
The Greater Bengaluru Authority's 'My e-Khata, My Hakku' campaign saw 2,704 citizens attend its second-day drive across five city corporations, receiving 809 e-Khata applications among other requests like mutations and corrections. Authorities processed 1,164 cases but 1,008 remain pending. South City Corporation had the highest participation with 870 attendees and 275 e-Khata applications, followed by East City Corporation. The campaign aims to streamline property record services under the state government's Bhoo Guarantee initiative.
The articles present a factual account of the Greater Bengaluru Authority's campaign without evident political framing. Coverage focuses on government efforts to improve property record services, highlighting participation and case processing data. Both sources emphasize administrative progress and citizen engagement, reflecting a neutral stance without partisan commentary or critique.
The tone across the articles is generally neutral to positive, emphasizing the campaign's active citizen participation and case disposals. While acknowledging pending cases, the coverage highlights government initiatives to streamline services, suggesting constructive progress without overt criticism or sensationalism.
Each source's own headline, political lean, and sentiment — so you can see framing differences at a glance.
| Source | Their headline | Bias | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|
| hindustantimes | Bengaluru's 'My e-Khata, My Hakku' campaign: Greater Bengaluru Authority receives 809 new e-Khata applications on Day 2 | Center | Positive |
| thehindu | Over 2,700 citizens attend GBA's second e-khata drive | Center | Neutral |
thehindu broke this story on 23 May, 06:32 pm. Other outlets followed.
Well-covered story — coverage matches public importance.
Institutions and figures named across source coverage.
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