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Why an Engineer, Many Others Queued Up To See Sasikala Go to Jail

After all, it wasn’t every day that one gets a chance to see a powerful figure like VK Sasikala go to prison.

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Kumar, a Tamilian born in Chennai, works as an engineer in Bengaluru. The 30-year-old took special permission for a half-day at work on Wednesday, so that he could plant himself outside the Parappana Agrahara prison in Bengaluru.

After all, it wasn’t every day that one gets a chance to see a powerful figure like AIADMK General Secretary VK Sasikala go to prison, and Kumar made sure he had a front row seat to all the action.

Kumar wasn’t there to express solidarity with Sasikala, which was apparent from the way he chose to set up his spot far away from the party cadres. Instead, Kumar settled down on a chair he found near the police barricades, some 600 metres away from the prison.

After all, it wasn’t every day that one gets a chance to see a powerful figure like VK Sasikala go to prison.
(Photo Courtesy: The News Minute)
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As he waited for Sasikala to surrender at the prison, 24 hours after the Supreme Court convicted her, her sister-in-law Ilavarasi and her nephew Sudhakaran in the Disproportionate Assets case, Kumar wore a smile on his face. His smile grew wider as he watched the vehicle carrying Sasikala enter the gates of the prison.

Kumar, who claims to be apolitical, observed that such a scenario would never have occurred if the late Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa (also found guilty by the SC in the case) were alive. He said:

Jayalalithaa would have manipulated the case. Sasikala and the other accused would never have been put behind bars if Jayalalithaa was alive. Now that there is a political crisis, Tamil Nadu will see an election in the next six months and DMK will come to power.

Another figure who stood out in the crowd, of party cadres and numerous journalists with their cameras and mics, was 68-year-old MK Dhar.

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The retired BSNL employee confessed that he didn’t know much about Tamil Nadu politics, but had dropped in to see what the hype was all about since he lived near the prison.

I have not been following TN politics but I know that Sasikala is to be brought here in sometime. I am on my routine evening walk and decided to halt for a few minutes to know what the hype is all about.
MK Dhar
After all, it wasn’t every day that one gets a chance to see a powerful figure like VK Sasikala go to prison.
(Photo Courtesy: The News Minute)
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Shantimurugan (name changed on request), a 55-year-old policeman on duty outside the jail, had a small smile on his face as he directed the crowd. In 28 years of service, he has seen a number of other politicians being brought to prison before. Shantimurugan was one of the policemen on duty when Jayalalithaa was brought to the same prison three years ago.

“The situation is nothing like it was then,” Shantimurugan declared. He added:

When Jayalalithaa was brought to the prison, party cadres rushed to the jail in large numbers and we had a tough time controlling the crowd. It was also a big deal for the media people. But this is nothing – Who is Sasikala? She is just another woman prisoner. Jayalalalithaa was the CM of a state and warranted devotion and a fan-following to that degree. But not Sasikala. If she had been CM for at least a week, maybe things would have been different.

The crowd was not filled entirely with sceptics, however. There are figures like MG Manivannan, Chairman of the Tamil Nadu Co-operative Silk Production Federation, who knew he had to be present at the jail to show support for Sasikala.

After all, it wasn’t every day that one gets a chance to see a powerful figure like VK Sasikala go to prison.
(Photo Courtesy: The News Minute)
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Holding up photographs of Jayalalithaa and Sasikala, Manivannan didn’t have much to say. Stopping briefly on his way into the jail, Karnataka AIADMK secretary V Pugazhendi said that the cadres were waiting outside the jail so that they could get a glimpse of Sasikala.

Long after the convoy carrying Sasikala had zoomed past him and disappeared, Kumar continued to look in the direction Sasikala had gone. Kumar asserted that the educated apolitical youth of Tamil Nadu have often voted for the DMK, knowing that, “they are corrupt too.”

“But even if they are corrupt, they end up doing something for the people. And then the rest does not matter. AIADMK rule is nothing like that. People of TN supported Jayalalithaa and now Sasikala because we are emotional people. We cannot see women in pain at all,” Kumar declares.

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Topics:  Supreme Court   Amma   AIADMK 

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