MP Prajwal Revanna under police custody 
States

Sexual abuse: Women cops execute Prajwal's arrest warrant at Bengaluru airport

As soon as the suspended JD(S) MP Prajwal Revanna landed at the Bengaluru airport in the wee hours of Friday, there was a posse of women policemen led by women IPS officers waiting to execute the arrest warrant against him in sexual assault cases.

Bengaluru | As soon as the suspended JD(S) MP Prajwal Revanna landed at the Bengaluru airport in the wee hours of Friday, there was a posse of women policemen led by women IPS officers waiting to execute the arrest warrant against him in sexual assault cases.

Three cases have been registered against him after a huge cache of videos leaked showing several women sexually abused allegedly by Prajwal.

The 33-year-old grandson of former Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda, who is seeking reelection as an NDA candidate from Hassan, fled the country on April 27 and returned in the early hours of Friday.

Soon after he alighted from the plane from Munich in Germany to Bengauru, he was received by women in Khaki, sources in the SIT said.

During the procedure of executing the arrest warrant, he was flanked by the women police who were led by two IPS officers, Suman D Pennekar and Seema Latkar. The Hassan MP was then taken in a jeep in which only women police were there. They took him to the CID office.

"It was a conscious call to send all women officers to arrest Prajwal, sending home a message that the JD(S) leader exploited his seat and power as an MP with women. The same women have authority to arrest him through all legal proceedings," a source in the SIT said.

There was also a symbolic message to the victims that women officers were not afraid of anyone, the source said.

We will form next govt in Kerala, says Modi in NDA rally

Iran warns US against ground invasion as regional diplomats seek end to war

Sri Lankan President Dissanayake thanks Indian PM Modi for fuel shipment

'Challenging' situation due to West Asia war, says Modi as he cautions against politicisation of crisis

'No Kings' rallies draw crowds across US, in Europe