Mangalore: Former CSI bishop Devaraj Bangera sentenced to three years in jail
Daijiworld Media Network - Mangalore (NM)
Mangalore, Mar 20: Devaraj Bangera, former bishop of Church of South India (CSI) Karnataka Southern Diocese, has been sentenced to three years of imprisonment by the second additional chief judicial magistrate (CJM) for forging documents.
The verdict was pronounced by judge Bhavya on Tuesday March 19.
When he was the bishop, Devaraj Bangera was accused of forging documents to claim that he was born on June 29, 1945 instead of 1944. He had produced birth certificate from the Kasargod municipality, but the Protestant Christians Association claimed that the certificate was forged.
The Association had then filed for information under RTI, which revealed that his date of birth in his SSLC certificate was June 29, 1944, and that there was no record under his name in the Kasargod municipality.
In this regard, a case filed on November 30, 2008 in Mangalore east police station by Udaychandra Kaundsa of Bejai, a leader of the Protestant Christians Association.
Uday said that the former bishop had deliberately changed his year of birth so that he could remain one more year as bishop. As per the CSI norms, a bishop has to superannuate from his post on turning 65 years. On June 29, 2009, the members of the Association had even staged a protest demanding that he step down from the post, as he turned 65 that day. Devaraj Bangera had then retired but filed a petition in the court stating that he was born in 1945 and therefore had another year as bishop, but the court had dismissed the plea.
Uday said that the records in Udupi Christian School where Bangera had studied also showed his year of birth as 1944, but Bangera had claimed with CSI Madras that he was born in 1945.
Bangera had taken charge as the bishop of CSI on October 9, 2004.
Apart from allegations of forgery, the former bishop had also faced charges of indulging in financial irregularities and selling off CSI property to a foreign company, and becoming increasingly inaccessible to people.