Cops, gangsters co-exist: Agni Sreedhar
Agni's autobiography in English is 'My Days in the Underworld,?Rise of the Bangalore Mafia'.
Bangalore: Agni Sreedhar’s name still strikes fear in people’s hearts.
Today, the reformed underworld don runs his tabloid, Agni, from his house in the city. “Just ask anybody at the ISRO layout junction for the Agni office,” he said, on the phone.
When we stopped to ask for directions, people scuttled off at the mere mention of his name. One man, who denied having any knowledge of Agni Sreedhar, called us back and said in an undertone, “Do you mean Sreedhar?” He gave us hurried directions and rushed off. We saw him at Sreedhar’s house a moment later.
We met Sreedhar at his high-security residence the day before the launch of his autobiography in English, My Days in the Underworld,?Rise of the Bangalore Mafia.
His security detail comprises of ten armed body guards, who mill about in the front yard. Sreedhar appears on the balcony overhead, to summon us into a study spilling over with books.
“I read all the time,” he said. “I was always this way,” Growing up, Sreedhar was the model son, the sort of boy all mothers want their children to become. His longtime partner and friend, Bachchan, emerges after a while and sits down with us, characteristically taciturn.
Turning his back on a community that shunned all criminal activity, Sreedhar shot to fame as he sought revenge on the man responsible for breaking his younger brother’s legs.
The murder of Kotwal Ramachandra, the barbaric gangster who hacked men to death in broad daylight, made Sreedhar notorious. He then joined Jayaraj, famously known as late Chief Minister Devaraj Urs’ right-hand man.
“Politicians, cops and gangsters — they cannot exist without each other. Today, that rowdyism has extended to journalists and lawyers, too,” said Sreedhar. In his book, he describes the role of politics in organised crime in great detail. “The Indira brigade,” he remarks, “Was the start of Bengaluru’s organised crime.”
The book is a translation of a three-volume Kannada work. For English-speaking audiences, who know very little about the workings of the city’s underworld, this book is a revelation.
“It’s a watered-down version,” Sreedhar admits. “We thought it would be of very little interest to readers outside the city. That was a mistake.” Much has changed since Sreedhar’s time. “It used to be all about personal ties. Today, killing is a business, everything thrives on a purely mercenary motive.”
To truly understand a man’s nature, you must watch him starve. A man in danger, who happens to wield a knife, will not hesitate to use it. Sreedhar agrees with this. “Circumstances bring out different sides to us, nobody would have believed that I, the quiet, bookish boy, would end up in a life of crime,” he said.
Much has been said about Sreedhar’s famed relationship with Muthappa Rai. The latter, who was once like an older brother to Sreedhar, attempted to murder him when their relationship soured.
Today, the past lies forgotten. “We’re good friends, I really respect him. Like me, he never enjoyed violence and gore in the way other rowdies do. I have never endorsed chopping off a man’s limbs. That’s why people never really took me seriously, when I was a don.”
The experience is like something out a gangster film. We talk of getting ‘worked on’, a colloquial term for being tortured by the police. Before the advent of Muthappa Rai, these men fought with swords (longs). Barging into a bar or restaurant and hacking a man to pieces, while shutters were brought down and people vanished off the streets in fear — that was daily life, he said.
Sreedhar, who was behind some of the most notorious gang wars in the city’s history, now talks at length about Albert Camus and Kafka, a passion he rekindled during two years in prison.
“Violence is used as a tool and yes, I once believed in that.”?All men contain within them a measure of barbarism, all it needs is provocation.