Key Points

Karnataka police intervened to remove a controversial festival cutout depicting Shivaji killing Afzal Khan. The move came after members of one community objected, creating tension in the communally sensitive area. Hindu activists initially resisted but later complied by replacing it with a solo Shivaji image. The situation was delicate due to past violent incidents during the same festival last year.

Key Points: Karnataka Police Remove Shivaji Afzal Khan Cutout Over Communal Tensions

  • Police removed cutout after objections from one community in sensitive area
  • Hindu activists demanded removal of Tipu Sultan cutouts in response
  • Devotees replaced it with a solo Shivaji poster to ease tensions
  • Locality witnessed stone pelting during last year's Ganesha procession
3 min read

Cutout of Shivaji killing Afzal Khan removed in Karnataka over law and order concern

Police in Davanagere remove Ganesha festival cutout showing Shivaji killing Afzal Khan citing law and order concerns after communal objections and past violence.

"The restrictions must be rolled back immediately. The Ganesha festival was an inspiration during the freedom struggle. - Shobha Karandlaje"

Davanagere, Aug 29

The Karnataka Police removed a cutout depicting Mughal commander Afzal Khan being killed by Chhatrapati Shivaji in Davanagere city on Friday, citing law and order concerns.

The cutout had been installed as part of Ganesha festival celebrations. Tension prevailed in the area after members of one community strongly objected to the cutout erected in the communally-sensitive Mattikallu locality, leading to arguments between members of two communities on Thursday night.

The jurisdictional RMC Yard police arrived to remove the cutout, but their move was opposed by some Hindu activists.

The police had given the devotees a deadline of 10.30 A.M. to remove the cutout and warned of legal action if they failed to comply.

Hindu activists convened a meeting and decided to demand that if the police insisted on removing the Afzal Khan cutout, they should also remove all cutouts of Mysuru’s erstwhile rulers Tipu Sultan and Hyder Ali installed across the district.

However, by Friday morning, the devotees themselves decided to remove the cutout and erected a new poster of Chhatrapati Shivaji alone.

Authorities heaved a sigh of relief after the development, as the Mattikallu locality had witnessed stone pelting and violent incidents during the Ganesha procession last year.

The devotees have also installed a Vinayak Savarkar cutout this year.

It can be recalled that when Chhatrapati Shivaji invaded the Konkan region, Mughal emperor Aurangzeb appointed Afzal Khan as the commander. Under the pretext of holding talks, Afzal Khan tried to capture Shivaji. At that moment, Shivaji killed the physically stronger Afzal Khan with a weapon known as the tiger claw (Wagh Nakh).

Earlier on Wednesday, attacking the government in Karnataka, Union Minister Shobha Karandlaje criticised it for placing restrictions on Ganesha festivities.

“Earlier, the police had taken the idol of Ganesha and placed it in a police vehicle. This year too, the government has introduced peculiar rules and regulations," the BJP leader criticised.

“I ask the government, why have so many restrictions been imposed on the Ganesha festival? Once a year, people instal Ganesha idols, worship them, celebrate, and take out processions. But the government is imposing regulations and curbing their celebrations. The restrictions must be rolled back immediately. The Ganesha festival was an inspiration during the freedom struggle,” Union Minister Karandlaje stated.

Expelled BJP leader and Vijayapura MLA Basanagouda Patil Yatnal, while questioning the restrictions, has challenged the authorities not to "dare interfere in the Ganesha festival celebrations in Vijayapura Assembly constituency."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I respect Shivaji Maharaj, maybe depicting violent historical moments during religious festivals isn't the best idea. Ganesh Chaturthi should be about unity and devotion, not reminding people of historical conflicts.
Siddharth J
The police did the right thing. Last year there was violence in the same area - why risk peace for political symbolism? Festivals should bring people together, not divide them.
A
Arjun K
Good compromise by the devotees - Shivaji Maharaj alone is enough inspiration. We don't need to show violence to honor our heroes. Jai Bhavani! Jai Shivaji! 🙏
M
Meera T
The double standard is obvious - if Shivaji's cutout is problematic, then Tipu Sultan's should be removed too. Either all historical figures are acceptable or none should be politicized during festivals.
K
Kavya N
As a Kannadiga, I'm tired of our festivals becoming political battlegrounds. Let's focus on the spiritual aspect of Ganesha festival rather than historical controversies. Ganpati Bappa Morya! 🐘

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