Dharmasthala Mass Burial Case: SIT Exhumation Amid Public Outcry

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July 31, 2025

The Dharmasthala Mass Burial Case

1. The Whistle-Blower & Chilling Allegations

In June 2025, a 48-year-old former sanitation worker filed a shocking complaint in Belthangady Court. He claimed he had been forced between 1995 and 2014 to bury or burn over 500 bodies, mostly women and minors. The remains often showed signs of sexual assault, strangulation, and acid attacks. The bodies were buried along the Netravathi River and forested areas. He produced skeletal remains as evidence.

He fled Dharmasthala in 2014 after family threats and resurfaced twelve years later, seeking closure. His public testimony promised “peace to victims’ souls” and personal expiation.

Whistleblower guiding SIT officials through dense forest terrain to marking sites amidst vegetation.

2. Formal FIR & Government Response

  • July 3: The whistle-blower filed an FIR at Dharmasthala police station under BNS Section 211(a) for delaying a crime report.
  • July 11: His sworn statement and skeletal remains were presented before a magistrate in Belthangady.
  • July 14: The Karnataka State Commission for Women took suo motu cognizance of missing women cases dating back decades.

By July 19, amid public uproar and legal pressure, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah announced formation of a Special Investigation Team (SIT) led by DGP Pronab Mohanty. Other members include senior IPS officers M.N. Anucheth, Soumyalatha S.K., and Jitendra Kumar Dayama.

Manual digging underway at second hilly site as officials continue exhumation near Dharmasthala mass burial case ghat.

3. SIT Action: Mapping & Exhumation

The whistle-blower identified 15 alleged burial sites—mainly riverbanks and forested hills. The Anti-Naxal Force (ANF) was deployed to all.

  • First five sites yielded no remains.
  • Site 6 revealed partial human skeletal remains at a 4-foot depth on July 31.
  • Exhumation at site 2 continued manually near Netravathi bathing ghats. Water seepage has hampered excavation efforts.

During site inspections, SIT officials accompanied revenue officers and local administrators in verifying land records.

Partially exposed skeletal remains found at site 6 in Dharmasthala mass burial probe.

4. Safety, Ethics & Media Gags

The whistle-blower was granted protection under the Witness Protection Scheme on July 10, but legal teams raised concerns about police claims that he was missing. His credentials remain confidential, his face covered in court, and advocates objected to alleged leaks of his identity. Lawsuits have been filed to protect him and his counsel.

Media content suppression orders were issued by a civil court on July 18, requiring the deletion of over 8,800 links about the case. The Supreme Court on July 24 refused to overturn the gag order and called for petitioners to pursue the High Court first.

5. Political & Civil Society Reactions

  • AIDWA held a convention demanding full autonomy for the SIT; they called for broader probes into past unresolved crimes like Padmalatha (1986), Sowjanya (2012), Narayana and Yamuna (2012), and Ananya Bhat (2003).
  • MP Santhosh P. Kumar penned a letter urging the National Investigation Agency (NIA) to take over, citing alleged organized criminal enterprise and local intimidation.
  • Health Minister Dinesh Gundu Rao affirmed there would be no cover-up: “No one will be protected if evidence emerges,” he stated. Legal experts criticized delays in exhumation and police inaction.

Opposition leaders, especially from the BJP, called the probe politically motivated, warning that the sacred identity of Dharmasthala should not be tarnished in the name of politics.

Timeline & Key Milestones

DateEvent
June–July 2025Whistle-blower surfaces after long hiding; files complaint and offers remains.
July 3FIR filed; statement under BNSS Section 183 recorded.
July 10Legal protection granted; complaintant appears before court.
July 14Women’s Commission seeks action on missing women cases.
July 19SIT constituted under DGP Pronab Mohanty.
July 27–31SIT inspects 15 sites; starts exhumations; site six yields skeletal remains.
July 24Supreme Court refuses to counter gag order.

Why It Matters

  • Justice delayed: Decades of unresolved murders and missing women cases raise serious questions about systemic failure.
  • Witness protection: Safeguards remain uncertain, amid alleged leaks and threats.
  • Media suppression: Journalistic scrutiny versus temple reputational rights remains contested.
  • Need for deeper inquiry: Calls for NIA involvement reflect demand for impartial, high-power investigation.
  • Moral reckoning: Public outrage stems from betrayal of trust in a religious sanctuary.

Final Thoughts

The Dharmasthala mass burial case is more than shock headlines—it’s a profound crisis of faith, justice, and governance. A formerly trusted temple town now faces a reckoning: will structural reforms and fearless investigation reveal the truth, deliver justice to victims, and restore public confidence?

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