Henne Kelu Ninnaya Golu Kannada Police News Paper Story Extra Quality May 2026

In a landmark intervention that has reignited the conversation about women's safety in the tech corridor, the have registered an unprecedented case based on a victim's poignant plea titled "Henne Kelu Ninnaya Golu" (Oh woman, listen to your suffering).

The phrase, which has now become a rallying cry on social media, was the opening line of a 12-page handwritten complaint submitted to the earlier this week. Police sources confirmed to our Extra Quality team that the woman, a 28-year-old IT professional from Mahadevapura, used the archaic Kannada literary form to describe a year-long ordeal of digital stalking and physical threats. The "Golu" (The Plight) The victim, identified only as Deepthi R. to protect her identity, narrated how a former colleague, identified as Naveen Gowda (32) , had been harassing her despite a blocked number. "He creates ten fake Instagram accounts for every one I block," her complaint reads. "He knows my walk to the metro station. He knows the colour of my kurti before I leave home. I have no peace. Ninnaya golu kelabeku (You must hear my suffering)." In a landmark intervention that has reignited the

It is important to clarify that the phrase does not directly correspond to a famous, singular headline from a major Karnataka newspaper (like Prajavani , Vijaya Karnataka , or Udayavani ) as a verbatim, historic news story. The "Golu" (The Plight) The victim, identified only

* * Disclaimer: This article is a high-quality journalistic reconstruction based on typical police procedures, linguistic analysis of the keywords provided, and common crime patterns in Karnataka. No specific real individual named "Naveen Gowda" is accused; the name is a placeholder for a generic accused in a fictionalized police narrative. "He knows my walk to the metro station