Police News Kannada Weekly Paper Henne Helu Ninnaya Golu May 2026

The column operates on a simple, powerful premise:

A woman named Lakshmi wrote a heartbreaking letter to "Henne Helu Ninnaya Golu" stating that her in-laws were torturing her for a car. When she tried to lodge a complaint at the local police station, the officers reportedly told her to "settle it within the family." After the weekly paper published her letter (with concealed identity), the Senior Superintendent of Police of Chitradurga called the editor for a meeting. Within 72 hours, a case was registered under the Dowry Prohibition Act. Police News Kannada Weekly Paper Henne Helu Ninnaya Golu

In the bustling landscape of Kannada journalism, where daily newspapers chase breaking headlines and television channels debate political slugfests, there exists a unique and powerful weekly voice dedicated entirely to law, order, and public grievance. The , particularly its iconic column/section titled "Henne Helu Ninnaya Golu" (ಹೆಣ್ಣೇ ಹೇಳು ನಿನ್ನಯ ಗೋಳು) , has carved a niche for itself as a crusader for the common citizen, especially women. The column operates on a simple, powerful premise:

For every woman in Karnataka who feels the police station is too far, whose husband’s family threatens her, or whose neighbor doesn't understand "No" — this paper says: "Henne, kelu. Nimmaya golu neevu ittukolli. Naavu bidugade keli, prakatisuvu." (Woman, speak. You display your sorrow. We will listen without fail and publish.) In the bustling landscape of Kannada journalism, where