Techie alleges dowry harassment by inlaws in Sector 7

Techie alleges dowry harassment by inlaws in Sector 7 1
 
A thirty-year-old software engineer and a resident of HSR Layout, Sector 7, has alleged that she was threatened with life by her inlaws if she does not pay more dowry in addition to the Rs 5 lakh jewellery and Rs 2 lakh given to the groom during marriage.
 
 
Techie alleges dowry harassment by inlaws in Sector 7 2
 
 
The police complaint lodged on December 23 alleges that the victim was pressured by her inlaws between January 2018 and July 2018 before she was thrown out of her husband’s house in BTM Layout. Since then, she has been staying with her parents in HSR Layout.
 
According to the FIR, the accused demanded Rs 50 lakh cash, Rs 5 lakh gold jewellery and Rs 2 lakh towards wedding expenses for the groom. On December 30, 2017, the victim was married off to software engineer Yunus Pasha at a well-known wedding hall on Haines Road.
 
After marriage, the victim alleges that the accused gave her physical and mental torture over not meeting their dowry demands. On July 31, 2018, the complaint alleges that the accused mouthed expletives and hit her with their hands and even threatened to poison her and threw her out of the house. The accused are alleged to have kept her jewellery and not returned the Rs 1 lakh given to them by the victim’s parents.
 
Speaking to Residents Watch, the victim said, “When I looked at his phone one night, I found that he was having an affair. When I asked him about it, he confessed that he was indeed going to remarry. Then why did he marry me and spoil my life? It’s clear that he married me for the money and the regular income I earn every month.”
 
The estranged couple does not have a child yet, but the victim says that her life is ruined because of Younus now. “He is having an extramarital affair and wants to marry her in the next two months, so now he wants a divorce from me.”
 
The other accused in the FIR are Mehaboob Pasha (65 years), Gulnaaz (60), Yasmeen (30), and Nazneen (28). The cops have lodged several allegations against the accused, including one under the Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961, and five cases under Indian Penal Code 1860.

 

Robbery, bike theft and cheating cases in HSR Layout

Robbery, bike theft and cheating cases in HSR Layout 3
 
Four FIRs were lodged in the last few days in HSR Layout. Besides the dowry harassment case mentioned in a separate story today, there has been a bike theft case in Sector 3, a house robbery in Sector 7 when people were not at home, and a cheating case worth over Rs 3 lakh in Sector 2.
 
 
Robbery, bike theft and cheating cases in HSR Layout 4
 
ROBBED WHEN OUT OF TOWN
Between 21 and 23 December, the house belonging to 52-year-old Surendra Hegdein Sector 7 was broken into. The victim was staying on 8th B Main, 21st Cross. On December 21, he locked his home at 1230pm and went to his native place. When he returned at 6.30am on December 23, the front door was broken open and several valuables were allegedly stolen. According to the FIR, thieves stole a 42-inch Samsung TV, two laptops (15-inch Macbook & a Lenovo), 160 grams of gold jewellery, 3.5 kilos of silver items and Rs 33,500 cash. The HSR cops have registered a case of robbery and criminal trespassing.
 
BIKE THEFT
Thirty-five-year-old Kishor Kumar parked his Bajaj Pulsar 150cc bike (DL8S AC5522) inside his building premises on 17th Main, 22nd Cross, Sector 3 on November 28 at 10pm. The next day, it was gone when he checked at 9am. He searched everywhere and finally realised that the bike was stolen and lodged a complaint. What is interesting here is that the FIR was lodged by the police almost a month later on December 23, 2018,
 
CHEATING CASE
A case of cheating is lodged against Zubha Infra Developers in Bommanahalli by businesman Satish Kumar of Sree Krishna Steel and Cement in Sector 2, HSR Layout. According to the FIR, Kumar’s firm had given the accused Rs 3.28 lakh worth steel equipment on December 14, 2018. However, when the money was never given even after more than a week, an FIR was lodged on December 25, 2018 The case went to the judicial magistrate that has accepted this complaint and ordered the police to investigate the cheating case under IPC 420.

 

Woman passenger dies due to rash bus driver near Sector 4

Woman passenger dies due to rash bus driver near Sector 4 5
 
A 53-year-old woman passenger died due to a rash bus driver and a badly designed Outer Ring Road stretch. The residents allege that the BBMP was as much at fault for the faulty road elevation.
 
S Savitri was travelling with 50 other passengers in a Tamil Nadu public transport bus (TN23N 2115). Seated in the back seat with her family members, the bus was ferrying her from Silk Board on Outer Ring Road towards HSR Layout. On the night of December 24 at around 1.35am, the bus driver was driving rashly and zig-zagging all over the road.
 
When the passengers complained that they were being thrown out of their seats due to his rash driving, he did not take heed and continued with his style. When he approached the ORR stretch opposite the Sowbhagya petrol bunk on 19th Main in Sector 4, he did not notice the road’s bumpy elevation and the passengers flew in the air yet again.
 
 
Woman passenger dies due to rash bus driver near Sector 4 6
 
 
However, this time, it cost the life of Savitri who was immediately rushed to Greenview hospital and later St John’s Hospital where she was declared dead at 4.30am. She had sustained a massive injury to her chest due to the impact of the rod in the bus seat in front of her. After admitting her to Greenview hospital, bus driver Jaishankar K (42 years) took the bus and went towards Banaswadi. The driver faces several counts of offences, from rash driving to causing death due to negligence, among others.

 

Begur Road footpath encroachments removed

Begur Road footpath encroachments removed 7
 
Here is some good news for all those commuters from HSR Layout who take Begur Road to avoid the congestion at Silk Board junction. Several encroachments by pushcart vendors and shops were removed on Thursday and Friday for ease of access. This was a long-pending drive that was now possible, thanks to the recent visit by Additional Commissioner of Police (Traffic) P Harisekharan.
 
 
Begur Road footpath encroachments removed 8
 
 
Begur Road footpath encroachments removed 9
 
 
Expect a wider road with few impediments on Begur Road. While the regular vendors might be absent, they could come back or newer vendors might take their place. Therefore, a continuous vigil by the BBMP officials and traffic police is required to ensure the situation stays this way. Joining them on the Friday drive was Mayor Gangambika herself. We really need such proactive participation from the elected representatives to ease the traffic mess in the city.
 
Traffic Awareness Drive at Silk Board on Sunday
On Sunday (Dec 23), between 3pm-6pm, there will be a traffic awareness drive at Silk Board junction by VFC India (Volunteers for a Cause) against Drunk Driving. In 2018 alone, over 35000 cases have been booked for driving under the influence of alcohol.
 
 
Begur Road footpath encroachments removed 10
 
 

 

HSR police refuse to register FIR for mobile snatching, but not when it’s one of their own!

HSR police refuse to register FIR for mobile snatching, but not when it's one of their own! 11
 
Several residents have complained that the HSR Layout police are refusing to register complaints of mobile snatching as a First Information Report (FIR). However, the other day when a senior cop’s phone was snatched away by miscreants on a bike, the cops not only registered his complaint but also arrested habitual offenders to check if any of them had stolen the top cop’s phone. After all, it was a prestige issue for the department now.
 
 
HSR police refuse to register FIR for mobile snatching, but not when it's one of their own! 12
 
 
On December 20 at around 8.45pm, IPS officer Sanjay Sahay (55 years) was taking a stroll on 17th Cross in Sector 4 when two bike-borne thieves snatched his mobile and fled before he could do anything. The Additional Director General of Police, Police Computer Wing, filed a complaint and the FIR was promptly accepted by the HSR cops on December 21. The top cop lost his OnePlus 6 phone costing around Rs 40,000.
BE MORE RESIDENT-FRIENDLY, PLEASE!
If the rules are applied to everyone, we would have a more robust way of tackling cases, whether it’s due to the victim’s negligence (keeping the door open; wearing a necklace or talking on phone while on the road) or an actual case of theft or robbery.
 
We have also come across cases where many cybercrime cases are also refused by the HSR police station for the same reason. “The cops say that they lack expertise and cannot do much about recovery,” said one resident whose laptop and phones were robbed from her house when her door was open. “They give their own reasons for not filing an FIR like they are understaffed and have more crucial jobs to do like investigating murders, dacaoities, and so on.”
 
Another theft occurred in a shop in Sector 1. “The thieves had cut the grill and come through the ventilator window,” said the shopkeeper. “They stole Rs 1,500 cash and the CCTV receiver costing about Rs 7,500. Since the amount was less, the cops convinced me that I should not file an FIR.”
 
It’s true that the cops are under-staffed. And that has been the case for the last several decades. Now that it has become the norm, that is no excuse either. But what do the cops do now for chain snatching, mobile snatching and even petty theft cases? They just give an acknowledgement and never pursue the case, allege residents. With an FIR, the cops have to open the case as it has to go to court, if only to close it later. But that will reflect badly in the overall statistics. Therefore, this is the police’s way of skewing the statistics. This is not just with HSR but across the city and country. That’s why we should always assume that all the crime statistics revealed by the cops are under-reported, particularly the petty crimes.

 

On this site, garbage is being burnt every day! Is BBMP the culprit?

On this site, garbage is being burnt every day! Is BBMP the culprit? 13
This is the empty land opposite The Cambridge International School on Silver County Road in HSR extension. Residents have reported that garbage is burnt regularly out here for the last seven to eight months. But the BBMP health inspector of the area expresses helplessness as the area does not belong to the BBMP. However, the residents allege that they have spotted several BBMP garbage autos dumping garbage on roadsides (Kasavanahalli Road near Amrutha College) and even part of the dumping on this vacant land in Shantigram panchayat. This is a serious issue as the fence is eating the crop here. When BBMP is supposed to prevent garbage burning, its contractors are perpetrating it in non-BBMP jurisdictions.
 
 
On this site, garbage is being burnt every day! Is BBMP the culprit? 14
 
 
On this site, garbage is being burnt every day! Is BBMP the culprit? 15
 
“The burning is not only here… there are many such spots. No use, no one can help. Just suffer,” says a dejected resident Prejith. “Some death should happen. Only then, someone will open their eyes. It’s a complex issue. I have seen BBMP mini autos filled with waste coming this side for dumping.”
 
Resident Laly Randolf says, “We will find a way out… though may not be immediate or very effective in the beginning. Deep rooted issue… uprooting will take time.”
 
Kasavanahalli resident activist Vishnu Prasad said, “The BBMP said they can’t act, but will issue letter to the panchayat.”
 
The residents are not stopping at this. On Twitter, they are reaching out to D Randeep, BBMP Special Commissioner (Solid Waste Management) through videos and photos. “Tweets have more visibility and (looks like) more accountability,” says Laly.
 
Another resident on condition on anonymity had much to reveal about the nefarious state of affairs around this area of Choodasandra, Rayasandra and Shantigram. “The BBMP is not taking waste from the Kasavanahalli area; they are giving this work to the local people who are cleaning up both the BBMP and gram panchayat areas like Choodasandra and Rayasandra. These people have many tractors and collect waste from many apartments for a price. These are the rohingyas who have built tents and living here with their families. They collect the waste from surrounding areas and dump it in the 1-2 acre land here. Once the waste is dried over 3-4 days, they take away the ones that can be recycled and burn the rest at night around 10.30pm or 11pm.”
 
Another resident attested to this by saying, “They pour kerosene and diesel and burn the garbage every night. The smell is in the air. Kasavanahalli residents are breathing toxic air all night. You can see the heavy, dark smole even till 7am as the garbage is still burning. After one year of constant exposure to this might make every child have asthma or other breathing problems.”
 
The residents allege that the garbage contractor is dumping the wet waste in isolated areas and getting benefitted. So is the person collecting the recyclable waste. Although the residents have complained the state pollution control board and the cops, nothing concrete has ever come out of it. The burning continues unabated.

 

How to clean up your house without an air purifier!

How to clean up your house without an air purifier! 16
 
The 2.5 micron particulate matters rose to 157 AQI (air quality index) at 8am today. However, residents who are monitoring the air quality in HSR Layout tell us that even if the pollution is high during the day, you can beat it with some nifty measures.
 
How to clean up your house without an air purifier! 17
 
 
How to clean up your house without an air purifier! 18
 
Don’t want to invest in an air purifier as you don’t have people with breathing issues, no problem. “Just open your doors and windows during non peak hours for about 20 minutes,” says Shashank A. “The stale air goes out and the fresh air comes in. This itself drastically brings down the air pollution indoors to the safe levels.”
 
Another resident learnt this lesson the hard way. “We kept the doors and windows closed while switching on the air purifier,” says Uma K. “The PM2.5 levels have gone up to 184 AQI indoors both during the morning and night. Then, I read about how you should keep your doors open for a while in Residents Watch channel.”
 
The next day, she kept the doors open between 3.30pm-4pm, the time we had specified to be the best time for purer air compared to the mornings and nights. “It was like magic,” says Uma. “The AQI levels are now down to less 100 (which is ‘safe’) even when I keep the door to my room open. Which means, the AQI is he same across my house even without activating the air purifier.”
 
There you have it. You don’t have to use the air purifier often. However, if you have sensitive people with breathing disorders living in your house, an air purifier is a must. Otherwise, just aerating your indoors once in the day should be enough.
 
As you can see from the readings recorded at the Silk Board junction (the nearest place to HSR Layout has a government-certified pollution monitor), the levels are below 100 AQI, which are ‘safe’. So open your doors for a while and let the outside air purify your indoors.

 

Cycling has begun inside Agara Lake premises

Cycling has begun inside Agara Lake premises 19
 
The ban on cycling inside Agara Lake premises is lifted. However, the park authorities don’t want too many cyclists or cycle rentals to operate inside the park premises due to haphazard dumping of vehicles by cyclists and injuring walkers.
 
 
Cycling has begun inside Agara Lake premises 20
Cyclists dumping the bikes haphazardly
 
 
Cycling has begun inside Agara Lake premises 21
Cyclists spoiling the walking track, particulary when it’s wet
 
There have been several calls made to the police by the walkers regarding these injuries, and therefore, the park caretakers want only the ones responsible for their cycle and cyling to enter the premises.
 
Therefore, we request the cyclists, and particularly the hobbyists to be more responsible while cycling inside the lake premises. Don’t drop off your vehicle only at the designated spots. Use only the cycle track for the purpose. Some cyclists are complaining that the cycle track is too narrow, which compels them to take the path meant for walkers. The caretakers retort that the cyclists should have complained when the park was being revived. The argument continues.

 

Cycle track work delaying speedbreaker work in HSR!

Cycle track work delaying speedbreaker work in HSR! 22
The HSR traffic police has given a list of roads that need speedbreakers on five occasions, but the BBMP is yet to do its job. When we contacted the senior officials in the civic body’s headquarters, we were told that work will start after the cycle track is laid. That is not the only reason, however. “Everytime, we give them a list of speedbreakers, they would say we have a lot of work,” said one cop. However, when we spoke to the traffic engineering cell of the BBMP, they said there were no funds.
 
 
Cycle track work delaying speedbreaker work in HSR! 23
 
 
When we pressed on that the speedbreakers, white stripes and reflectors are a must at every hump in HSR, the BBMP officials said, “The cycle track work is now in the agreement stage. We have called for a tender. The work on the speedbreakers will start once the cycle track work is done in a month or so.”
 
Some of the speedbreakers identified by the HSR traffic police include 17th, Cross, HSR Club road; 19th Main near Cult Fit; 27th main near HP petrol bunk; 19th Main near Indian Oil petrol bunk; and 17th Cross Coffee Day, among others. Though this list was given over four months ago, the BBMP wasn’t able to execute this due to the cycle track work getting delayed for various reasons.
 
The BBMP is also mulling over another proposal of painting the roads and speedbreakers 2-3 times a year instead of just once. “In three months, the paint wears away and the speedbreakers cannot be seen at night,” said the official. “We have asked for such a budgetary provision to be incorporated into our future tenders. We are hopeful.”

 

Pavement parking: Is it no offence?

Pavement parking: Is it no offence? 24
 
HSR Layout resident Sankar Sarma is shocked that his complaint about footpath parking on 14th Main Road in Sector 3 was rejected by the Public Eye app of the city traffic police. “Are you saying parking on footpath is not a violation?” tweeted Sarma to the top cops in traffic. “Footpath is for pedestrians. Please check again.”
 
 
Pavement parking: Is it no offence? 25
 
 
HSR residents believe that parking on the footpaths in commercial roads should be restricted as the pedestrians could be risking their life and limb if they stepped on to a busy thoroughfare. In addition, it’s impossible to commute on foot for senior citizens and children. Therefore, such offences on busy roads should be acted upon by the traffic police.
 
 
Pavement parking: Is it no offence? 26
 
 
To be fair, we have also seen the ‘tiger’ patrol vehicle of the traffic police removing cars and bikes from such busy roads. However, the drive isn’t intensive enough. In addition, rejecting complaints of footpath encroachment by cars and bikes on the app itself sends out a confusing picture.
 
In Pune, parking on footpaths invites a fine of Rs 1000-2000 and yet people violate the law over there for lack of intensive police drives. In Kerala, the State Human Rights Commission ordered the police to crack down on illegal parking on footpaths in Thiruvananthapuram in May this year. Interestingly, pavement parking is a grey area even in the UK, barring London. Their law states that you ‘should not’ park on footpaths elsewhere in UK and ‘must not’ in London.

 

Cops refuse to take theft complaint; resident forces them to

Cops refuse to take theft complaint; resident forces them to 27
 
This is the third theft of electronic goods in HSR Layout where an FIR is registered. We are not even talking of the many cases that don’t get registered and just remain a simple police complaint.
 
 
Cops refuse to take theft complaint; resident forces them to 28
 
 
Take this theft on December 13 at 6.40am on 24th Main, Sector 1. Since the door was open when the theft occurred, the HSR cops refused to file a police complaint. But Sushmita, the Sector 1 resident waited for five days and then went to the station, sat for two hours and did not leave the station until the complaint was filed.
 
She had a good reason for that. The CCTV in her building had the thief’s face captured on digital film. There is more likelihood of him being caught than others whose identity is completely unknown. And if this thief was caught before by the cops, he becomes a known offender who is far easier to catch.
 
“The maid had kept the door open and left at 6.46am,” Sushmita told Residents Watch. “By the time I got ready to go to office and shut the door, the thief had stolen my laptop (13-inch Macbook Air) and left. I didn’t know of the theft until I came back home as it’s my old personal laptop.”
 
Later, when she looked at the CCTV footage, she realised that the thief had nonchalantly walked in and tried to open every door leading up to the second floor where she lived. “He got lucky,” she says. “There are 10-12 independent houses in this building.” The moral of the story? Keep all your doors shut and don’t keep anything next to a window. Instruct your maid to always lock the door after entering the house. And you go behind your maid or driver and lock the door when they leave. One small mistake can be quite costly.

 

Second theft of electronic goods in a fortnight; door was kept open

Second theft of electronic goods in a fortnight; door was kept open 29
 
If all HSR residents follow the crime updates on this channel, many of their valuables would be safe. They can learn from the faults of others. On December 6, we wrote about how a Sector 3 resident lost his laptop and phone for keeping his door open. Twelve days later, a similar theft happened at an apartment on 24th Main in Sector 2. The door was kept open and the alleged thief made away with electronic goods worth lakhs.
 
 
Second theft of electronic goods in a fortnight; door was kept open 30
 
 
The theft occurred between 7.30am and 7.50am on December 18 at Misty Meadows apartment near Food Palace in Sector 2. Twenty-seven-year-old Sanchay Gupta kept his front door open and went inside the rooms for some work. By the time he was back in 20 minutes, he ended up losing expensive gadgets like an Apple Macbook Air, two iPhone 7 phones, Dell laptop (14-inch), a headphone, charger, two silver rings, keyboard and mouse, among others. In all, he lost goods worth Rs 2.5 lakhs.
 
What’s shocking is that this has happened in a more secure apartment complex. We can understand if independent houses are facing this issue, but if apartments are also being targetted by miscreants, then this case should serve a cautionary note to every resident. They can no longer keep their entrance door open. Anybody can walk in and walk out within seconds.
 
In this case, the alleged culprit’s face, though not clearly visible, was captured on CCTVs at the apartment entrance. “He’s seen enterting without a bag and exiting with a bag,” said Sanchay to Residents Watch. “When I checked the footage from other places to see if I can get his vehicle number, I found that he was wearing a white shirt and blue jeans and roaming around the street for 20 minutes before entering our apartment on foot, and he had no company.”
 
Clearly, there was a flaw at the apartment security as no one should be allowed inside without making an entry in the log book. However, that alone may not be enough. What is required is more vigilance by the residents’ themselves. No longer can they keep their doors and windows open. In another recent case, the window grill was sawed to steal a laptop kept in a ground floor independent house in Sector 2 after they had slept at night.
 
You can still prevent more such thefts. Just hit the ‘share’ button for this story on the homepage and pass it on to your contacts on WhatsApp, Facebook, and Twitter, among others.