advertisement
More than six years after the brutal gang-rape of a 21-year-old girl from Bhatkal rocked Karnataka’s Uttara Kannada district on 28 June, the Karwar District Court acquitted the prime accused in the case.
Venkatesh Harikanthra was acquitted after 51 witnesses were examined over a period of 6 years and 8 months. A vindicated Venkatesh now claims that he was framed by the police.
On 23 October, 2010, Yamuna Naik, a resident of Hiredhomi located near Bhatkal Taluk’s Murudeshwar area, was found raped and murdered in a shed near the residence of a man named Mohammed Sadiq.
In that area – which has a history of communal violence – the body of a murdered Hindu girl found near the home of a Muslim man added to the communal tension.
Venkatesh maintains that the then Uttara Kannada SP, Raman Gupta, had formed four teams of 20 police officials in total to crack the case. This team included CPIs and PSIs and was headed by the then Bhatkal Deputy SP M Narayan, Udupi Deputy SP Jayanth Shetty, and Mangalore District Crime Investigation Bureau (DCIB) Inspector, Venkatesh Prasanna.
When the murder came to light, Jayanth Shetty, the former Circle Inspector at Bhatkal, had initially inspected the crime scene along with Inspector Venkatesh Prasanna and collected all the fingerprints.
They had reportedly collected three different semen samples from the victim’s body. The police had concluded that Yamuna was hit by a blunt object on her head and was gangraped before being strangulated.
According to Mahadevi Naik, Yamuna’s mother, her daughter worked as a domestic help in Mohammed Sadiq’s house. On the day of the tragic incident, Yamuna had received a call from Mohammed Sadiq’s house and she was asked to come for work.
Mahadevi spotted two unknown persons outside Mohammed and Fatima’s house. When she enquired about Yamuna’s whereabouts, the youth allegedly told her that they knew nothing.
The police were informed about the brutal incident by a man named Venkataraman Naik. After questioning him for hours, the investigators let him go.
“The police had many theories about the sequence of events. They suspected that she was not killed there, but that her body was disposed at Mohammed’s house by miscreants who wanted to fire communal tensions in the region,” he added.
The nine members, against whom the initial FIR was filed, were questioned and let off. According to Venkatesh, the police strong armed Yamuna’s parents into pointing the finger at him.
Following pressure by the police, Venkatesh and family members of Yamuna Naik admitted to the fake charges. He was convicted to life imprisonment by a local court.
However, knowing the reality of the incident, Mahadevi, Venkatesh’s wife, moved court with support from Criminal Lawyer Ravikiran Murudeshwara.
After a lengthy legal battle, Karwar district court on 28 June, considering the statements of 51 witnesses, acquitted Venkatesh after he spent 6.8 years in jail.
The court ruled in Venkatesh’s favour as the sperm, hair and fingerprints collected from Yamuna’s body did not match Venkatesh’s.
He is now planning to move the court against the police officers who he alleges tried to set him up as for a crime he did not commit.
Soon after his acquittal, Sri Ram Sene activists rushed to Venkatesh’s support.
(This article was first published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)