Bengaluru: The Karnataka High Court has directed Belthangady MLA Harish Poonja not to make any further hate speeches or repeat offences under criminal sections already filed against him.

Senior advocate S. Balan, appearing for the complainant Ibrahim, urged the court to vacate the interim stay granted on FIRs registered against Poonja for his alleged inflammatory speeches targeting the Muslim community and provoking communal tensions in Dakshina Kannada district. The court heard the matter on Thursday.

Advocates representing the government and Poonja sought more time, but Balan opposed the plea, arguing that allowing the interim stay to continue would enable the MLA to repeat such actions.

Balan told the court that Poonja’s hate speeches had provoked mob violence, including a lynching in Mangaluru and three recent murders in the region. He added that interim stay orders were being misused to incite communal hatred and bypass the law.

Justice Krishna Kumar, after hearing the arguments, extended the interim stay until August 7 but imposed strict conditions. The court directed that Harish Poonja must not indulge in hate speech or repeat any criminal conduct related to the sections already invoked against him.

Poonja had previously courted controversy during a speech at the Brahmakalashotsava of Tekkaru Gopalakrishna Temple, where he allegedly said that "rowdy Muslims" should be kept away from temple events and called for Hindu unity without fostering harmony with Muslims. His remarks reportedly escalated tensions at a time when communal killings had already taken place in the region.

The MLA had moved the High Court on May 4, 2025, seeking to quash the FIR registered at Uppinangady Police Station and requested an immediate stay on the proceedings. On May 22, the High Court had granted an interim stay.

Ibrahim, represented by Balan, later filed a "vacating stay" application against the May 22 order. FIRs are currently registered against Poonja in multiple police stations in Dakshina Kannada under various sections of the IPC, including:

* Belthangady PS: Crime No. 39/2023 – IPC 153, 153A, 505(1)(c), 505(2)
* Dharmasthala PS: Crime No. 57/2024 – IPC 504, 353
* Belthangady PS: Crime No. 58/2024 – IPC 143, 147, 341, 504, 506 r/w 149
* Bajpe PS: Crime No. 239/2016 – IPC 143, 147, 290, 160, 504 r/w 149
* Bantwal PS: Crime No. 117/2017 – IPC 142, 143, 188 r/w 149
* Dharmasthala PS: Crime No. 77/2023 – IPC 143, 353, 504 r/w 149
* Belthangady PS: Crime No. 105/2023 – IPC 504, 505(2)

Despite multiple FIRs, the complainant argued that Poonja continued to engage in repeat offences, making him ineligible for further protection through interim orders.

While continuing the stay until the next hearing, the High Court laid down firm conditions, clearly stating that Harish Poonja must refrain from hate speech and any repetition of his past criminal acts.

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Dhaka (PTI): A Bangladesh court on Monday sentenced deposed Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to 10 years in jail in two separate corruption cases related to alleged irregularities in allocations of land in a government housing project.

Dhaka Special Judge’s Court-4 Judge Rabiul Alam handed down the verdicts, sentencing Hasina to a total of 10 years’ imprisonment — five years in each case, state-run BSS news agency reported.

The court sentenced 78-year-old Hasina, her nephew Radwan Mujib Siddiq, and her nieces, Tulip Rizwana Siddiq and Azmina Siddiq, and others in the cases over alleged irregularities in the allocation of plots under the Rajuk New Town Project in Purbachol.

The judgment was pronounced at around 12.30 pm.

Tulip Siddiq was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment — two years in each case — while Radwan Mujib Siddiq and Azmina Siddiq were each sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment in both cases.

Rajuk member Mohammad Khurshid Alam, the only accused to surrender before the court, was sentenced to one year’s imprisonment in each case, totalling two years.

The court also fined all convicted persons Tk1 lakh each and ordered them to serve an additional six months in prison in default of payment.

Hasina has been living in India since she fled Bangladesh on August 5 last year in the face of the massive protests. She was earlier declared a fugitive by the court.

The cases were filed by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) over alleged abuse of power in the allocation of two 10-katha plots.

According to the prosecution, the accused manipulated the allocation process and violated existing rules and regulations of the Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha (Rajuk).