Nithyananda's secrets spilled yet again by 1 more close aide Gnanananda
who has now left the ashram. His revelations in an email confirm what
Lenin, Aarthi Rao and other devotees have stated based on their own
personal experiences. Gnanananda was a dedicated brahmachari of the
ashram, a long time member of Nithy's inner circle and a devoted
follower of Nithy for almost 10 years! He was also in-charge of Tamil
publications in the ashram, and was also appointed by Nithyananda as one
of the spiritual heads of Bidadi ashram, and a Mahacharya teaching
several higher level programs like Bhakti Spurana, Nithyananda Spurana,
etc.
Unheard answers to often heard questions about Nithyananda and his cult!!! Do you have a question? Post it!
Friday, November 9, 2012
Nithyananda Exposed Again by Close Aide - Newstv9
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
ashram,
Corruption,
Dharma,
Innerawakening,
LeninKaruppan,
Nithyananda,
Nithyananda Fraud Foundation,
Nityananda,
Paramahamsa,
Ranjitha,
rape,
Sex Scandal,
sex swamy,
நித்யானந்தா
Sex and the single swami,Nithyananda: More revelations
"I
am Krishna and you are my Gopika," sounds like an appalling pickup
line, but if the Karnataka police are to be believed, it was normally
employed by 33-year-old Swami Nithyananda or Paramahamsa Nithyananda of
the Nithyananda Dhyanapeetam at Bidadi, Karnataka, to seduce his female
devotees.
The 430-page chargesheet filed by the Karnataka CID on November 27 against Nithyananda was prompted by the complaint of a young lady (whose name and identity has been withheld by the CID as part of the witness protection programme) accusing the swami of sexual abuse at the Bidadi Ashram, 37 km from Bangalore, and in other locations. Her complaint says Nithyananda insisted on "seeking moksha through sexual union" with several female devotees by claiming to be incarnations of various gods.
The swami made them sign non-disclosure agreements (NDA) forbidding them to reveal sexual details. The signed NDA (in the possession of INDIA TODAY) states that "the volunteer understands that the programme may involve the learning and practice of ancient tantric secrets associated with male and female ecstasy, including the use of sexual energy for increased intimacy/spiritual connection, pleasure, harmony and freedom. Volunteer understands that these activities could be physically and mentally challenging and may involve nudity, access to visual images, graphic visual depictions and descriptions of nudity and sexual activity, close proximity and intimacy, verbal and written descriptions and audio sounds of a sexually oriented and erotic nature."
The agreement also absolves the ashram of any wrongdoing with an additional clause in the NDA: "By reading and signing this document, volunteer irrevocably acknowledges that he/she is voluntarily giving
unconditional acceptance of such activities and discharges the leader and the foundation, and anyone else not specifically mentioned here but directly or indirectly involved in the organisation, management or conduct of any such programmes from any liability, direct or indirect, arising from such activities."A further sentence states that the "volunteer also affirms that he/she does not find sexual or adult-oriented material associated with the practice of any tantric rituals or any other adult material to be offensive or objectionable."
Nithyananda's Spiritual Wares
The 430-page chargesheet filed by the Karnataka CID on November 27 against Nithyananda was prompted by the complaint of a young lady (whose name and identity has been withheld by the CID as part of the witness protection programme) accusing the swami of sexual abuse at the Bidadi Ashram, 37 km from Bangalore, and in other locations. Her complaint says Nithyananda insisted on "seeking moksha through sexual union" with several female devotees by claiming to be incarnations of various gods.
The swami made them sign non-disclosure agreements (NDA) forbidding them to reveal sexual details. The signed NDA (in the possession of INDIA TODAY) states that "the volunteer understands that the programme may involve the learning and practice of ancient tantric secrets associated with male and female ecstasy, including the use of sexual energy for increased intimacy/spiritual connection, pleasure, harmony and freedom. Volunteer understands that these activities could be physically and mentally challenging and may involve nudity, access to visual images, graphic visual depictions and descriptions of nudity and sexual activity, close proximity and intimacy, verbal and written descriptions and audio sounds of a sexually oriented and erotic nature."
The agreement also absolves the ashram of any wrongdoing with an additional clause in the NDA: "By reading and signing this document, volunteer irrevocably acknowledges that he/she is voluntarily giving
unconditional acceptance of such activities and discharges the leader and the foundation, and anyone else not specifically mentioned here but directly or indirectly involved in the organisation, management or conduct of any such programmes from any liability, direct or indirect, arising from such activities."A further sentence states that the "volunteer also affirms that he/she does not find sexual or adult-oriented material associated with the practice of any tantric rituals or any other adult material to be offensive or objectionable."
Nithyananda's Spiritual Wares
- Advanced inner awakening programme: $6,000
- Holy rudraksha bracelet: $12
- Rudraksha mala: $35
- Meditation kit: $30
- Silver replica of his feet: $20
- Silver Guru Puja Set containing his picture, silver diya, haldi and kumkum boxes: $550
- Perpetual Calendar with the Joke of the Day: $12
number to his victims, but I would guess not less than 15," says cid
http://recent-news-update.blogspot.in/2010/12/nithyananda-more-revelations.html
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
ashram,
Corruption,
Dharma,
Innerawakening,
Lenin Karuppan,
Nithyananda,
Sex Scandal,
நித்யானந்தா
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Karnataka, Tamil Nadu police search for absconding Nithyananda
Self-styled godman Nithyananda Paramahamsa , who is being probed by the Karnataka CID police for his alleged sexual exploits, has apparently gone absconding. Both Tamil Nadu and Karnataka police are on a lookout for the controversial guru for questioning, however, he is reportedly evading them.
Nithyananda , who was asked to step down from the position of the Madurai Adheenam Mutt pontiff, had been accused of rape by one of his followers recently. After the victim Arathi Rao contended that she was repeatedly raped by Nithyananda, the Adheenam Mutt senior pontiff sacked him. In addition, the Tamil Nadu government had approached a local court seeking the sacking of Nithyananda from the Mutt on the grounds that his appointment was illegal.
http://haryanaabtak.com/karnataka-tamil-nadu-police-search-for-absconding-nithyananda
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
cult nithyananda,
Madurai Adheenam,
Ranjitha,
Sex Scandal,
ஆர்த்திராவ்,
நித்யானந்தா,
மதுரைஆதீனம்
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Nithyananda sacked as successor of Madurai Mutt head
Self styled godman Nithyananda , who is embroiled in several
controversies and facing criminal charges including rape, was on Friday
removed as the successor of the mutt head of Madurai Aadheenam, a 1500-
year-old Saivite mutt.
The appointment of the self-styled godman hailing from
A terse announcement removing Nithyananda from the Aadheenam was made
by Desikar in a brief interaction with the media in the temple town of
Madurai.
The sacking of Nithyananda came a day after the government’s Hindu religious and charitable endowment department moved a local court in Madurai seeking the removal of Desikar himself for making the appointment that it alleged violated the traditions of the possibly oldest Saivite mutt in the country.
When asked why the person whom he had appointed was removed, Desikar said “you know better.”
He also told media persons that fearing for his life, he had sought police protection as he faced threats from Nittyananda’s disciples.
The appointment of Nithyananda as the successor to the Madurai Mutt head Desikar had shocked the people and the leaders of religious bodies that condemned the development and questioned as to how a man facing serious criminal charges, including rape could even be considered for holding such a high position in a prestigious and respected religious body.
In a related development, the Madras high court on Friday reserved its orders on a bunch of petitions praying for Nithyananda’s removal.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/Chennai/Nithyananda-sacked-as-successor-of-Madurai-Mutt-head/Article1-947454.aspx
The appointment of the self-styled godman hailing from
Karnataka one and half years ago as the successor of the
Madurai Aadheenam head Arunagirinatha Desikar was widely condemned by
Hindu religious bodies and even the government.
The sacking of Nithyananda came a day after the government’s Hindu religious and charitable endowment department moved a local court in Madurai seeking the removal of Desikar himself for making the appointment that it alleged violated the traditions of the possibly oldest Saivite mutt in the country.
When asked why the person whom he had appointed was removed, Desikar said “you know better.”
He also told media persons that fearing for his life, he had sought police protection as he faced threats from Nittyananda’s disciples.
The appointment of Nithyananda as the successor to the Madurai Mutt head Desikar had shocked the people and the leaders of religious bodies that condemned the development and questioned as to how a man facing serious criminal charges, including rape could even be considered for holding such a high position in a prestigious and respected religious body.
In a related development, the Madras high court on Friday reserved its orders on a bunch of petitions praying for Nithyananda’s removal.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/Chennai/Nithyananda-sacked-as-successor-of-Madurai-Mutt-head/Article1-947454.aspx
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
Corruption,
Madurai Adheenam,
Nithyananda,
Paramahamsa Nithyananda,
Sex Scandal,
TAMIL NADU,
ஆர்த்திராவ்,
நித்யானந்தா,
மதுரைஆதீனம்
Thursday, October 18, 2012
The cult of preying and feeding on anxieties
The man who passed himself off as Paramahamsa Nithyananda for
seven years, promised instant spirituality to hundreds, perhaps even
thousands, across India and abroad.
It might be too early to brand Nithyananda as a conman, but what is emerging is that he is a psychopath who exploited people’s credulity and played on the minds of youthful devotees who, before joining his cultic order, might have demonstrated symptoms of psychic distress, anxiety, depression, apathy, disinterest, meaninglessness, isolation, social alienation and confusion. As a normative social system, Nithyananda’s cultic order is an alternative healing mechanism for the existential crises of contemporary youth.
Nithyananda, of course, is no paramahamsa. He is an ordinary man who was intelligent enough to capitalise on his youthful disciples’ loss of faith in the “rationalistic western cosmology and loss of the extended family system,” as sociologist Mansell Pattison has pointed out. But Nithyananda also tapped into the dissatisfaction caused by the impact of the prevailing economic paradigm which has created stress and anxiety, especially among those in the 30-40 age group whose members may have deliberately turned away from traditional psychotherapies toward his religious cult as the ultimate remedy for their anxieties.
These young men and women found in him and his cult — which is a strange and often frightening mix of the Vedic and tantric with an attractive and appealing focus on phallus worship — the path to physical and spiritual healing. What might also have appealed to the devotees was the stress on mental seduction and enslavement or mind control, so much so that they were prepared to abandon family, loved ones and well-wishers.
Some psychologists and sociologists agree that intensive conditioning (or brainwashing) is designed to compromise the devotees’ psychological integrity and indoctrinate them in a world view in which the ends (salvation, bliss and even personal health and wealth) justify the means (deceptive recruitment, fraudulent fund-raising and psycho-sexual practices).
The rest of Nithyananda’s so-called spiritual and healing prowess was built by aggressive and purposeful public relations directed not at the poor from our urban ghettos or despoiled rural backwaters. Rather, these are middle class, affluent, educated, and sophisticated youth. A network of branch heads in some southern Indian cities and those in the United States, mostly non-resident Indians with deep pockets helped Nithyananda catapult to spiritual stardom. It would not be out of place to point out here that the website of one of Nithyananda’s subsidiary organisations in US suggests that more than a spiritual enterprise the Nithyananda mission is commercial enterprise.
Brief interviews with some of Nithyananda’s disciples at his ashram near Bangalore and over telephone, with the primary question “what drew you to his order?,” elicited confused response. Emails from followers in support of Nithyananda were also important sources to understand what attracted the youth to his alternative spiritual system that offered a radical world view in distinction from the common culture, with explicit sanctions in regard to one’s behaviour, with a strong emphasis on separatism from the ‘world at large’ that is reflected in some degree of small group communality ranging from total communal living to frequent communal gatherings.
Beliefs
The standard replies typically comprised two strains of belief: a) he helped heal their physical ailments and psychological distress and b) we experienced truth and enlightenment, two very abstract concepts that souls far greater and intellectual than ‘Nithyananda, our Master’ have not been able to fathom within the context of Indian philosophy.
The likes of Osho Rajneesh, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Satya Sai Baba, Ma Amritanandamayi, Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar and sundry other self-proclaimed television-propelled godmen have, in their own distinctive styles, tried to peddle Indian spirituality, with their base and esoteric twists, to a gullible audience within India and abroad.
They have met with varied levels of successes and then faded away as the spiritual ferment, shaped in large part by globalisation and television, spawned other unconventional, secretive and deviant cult movements. They were sought to be given legitimacy and acceptability within society by obtaining the crucial backing of political parties and enlisting the support of the rich and the powerful, an approach that has almost always benefited the organisations in more ways than one.
But such groups have often elicited extreme hostility and distrust and have, moreover, been perceived as fundamentally subversive of civil order and the ideals of Hinduism. To some extent, part of the popular uproar about cult groups such as Nithyananda’s comes from bewildered, frightened and angry parents and other elders who cannot comprehend why the youth, otherwise socialised into the mainstream of society with many seeming advantages, should abandon their cultural and religious heritage to enter such ‘separate reality.’
The Nithyananda cult operated as a surrogate extended family and provided novel, if questionable, therapeutic and spiritual alternatives that confer meaning on individual lives and experiences, even if the devotees were deluded into believing so because of their existential vacuum. In doing so, he and some of his close confidantes exploited the weaknesses of existing institutions like Hinduism, family and modern psychiatry.
This is not to say that cults necessarily threaten the social order. After all, people are at liberty to exercise their preference for one religious movement for another. But what may endanger society is the return to obscurantism, superstition and blind faith that once constituted the bane of India.
A study of Nithyananda’s cultic order — the reference to an ‘energised banyan tree’ and ‘energised puja items,’ besides a host of weird teaching practices that go toward deification of the occult — indicates that its devotees, drunk on their ‘sadguru,’ their ‘Enlightened Master’ of merely seven years’ experience, should exercise some caution in distinguishing between the truly pious and the charlatan.
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/57807/cult-preying-feeding-anxieties.html
It might be too early to brand Nithyananda as a conman, but what is emerging is that he is a psychopath who exploited people’s credulity and played on the minds of youthful devotees who, before joining his cultic order, might have demonstrated symptoms of psychic distress, anxiety, depression, apathy, disinterest, meaninglessness, isolation, social alienation and confusion. As a normative social system, Nithyananda’s cultic order is an alternative healing mechanism for the existential crises of contemporary youth.
Nithyananda, of course, is no paramahamsa. He is an ordinary man who was intelligent enough to capitalise on his youthful disciples’ loss of faith in the “rationalistic western cosmology and loss of the extended family system,” as sociologist Mansell Pattison has pointed out. But Nithyananda also tapped into the dissatisfaction caused by the impact of the prevailing economic paradigm which has created stress and anxiety, especially among those in the 30-40 age group whose members may have deliberately turned away from traditional psychotherapies toward his religious cult as the ultimate remedy for their anxieties.
These young men and women found in him and his cult — which is a strange and often frightening mix of the Vedic and tantric with an attractive and appealing focus on phallus worship — the path to physical and spiritual healing. What might also have appealed to the devotees was the stress on mental seduction and enslavement or mind control, so much so that they were prepared to abandon family, loved ones and well-wishers.
Some psychologists and sociologists agree that intensive conditioning (or brainwashing) is designed to compromise the devotees’ psychological integrity and indoctrinate them in a world view in which the ends (salvation, bliss and even personal health and wealth) justify the means (deceptive recruitment, fraudulent fund-raising and psycho-sexual practices).
The rest of Nithyananda’s so-called spiritual and healing prowess was built by aggressive and purposeful public relations directed not at the poor from our urban ghettos or despoiled rural backwaters. Rather, these are middle class, affluent, educated, and sophisticated youth. A network of branch heads in some southern Indian cities and those in the United States, mostly non-resident Indians with deep pockets helped Nithyananda catapult to spiritual stardom. It would not be out of place to point out here that the website of one of Nithyananda’s subsidiary organisations in US suggests that more than a spiritual enterprise the Nithyananda mission is commercial enterprise.
Brief interviews with some of Nithyananda’s disciples at his ashram near Bangalore and over telephone, with the primary question “what drew you to his order?,” elicited confused response. Emails from followers in support of Nithyananda were also important sources to understand what attracted the youth to his alternative spiritual system that offered a radical world view in distinction from the common culture, with explicit sanctions in regard to one’s behaviour, with a strong emphasis on separatism from the ‘world at large’ that is reflected in some degree of small group communality ranging from total communal living to frequent communal gatherings.
Beliefs
The standard replies typically comprised two strains of belief: a) he helped heal their physical ailments and psychological distress and b) we experienced truth and enlightenment, two very abstract concepts that souls far greater and intellectual than ‘Nithyananda, our Master’ have not been able to fathom within the context of Indian philosophy.
The likes of Osho Rajneesh, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Satya Sai Baba, Ma Amritanandamayi, Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar and sundry other self-proclaimed television-propelled godmen have, in their own distinctive styles, tried to peddle Indian spirituality, with their base and esoteric twists, to a gullible audience within India and abroad.
They have met with varied levels of successes and then faded away as the spiritual ferment, shaped in large part by globalisation and television, spawned other unconventional, secretive and deviant cult movements. They were sought to be given legitimacy and acceptability within society by obtaining the crucial backing of political parties and enlisting the support of the rich and the powerful, an approach that has almost always benefited the organisations in more ways than one.
But such groups have often elicited extreme hostility and distrust and have, moreover, been perceived as fundamentally subversive of civil order and the ideals of Hinduism. To some extent, part of the popular uproar about cult groups such as Nithyananda’s comes from bewildered, frightened and angry parents and other elders who cannot comprehend why the youth, otherwise socialised into the mainstream of society with many seeming advantages, should abandon their cultural and religious heritage to enter such ‘separate reality.’
The Nithyananda cult operated as a surrogate extended family and provided novel, if questionable, therapeutic and spiritual alternatives that confer meaning on individual lives and experiences, even if the devotees were deluded into believing so because of their existential vacuum. In doing so, he and some of his close confidantes exploited the weaknesses of existing institutions like Hinduism, family and modern psychiatry.
This is not to say that cults necessarily threaten the social order. After all, people are at liberty to exercise their preference for one religious movement for another. But what may endanger society is the return to obscurantism, superstition and blind faith that once constituted the bane of India.
A study of Nithyananda’s cultic order — the reference to an ‘energised banyan tree’ and ‘energised puja items,’ besides a host of weird teaching practices that go toward deification of the occult — indicates that its devotees, drunk on their ‘sadguru,’ their ‘Enlightened Master’ of merely seven years’ experience, should exercise some caution in distinguishing between the truly pious and the charlatan.
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/57807/cult-preying-feeding-anxieties.html
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
Corruption,
Cult,
Innerawakening,
Lenin Karuppan,
Madurai Adheenam,
Nithyananda,
Paramahamsa Nithyananda,
Sex Scandal,
sex swamy,
ஆர்த்திராவ்,
நித்யானந்தா
TN GOVERNMENT FILED EMERNGENCY PETITION TO TAKE OVER MADURAI ADHEENAM
TN Government filed emergency petition in Madurai Court seeking order to take over Madurai Adheenam.
Govt has also filed a petition objecting to Nithyananda's appointment as 293rd pontiff of Madurai Adheenam. Judgment is expected tomorrow (19th Oct)
மதுரை ஆதீன மடத்தை அரசிடம் ஒப்படைக்க வேண்டும்: இந்து அறநிலையத்துறை அவசர மனு தாக்கல்
வியாழக்கிழமை, அக்டோபர் 18, 10:16 PM IST
Govt has also filed a petition objecting to Nithyananda's appointment as 293rd pontiff of Madurai Adheenam. Judgment is expected tomorrow (19th Oct)
மதுரை ஆதீன மடத்தை அரசிடம் ஒப்படைக்க வேண்டும்: இந்து அறநிலையத்துறை அவசர மனு தாக்கல்
வியாழக்கிழமை, அக்டோபர் 18, 10:16 PM IST
மதுரை,அக்.18-
மதுரை
ஆதீன மடத்தின் இளைய ஆதீனமாக நித்யானந்தாவை நியமித்தற்கு தொடர்ந்து
எதிர்ப்பு வலுத்து வருகிறது. இந்த நியமனம் செல்லாது என்று மதுரையைச்
சேர்ந்த சிலர் வழக்கு தொடர்ந்துள்ளனர்.
இதுதொடர்பான
வழக்கு விசாரணையின்போது, நித்யானந்தாவுக்கு ஆதீன பொறுப்பு வகிக்க
தகுதியில்லை என்று தமிழக அரசு உயர்நீதிமன்றத்தில் கூறியிருந்தது. மேலும்
நித்யானந்தா நியமனம் செல்லாது என்றும் தமிழக அரசு கூறியிருந்தது.
இந்நிலையில்,
மதுரை மாவட்ட நீதிமன்றத்தில் இந்து அறநிலையத்துறை ஆணையர் தனபால் ஒரு அவரசர
மனு தாக்கல் செய்தார். அதில், அறநிலையத்துறை அனுமதியின்றி நித்யானந்தா
நியமிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார். எனவே அவரது நியமனம் செல்லாது.
மேலும்
மதுரை ஆதீன மடத்தை தமிழக அரசே ஏற்று நடத்த உத்தரவிட வேண்டும் என்று
கூறப்பட்டிருந்தது. இந்த மனு நாளை விசாரணைக்கு வருகிறது. இதற்கிடையே
எதிர்ப்புகள் அதிகரித்திருப்பதால் இளைய ஆதீனம் பொறுப்பில் இருந்து
விலகுவதற்கு நித்யானந்தா முடிவு செய்திருப்பதாகக் கூறப்படுகிறது.
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
Corruption,
Cult,
Innerawakening,
Lenin Karuppan,
Madurai Adheenam,
Nithyananda,
Paramahamsa Nithyananda,
Sex Scandal,
sex swamy,
ஆர்த்திராவ்,
நித்யானந்தா
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Aarthi Rao responds to Nithyananda's Latest Allegations
It is known that Swami
Nithyananda, the self styled godman is facing criminal charges of Rape in CC
No. 204/2010, in which Aarthi Rao is a victim and key witness. In retaliation Nithyananda
has filed several criminal cases against Aarthi Rao and the whistle blower
Lenin, through his blind followers. In the criminal rape case Nithyananda has
to undergo required medical exam, for which he had received eight summons from
Karnataka CB CID and finally a court order from Ramanagar court. However
Nithyananda has cleverly evaded all demands for his medical tests, while
claiming to be like a 6-year old child, incapable of sex. But in the meantime
he is trying to confuse the public and humiliate & intimidate the victim
Aarthi Rao through several tactics.
The above was received in a message from Aarthi Rao, requesting us to post her response to Nithyananda's allegations, for the benefit of our readers.
Most recently, Nithyananda has
published some documents, claiming them to be Aarthi Rao’s medical records from
USA. Nithyananda alleges that the documents prove that Aarthi suffers from
Sexually Transmitted Diseases while a test proves Nithyananda doesn’t suffer
from the same disease, and therefore Nithyananda is innocent! Nithyananda’s
lies and fraudulent manipulation is exposed once again if the documents are
examined closely.
Fake Court Order Exposed – No
Basis for Medical Record:
Nithyananda claims to have
obtained Aarthi’s medical records from USA through a court order in Michigan,
USA. Here are some basic facts about medical records in USA:
·
Aarthi Rao’s
Medical Report in the USA would be subject to very strict confidentiality laws
of USA.
·
Hence, as
per US laws, no one can obtain it without her consent. Not even her husband can
get it without her consent.
·
Even when it
is demanded through a court order, US laws require that she must be informed
about such a petition (about releasing her medical records).
This is the
legal procedure followed very strictly in the USA. Let us look at the so-called
court order Nithyananda obtained, which he claims was used to get
Aarthi’s medical records.
1.
No
defendant: The court notice shows that there is no defendant named (i.e. Aarthi
Rao), and the opposite party has not been informed.
·
As per the
instructions on the same document, incomplete form is not valid.
·
Aarthi Rao never received any summon for a petition by
Nithyananda regarding her medical
records. (her contact information is already available with Ann Arbour police)
2.
No judge
signature: The court order is NOT signed by the Judge!
3.
Incorrect
court seal: The hearing is claimed to have taken place in Washtenaw County Trial
court and signed by the Trial Court judge. But the seal in the
“Subpoena” is from Michigan Supreme Court!
4.
No legal
basis for USA court order: Nithyananda’s petition claims it was in connection
with a complaint filed by Aarthi with Ann Arbor police.
Aarthi Rao’s complaint with Ann Arbor police
is only for life threat. Police has NO NEED for her Medical Records
to Investigate a life threat complaint.
There are several such serious questions
about the so-called court order, which is clearly fake, therefore the medical
records cannot be authentic. This once again brings out the cunning mischief of
Nithyanada and his henchmen, who will face the consequences for this! Aarthi’s
lawyer has issued defamation notices and will take further action for such
unethical and illegal actions of Nithyananda and his group.
Nithyananda’s Bogus Medical Test
Exposed:
Now coming to Nithyananda’s one-page Medical Test report, he
claims this 1 page report proves his sexual history of celibacy. But there are
several questions arising from the following critical observations, clearly
pointing out the lack of authenticity of his test result.
1.
Whose blood
sample was actually tested? Basic identification
details are missing or wrong on the test report!
Name
(Nithyanandji Swami) doesn’t match legal name (Sri Nithyananda Swami in
passport)
date of
birth shown (02-09-1978) doesn’t match legal date of birth (13-03-1977 in passport)
or even his publicized DOB 1-1-1978!
No address
provided
No father’s
name provided
2. Why no
Hospital Stamp or Seal on the report?
3. Report shows
ONLY Herpes result. Why no test results for other 8-9 Sexually Transmitted
Diseases?
4. Test taken only on September 2012. Where is
the complete medical history from 2004 – 2012? What about Nithyananda’s
tests and treatments for STDs in 2004-2012.
Many more questions are to be
answered by Nithyananda re. the authenticity of the so-called medical reports
of Nithyananda and Aarthi Rao. But the single most important question
whether Nithyananda is innocent cannot be answered by medical reports of Aarthi
Rao or any other victim. It can only be established conclusively by Nithyananda
proving that he is impotent and therefore incapable of the sexual acts alleged.
The above was received in a message from Aarthi Rao, requesting us to post her response to Nithyananda's allegations, for the benefit of our readers.
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
ashram,
Fraud,
LeninKaruppan,
news,
Nithyananda,
Official Press Releases,
Paramahamsa,
Ranjitha,
rape,
ஆர்த்திராவ்,
நித்யானந்தா
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Nityananda Rape Case - Aarthi Rao's English Interview
Labels:
Aarthi Rao,
Lenin Karuppan,
Nithyananda,
Nithyananda Fraud,
Nithyananda Fraud Foundation,
sex swamy,
நித்யானந்தா,
ரஞ்சிதா,
லெனின் கருப்பன்.arthi
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)