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                <title>Sheopur Farmer Murder Triggers Protest, Police Action</title>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p dir="ltr"><strong>A farmer murder in Sheopur linked to a land dispute triggered violent protests, highway blockade and police lathicharge in Madhya Pradesh.</strong></p>
<p> </p>]]></description>
                
                                    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/sheopur-farmer-murder-triggers-protest-police-action/article-19178"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/400/2026-05/sheopur-farmer-murder-sparks-violence,-highway-blockade-and-clash.jpg" alt=""></a><br /><h1 dir="ltr">Sheopur Farmer Murder Sparks Violence, Highway Blockade and Clash</h1>
<p dir="ltr">Sheopur district in Madhya Pradesh witnessed tense scenes on Saturday evening after a tribal farmer was allegedly shot dead in a violent land dispute, leading to protests, vandalism and a confrontation between villagers and police.</p>
<p dir="ltr">The incident took place in the Karahal area, where a long-running dispute over agricultural land reportedly escalated into firing. According to officials, the death of the farmer triggered anger among local residents, who later surrounded the police station, damaged vehicles and blocked the Sheopur-Shivpuri highway for several hours.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Police later used lathicharge and tear gas shells to disperse the crowd after the situation turned volatile.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Land Dispute Turns Deadly</h2>
<p dir="ltr">Initial reports indicate that the dispute was linked to recently demarcated land in the area. Revenue authorities had reportedly carried out measurement work in recent days, but tension between the two sides over possession continued.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Officials said Gangaram Adivasi, a tribal farmer, was working in his field on Saturday evening when around 10 to 12 men allegedly arrived in a Scorpio vehicle. Soon after reaching the spot, the attackers reportedly opened fire.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Witnesses told police that nearly seven rounds were fired during the attack. One bullet struck Gangaram in the abdomen, leaving him critically injured. He was taken to hospital by police personnel, where doctors declared him dead.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Protest Outside Police Station</h2>
<p dir="ltr">News of the killing spread quickly across nearby villages, leading to large gatherings outside Karahal police station later in the evening.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Several protesters carrying sticks and wooden rods allegedly damaged parked police vehicles and raised slogans demanding immediate arrests. Traffic movement on the Sheopur-Shivpuri highway was disrupted after villagers staged a road blockade.</p>
<p dir="ltr">The protest continued for hours, forcing authorities to deploy additional police personnel from more than six nearby police stations.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Police Use Force</h2>
<p dir="ltr">As the crowd became increasingly aggressive, police resorted to lathicharge to clear the area. Tear gas shells were also fired to push back protesters and restore movement on the highway.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Senior administrative and police officials reached the spot late in the evening to monitor the situation. Local MLA Mukesh Malhotra also visited the area as tensions remained high.</p>
<p dir="ltr">According to local authorities, the situation is currently under control, though police presence has been increased across sensitive pockets in Karahal and adjoining villages.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Sarpanch Among Injured</h2>
<p dir="ltr">Apart from the fatal shooting, several others were reportedly assaulted during the attack at the farmland.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Police said Panwada village sarpanch Ramavatar Adivasi and his brother Babulal Adivasi were allegedly beaten with sticks by the attackers. Some other villagers also suffered injuries in the violence, though officials have not yet released a detailed medical update.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Locals claimed the attack appeared planned, though investigators are still examining the sequence of events and motive behind the firing.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Murder Case Registered</h2>
<p dir="ltr">Karahal police have registered a murder case against six named accused, including one woman. Charges under multiple sections related to murder and violence have been added in the FIR.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Police teams have been sent to possible hideouts to trace the accused persons. Sources familiar with the investigation said the case appears to be connected to an old rivalry tied to disputed agricultural land.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Security patrols have been intensified in the region to prevent further unrest.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Area Remains Sensitive</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The incident has once again drawn attention to recurring land-related disputes in rural pockets of Madhya Pradesh, particularly in tribal-dominated regions where ownership conflicts often turn tense.</p>
<p dir="ltr">By Sunday morning, police officials maintained that the law-and-order situation was stable, though tension continued to prevail in parts of Sheopur district. Authorities are expected to continue monitoring the area closely as the investigation into the Sheopur farmer murder moves forward.</p>
<p> </p>]]></content:encoded>
                
                                                            <category>States</category>
                                            <category>Madhya Pradesh</category>
                                    

                <link>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/sheopur-farmer-murder-triggers-protest-police-action/article-19178</link>
                <guid>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/sheopur-farmer-murder-triggers-protest-police-action/article-19178</guid>
                <pubDate>Sun, 24 May 2026 13:50:09 +0530</pubDate>
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                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abhishek Joshi]]></dc:creator>
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                <title>From KBC Hotspot to Jail: The Rise and Fall of Amita Singh Tomar — Sheopur's ₹2.5 Crore Flood Relief Scam Exposed</title>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>KBC winner tehsildar Amita Singh Tomar arrested in Sheopur's ₹2.5 crore flood relief scam. 127 fake accounts, 22 patwaris held. MP corruption exposed.</strong></p>]]></description>
                
                                    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/from-kbc-hotspot-to-jail-the-rise-and-fall-of/article-16079"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/400/2026-03/untitled-design-(38).jpg" alt=""></a><br /><h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">From KBC Hotspot to Jail: How Sheopur's Flood Relief Money Ended Up in 127 Fake Accounts</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">She once sat across from Amitabh Bachchan under the famous studio spotlight, answered questions worth ₹50 lakh, and walked out a celebrity. The cameras loved her. The newspapers celebrated her. For a brief, shining moment, Amita Singh Tomar — tehsildar from Vijaypur, Sheopur — was the face of a government officer who had made good.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">On March 26, 2026, a police team from Baroda tracked her down to a house in Gwalior's Chandravadni Naka and put her in handcuffs. She was removed from her post the previous day by Collector Arpit Verma, her anticipatory bail had been rejected by both the Madhya Pradesh High Court and the Supreme Court of India, and there was nowhere left to run.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The story of Amita Singh Tomar is not just the story of one corrupt official. It is the story of a system that let flood-hit families starve while their relief money flowed into ghost accounts — and took five years to act.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">The Scam: How ₹2.5 Crore Was Stolen From Flood Victims</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The year was 2021. Madhya Pradesh, like much of central India, had experienced devastating floods. Thousands of families in Sheopur's Baroda tehsil lost crops, livestock, homes, and livelihoods. The government sanctioned flood relief compensation to reach the most affected — a lifeline for people who had nothing left.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">What happened next was a masterclass in administrative fraud.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Investigators found that 794 flood-affected people were officially identified in Baroda tehsil and were entitled to relief. But when the money was actually distributed, it was not transferred to those 794 families. Instead, funds were routed into 127 fake bank accounts — accounts that existed on paper, controlled by those running the scam. Approximately ₹2 crore of the total amount was diverted in this way, never reaching a single genuine flood victim. Police investigation further revealed financial transactions linked to the bank accounts of family members of the accused.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">By the time the full picture emerged, 22 patwaris — the frontline revenue officials who are the first point of contact between the government and rural citizens — had already been arrested in connection with the scam. Tomar was the senior-most official implicated, the tehsildar who oversaw the very process that was being manipulated beneath her.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/2026-03/untitled-design-(39).jpg" alt="Untitled design (39)" width="1366" height="768"></img></p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Five Years, Two Courts, One Arrest</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">What is perhaps the most damning aspect of this case is not the fraud itself — though that is damning enough — but the timeline. The scam happened in 2021. The arrest happened in March 2026. Five years passed between the crime and the consequence.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">During those five years, Tomar continued in government service. She was posted as tehsildar of Vijaypur. She applied for anticipatory bail, first in the Madhya Pradesh High Court and then, when that failed, in the Supreme Court of India. On March 18, 2026, a Supreme Court bench sitting in Court No. 13 rejected her anticipatory bail plea in clear terms, stating that no solid legal grounds had been presented to justify the relief. Her Special Leave Petition was simultaneously dismissed. The Supreme Court's rejection effectively closed every legal escape route.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Only then — with the apex court's door shut — did the administration move. Collector Arpit Verma removed her from the post of Vijaypur tehsildar on March 25. A police team led by SDOP Avneet Sharma arrested her the following day. She was produced in court and lodged in the women's jail in Shivpuri.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Five years. Two courts. Twenty-two patwaris arrested before her. And still, it took a Supreme Court rejection of anticipatory bail to trigger the arrest of the tehsildar who supervised the very mechanism that was defrauding flood victims.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">The Bigger Picture: How Deep Does the Sheopur Scam Go?</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Bhaskar report that originally broke this story references a ₹257 crore figure in connection with the broader flood relief irregularities in Sheopur — a number vastly larger than the ₹2.5 crore attributed specifically to the Baroda tehsil case in which Tomar has been arrested. This suggests that what is publicly known and prosecuted so far may represent only the visible tip of a far larger iceberg of flood relief fraud across the district.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The ₹257 crore figure, if accurate, would make the Sheopur flood relief scam one of the largest single-district disaster relief frauds in Madhya Pradesh's recent history. It raises questions that go beyond Tomar and the 22 patwaris already arrested: Who else in the administrative and political chain knew? Who signed off on the fake accounts? Who benefited from the remaining undiscovered portions of the alleged fraud?</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">These questions remain unanswered — and the investigation is, by all official accounts, still continuing.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">The KBC Angle: Fame as a Shield</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">It would be easy to treat the KBC angle as a colourful sidebar — a celebrity detail that adds spice to a corruption story. But it deserves more serious examination than that.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Amita Singh Tomar's fame from Kaun Banega Crorepati did not just make her a well-known figure. It made her a protected one — at least for a while. High-profile public personas create a kind of reputational friction around legal proceedings. Authorities move more carefully. Media coverage of early-stage investigations risks being seen as targeting a public figure. Colleagues in the administration close ranks. The arrest, when it finally comes, is surrounded by more drama and more scrutiny than it would be for an unknown official.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This is not unique to this case. Across India's corruption landscape, there are numerous examples of accused individuals using public profile, political connections, or social status to delay legal proceedings for years. The system is not designed to be immune to this — and it shows.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">What the Sheopur case makes clear is that fame is not integrity. Sitting across from Amitabh Bachchan and answering questions correctly says nothing about whether a person will choose honesty when entrusted with power over the poor and the vulnerable.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">What Flood Victims Lost — and Never Got Back</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">At the centre of this story — easy to forget amid the legal drama and celebrity angles — are 794 families in Baroda tehsil who were supposed to receive flood relief and did not. These were not wealthy families. They were rural households in one of Madhya Pradesh's most economically fragile districts, who had just survived a devastating flood and were waiting for government help that was being stolen from them in real time.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">For them, the arrest of Amita Singh Tomar five years after the crime is not justice. It is a reminder. A reminder that when disaster strikes the poor in India, the relief meant to reach them must pass through layers of administration — and each layer is an opportunity for someone to steal.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The 127 fake bank accounts were not created by accident. They required planning, coordination, access to official systems, and the cooperation of multiple officials at multiple levels. This was organised, premeditated fraud — executed against people who had just lost everything.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">What Needs to Change</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Sheopur flood relief scam is a failure of systems, not just of individuals. The following reforms are urgently needed:</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Real-time DBT monitoring:</strong> Direct Benefit Transfer systems must include automated flags when funds are disbursed to accounts that do not match the beneficiary database. This should happen at the point of transfer — not five years later in a criminal court.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Faster investigation timelines:</strong> A scam identified in 2021 that results in the senior-most official's arrest in 2026 is not accountability — it is a very slow-moving version of accountability that provides almost no deterrence.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Whistleblower protection:</strong> Someone knew about the 127 fake accounts before the investigation began. The system must make it safe and rewarding — not career-ending — to report such fraud early.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Independent disaster relief audit:</strong> Every large-scale disaster relief distribution should be subject to a mandatory independent audit within 90 days, not reviewed retrospectively when a criminal case finally forces a reckoning.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h3 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">The Hotspot Was Answered. The Question of Accountability Took Five Years.</h3>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Amita Singh Tomar answered every question correctly on KBC. She knew the answers, she stayed calm under pressure, and she walked away with ₹50 lakh. The audience cheered.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In Baroda tehsil, 794 families waited for flood relief that was being redirected into fake accounts while those same cameras rolled.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">She is in jail now. The investigation continues. Whether the full ₹257 crore of alleged fraud in Sheopur is ever fully investigated, prosecuted, and punished remains to be seen. What is already certain is this: disaster relief corruption is not a victimless crime. It is a crime against people who are already at their lowest — and it demands the fastest, most uncompromising accountability the system can deliver.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Five years was not fast enough. It must never take that long again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
                
                                                            <category>States</category>
                                            <category>Madhya Pradesh</category>
                                    

                <link>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/from-kbc-hotspot-to-jail-the-rise-and-fall-of/article-16079</link>
                <guid>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/from-kbc-hotspot-to-jail-the-rise-and-fall-of/article-16079</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 12:56:51 +0530</pubDate>
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                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[Nitin Trivedi]]></dc:creator>
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