhere else in the world till scientists at Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) chanced upon four thalassaemia carriers of a single family in Bandel last month.

The three women and a child had the rare mutation. Since no member of the family - a conservative Brahmin one belonging to the Barendra sect - has ever married outside the caste, scientists are intrigued about the source of the mutation and a study has been launched.

Fannin Lubbock mutation alters the beta globin gene structure in haemoglobin and is impossible to detect in blood count tests. It's only revealed on molecular analysis. The defect doesn't lead to thalassaemia. It merely makes the person a carrier but a child of two thalassaemia carriers has a 25% chance of being born with the ailment.

The discovery of the gene in the Barendra sect was almost by accident. A female member of the family visited NCRI for treatment after she had post-natal complications and a low haemoglobin count. While regular tests didn't show anything abnormal, molecular analysis revealed an alteration in the haemoglobin structure.

"It was strikingly similar to Fannin Lubbock that has so far been detected only in Europe. We compared her mutation to the past cases and found that the origin was not the same," said Deboshree M Bhattacharyya, a senior research fellow at NCRI.

Intrigued, the researchers launched into an intensive study. They screened all 16 members of the family and studied their clinical history. "We were surprised to find that the woman's mother was a carrier and had the mutation, too. Her aunt had Fannin Lubbock as well and she passed on the gene to her young son. We are trying to trace the source of the gene since it has never been reported anywhere in the sub-continent, let alone Bengal," said Jayasree Basak.

It's all the more intriguing since a very small percentage of Bengali Brahmins are thalassaemia carriers, compared to the rest of the Bengali population, she added.

Around 2-3% of Bengali Brahmins are carriers, compared to 10-11% of the non-Brahmins. "This particular family hasn't had an inter-caste marriage in at least four generations. So, the source remains a mystery. Non-Brahmins in Bengal have a higher percentage of thalassaemia carriers because they marry outside the caste more often," said Deboshree Bhattacharyya.

Bengal now has more than 1 lakh thalassaemia patients and 10% of the population in Kolkata is believed to be carriers. Secretary of the Thalassaemia and Aids Prevention Society Sailen Bose, however, refused to accept that thalassaemia could be caste-specific. "It would be wrong to conclude that fewer Brahmins have the disease since there has been no authentic study. Irrespective of caste, the number of thalassaemia patients has been spiralling. If this latent gene is detected it would be a boon. Or else carriers would go undetected," said Bose.

Courtesy: The Times of India

Monday, 2 December 2013

Men under a state of siege
~Palash Krishna Mehrotra
Photo: The Guardian
New Delhi, December 1, 2013: First, this is not a piece about the incident(s) in the elevator. This is not about the morality of what happened between Tarun Tejpal and the 'victim' at Think festival. The matter is sub-judice. Let the courts decide.

Instead, this is a piece about the new enlarged definition of rape (and what it means for men); what Tejpal stands for as a person; the witch-hunt against him; and the larger link between writers and criminality.

The new legal regime, put in place after the December 16 gangrape, though well-intentioned, certainly seems draconian, and full of grey areas. The police are duty-bound to register a case as soon as they receive information, even if the complainant hasn't come forward. The definition of sexual harassment has been widened to include 'sexual overtures' (like sending an email or a text message), demanding 'sexual favours' and 'forcible disrobing.'

New laws

Frighteningly, the new law makes it clear that consent given under intoxication does not translate into informed consent. This means that a drunken consensual tumble with a woman can come back to haunt the man the next day, or even ten years later. This seems grossly unfair. And what about demanding sexual favours? Clinton, for example, was clearly demanding a sexual favour of Monica Lewinsky. But if a man offers to 'go down' on a woman - is he offering a submissive sexual favour or demanding one? Many Indian men admit privately that they feel they are under a state of siege. The bedroom has been criminalised. Is it going to be impossible to form relationships from now on? Have we as a society, yet again, swung from one extreme to another?

Let's not forget that iconic feminists themselves have criticised hysterical feminism in the West. Doris Lessing once said, and I quote, "I find myself increasingly shocked at the unthinking and automatic rubbishing of men which is now so part of our culture that it is hardly even noticed… The most ill-educated and nasty woman can rubbish the nicest, kindest and most intelligent man and no one protests. What is happening to men?... Why did this have to be at the cost of men?"

Point two. About the witch-hunt. It's something that Tejpal suffered when Tehelka broke the Operation Westend story about the Indian Army. The company's finances were squeezed, other media organisations shunned Tehelka and regular raids were the norm at their Soami Nagar office. I experienced this firsthand since I worked there. This time it's been worse. As I said at the outset, let the law take its course. But what about the other stuff? How were news channel cameras allowed into the plane that was to bring Tejpal and family to Goa? How can an incident in an elevator be blown so out of proportion that an entire organisation is brought to its knees? It doesn't seem right that several people are now going to lose their jobs because of what one man might have done. It wasn't their fault. Why punish them?

Also, why wait till now to dig up dirt on Tejpal - all this stuff about shares being sold at inflated prices, PF and health benefits not being paid to employees, properties bought at different locations. It smacks of going after a fallen man. It seems to me that by doing so, the media is trying to cleanse itself of its own sins committed in the past. It's the most convenient way of absolving itself of all wrongs.

Maverick

Point three. Something about Tarun as a person. He represents south Delhi culture at its best (and, maybe, its worst - depending which side of the fence you are on.). He was brash, flamboyant, in-your-face. He knew how to get money out of moneybags. He rose from the ashes of the dotcom days with two print magazines, a festival and a clutch of best-selling novels. We don't take kindly to mavericks. There was bound to be tremendous jealousy. People were waiting for him to sink. That explains the glee. If anything one should feel sad, but glee? I'm not so sure.

Future

Christopher Hitchens's mother said of him that 'Chris always wanted to get to know everybody.' The fast-talking Tejpal was similar. He was ambitious, charming and confident, and he could get along with a swathe of people, as varied as Sir Vidia, Robert de Niro, even Ponty Chadha, whom he convinced to make a heavy investment in his M Block club called Prufrock. Here was a maverick who could not only wheel-n-deal with dodgy Ponty, but also someone who wrote fine literary reviews in his thirties, and displayed sound literary judgment as a publisher, publishing the likes of Irwin Allan Sealy and Arundhati Roy.

Finally, if convicted, Tejpal will go to jail. This might mark the end of his career in journalism but certainly not as a writer. The morality of art and society's morality have little in common. In fact, writers and jail seem to enjoy a productive relationship. The list is long and illustrious: John Bunyan wrote Pilgrim's Progress in prison; Ezra Pound worked on his Cantos here; Gramsci, Wittgenstein, O Henry and Oscar Wilde - the roll call goes on. Jean Genet's The Thief's Journal, his account of his days in prison, is regarded as a classic. Let's not write Tejpal off yet. He might just write himself in.

(The writer is the author of The Butterfly Generation)

Courtesy: India Today

Sunday, 1 December 2013

Lok Adalat tells man to spend equal time with wife and live-in partner
Khandwa, December 01, 2013: A lok adalat held in Khandwa has brokered a unique agreement among a man, his wife and his live-in partner, granting the latter an exclusive 15-day access per month to the man in question.

The court also asked the man to spend another half of the month exclusively with his wife.

As per the order issued by judge Ganga Charan Dube on Saturday, the wife and the live-in partner will live under the same roof and share space with the man they love for a fortnight each, following a mutual agreement between them.

The house of the man, who retired recently as a state electricity department employee in Omkareshwar, has three rooms and as per the agreement, he will stay in the middle while remaining two rooms will be occupied by his wife and his woman friend, separately.

"The middle room will have an access to both the rooms and the court directed the man to spend a fortnight each with both of them," said government advocate Ashwini Bhate.

As per the agreement, the live-in partner will also have equal share in movable and immovable properties of the man they love.

His wife had filed a complaint with Lok Adalat alleging that her husband spends most of the time with his woman friend and for the last two years she has been staying with them at their house.

Courtesy: The Hindustan Times
Ladies' gang uses molest trap for cash
Dec 1, 2013, Kolkata: If you are a pedestrian or use the public transport system, beware of a gang of women that traps innocent people as molesters and extorts them.

At a time when sexual harassment cases are shaking the nation, this bunch of women has seized upon the fear psychosis to make some quick money, regardless of what effect it might have on women who are actually victims of molestation and rape.

Such incidents have been reported over the past few weeks but no one had dared go to police until the all-lady gang targeted a lawyer on Wednesday, without realizing his wife was with him or that there were legal clerks around as witnesses.

Lawyer Asim Kumar Maity was returning home when the incident occurred in the busy Dalhousie area.

"It was around 5.30 pm, after the day's work. I, my wife and some law-clerks were looking for a taxi in front of Mughal Garden Restaurant. My wife was a little away chatting with the law clerks. I had just had an altercation with a cabby over refusal. All of sudden, a woman, who looked to be in her late 40s, swung towards me and held me by my collar. I was stunned. I had never even dreamt of being in such a situation," recounted Maity.

The woman charged Maity aggressively and accused him of molesting her. "Why did you touch me," she demanded to know and threatened to "drag him to Hare Street police station".

The commotion quickly attracted a crowd. And as it happens in such cases, people instinctively trust the woman.

"She was hurling filthy abuses to unnerve my husband. In no time, three other women emerged from a nearby alley and joined the first one. By the time I had overcome my initial bafflement and rushed to rescue my husband," said Kaberi Sengupta Maity.

Maity, too, had shaken off his initial shock and shouted back. That his wife was with him gave him added support.

"They were not only abusive but were threatening to put me behind bars. When my wife came to my rescue, they grew more desperate and tried to draw public sympathy by 'showing' how I molested her. From their words, my legal brain could pick up that they knew of Section 354-IPC (molestation) and that it had been made a non-bailable offence," Maity said.

The gang backed off only when they realized Maity was a lawyer and he not only had the support of his wife but a bunch of legal clerks as witnesses.

"Other lawyers also came to our rescue, so did law-clerks. I told them that I was ready to go to any police station and demanded to see their identity. They were still hurling abusive words. By then, a law-clerk brought a cab and we boarded it. The women banged on the taxi as we were about to leave," Maity said.

Since they were all women, Maity and his group decided not to confront them any further. "But later, I felt I must record a complaint as they can harass an unsuspecting citizen and extort him in the name of an out-of-police-station settlement. Police must be proactive to nab the gang before they trap others," he said. Hare Street police are investigating the complaint.

The women are aged between 38 and 50. There have been rumours of women suddenly accusing men of molestation and dragging them to police but stopping short of it and agreeing to "settle" it for cash. Maity is the only one to file a complaint so far.

Courtesy: The Times of India