Bengaluru: A social media post alleging that a GBA official sought a bribe to issue a death certificate has triggered outrage online, with several citizens sharing similar experiences of facing corruption while accessing basic civic services.The incident was reported from the birth and death certificate office in Jayanagar 4th Block. A man — who uses @KhaziKhaleel as his X handle — alleged that he was asked to pay money while trying to collect the death certificate of his uncle, who died at Sri Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Research on April 24, 2026.“People are so greedy that they are asking for a bribe to issue death certificate,” he posted. According to the post, the hospital had informed the family that the certificate had been approved and could be collected from the GBA office. The man visited the office on behalf of his widowed aunt and minor cousin with all the required documents.He alleged that instead of processing the papers, an official took him aside and said there would be “expenses” if the certificate was needed urgently. The man confronted the official and later wrote on X questioning whether families were now expected to pay even to obtain a death certificate.Following the confrontation, the documents were reportedly processed and a collection date of May 19, 2026, was issued.The post gained traction after being reshared by Nikhil Kumaraswamy, state youth president, JD(S). “My heart goes out to the family. While they are mourning a loss, the system is busy counting ‘commissions’. This “percentage govt” culture has reached a point where even a common man’s tears have a price tag. We will not stay silent while citizens are harassed at government doors. The GBA commissioner must act now. This systemic rot needs a complete cleanup!,” he wrote on X.The comments section saw several users narrating similar incidents at GBA offices. One user, Muninder Kumar posted: “Even I paid a bribe for my father’s death certificate at the BBMP (now GBA) Whitefield office. First, you are emotionally suffering and then you have to deal with such people.”Others commented saying no action will be taken because the corruption runs from top to bottom. Another user, Madhukar Ichalkaranji, alleged a broader rot in state govt departments, suggesting that lower-level officials take their cut from leaders who visibly live lavish lifestyles.The incident has renewed focus on corruption complaints involving public officials in Karnataka. Earlier this year, a police inspector at KP Agrahara station was arrested by Lokayukta police in a bribery case, while two GBA officials were arrested for allegedly accepting Rs 3 lakh to process khata documents.A March 2026 Lokayukta report recorded 195 major corruption cases against senior govt officials. The state also leads the country with 75 active Disproportionate Assets investigations. According to NCRB, Karnataka ranked among the top three most corrupt states in India, with 334 cases registered in 2024 alone.— Nyasa Gupta
