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This is an archive article published on October 21, 2000

HC admits appeal against Veerappan aides

BANGALORE, OCT 20: A division bench of the Karnataka High Court on Thursday admitted an appeal filed by the State of Karnataka against the...

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BANGALORE, OCT 20: A division bench of the Karnataka High Court on Thursday admitted an appeal filed by the State of Karnataka against the acquittal of 21 Veerappan aides.

Perumal and 20 other aides of the sandalwood smuggler were apprehended in the Sorekamadu forests in MM Hills. The 21 gang members were charged with smuggling of sandalwood and under various other provisions of the Forest Act.

The State had also charged the gang with having opened fire on the police party that apprehended them. The Mysore Sessions Court to which the case was transferred acquitted all the accused in April 2000. The sessions judge, Radhakrishna Holla, ruled that there was no evidence to prove the charges against the accused and had acquitted them. The State’s appeal against the acquittal was admitted on Thursday by Justice Bannurmath and Justice Prasad Rao.

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Meanwhile, the Tamil Maanila Congress today said the nexus between forest brigand Veerappan and Tamil militant groups had "dangerous" overtones and would have serious repurcussions in the future.

Senior TMC leader and former Union Minister S R Balasubramaniam alleged at a press conference here that the NDA government at the Centre was keeping silent on the "disturbing tendency" as it wanted to derive political mileage out of the issue, since a Congress government was in place in Karnataka.

He demanded that the Centre direct the Tamil Nadu and Karnataka governments to take effective steps to secure the release of Kannada actor Rajkumar, who had been in Veerappan’s captivity for the past 80 days.

The decision to send Tamil Nationalist Movement (TNM) leader P Nedumaran, known for his pro-LTTE leanings, as an emissary to secure Rajkumar’s release would only encourage anti-national forces in the state, he said and alleged that over 100 volunteers, who participated in the TNM conference in Madurai, had entered the forests to help Veerappan.

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The Tamil Nadu government should bring out a "white paper" on efforts it had taken to secure the actor’s release, he said, adding that the Centre’s continued silence on the abduction issue was a "slur" on its face.

He said Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi should not forget that his government was dismissed in 1990 only due to the LTTE links. The United Front government had lost power only because of some remarks against the DMK in the Jain Panel report, he added.

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