The Special Investigation Team (SIT) formed to probe the alleged secret burials at Dharmasthala Monday took the whistleblower to locations around the Karnataka temple town where the bodies are said to have been buried.
The team conducted a spot mahazar (inspection) of the location where the whistleblower had dug up a skull, which he had handed over to investigating authorities while filing a complaint earlier this month. This was apart from marking other spots around Snana Ghatta (bathing ghat), located on the banks of River Netravati, where the bodies were allegedly buried by him, according to sources.
The mahazar took place amid heavy police presence as personnel from Dharmasthala and Belthangady police stations, and the Karnataka State Reserve Police were deployed around the spot. The process took place after SIT officials questioned the whistleblower for two consecutive days – Saturday and Sunday – regarding the allegations made by him. During the mahazar process, the complainant’s face was concealed with a mask to protect his identity.
Earlier this month, the whistleblower – a former sanitation worker employed at Dharmasthala – filed a police complaint saying he was forced to bury several bodies and was threatened against approaching the police. The complainant had said that he was suffering from ‘guilty consciousness’ and that many of the bodies he had buried were of women with signs of sexual assault.
The Dharmasthala police filed a First Information Report (FIR) on July 4 based on the complaint filed by the whistleblower. On July 19, succumbing to pressure from various organisations and activists, the Karnataka government formed an SIT to probe the sensational allegations levelled by the whistleblower.
Last week, the SIT set up an office at the Belthangady police station. Officials from SIT had also visited the Dharmasthala police station to collect relevant documents pertaining to the case.