logo
After ink attack on Pravin Gaikwad, Sambhaji Brigade warns of retaliation

After ink attack on Pravin Gaikwad, Sambhaji Brigade warns of retaliation

Hindustan Times15-07-2025
A day after Sambhaji Brigade state president Pravin Gaikwad's face was smeared with black ink during an event in Solapur's Akkalkot, the outfit warned of retaliation and alleged political backing behind the attack. The incident has triggered sharp reactions from some organisations and political parties in opposition. On Monday, several progressive organisations, including Sambhaji Brigade, Maratha Seva Sangh, Maratha Mahasangh, Maratha Kranti Morcha, Shivsangram, as well as political parties like NCP (Sharad Pawar faction), Congress (UBT), and others gathered at Vyayam Shala in Shivajinagar Gaothan, Pune, to condemn the incident and discuss their next steps. (HT)
Activists from the Shivdharma Foundation, which has objected to the name 'Sambhaji Brigade' for its singular reference to Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj, allegedly carried out the attack. The group was reportedly led by BJP worker and Hindutva activist Deepak Sitaram Kate, who demanded that the outfit be renamed as Dharmaveer Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj Brigade.
'This was not a spontaneous act. It appears to have political patronage,' said Vikas Pasalkar, central observer for the Sambhaji Brigade. 'Changing an organisation's name is not done overnight. While we are ideological opponents, we know how to respond in our own way.'
Manoj Akhare, state president of the Brigade's political wing, echoed the sentiment. 'We will give a befitting reply to the attack on Pravin Gaikwad,' he said.
On Monday, several progressive organisations, including Sambhaji Brigade, Maratha Seva Sangh, Maratha Mahasangh, Maratha Kranti Morcha, Shivsangram, as well as political parties like NCP (Sharad Pawar faction), Congress (UBT), and others gathered at Vyayam Shala in Shivajinagar Gaothan, Pune, to condemn the incident and discuss their next steps.
'This act is not about one person,' said Maratha community leader Purushottam Khedekar. 'Many of the youths involved come from Bahujan backgrounds, but they were misled and enticed into such acts. We are taking this incident positively. It's a call for unity. We will work to rebuild the Maratha Seva Sangh and bring like-minded groups together again.'
Khedekar added that the term 'Maratha' transcends caste or religion. 'In our view, everyone in India, across communities, is a Maratha. It's a universal identity.'
Vijay Taware, who coordinated the meeting, clarified that no formal resolution was passed, but the primary purpose was to express collective outrage over the attack on Gaikwad.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ghaziabad ‘love jihad' case: Muslim man arrested again despite Hindu wife denying abduction claim
Ghaziabad ‘love jihad' case: Muslim man arrested again despite Hindu wife denying abduction claim

Scroll.in

time5 hours ago

  • Scroll.in

Ghaziabad ‘love jihad' case: Muslim man arrested again despite Hindu wife denying abduction claim

The police in Uttar Pradesh's Ghaziabad on Friday arrested a Muslim man on charges of abducting his Hindu wife, despite the woman saying in a video two days earlier that she left home of her own will. The man, Akbar Khan, and the woman, Sonika Chauhan, got married in August 2022. They had, however, not been living together as Chauhan's family objected to their relationship. The couple had eloped on May 24, after which local Bharatiya Janata Party leaders stepped in to help the Chauhans separate the couple and bring Sonika back to her family. Khan was arrested for the same offence on May 25, but was released on bail on June 8. Scroll had reported on the couple's ordeal at the time. A mob that claimed that the couple's marriage was a case of 'love jihad' had vandalised their businesses on May 26. Love jihad is a Hindutva conspiracy theory that holds that Muslim men pose as Hindus to trick Hindu women into relationships with the aim of converting them to Islam. In the early hours of July 30, the couple managed to run away again, reported The Indian Express. A member of Khan's family, who requested not to be identified, told Scroll that they went to Prayagraj to seek protection from the Allahabad High Court. On the same day, the Ghaziabad Police filed a new case against Khan and four others under provisions related to abduction, using poisonous substances to cause hurt, theft and criminal intimidation. The case was filed based on a complaint by Sonika's father Laxman Singh Chauhan. The complainant alleged that Khan had been threatening the family in the days leading up to his daughter's supposed abduction. He claimed that an intoxicating substance had rendered them unconscious on the night when the couple eloped again. Additionally, he claimed that Rs 50,000 and some jewellery were also missing from their home since then. However, soon after the couple ran away on July 30, Sonika released a video declaring that she had left her home on her own because her family was 'mentally and physically torturing' her. She said that for the past two months, her parents and local BJP leaders had been forcing her to testify against Khan. Ghaziabad interfaith couple: Nearly two months after the father of a 25-year-old woman in Ghaziabad accused her in-laws of kidnapping her, only for the daughter to claim that she has entered into an interfaith marriage by choice, her family filed a complaint at the Indirapuram… — The Indian Express (@IndianExpress) July 31, 2025 Nevertheless, the police on Thursday brought the couple back to Ghaziabad. Khan's family claimed that the police acted so swiftly because of political pressure. However, Indirapuram Assistant Commissioner of Police Abhishek Srivastava denied the allegations of political pressure. 'We are investigating the case based on the complaint by the woman's father,' he said. 'Her statement will be duly recorded.' On Friday, the police arrested Khan, his brother Maksad and their neighbour Lalit Ayyar, according to Ravendra Gautam, station house officer of the Indirapuram police station. Gautam said that the police are investigating whether Sonika was 'under pressure' to record the July 30 video. 'She is with her family now,' he added. 'Her statement will be recorded in court whenever she is comfortable.'

CPI(M) urges NIA to appeal against acquittal of Malegaon blasts case accused
CPI(M) urges NIA to appeal against acquittal of Malegaon blasts case accused

The Hindu

time5 hours ago

  • The Hindu

CPI(M) urges NIA to appeal against acquittal of Malegaon blasts case accused

Expressing 'dismay' and 'deep disappointment' over the verdict in the 2008 Malegaon blasts case, where all seven accused were acquitted by a special court on Thursday (July 31, 2025) the CPI(M) Polit Bureau on Friday (August 1, 2025) said it was yet another case of undue delay and eventual denial of justice to the victims of a terrorist act by an extremist Hindutva group. The Polit Bureau pointed out that the verdict came a day after Home Minister Amit Shah made a statement in Parliament that no Hindu could be a terrorist. Six persons were killed and nearly hundred were injured in the blasts. The accused included former BJP MP Pragya Singh Thakur and Lt. Col. Prasad Purohit, then a serving Army officer. The CPI(M) statement said the National Investigation Agency (NIA) had submitted that the conspirators had orchestrated the crime to terrorise a section of Muslims and was aimed at creating communal tensions. 'It is yet another case of undue delay and eventual denial of justice to the victims of the terrorist act by an extremist Hindutva group,' the Polit Bureau noted. The accused, the CPI(M) alleged, were patronised and supported by the RSS-BJP all through. 'In view of the serious nature of the crime, the CPI(M) demands the government to appeal the NIA court's decision,' the Polit Bureau said.

Malegaon blast accused trained Gauri Lankesh murder suspects, Karnataka SIT finds: Report
Malegaon blast accused trained Gauri Lankesh murder suspects, Karnataka SIT finds: Report

Hindustan Times

time6 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Malegaon blast accused trained Gauri Lankesh murder suspects, Karnataka SIT finds: Report

The names of two absconding accused in the 2006 and 2008 Malegaon blast case, Ramchandra Kalsangra and Sandeep Dange, surfaced during the Karnataka Police's investigation into the 2017 murder of journalist Gauri Lankesh, according to findings submitted by the Special Investigation Team (SIT). The SIT alleges they trained attendees at covert camps run by groups connected to Sanatan Sanstha, contributing to a network targeting ideological opponents. Both men, also wanted in the 2007 Mecca Masjid and Ajmer Sharif blast cases, are suspected to have served as trainers at covert arms and explosives camps attended by several of the 17 people arrested for Lankesh's murder, Indian Express reported. (Also Read: DK Shivakumar says over 9,700 garbage complaints resolved in Bengaluru, residents react) These training camps were organised by groups linked to Sanatan Sanstha between 2011 and 2017, with five camps in Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Gujarat attended by 'guest trainers,' the SIT chargesheet states. Kalsangra and Dange, linked to the right-wing group Abhinav Bharat, are among seven men connected to multiple bombings from 2006 to 2009 who have disappeared. Others include Amit Hakla (alias Ashwini Chauhan), wanted in the Samjhauta and Malegaon cases, and Sanatan Sanstha-linked Sarang Akolkar, Rudra Patil, and Jay Prakash, all wanted in the 2009 Goa blast case. The Karnataka SIT, based on statements from accused and witnesses, created sketches of the guest trainers. One of them, Suresh Nair, an Abhinav Bharat member and accused in the 2007 Ajmer blast, was arrested in Gujarat in 2018 and identified as 'Bade Babaji,' a trainer who attended camps in Gujarat and Jalna. His arrest suggested that Dange and Kalsangra could have similarly posed as trainers at these camps. The SIT also linked training activities to other murders, including those of Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare, and M M Kalburgi, claiming a covert group aligned with Sanatan Sanstha and Hindu Janajagruti Samiti operated a network to eliminate ideological opponents. The camps provided training in IEDs, subterfuge, and arms use. Arrested persons described trainers with titles like 'Babaji' and 'Guruji,' dressed as monks. The SIT's 9,235-page chargesheet, filed in November 2018, states that Sanatan Sanstha members followed militant Hindutva ideology guided by the group's publication Kshatra Dharma Sadhana. One witness turned hostile during the ongoing trial in May 2025, but the SIT maintains that missing Malegaon accused played a crucial role in creating a trained ideological cell. (Also Read: Karnataka HC lifts media gag in Dharmasthala mass burials case, calls it unconstitutional)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store