Activist Trupti Desai has also come to the southern state again for another shot at making it to the hilltop shrine of Lord Ayyappa, nestled in the Western Ghats. Five more women, including Ms. Desai, plan to trek to the shrine today.
Ms. Desai, who the Kerala government said will not get any security cover, landed at Kochi airport this morning. "We'll visit Sabarimala temple today on Constitution Day. Neither the state government nor the police can stop us from visiting the temple. Whether we get security or not we will visit the temple today," Ms Desai said today.
"I will leave Kerala only after offering prayers at the shrine," Ms Desai said, according to news agency Press Trust of India.
The six women including Ms. Desai are inside the City Police Commissioner's office in Kochi. Ms Ammini was attacked while a group of right-wing workers were protesting at the site.
The Supreme Court in 2018 in a historic judgment allowed women of all ages to enter the temple, which angered some devotees of the celibate God. The Kerala government had then promised it would provide security to women who want to walk to the temple from the nearest base camp in Pamba, some 5 km away.
Earlier this month, the top court while deciding on a petition to review its 2018 order referred the matter to a larger seven-judge bench, though it did not stay the 2018 verdict that had allowed entry of women of all ages into Sabarimala temple. The Kerala government now maintains it will not provide security to "activists" who try to enter Sabarimala.
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