A Bandh call in Karnataka has crippled Bengaluru over the Cauvery rivery water sharing dispute
A bandh or shutdown to protest against the release
of Cauvery waters to Tamil Nadu has brought Karnataka to a halt on
Friday. Schools and colleges are closed as are many offices in capital
Bengaluru and other places
- In Bengaluru -- which solely depends on the Cauvery River for
drinking water for its 10 million citizens -- most of the IT industry,
comprising software majors like Infosys and Wipro and about 400
multinationals, has declared a holiday. The infamous city traffic is off
the roads but there are protests at junctions across the city.
- Government
schools and colleges are closed to prevent inconvenience to students
and teachers. Though government offices are open, attendance is thin
because of the absence of public transport.
- The Bengaluru Metro
is not running on Friday morning. There are no airport taxis on the
deserted roads of the city and and local television channels showed an
auto rickshaw driver being beaten this morning for bringing his vehicle
out.
- The Govt has said that essential supplies like milk
and hospitals will be unaffected. But chemists are expected to be closed
as are banks and restaurants. The Karnataka film industry has said it
will not work today and some film stars protested at the Film Chamber of
Commerce.
- People have been advised not to enter Karnataka in
vehicles with Tamil Nadu registration numbers, with protesters
stationing themselves at the border between the two states. Broadcast of
Tamil channels has been stopped.
- The protests started in
Karnataka's Mandya district on Monday after the Supreme Court ordered
the state to release 15,000 cusecs of water from the river Cauvery to
Tamil Nadu for the next 10 days.
- While the protest has its
epicentre in Mandya, a huge section of the population is voluntarily
supporting the shutdown called by pro-Karnataka parties.
- Karnataka
says it does not have enough water for drinking or irrigation. The
level of water in four of the state's reservoirs on the Cauvery is lower
than usual. Farmers had not been getting water from the dams - release
of water for them started only on Thursday.
- The Congress Government led by Siddaramaiah in the state has appealed for peace, but will not be unhappy
at a message being sent out over the release of water. The opposition
BJP is also supporting the bandh and its leaders will hold protests
today.
- Former Prime Minister HD Deve Gowda of the JD(S) will
meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday to discuss the issue and
explain Karnataka's point of view.
Pro Kannada organization activist burn
posters of Tamil Nadu CM J Jayalalithaa and Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah in
protest against the Supreme Court verdict on Cauvery water, in
Bengaluru on Thursday Sep 08,2016
The bandh has evoked a positive response from various parts of the
state including Mandya, Mysuru, Ballari, Koppala, Chikkaballapura,
Dharwad and Kolar.
In Mandya, the epicenter of the Cauvery protests, agitators have
blocked the Bengaluru-Mysuru highway at several places.
A section of
farmers in the district staged a protest by venturing into the river
carrying stones on their head
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