Wrestlers hold secret meetings to plan for future | More sports News – Times of India
Unfazed by the high-handedness of the Delhi police on Sunday, Bajrang and Vinesh held a series of meetings with khap leaders and their village elders at a farm house in Gurugram. The meeting was attended by the wrestlers’ team of lawyers as well to discuss the legal recourse in the wake of an FIR being registered against the ‘organisers’ of the proposed women’s mahapanchayat, TOI has learnt.
The police have booked the organisers (read wrestlers) of the women’s mahapanchayat under different sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and section 3 of the PDPP Act. While all are bailable offences, the legal team of the wrestlers fears coercive and motivated action by the police, which has resulted in wrestlers leaving the national capital.
The supporters of the wrestlers fanned out to different parts of Haryana and districts and towns bordering Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and Haryana to hold discussions. After the wrestlers and their supporters were detained and later released by the Delhi police on Sunday evening, they assembled at Rio Olympics bronze medallist Sakshi’s apartment near Connaught Place in the night to ponder over the police’s misbehaviour with female wrestlers. The police action, the wrestlers alleged, resulted in bruised arms and minor injuries to Malik, Vinesh and her cousin Sangeeta Phogat.
While Sakshi stayed put at her Delhi residence, Bajrang, Vinesh, Sangeeta, Jitendra Kinha and others left for Haryana in the morning to hold meetings. Later, Bajrang visited his ancestral home in Khudan village of Jhajjar district. It’s been learnt that Delhi police has been keeping a close vigil on the wrestlers’ next move.
On Monday, the Jantar Mantar site wore a deserted look with only a group of women from Manipur protesting there. The police have imposed Section 144 (prohibit the assembly of four or more people in an area) at the site. It’s been learnt that the police have clearly told the wrestlers that they can’t return to Jantar Mantar.
The wrestlers originally did not have the permission to protest when they had started their second round of agitation on April 23, but the police allowed them to continue with their protest. This time, the police have told the wrestlers to continue their agitation at the Ramlila Ground, but only after obtaining proper permission from them.
The wrestlers had called for a women’s mahapanchayat at the new Parliament building at a time when it was being inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, leading to a scuffle between the protestors and police.
“It took Delhi Police seven days to register an FIR against Brij Bhushan who sexually assaulted girls and it didn’t even take seven hours to register an FIR against us for peacefully protesting. Has dictatorship started in this country? The whole world is watching how the government is treating its players,” Sakshi wrote on her twitter account.
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