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In the rape case filed against him, self-styled godman Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh was held guilty by a special CBI court on Friday.
Lakhs of supporters thronged Panchkula ahead of the verdict. Though they claim that their ‘satguru’ is innocent, a number of cases have piled up on Singh and the organisation that he heads — the Dera Saccha Sauda.
Let’s start with the 2002 rape and murder case:
A case of sexual exploitation was filed against Singh in September 2002 by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), after an anonymous letter by one of the female followers of the DSS accused Singh of raping two female followers in the premises of DSS.
The letter claimed that 35 to 40 other girls have been under constant threat from Dera members.
In October 2002, the editor of Poora Sach was shot by male followers of the DSS because of the heavy coverage the charges against Singh were getting in his newspaper. He died later on.
The basis of the charges were the letter and the confessions by the two Dera attackers. The verdict would be announced on 25 August.
For updates on the Ram Rahim case, read: Ram Rahim Verdict Live
In 2007, Singh apologised to the Sikh community after he enacted Shri Guru Govind Singh, the 10th guru of the Sikhs. He was accused of wearing a costume similar to that of the Guru. He was discharged of the charge in August 2014.
The CBI started examining the disappearance and murder of Singh’s driver, Faqir Chand. A case was filed against the Dera chief along with three other members of the sect, but it was closed due to poor investigation by the CBI in December 2010, with the accused being exonerated.
In 2014, the Punjab and Haryana High Court asked the CBI to investigate a case against Singh and doctors tied to the DSS, stating that 400 Dera followers had been castrated inside the sect’s headquarters.
The court remarked in December 2016 that though it was consensual, it was not an “act of humanity.” The case is still pending in court due to insufficient investigation.
In December 2014, media reports and a contempt petition filed by Rampal, head of the Satlok Ashram, facilitated the Punjab and Haryana courts to order suo motu probe into the DSS headquarters on suspicions of illegal arms training. It was seen by the court as a challenge to the state and judiciary.
Kamlesh Kumar, who alleged that his wife, Guddi Devi, was kidnapped by Singh and two of his team members, registered a case under the Jawahar Circle police station.
Devi had gone to partake in a satsang at the DSS headquarters, where she was allegedly abducted. A case was lodged against the managing director of DSS, Satnam Singh, under Sections 365 (kidnapping), 344, 346 (wrongful confinement), and 120b (criminal conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code.
The case remains open.
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and All-India Hindu Federation filed a complaint in January 2016 against the DSS head, accusing him of hurting Hindu sentiments by dressing up as the Hindu god Vishnu in a video.
The investigation is in motion, with no final decision taken on it.
Singh’s movies ‘Messenger of God’ and MSG-2 have been controversial too.
Many Sikh groups had protested against the release of the movies. They alleged that it was offensive to Sikhs. Others objected to the film portraying Adivasis as ‘anti-nationals.’
Filmmakers added disclaimers about the fictionality of characters in the movie, and after certain clarifications by the Dera chief himself, the movies released successfully.
(Sources: Hindustan Times, PTI, India Today )
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