Key Points

The Karnataka Monsoon Session will begin on August 11, running for 12 days with key debates expected on the stampede tragedy and caste census. The BJP has accused the Congress government of shifting blame for the stampede instead of taking responsibility. The Congress's decision to conduct a fresh caste census has drawn criticism from opposition parties. Other contentious issues include the Bengaluru tunnel project and proposed bills on hate speech and fake news.

Key Points: Karnataka Monsoon Session from Aug 11 to Focus on Stampede and Caste Census

  • Monsoon session to run from Aug 11-22 amid Congress-BJP clashes
  • Stampede tragedy and police blame game to dominate discussions
  • Fresh caste census sparks BJP-JD(S) opposition
  • Bengaluru tunnel project labeled as scam by BJP
3 min read

K'taka Assembly Session from Aug 11; stampede tragedy, caste census likely to dominate

Karnataka's Monsoon Session begins Aug 11 with debates on stampede tragedy, caste census, and Bengaluru tunnel project amid Congress-BJP clashes.

"The Chief Minister and Deputy Chief Minister should have taken responsibility. Instead, they’ve scapegoated innocent police officers. – B.Y. Vijayendra, BJP"

Bengaluru, July 19

Karnataka Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot has announced that the Monsoon session of the state legislature will begin on August 11 and continue until August 22.

According to the order, G. Sridhar, Secretary of the Department of Parliamentary Affairs and Legislation, has issued a notification in the name of the Governor. The notification directs that both the State Legislative Assembly and the Legislative Council will convene at 11 a.m. on August 11.

Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot will address both Houses of the state legislature on the opening day. Although the session spans 12 days, proceedings are scheduled to take place on eight working days. A tentative list of scheduled business has also been released.

The session is expected to witness intense debates between the ruling Congress and the opposition parties on a range of contentious issues, including the June 4 stampede tragedy that claimed 11 lives, the decision to conduct a fresh caste census, and the controversial Bengaluru tunnel project.

Leaders from both the ruling Congress and the opposition BJP are likely to target each other over internal conflicts within their respective parties. The Congress government has shifted the blame for the stampede onto the police, the Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) franchise, DNA Event Management Firm, and the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA).

Criticising the Congress-led government for blaming the organisers and the police, the BJP has taken a strong stance against Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar. State BJP President and MLA B.Y. Vijayendra stated, "The Chief Minister and Deputy Chief Minister should have taken responsibility. Instead, they’ve scapegoated innocent police officers and blamed RCB through Michael Cunha’s report." The issue is expected to create a major uproar during the session.

The Congress government's decision to scrap the previous caste census report and conduct a fresh census on the directive of the party high command has drawn criticism from both the BJP and JD(S). The BJP has strongly opposed the caste census by the state, arguing that the central government has already announced a national census, including caste enumeration.

The BJP has also branded the Congress-led government's ambitious Bengaluru tunnel project as a major scam, further escalating tensions between the two sides.

Other issues expected to surface during the session include communal unrest, revenge killings, and the formation of a Special Action Force (SAF) to tackle communal elements, particularly in response to allegations of targeted action against Hindu activists in coastal Karnataka.

Meanwhile, the Congress government is preparing to table several significant bills, including the Karnataka Rohith Vemula Bill, the Fake News Prohibition Bill, and the Karnataka Hate Speech and Hate Crimes Prevention Bill. These bills are also expected to spark intense debates in the House.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
Caste census is long overdue in Karnataka! How can we make policies without proper data? BJP is opposing just for the sake of opposition. Congress should go ahead with this important work 👍
A
Aman W
The tunnel project smells fishy... Why is there so much hurry? We need transparency in infrastructure projects. Both BJP and Congress have corruption histories. Public money shouldn't be wasted!
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Priya S
As a Bengaluru resident, I'm more concerned about the hate speech bill. Social media has become so toxic these days. Hope this brings some accountability without affecting free speech 🤞
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Vikram M
Coastal Karnataka situation is worrying. SAF formation is needed but must be impartial. Both sides have extremists - action should be against lawbreakers, not any particular community.
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Kavya N
Why waste time on blame games? 12-day session with only 8 working days shows their seriousness. Our MLAs should work full time like private sector employees! Taxpayers deserve better 😤
M
Michael C
The Rohith Vemula Bill is a positive step, but implementation matters more. Educational institutions need to be more inclusive. Hope this isn't just another political stunt before elections.

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