Shivamogga: The project to divert Sharavathi river water to Bengaluru has been scrapped, announced MLA Gopalakrishna Beluru during a press conference today. The proposal, which had garnered significant attention across the state and district, faced strong opposition from several local organisations and environmentalists, leading to its cancellation.

The project was initially proposed during the BJP-led government under Basavaraj Bommai. However, the Congress government, after taking charge, estimated the cost to be around ₹20,000 crore. Gopalakrishna clarified that apart from this cost estimate, no further progress was made on the project under the Congress government.

He added that both Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar sought his opinion on the matter, which eventually led to the decision to drop the project.

Gopalakrishna also highlighted the Congress government's support for those affected by the Sharavathi submersion, with multiple meetings held at the Vidhana Soudha under the leadership of District In-charge Minister Madhu Bangarappa. A petition has been submitted to the Supreme Court, and lawyers have been appointed to present a strong case. He assured that there was no question of displacing farmers and reaffirmed the government's commitment to stand by them.

Criticising MP Raghavendra, Gopalakrishna said that the MP failed to raise his voice for the farmers affected by the Sharavathi submersion at the central level, questioning his effectiveness as a representative.

KPCC spokesperson Ayanuru Manjunath, and prominent leaders including Somashekhar Lavigere, Ramesh Shankarghatta, Balaji, Shiju Pasha, and Padmanabha were also present at the press conference.

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New Delhi, Oct 21: Olympic bronze medal-winning former wrestler Sakshi Malik has said that Vinesh Phogat and Bajrang Punia's decision to accept exemption from the Asian Games trials last year hit the image of their protest against Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh as it made their movement seem "selfish".

Sakshi, who was one of the three prominent faces of the prolonged protest, made this statement in her recently-released book 'Witness'. She said their protest developed cracks when "people close to" Bajrang and Vinesh began to fill their minds with "greed".

The three had alleged that Sharan Singh, the former head of the Wrestling Federation of India, sexually harassed women wrestlers during his tenure. The case is still being heard in a Delhi court.

The ad-hoc committee, that took over the administration of wrestling after WFI's suspension, exempted Bajrang and Vinesh from the 2023 Asian Games trials but Sakshi decided not to seek the favour as suggested by her colleagues.

Eventually, Sakshi did not compete while Vinesh suffered an injury before the Games and Bajrang failed to win a medal in Hangzhou.

"The old way of thinking selfishly was taking over once again. The people close to Bajrang and Vinesh had started filling their minds with greed. Now they were talking about this exemption from trials for the Games," Sakshi wrote in the book co-authored with journalist Jonathan Selvaraj but did not give names of those who influenced the duo.

"...Nothing good came of Bajrang and Vinesh's decision to take the exemption...their decision badly hurt the image of our protest. It put us in a situation where many supporters started to think that we were actually in the protest for selfish reasons," the 32-year-old said.

The protest ended after the wrestlers' march towards the new Parliament Building was halted by the Police on May 28, 2023.

Both Vinesh and Bajrang joined the Congress party before the Haryana assembly elections earlier this month. The former contested and won from the Julana constituency, while the latter was made head of the party's national farmers' unit.

Before the political plunge, Vinesh endured a heartbreaking sporting low when she was disqualified from the 50kg category Olympic finals in Paris for being 100gm overweight.

Was harassed as a child

The 32-year-old from Haryana said she was molested in her childhood too by a tuition teacher but she kept quiet.

"I could not tell my family about it because I thought it was my fault. My tuition teacher from my school days used to harass me. He would call me over to his place for classes at odd times and sometimes tried to touch me. I was scared to go for my tuition classes but I could never tell my mom."

Talking about her struggles at the start of her career, Sakshi said she hated confrontations and would think of running away from her bouts at the beginning of her career.

"It's a fear that I've carried to the end of my career. I've never enjoyed the actual act of confrontation.

"... I was an exceptionally slow starter in wrestling. I won my first bout only after nearly two years of my first stepping on a wrestling mat. It wasn't that I didn't have any physical skills.

"I was always one of the fastest and strongest girls at my coaching centre for my age. But I never developed the fearlessness you needed for a fight. I would always get very nervous before my bouts."

But she was a picture of defiance during the protest against Sharan Singh and said the political class disappointed her.

She also alleged that former wrestler Babita Phogat, who is now a BJP politician, had selfish motives even though she portrayed herself as a well-wisher for the protesting trio.

"In hindsight, while I know that ending Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh's reign was the primary goal for Vinesh and Bajrang, I made the mistake of thinking that that was Babita's sole intention too."

"...She didn't just want to just get rid of Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh – she wanted to replace him."

Babita could not be reached immediately for a comment on this assertion.

In the book, Sakshi also claimed that her parents took away most of her award money. She also alleged that her family was against her match with fellow wrestler Satyawart Kadian but she took a stand for their relationship.