Addressing
a group of reporters, the students said that the footage that was
relayed on most of the local news channels showed one of the women,
identified as Temitope Esther, catching the collar of the bus conductor
and another woman comes to intervene shoving the conductor away from
Esther.
Esther told Deccan Chronicle, “We had to
alight the bus on Lalbagh Road to go to our church and as there was
confusion over the passes (that were not signed by us), the rude
conductor instructed the bus driver not to stop the bus and he continued
driving. I went up to the driver and demanded that he stop the bus and
by then the conductor had come towards me and slapped me,” adding that I
accept that only after he slapped, I beat him in retaliation. “The
conductor then hung on to the bus hand rails and kicked on my stomach
repeatedly. Only after that my friends intervened and someone had video
recorded that part of the incident,” Esther said.
“We
were treated in an inhumane manner by the police who did not allow
Esther to receive medical aid though she was crying in pain. We were not
allowed to use mobile phones to inform our guardians, and not even to
contact our embassy,” said Abisodun Damilola another student.
“How
can a foreigner that too a woman, have the guts to assault an Indian,
that too a government servant without provocation. We have come to
Bengaluru for our higher education and we are educated well and we abide
by the laws of the land here,” said Oluwasheti Dorcas, one among the
group.
The six students after securing bail on
July 6 met the Additional Commissioners of Police both Prathap Reddy
and Harisekaran and briefed them about the incident. They have ordered
to register a case against the conductor. They also promised action
against the errant police officers, the students added.
“An
FIR has been registered against the BMTC conductor Nagesh and we are
almost done with the formalities for release of passports,” said a
police officer.
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