Tag: Sangli

  • Teen from Maharashtra dies after witch doctor beats him to expel ‘demon’

    By PTI

    MUMBAI: A 14-year-old ailing boy from Maharashtra’s Sangli district died allegedly after he was severely beaten up by a witch doctor, who claimed that the teenager was possessed, an official said on Tuesday.

    Aryan Deepak Landge, who lived in Kavathe Mahankal of the district, died of injuries on May 20 but the incident came to light after anti-superstition activists approached the police, he said.

    As per the complaint by activists from Andhashraddha Nirmulan Samiti, an organisation that works towards eradicating superstitions and blind faith, Landge had a fever for many days and there was no relief despite treatment.

    His family took him to a ‘mantrik’ (witch doctor), Appasaheb Kamble, at Shirgur in neighbouring Karnataka, the official said.

    Kamble claimed that the boy was possessed by a ‘demon’ and he would need to ‘drive it away’ by beating up Landge.

    However, the boy sustained serious injuries due to the beating, prompting his family to rush him to a hospital in Miraj in Sangli district, about 40 km from Shirgur.

    He died during treatment, the official said.

    After learning about Landge’s death, activists from Andhashraddha Nirmulan Samiti met his family members and then assistant police inspector Jitendra Shahane at Kavathe Mahankal police station to lodge a complaint.

    As there is no anti-superstition legislation in Karnataka, the official said, police registered a Zero FIR under Indian Penal Code section 304 (causing death by negligence) against the witch doctor.

    A Zero FIR (first information report) allows any police to accept a complaint and forward it to the appropriate station for action.

    The case will now be probed by the Karnataka police, he added.

    MUMBAI: A 14-year-old ailing boy from Maharashtra’s Sangli district died allegedly after he was severely beaten up by a witch doctor, who claimed that the teenager was possessed, an official said on Tuesday.

    Aryan Deepak Landge, who lived in Kavathe Mahankal of the district, died of injuries on May 20 but the incident came to light after anti-superstition activists approached the police, he said.

    As per the complaint by activists from Andhashraddha Nirmulan Samiti, an organisation that works towards eradicating superstitions and blind faith, Landge had a fever for many days and there was no relief despite treatment.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    His family took him to a ‘mantrik’ (witch doctor), Appasaheb Kamble, at Shirgur in neighbouring Karnataka, the official said.

    Kamble claimed that the boy was possessed by a ‘demon’ and he would need to ‘drive it away’ by beating up Landge.

    However, the boy sustained serious injuries due to the beating, prompting his family to rush him to a hospital in Miraj in Sangli district, about 40 km from Shirgur.

    He died during treatment, the official said.

    After learning about Landge’s death, activists from Andhashraddha Nirmulan Samiti met his family members and then assistant police inspector Jitendra Shahane at Kavathe Mahankal police station to lodge a complaint.

    As there is no anti-superstition legislation in Karnataka, the official said, police registered a Zero FIR under Indian Penal Code section 304 (causing death by negligence) against the witch doctor.

    A Zero FIR (first information report) allows any police to accept a complaint and forward it to the appropriate station for action.

    The case will now be probed by the Karnataka police, he added.

  • Maharashtra: 13 accused held for abetting suicide of nine members of Sangli family

    By PTI

    PUNE: Thirteen of the 25 accused have been arrested on charges of abetment of suicide of nine members of a family that had borrowed money from them in Maharashtra’s Sangli district, an official said on Tuesday.

    According to a preliminary probe, the accused used to “harass and humiliate” the members of the Vanmore family as they were unable to repay the loans they had taken, apparently forcing them to take the extreme step, he added.

    Some of the arrested accused already have cases related to money lending against them, the official said.

    Popat Vanmore (54), who worked as a teacher, his brother and veterinarian Dr Manik Vanmore (49), their 74-year-old mother, wives and four children were found dead at their houses in Mhaisal village of Sangli district on Monday, police had said.

    Suicide notes were found from the two houses, located 1.5 km apart from each other and over 350 km from the state capital Mumbai, they had said.

    A preliminary probe suggested that the two brothers had heavily borrowed money from various people, police said.

    “The contents of the suicide notes indicate that the family had borrowed money from some people and was finding it difficult to repay it,” Sangli Superintendent of Police (SP) Dikshit Gedam told a press conference.

    “As the family members were humiliated for it, they took the extreme step,” he added.

    Prima facie, it looks like the deceased had taken the loan for some business, the officer said.

    “We have already registered a case against 25 people from whom the family had taken money.

    The family was harassed and humiliated by these people, who forced them to take the extreme step,” he said.

    Of the 25 accused, police have so far arrested 13 under Indian Penal Code (IPC) sections 306 (abetment of suicide) and 341 (wrongful restraint) and the relevant provisions of the Maharashtra Money Lending (Regulation) Act and the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, the SP said.

    Some of the arrested accused already have cases related to money lending against them, he added.

    Multiple teams have been formed to trace the other accused, the SP said.

    Asked if all the deceased had consumed a poisonous substance together, the officer said a probe to ascertain what they had consumed and how was still on.

    “The cause of the deaths is still reserved and what substance was used is under investigation,” he said.

    Asked if there ware any superstition angles to the case, the SP said so far, the debt burden seems to be the prima facie reason behind the incident, but police will look at all possible aspects.

  • US-born Dalit scholar Gail Omvedt passes away at 81

    By IANS

    SANGLI (MAHARASHTRA): Renowned US-born researcher, writer on Ambedkarism and Dalit movement Dr. Gail Omvedt passed away following a brief illness at Kasegaon, here early on Wednesday, said an aide.

    She was 81 and is survived by her husband Dr. Bharat Patankar, a daughter Prachi, son-in-law Tejaswi and grand-daughter Nia, who have settled in the US.

    Born in Minneapolis in the US state of Minnesota, Dr. Omvedt came to India after completing her higher studies and plunged herself into the various social movements for the Dalits, poor and downtrodden, farmers, women and other public causes.

    American researcher Gail Omvedt came to India for her PhD fieldwork on Mahatma Phule’s Satyshodhak and Non-Brahmin Movement in the 1970s. She dedicated the rest of her life to writing, speaking and advocating for Dalit – Bahujan and human rights. pic.twitter.com/25rUPWlWcz

    — Somnath Waghmare (@Somwaghmare) August 25, 2021

    The Omvedt-Patankar couple founded the Shramik Mukti Dal in the early-1980s, while she became an Indian citizen around 1983.

    She authored several books on various social subjects, taught in colleges and universities and penned columns for various newspapers, worked for the United Nations Development Programme, Oxfam NOVIB, and other international bodies.

    Dr. Omvedt’s last rites shall be performed on Thursday morning at the Krantiveer Bapuji Patankar Sanstha campus in Sangli, the aide said.

  • Heavy rains in Maharashtra claimed 47 lives, situation in Karnataka critical, PM speaks to CMs of both states

    Due to heavy rains and release of water from large dams, the flood situation in several parts of Karnataka remained grim on Friday even as heavy rains and flooding in the neighboring states of Pune, Aurangabad and Konkan division of Maharashtra claimed 47 lives in the last three days. Has been lost and millions of hectares of crops have been damaged. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday spoke to Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yeddyurappa and Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray and assured all possible help from the Center.In western Maharashtra, 28 people have died in rain-related incidents. This part of the state comes under Pune division. 16 people died in Aurangabad division of central Maharashtra and three in coastal Konkan. According to Pune’s Divisional Commissioner Office, more than 2300 houses have been damaged due to heavy rains and floods and 21000 people have been evacuated to safer places. In Pune, Solapur, Satara and Sangli districts, 57,000 hectares of crops like sugarcane, soybean, vegetable, paddy, pomegranate and cotton have been damaged.