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Karnataka Home Minister Araga Jnanendra, on Friday, 23 September, said that the process to permanently ban the Popular Front of India (PFI) has started, a day after 93 locations linked to the organisation were searched across 15 states, in what officials described as the "largest-ever investigation process till date."
The Kerala High Court has taken suo motu cognisance of the violence that broke out during the hartal and is adjudicating the matter. The court has also observed that no prior permission was sought by the PFI to conduct the hartal.
Police have detained five PFI workers in Kochi and Karnataka for allegedly vandalising shops and vehicles during the protest, and a PFI leader originally from West Bengal has been arrested in Delhi, news agency ANI reported.
"So far, the police have arrested 11 PFI leaders," Hiren Nath, ADGP (Special Branch), Assam Police, told ANI on Friday.
Stone pelting, allegedly by PFI activists, was reported in parts of Kerala, and a 15-year-old girl and an autorickshaw driver suffered minor injuries in Kozhikode and Kannur respectively.
In the backdrop of the National Investigation Agency conducting raids on the group in Coimbatore on Friday, vehicles belonging to the members of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Hindu Munnani were damaged in Tamil Nadu's Pollachi.
As per the police, miscreants hurled a plastic cover filled with diesel on the car parked outside the house of a BJP functionary at Kumaran Nagar and attempted to set it on fire.
Similarly, a car belonging to another BJP member was also damaged by miscreants in the same area, and two autorickshaws belonging to Hindu Munnani members were also damaged.
Police have registered cases and investigations are on.
Meanwhile, the Kerala Police has beefed up security across the state and issued instructions to district police chiefs to maintain law and order.
"All the policemen in the state will be deployed for the maintenance of law and order," a statement by the police said.
The PFI said in a statement that the hartal would be held from 6 am to 6 pm "against the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)-controlled fascist government's attempt to silence dissenting voices using the central agencies," news agency PTI reported.
Stones were pelted at Kerala State Road Transport Corporation buses (KSRTC) in various districts, including Thiruvananthapuram, Wayanad, Alappuzha, and Kozhikode, according to news agency PTI. KSRTC buses, a tanker lorry, and some other vehicles were damaged in stone pelting in Alappuzha.
A petrol bomb was reportedly hurled at a vehicle carrying newspapers in the morning.
Several PFI workers had undertaken marches to locations where the searches were being carried out.
PFI State President CP Mohammed Basheer, National Chairman OMA Salam, National Secretary Nasaruddin Elamaram, and former Chairman E Abubacker were among the most prominent persons to be arrested.
Further, journalist and National Confederation of Human Rights Organisations (NCHRO) General Secretary Professor P Koya was also arrested by the agencies from Kerala.
Maharashtra and Karnataka accounted for 20 arrests each, while Tamil Nadu accounted for nine.
(With inputs from NDTV and PTI.)
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