•
Government of Kerala •
Communist Party of India (Marxist) •
Communist Party of India •
Bharatiya Janata Party •
Indian National Congress }} In the period following the Supreme Court verdict, a total of seven
hartals were organised in
Kerala by various Hindu groups under the flag of the Sabarimala Karma Samithi.
October 2018 The first hartal was observed in
Pathanamthitta district on 7 October 2018. The
BJP called for this hartal in response to alleged police violence against Prakash Babu, state president of
Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, during a protest march held on 6 October 2018. The second hartal was held on 18 October 2018. In the lead-up to the hartal, Malayalam actor and BJP member
Kollam Thulasi said that women who enter Sabarimala should be ripped in half. He also declared that the faithful should prevent women from entering the temple. A
First Information Report was registered against him, citing his "deliberate and malicious acts, intended to outrage religious feelings of any class." The Chief Minister of Kerala, Pinarayi Vijayan, held "RSS (
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh)-driven upper caste religious fanatics" responsible for the violent agitation. The
Indian National Congress also launched a protest demanding the state government file a review petition against the Supreme Court's verdict.
Rahul Easwar, a member of the family of Sabarimala priests and leader of Ayyappa Dharma Sena, was arrested for inciting violence and rioting near the Sabarimala temple complex. He was denied bail on the grounds that he was likely to return to Sabarimala to incite further trouble. By the end of October, over 3,000 people had been arrested and around 500 cases were registered at police stations across Kerala.
November 2018 The third hartal occurred on 2 November 2018. The putative cause was the death a lottery ticket seller, Sivadasan, who had gone on the Sabarimala pilgrimage and was found dead near Laha. BJP called for a hartal in Pathanamthitta district. They blamed police action at Pamba for his death, although police confirmed that Sivadasan had died in a traffic accident. Anticipating protests,
IPC Section 144, which can be used to prevent the assembly of people in the possibility of danger, was declared at
Sannidhanam,
Pamba,
Nilakkal and Elavunkal when the temple reopened for the 41-day Mandalam Makaravilakku pilgrim season on 16 November 2018. Around 70 people were arrested for defying these orders and protesting near the main temple. This included K. Surendran, state secretary of the
Bharatiya Janata Party, and K.P. Sasikala, leader of
Hindu Aikya Vedi, who were taken into preventive detention during their journey to the temple on 17 November. The fourth hartal in Kerala was organized by the Bharatiya Janata Party on 17 November 2018. The reason given for this hartal was the arrest of K P Sasikala. It was a statewide demonstration. On 21 November,
Thiruvananthapuram City Police Commissioner P Prakash threatened
non-resident Indians (NRIs) with "getting their passports cancelled, and forcing [them] to return to India." The police commissioner accused them of "inciting riots and fermenting trouble over the Sabarimala issue" and using social media to deliberately create instability in the region.
The Kerala police department was severely criticised by the
High Court for the restrictions it had implemented in Sabarimala, which had caused difficulty for pilgrims. Following this criticism from the High Court, all restrictions except Section 144 were gradually removed. The
Indian National Congress and
Bharatiya Janata Party launched separate protests demanding the state government revoke the Section 144 restrictions.
December 2018 The fifth hartal took place on 11 December 2018. Bharatiya Janata Party called this hartal in the
Thiruvananthapuram District of Kerala. It was in response to the alleged police action against the march organised by
Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha on 10 December 2018. A 49-year-old man committed suicide in front of the protest site on 13 December 2018; afterward, BJP called for another statewide hartal. It was the sixth hartal invoked by BJP on Sabarimala issue since the beginning of the Mandalam Makaravilakku pilgrim season at Sabarimala. The BJP alleged that the man was an Ayyappa devotee who had immolated himself in protest against the restrictions imposed by the Kerala government at Sabarimala. The police maintained that the man had committed suicide for personal reasons and his
dying declaration did not mention Sabarimala. On 26 December, thousands of Ayyappa devotees, mainly women, took part in Ayyappa Jyothi, an event organised by
Hindutva groups to protest the Supreme Court verdict. In some places, the participants at the event were attacked by activists from the
Communist Party of India and
Democratic Youth Federation of India. In response, Kerala Police arrested 16 people who allegedly planned the attacks. Cases are also filed against 1400 people who took part in the Ayyappa Jyothi event. As a counter protest, women supporting the Supreme Court verdict formed a human chain called
Vanitha Mathil (Women's Wall), which stretched across the state of
Kerala. Around three to five million women participated in the event. Vanitha Mathil was organised by the state government.
January 2019 The seventh hartal was on 3 January 2019. Sabarimala Karma Samithi called a statewide hartal in Kerala, supported by the Bharatiya Janata Party. The hartal was provoked by the successful entry of two women,
Bindu Ammini and Kanakadurga, into Sabarimala. One of the protesters, Chandran Unnithan, a member of Sabarimala Karma Samiti, was injured when CPI(M) members started pelting stones and he died shortly of severe head injuries. Many cases of violence and arson were reported from across the state during this particular hartal. Fed up with the economic and social effects of the hartals, trade organisations in Kerala had already decided to observe 2019 as 'anti-hartal year' and to defy future hartals. Even though police had promised them adequate protection, shops which opened in defiance of the hartal were widely attacked; some were even set on fire. Media organisations boycotted all press conferences by the
Bharatiya Janata Party following unprovoked, targeted attacks on journalists. More than 100 buses belonging to the
Kerala State Road Transport Corporation were damaged. Offices, libraries and businesses related to the ruling Communist party were damaged, and incidents of street fights between CPI(M) and BJP cadres were reported in many places. Anticipating further violence, Section 144 was imposed in the towns of
Palakkad and
Manjeswaram the next day. There were reports of attacks on the homes of both women who had tried to enter Sabarimala as well as those who supported the verdict. A hotel owned by
Kerala Tourism Development Corporation at
Chennai was also damaged by unidentified men protesting against women's entry to Sabarimala. Leaders of the ruling CPI(M) compared those unleashing violence over the Sabarimala verdict to
Taliban and
Khalistan terrorists. ==Successful entries==