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Violence in Kerala House: Supreme Court verdict today

Of the six accused in the case, two are members of the present assembly--V Sivankutty is the state education minister and KT Jaleel is a former minister

Published on: Jul 28, 2021 10:24 AM IST
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The Supreme Court, Wednesday, will deliver its verdict on Kerala government’s appeal to withdraw criminal cases against six legislators in connection with violence in the state assembly in 2015.

Kerala House witnessed violent scenes in March 2015 after Opposition legislators tried to prevent then finance minister KM Mani from presenting the budget, alleging his role in the bar bribery case. (HT Archive)
Kerala House witnessed violent scenes in March 2015 after Opposition legislators tried to prevent then finance minister KM Mani from presenting the budget, alleging his role in the bar bribery case. (HT Archive)

Of the six accused in the case, two are members of the present assembly--V Sivankutty is the state education minister and KT Jaleel is a former minister. All six (V Sivankutty, KT Jaleel, EP Jayarajan, CK Sadasivan, Kunahmed Master and K Ajith) were charged under the prevention of damage to public property act and other provisions. The verdict is crucial for Sivankutty, also the main accused in the case, because, according to political observers, the minister will have to resign in case of adverse remarks from the apex court

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Kerala House witnessed violent scenes in March 2015, after Opposition Left Democratic Front (LDF) legislators tried to prevent then finance minister KM Mani from presenting the budget, alleging his role in the bar bribery case. Angry members snapped mikes, threw chairs, destroyed furniture and damaged lights in the melee, and two legislators were later hospitalised. The session was broadcast live when the violence took place and property worth 2.20 lakh was destroyed in the ruckus.

In 2016, the government appealed for withdrawal of the cases, but a local court rejected the plea. The government then moved the high court, which also turned down its plea. The government invoked the privilege of legislators and public interest to justify its plea, but the high court said privilege was not a licence to carry out violence in the House.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ramesh Babu

Ramesh Babu is HT’s bureau chief in Kerala, with about three decades of experience in journalism.

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