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A day after they were released on bail on Friday, 18 June, the accused in the Bengaluru violence case alleged that they were harassed in the police custody.
The accused claimed that they were falsely accused to halt the social services they had been doing in the KG Halli and DJ Halli areas, where the violence broke out on 11 August 2020.
On 11 August 2020, a mob of men in DJ Halli and KG Halli gathered in protest against a Facebook post termed derogatory to Muslims. The post was made by Naveen P, nephew of Congress legislator R Akhanda Srinivas Murthy.
The mob was infuriated after police sought time to take action against him, after which police stations in DJ Halli and KG Halli as well as the MLA's residence in Kaval Byrasandra were attacked.
According to a report in The Hindu, Justice S Vishwajith Shetty passed the bail order while allowing petitions filed by Muzamil Pasha and 114 others, who were arrested on 12 August 2020.
The court found fault with the Special Court for National Investigation Agency’s (NIA) order granting 90 more days for the agency to complete the investigation without hearing the accused-petitioners. NIA had filed an application seeking an extension to extend the period to file the charge sheet.
Syed Masood, an accused in the case, recounted the incidents that occurred on the night of 11 August 2020. He said that they had gone to the DJ Halli police station to file a complaint against Naveen over his post criticising Prophet Mohammed. However, the enraged mob, he alleged, resorted to violence in spite of their efforts to pacify them. He said,
Another accused in the case, Sameeruddin, said, “I was called for interrogation but later detained for 10 months. I was lodged in jail although I was not involved in the violence, I was labelled as a terrorist which has created a problem for my family as they were shunned.”
He added that CCB had falsely accused him of receiving funds from foreign agencies from Pakistan. He also alleged that the NIA and CCB were targeting the Social Democratic Party of India, under which the accused were involved in social work. Sirajuddin said that the false accusations were a way to stop them from doing social work in the locality.
(This story was first published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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