Kottayam: Sister Anupama, who led the protests demanding justice for a nun who accused former Jalandhar Bishop Franco Mulakkal of rape, has left the convent and renounced her nunhood, according to sources from the Latin Catholic Church.

Anupama, an Alappuzha native, was part of a Kuravilangad-based convent under the Jalandhar diocese. She became the public face of the protests after a fellow nun accused Mulakkal of repeatedly raping her during his visits to the Kottayam convent between 2014 and 2016.

Church sources confirmed that she had left the convent “some time back,” but did not reveal the exact date or the reason behind her decision. Anupama and her family have so far remained unavailable for comment, and she has not made any public statement.

It was Anupama who took the lead in addressing the media and mobilising public support for the survivor, as the latter chose to stay away from the spotlight. Along with other nuns, Anupama had openly criticised the Church’s handling of the case and continued to challenge its authority in the years that followed.

Franco Mulakkal was temporarily relieved of his pastoral duties by Pope Francis in 2018. He was later acquitted by a local court in Kerala and stepped down as Bishop of Jalandhar in 2023. He currently leads a prayer mission in Kottayam as the Bishop Emeritus of the Jalandhar diocese.

The Church has not issued any official statement regarding Anupama’s resignation or her future plans.

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Jabalpur (PTI): Army divers and disaster response teams on Saturday expanded their search at Bargi Dam in Madhya Pradesh to locate a man and three children still missing after the cruise boat tragedy that claimed nine lives two days ago, officials said.

With 28 of the 41 identified passengers onboard the ill-fated cruise boat rescued safely, police are preparing to register an FIR in connection with the accident that occurred at the reservoir in Jabalpur district on Thursday evening, they said.

The search radius has been expanded to 5 km in the backwaters of the Bargi Dam, located downstream of the Narmada River, area sub-divisional officer of police (SDOP) Anjul Ayank Mishra told PTI.

Nine people drowned in the incident, while 28 were rescued, and efforts are ongoing to trace the missing persons, he said.

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According to the police, more than 200 rescuers, including around 20 Army divers airlifted from Agra, began the search operation at 5 am on Saturday to trace Kamraj, an employee of the Ordnance Factory in Khamaria, his son Tamil (5), Vijay Soni (6) and Mayuram (5).

Mishra said that an inquest case has been registered and the post-mortem of nine deceased persons has been completed.

"Our priority is to search for the missing persons. We will soon register an FIR," he said.

Investigators have said that CCTV footage near the boarding point showed 43 people heading towards the ill-fated boat, and the names of 41 persons, who boarded the vessel, have been ascertained so far.

Collector Raghvendra Singh confirmed that a search is underway for four missing persons.

The rescue operation, being carried out by the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) and local divers, was briefly affected around 9 am due to strong winds.

The state government on Friday ordered a probe into the incident and dismissed three crew members after survivors alleged negligence and safety lapses, including failure to provide life jackets.

The government also banned the operation of similar vessels in the state.

The boat, operated by the state tourism department, sank during a sudden storm around 6 pm on Thursday, and the wreckage was retrieved from the dam water on Friday, after the rescuers confirmed that there were no more bodies inside.

Eyewitnesses have said that strong winds made the water choppy, prompting passengers to raise an alarm and ask the crew to steer the vessel towards the riverbank.

A survivor alleged negligence by the crew and described a last-minute scramble for life jackets.