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The handbook distributed by the Home Department among policemen on duty at the hill shrine and its premises says all pilgrims are permitted to enter the temple as per the September 2018 verdict of the Supreme Court. As the matter kicked up a political controversy, state Devaswom Minister K Radhakrishnan clarified it was printed earlier and the directives that appear in this year’s handbook were by mistake.
”The government has no ill-motive in the matter. We have done everything with a good intention. If there are any lapses in the directives, directions will be given to withdraw it,” the minister told reporters in Sabarimala.
The controversial directive appears as the first among several given for policemen to be followed while on duty at the Lord Ayyappa Temple.
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”If the decision (of the government) is to turn Sabarimala into a war zone again and to target believers, we haven’t forgotten anything from the past. The government had backtracked from those things before. If you are coming up again with such moves, it will have far reaching consequences…that’s the only thing we can say,” he told reporters.
The BJP leader also said it was better for the government to step back from such moves.
The famed Lord Ayyappa temple in Sabarimala here opened on Wednesday evening on the eve of the annual Mandalam-Makaravilakku pilgrimage season which this year is expected to see a 40 to 50 per cent increase in devotees in the absence of COVID-19 restrictions.
The temple witnessed a huge turnout of devotees this morning braving heavy rains.