Saturday, November 27, 2021

Students to get easy access to information with new LU app


Students to get easy access to information with new LU app

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Lucknow:27.11.2021

The Lucknow University on Friday launched a mobile-based application to make it easier for students to browse the university’s website, fill examination forms, view the timetable and get latest updates and information.

Governor Anandiben Patel launched the mobile application, besides a number of other facilities on the campus, during the convocation ceremony of the university on Friday.

At least 17 open-air gyms have been set up in both LU hostels for girls and boys on the old and new campuses with the help of the grant given by the Rashtriya Uchchatar Shiksha Abhiyan.

Besides, three boys’ and two girls’ toilets, constructed with the help of the deputy chief ministers’ MLA fund, were also inaugurated.

A tribal museum, residences for class four employees and a new lift at the fourstoreyed education department building were the other facilities inaugurated by the Governor.

The new NSS office was inaugurated and renamed as ‘Sewa Bhawan’.

New variant not here yet, checks up


New variant not here yet, checks up

Sushmi.Dey@timesgroup.com

New Delhi: 27.11.2021

No case of the new variant B.1.1.529 has been detected in India so far, health ministry sources said.

However, Hong Kong and Israel have been added to the existing list of “countries at risk”. Travellers from these countries will have to undergo additional checks and scrutiny, including post-arrival tests. Several other countries, including the UK, South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, Botswana, China, Mauritius, New Zealand, Zimbabwe and Singapore have already been categorised “countries at risk”.

The health ministry has urged states to ramp up surveillance and testing, particularly among international travellers and their contacts.

The Wmet on Friday to assess the new variant and to discuss whether to designate it as ‘variant of interest’ or ‘variant of concern’.

While many countries have tightened their borders due to the fear that the new variant could be the worst Covid-19 strain identified yet, with major public health implications, the UN health agency cautioned nations against hastily imposing travel restrictions.

WHO said it would take several weeks to determine the variant's transmissibility and effectiveness of vaccines and therapeutics against it.


Dharwad cases rise to 182

Authorities in Sattur of Karnataka’s Dharwad district closed schools and colleges on Friday and sanitised places within a 500-metre radius of SDM College of Medical Sciences as 116 students and faculty members tested positive for Covid, taking the number of infections to 182.

The outbreak was detected when 66 students reported positive on Tuesday and Wednesday, barely a week after 300 freshers and seniors attended a college event, reports Basavaraj Kattimani.

Deputy commissioner Nitesh Patil said the college management has been directed to close the outpatient department till Sunday.

New Covid Variant Triggers Global Alarm


New Covid Variant Triggers Global Alarm

Cases Found In SA, Botswana, Belgium, HK & Israel; At Least 10 Countries Limit Travel

27.11.2021 

TOI Ahamedabad

European countries on Friday joined Singapore, Israel and others in restricting travel from southern Africa in a frantic effort to keep a newly identified, and apparently significantly evolved, variant of the coronavirus from crossing into their borders. In the past, governments have taken days, weeks or months to issue travel restrictions in response to new variants. This time, restrictions came within hours of South Africa’s announcement — at least 10 countries around the world had announced measures before South African scientists had finished a meeting with WHO experts about the variant on Friday. There is no proof yet that the variant could diminish the protective power of the vaccines, but uncertainty on that question was one factor in the speed of countries’ move toward restrictions.

The new variant, initially called B.1.1.529, has a “very unusual constellation of mutations,” according to Tulio de Oliveira, director of the Kwa-Zulu-Natal Research and Innovation Sequencing Platform. On the protein that helps to create an entry point for the coronavirus to infect human cells, the new variant has 10 mutations, many more than the dangerous Delta variant, professor de Oliveira said. Still, even epidemiologists who have been the most outspoken in urging protection from the virus urged calm on Friday, noting that little is known about the variant and that several seemingly threatening variants have come and gone in recent months. “Substantively NOTHING is known about the new variant,” Roberto Burioni, a leading Italian virologist, wrote on Twitter, adding that people should not panic.

Stocks tumbled around the world on Friday as the news of the variant spooked markets, prompted Britain, France, Italy and others to bar flights and impose restrictions, and terrified many Europeans already exhausted by news of breakthrough infections, surging cases ahead of another imperiled holiday season and rallies by vaccine skeptics. So far only a few dozen cases of the new variant have been identified in South Africa, Botswana, Belgium, Hong Kong and Israel. But the case in Israel was a person who had recently arrived from Malawi, according to the state broadcaster, Kan. And Belgium’s case was detected in a young, unvaccinated woman who had recently returned from travel abroad, but not to South Africa or neighbouring countries, Belgian researchers said. Countries in Europe, once again the epicenter of the pandemic, wasted no time and were among the first to announce travel bans. Britain announced its restriction on Thursday, and put it into force on Friday. “More data is needed but we’re taking precautions now,” Sajid Javid, the British health secretary, said on Twitter.

The discovery of the variant by South African authorities this week comes as the virus was already galloping across the continent in a deadly fourth wave, especially in Eastern Europe where vaccination levels are low and restrictions have been loose. Italy’s decision on Friday to block travel from South Africa and the region showed that even a country that has generally been ahead of the wave, vaccinating much of its population and introducing early, and then progressively stricter, health passes to keep infections low, is not taking any chances.

The history of the pandemic has shown that blocking flights has not been a panacea in stopping the virus, and especially variants that spread with increasing ease. But this time, countries acted much earlier and more restrictions seemed likely. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the EU’s executive arm, said in a Twitter post on Friday morning that it would also propose restricting air travel to European countries from southern Africa.

In a statement posted on Friday on a government website, South Africa said it would urge Britain to reconsider its travel restrictions, saying “even the WHO is yet to advise on the next steps.” But that complaint came before a flurry of other bans from other countries. In the past two days, scientists in South Africa — which has a sophisticated detection system — discovered the variant after observing an increase in infections in South Africa’s economic hub surrounding Johannesburg. “This variant did surprise us — it has a big jump in evolution, many more mutations than we expected, especially after a very severe third wave of Delta,” professor de Oliveira said. NYT

COVID SCARE IN SHANGHAI: Hundreds of flights were cancelled, some schools shut and tour groups suspended on Friday after three coronavirus cases were reported in Shanghai, as China continues its strict zero-Covid policy. The three positive persons are friends who travelled to the nearby city of Suzhou together last week, Shanghai health authorities said on Thursday, adding that all had been fully vaccinated

WHO meets to designate new variant

The WHO on Friday cautioned countries against hastily imposing travel restrictions linked to the new B.1.1.529 variant of Covid-19, saying they should take a “risk-based and scientific approach”. A closed-door experts’ meeting from Geneva, convened by WHO, began at midday (1100 GMT) to assess the new variant and to designate it as either a variant of interest or a variant of concern, spokesperson Christian Lindmeier said. It would take several weeks to determine the variant’s transmissibility and the effectiveness of vaccines and therapeutics against it, he said, noting that 100 sequences of the variant have been reported so far. People should continue to wear masks whenever possible, avoid large gatherings, ventilate rooms and maintain hand hygiene, Lindmeier added. REUTERS

Canada too recognises Covaxin for travel


Canada too recognises Covaxin for travel

Swati.Bharadwaj@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:27.11.2021

Here’s finally good news for those wanting to travel to Canada who have taken two doses of Covaxin. The Canadian health authority, Health Canada, has recognised the indigenous two-dose, inactivated virus vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech.

Come November 30 this year, all those who have taken two jabs of Covaxin can travel to Canada starting November 30. The only condition is that the second Covaxin shot should have been taken at least 14 days prior to entry into Canada.

“Beginning Nov 30, the #GOC will expand its list of #Covid19 vaccines accepted for entry to Canada to include Sinopharm, Sinovac and COVAXIN. Travellers must have received a full vaccine series at least 14 days before entry to Canada,” Health Canada and PHAC (Public Health Agency of Canada) tweeted.

The move comes as a major respite for travellers from India who had been waiting to travel to Canada without having to quarantine for 14 days after arriving in that North American country. Canada had earlier recognised vaccines such as the Pfizer-Bio-NTech vaccine, Moderna, AstraZeneca including Covishield manufactured by Serum Institute of India, and Johnson & Johnson’s single dose vaccine. With this, most major countries, including Australia, US and UK, have recognised Covaxin.

Doctors’ stir may affect services at city hospitals


Doctors’ stir may affect services at city hospitals

New Delhi: 27.11.2021

Resident doctors of Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA) have decided to boycott the OPD services on Saturday to protest delay in NEET PG counselling.

Patient services at Lok Nayak, Ram Manohar Lohia and several other hospitals in Delhi are likely to be affected by it. Sources said the resident doctors’ association of these hospitals have informed their respective administrative of their participation in the strike. Inpatient services shall continue as usual, doctors said. According to FORDA, the delay in admission to PG NEET is impacting the morale and performance of residents. TNN

Summons via WhatsApp not as per law, says Delhi court


Summons via WhatsApp not as per law, says Delhi court

New Delhi: 127.11.2021 

A Delhi court has pulled up the police for serving summons to witnesses through WhatsApp in clear violation of instructions. It has been observed in numerous cases that the process server served summons to witnesses through WhatsApp messages or SMS, which has no sanction in law and cannot be deemed as proper service of summons, it said.

“No action can be taken against a witness on the basis of such a report if the witness opts to remain absent on the date fixed for his examination in court. In such situations, the date of hearing gets wasted without effective judicial work, which hampers the trial of case,” said Additional Sessions Judge Vishal Singh in an order on November 23.

The court issued notice to the DCP (Central) to issue strict instructions to all the police stations under his jurisdiction to ensure proper service of summons as per law and as per instructions mentioned on the summons.

The observations came after prosecution witnesses did not appear before the court. A report was filed, which stated that the summons were served to them through WhatsApp messages. TNN

HC seeks govt reply on panel against med college profs


HC seeks govt reply on panel against med college profs

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bhopal/Jabalpur:  27.11.2021 

A single-judge bench of the Madhya Pradesh high court asked the state government to explain under what circumstances departmental inquiry was initiated against two professors of Subhash Chandra Bose Medical College, Jabalpur; and why faculty junior to them have been included in the probe panel?

Dr Ashok Sahu and Dr Tripti Gupta, both professors at Subhash Chandra Bose Medical College, in their petition before the high court said that they were appointed to the post of assistant professor in the year 2007 and 2008 respectively.

They alleged that under political pressure, a departmental inquiry was ordered against them by the dean of the medical college.

They told the court that they didn't know that the panel constituted for the inquiry has several faculty members of the college, who are junior to them.

Only after they sought to know about members of the inquiry committee did they come to know that several members of the committee were junior to them. They gave an application to the dean and the chief of the inquiry committee that having faculty junior to them in the committee was illegal, but they didn't pay heed to their argument.

It was then that they moved the court for justice. Advocates Pankaj Dubey, Akshay Khandelwal and Ritika Gupta appeared in the court for the petitioners.

138 more test +ve, Dharwad medical college tally 204


138 more test +ve, Dharwad medical college tally 204

Basavaraj.Kattimani@timesgroup.com

Hubballi:27.11.2021

The district administration on Friday closed schools and colleges and sanitized areas in a 500-metre radius of SDM College of Medical Sciences in Sattur, Dharwad, after 138 medical students and faculty members tested positive for Covid-19, taking the total number of infections from the campus to 204.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, 66 students tested positive for Covid-19 barely a week after about 300 students took part in a cultural event in the college attended by freshers as well as seniors.

12 B’luru nursing students test +ve

In yet another Covid outbreak in an educational institution, 12 students of Spurthy Nursing College in Chandapura, southeast Bengaluru, have tested positive. The state on Friday saw 402 new cases, including 224 from the city. P 2

Samples of 1.8k more students, faculty members collected

After the cluster outbreak, the health department sent samples of 1,000 students, doctors and college employees on Thursday and 116 of them turned positive. Of them, 25 are college employees, a source said.

Samples of 1,800 more students and faculty members have already been collected. The district administration has roped in 11 teams to expedite collection of samples, which will be sent to KIMS, DIMHANS and SDM labs.

Deputy commissioner Nitesh Patil told TOI that they have directed the college management to close the outpatient department till Sunday and restrict entry of visitors, patients’ attendants and other outsiders. “We’ve kept eight ambulances ready,” he added.

He said accommodation has been provided for those inside the campus and they will be allowed to leave the premises only after testing negative for Covid-19. Medical and paramedical employees and housekeeping staff will be allowed to resume duty only if they are negative for Covid.

“We’ve set up a separate ward in the hospital to treat Covid-positive cases in the coming days. Attendants will have to stay with patients and will not be allowed to leave the hospital for the next 2-3 days. Exceptions are made only in cases patients are discharged. The hospital management has been directed to take up only emergency cases now,” he said.

Patil said they are sending samples for genome sequencing in a bid to find out if there are any new variants. “We’ve been asked to send 380 samples of positive persons for sequencing. Since we do not have that kind of capacity, we have requested labs in Bengaluru to share the load,” he added.

US, EU, UK stop air travel from southern Africa


US, EU, UK stop air travel from southern Africa

27.11.2021

Countries across Europe, US, Britain, Canada, Japan and Hong Kong halted air travel from southern Africa amid growing concern about the new variant even as South Africa called the ban “draconian”, unscientific and contrary to WHO advice. EU members agreed to rapidly impose restrictions on seven African countries — Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Russia has also restricted entry from Africa and Hong Kong. P 18

Delay in NEET PG counselling: Docs call for strike


Delay in NEET PG counselling: Docs call for strike

Ahmedabad:27.11.2021

Faced with repeated delays and postponement of NEET PG counselling 2021, the Junior Doctors Association at BJ Medical College and Civil Hospital have called for a strike from November 29.

JDA said on Friday that all its members and resident doctors will withdraw from out patient department services from Monday if counselling process is not fast-tracked by the concerned authority.

On Saturday, JDA at BJMC will sensitize resident doctors regarding their grievances and plan of action. On Sunday, they will give a memorandum to the director for PG courses at BJMC, wear black ribbons and carry out a candle march on the hospital campus. “On Monday all resident doctors will withdraw from OPD/ ward services,” it said. TNN

FLOOD FURY


FLOOD FURY

TN in troubled waters without restoration of its tanks, rivers

People Died, Crops Were Destroyed And Roads And Bridges Crumbled In Recent Rain That Put Rivers In Spate. Experts Say Loss Of Water Bodies Will Make Situation Worse

Team TOI

27.11.2021

The administration and people of Tamil Nadu have been living a life of self-deceit in handling issues concerning ecological degradation. The state creates its own comfort zone by viewing extreme weather systems as aberrations.

The 2015 Chennai floods was viewed as a once-in-a-century phenomenon, which may not recur for a couple of generations. Chennai got flooded again, twice this year, but thankfully Adyar and Cooum did not wreak havoc by overflowing into human settlements. If they had, none had any solution on hand.

Except for very few rivers like the Cauvery, other rivers in the state will overflow if reservoirs connected to them let out water to their full capacity. Adyar, for instance, gets water from close to a dozen sources including Chembarambakkam reservoir and Athanur lake. The river cannot carry more than 60,000 cusecs (cubic feet per second) water, whereas more than one lakh cusecs was released into the river in November-December 2015, resulting in inundation of many parts of Chennai for about a week.

Thanks to the drive carried out by the then Kancheepuram district collector against encroachers, Adyar can carry more water now. It may not be enough though. Kosasthalayar, which draws water from Red Hills and Poondi reservoirs, can carry up to 70,000 cusecs of water. However, the release from the reservoirs exceeded the river’s carrying capacity in the recent rains, resulting in flooding of Manali Pudhu Nagar and surrounding areas.

S Thirunavukkarasu, former assistant executive engineer of PWD, said that water flow can be better regulated if one more reservoir with 1tmcft capacity is constructed upstream of Poondi reservoir.

Creating more water bodies many not be the right solution. Climate patterns are fast changing and they will no longer remain aberrations. Global warming causes faster evaporation of seawater – even at 24ºC-25ºC– and the water molecules that escape have to come down as rain. The stark difference is that a week’s downpour now matches the rainfall of a month in previous years. “The state should acknowledge that going forward, cyclones and storms will become severe and super cyclones will be a routine affair. Business as usual will not work. If the 1,076 km coastline gives huge growth prospects to Tamil Nadu, it will also bring in incessant rains during every weather formation. Apart from receiving about 930mm of average annual rainfall, Tamil Nadu is also a natural drain for Kerala, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh to let out excess water. Tamil Nadu governments, in the past, have been demanding water from its neighbours. It has never thought of what to do if there is excess release from those states. Our solution has been letting out excess flow into the sea as runoff, without bothering to store it,” said S Janakarajan, former professor of Madras Institute of Development Studies.

Tamil Nadu has compounded the problem by indiscriminate denudat cover. “Let us not hide beh change for all our past blu Janakarajan. “Madhav Ga shows three-fourths of our cover in the Western Ghats our water tower – is lost. Th made disaster. And strangel putting brakes on it,” he said The state has enough nat man-made waterways and o storage structures. It has grouped into 17 major basins basins. There are 90 reservoirs with a combined storage capacity of 224tmcft water. There used to be 42,000 tanks, big and small, but the numbers have been revised to 39,000 by government agencies. Only about 30,000 of them are effective though. Others have been lost to development and encroachments. There are close to 1,000 tanks below the Grand Anicut in the Cauvery delta districts. Sadly, even after sinking several thousand crores of rupees in the name of ‘kudimaramathu’ schemes over the past many years, none of the waterbodies in the state has been restored to its previous glory. “Our reservoirs, lakes, tanks and rivers are heavily silted. Most reservoirs including Mettur and Vaigai have lost more than 30% holding capacity owing to silting. If storage, water catchment area and foreshore area of existing water bodies are restored, much of our problem will be solved,” said Janakarajan.

Email your feedback to southpole.toi@timesgroup.com

Downpour leaves over 150 streets inundated


Downpour leaves over 150 streets inundated

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

27.11.2021

The rain that lashed the city on Friday resulted in inundation in 151 streets. The hardest hit were Raja Mannar Salai in K K nagar, Bazullah Road in T Nagar, some areas in Kolathur and OMR. Short term interventions by the civic body helped Pullianthope, Jawahar Nagar and G N Chetty road, where there were fewer complaints of inundation.

Corporation sources said 14 trees had fallen on Friday, pushing the total number of trees falls this monsoon to 696. The civic body has pressed 840 pumps into service. Corporation commissioner Gagandeep Singh Bedi said that all these pumps will be used at night, if required.

Several activists pointed out that in order to arrive at long-term solutions, the civic body should completely rework the storm water drains. Dayanand Krishnan, a civic activist who is studying the city’s drain maps, said most drains in T Nagar have a reverse flow. “Depth of the drains in many locations is not even one feet. The width is very narrow in several locations. A proper investigation should be done by inspecting all drains constructed in the past few years. The drains will only work if constructed properly connecting them to Mambalam canal,” he said.

An official told TOI that in T Nagar and other areas, when the missing link drains were constructed between 2019 and 2020, the run-off from the road alone was calculated. “The engineers were so lethargic in their work that they didn’t even calculate the run-off from apartment complexes and commercial establishments,” said an official.


NO RESPITE : A water-logged stretch in K K Nagar

FIVE ROADS, SUBWAY CLOSED FOR TRAFFIC


FIVE ROADS, SUBWAY CLOSED FOR TRAFFIC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

27.11.2021

Five roads were closed for traffic and vehicles were diverted on Friday morning due to the wet spell. The Rangarajapuram subway and Rajamannar Road in K K Nagar were closed for traffic since Friday morning. All vehicles were diverted towards Second Avenue.

At Valasaravakkam, traffic near Mega Mart was diverted towards Keshavardhani Road to reach Arcot Road.

The traffic on Vani Mahal to Benz Park was closed and diverted towards Habibullah road and Raghavaiah road. To facilitate the drain water work at Anna main Road in front of K K Nagar, GH. The traffic towards Udhayam theatre was allowed in the opposite direction. At Udhayam junction, heavy vehicles from Kasi theatre going towards Anna main road were diverted towards Ashok pillar.

Rangarajapuram subway and three roads in T Nagar, K K Nagar and Manali were closed on Friday morning. Traffic cops have been assigned to find out traffic blocks and report it to civic authorities. However, interior stretches like GN Chetty Roadm Rajamannar Salai and Adyar witnessed traffic bottlenecks during the day.

Places like T Nagar, Nandanam, Adyar, Mount Road and Periamet witnessed traffic jams during peak hours, while movement of vehicles slowed down in interior roads due to water-logging. In Kancheepuram, 100 villagers petitioned the collector to help them find an alternative route as the Walajabad - Avanur causeway was washed away in the rain.

As machines idle, suburban railway passengers suffer


As machines idle, suburban railway passengers suffer

Meera Nair TNN

Chennai:27.11.2021

Most of the automated passenger amenities like ticket vending machines, water dispensers and digital information screens are idling at city’s suburban railway stations despite high footfalls in these stations.

At West Mambalam station, all the three automatic ticket vending machines are not in working condition. While one is supposed to have been ‘fully automated’ machine, two others are to be manually operated. “They are not in working condition for a very long time,” said a lady clerk, adding, “I don’t’ know how long will they remain so.”

At Tambaram, of the four ticketing machines, two are out of order for the past many months, and a railway employee at the station said the issue had been communicated to commercial department and action awaited. Even the ATMs are in short-supply. Of the three ATMs at the main entrance, two are out of order, resulting in endless queue in front of the lone working ATM.

At West Mambalam, the rusted drinking water pipes, dirty floor and stench all around would put off even the thirstiest commuter. A woman commuter close-by advises those who care not to use water from the tap. “Buy from the RO units on platforms,” she says.

The UTS mobile ticket App of the railways too has not endeared itself to users, including youngsters, much. “App-based bookings are used by less than 20% of regular passengers,” said the clerk, adding that elders and less educated are not able to use them.

Pooja, a college student, said she had not even tried any app-based ticket booking or attempted the ticket vending machines as well. Lakshmi, a private company employee, said she was not even aware of the UTS mobile ticketing system operated by the railways.

Both at Tambaram and West Mambalam stations, the giant digital information board were not working, forcing commuters to wait in front of alreadycrowded counters for inquiry regarding train timings.

Senior citizens, handicapped and pregnant women find it hard to first inquire about timings at the counter, and then rush to catch the train. A railway employee the complaint has been forwarded to higher officials but it hasn’t received any positive yet.

The upgraded Tambaram station is a multi-modal hub handling much more number of trains than it used to be a mere suburban outpost. The station’s upgradation has not bought along more amenities on platforms.

Anna Library project: 20,000 rare books, journal s now a click away


Anna Library project: 20,000 rare books, journal  s now a click away

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 27.11.2021

Some of the rarest collections including a review of the shipping system of the East-India Company of 1798, the Madras Monthly Journal Medical Science of 1872, the Madras Agricultural Journal of 1929 and some rare Tamil literary works such as “Nandanar Charithira Keerthani: Chidambarakummi of 1895” are just a click away.

An Anna Centenary Library project is digitising rare books, journals, written manuscripts, palm-leaf manuscripts, documents and periodicals, rare photographs and paintings sourced from individuals and institutions across the state. “The readers can now read 20,000 rare books at the digital library on the website of directorate of public libraries (tamilnadupubliclibraries.org),”

said S Kannappan, director (incharge) of Public Libararies.

The team will first verify whether the books have already been digitised and whether they are copyrighted. “We are scanning copyrights of books and journals and other material to preserve them,” said S Kamatchi, coordinator, digital library project at Anna Centenary Library in Kotturpuram.

“There are many rare books and palm leaf manuscripts with individuals and institutions. If not preserved, they will eventually be lost,” she added. Under the project, around three lakh palm leaf manuscripts have been digitised besides books and journals.

Anna Centenary Library also entered into MoU with Madras University to scan rare books preserved in the university. “There are 10,000 rare books and journals, pamphlets are being preserved in the university library. ACL team will scan them and make available to all readers in their digital library. They will also provide the digital copy to the university,” said S Gowri, vicechancellor of Madras University.

Besides, rare books belonging to Presidency College and other institutions also will be preserved in digital form.

Singapore’s non-transit norm hits travellers to Far East, US


Singapore’s non-transit norm hits travellers to Far East, US

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 27.11.2021

Travellers from Chennai to the far-east and the US have been affected as Singapore is yet to allow transit for other countries. Due to this, Dubai and Doha are the only option transit options, resulting in fewer flights and pricey tickets.

Singapore was a popular transit hub for travellers from Chennai and other parts of the state to fly to Hong Kong, China, South Korea, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia and the US.

Travellers to the US have to spend ₹1.5lakh to ₹3lakh one-way to fly via Dubai and Doha because there are fewer flights to the Middle East.

Chennai-Dubai air fares continue to remain high as flights are full for the coming week. The traffic on this route is high because people are flying to UAE for holiday and business. Economy class return fare has touched ₹60,000 to ₹70,000 to Dubai. The usual fare was ₹19,000.

Singapore is allowing airlines to bring passengers only to the country and not for transit. Travel and tour operators have urged them to allow transit facility too.

Basheer Ahmed of Chennai Metro Travels said, “There is hope that Singapore may allow transit next month as India has announced resumption of scheduled international flights from December 15.” As there is already a Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL) agreement between India and Singapore, the destination will be treated as a safe country. This means full schedules and full capacity flights may be operated. They also can allow people to transit via Singapore, he said.

S Bhaskar of Travel Agents Federation of India (TAFI) said that Singapore is a popular transit hub and there was patronage for business class to destinations in the US on Singapore Airlines even though the fares were costlier than other carriers “The airlines should come forward to start more flights,” he said.

Cathay Pacific, Malaysia Airlines have not resumed.

Bhaskar said that flights on Chennai-Dubai route are full. “People are booking business class because seats are not available in economy. The air fare is in the range of ₹70,000 for most of the days in December."


Singapore is allowing airlines to bring passengers only to the country and not for transit. Travel and tour operators have urged them to allow transit facility too

Regular int’l flights with ‘risk’ rider from Dec 15


Regular int’l flights with ‘risk’ rider from Dec 15

Saurabh.Sinha@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:27.111.2021

The Centre has allowed resumption of regular international flights from December 15, nearly 21 months after services were suspended on March 23, 2020. Now both Indian and foreign airlines can add capacity.

Air bubbles, that gave limited flights to some countries during Covid, will burst on December 14, allowing passengers flying between India and rest of the world to take connections from nearby hubs as per air service agreements. The increased connectivity will bring respite from sky-high airfares under the bubble system. The decision comes at a time when some countries like the UK and Italy are reimposing travel restrictions due to the detection of the new Covid variant in South Africa.


India could gain a lot from air travel move

India has become the first major south Asian country to open since the pandemic shook the world early last year and could gain a lot from the first mover advantage.

Covid high-risk countries will see a “calibrated resumption”, ranging from 75% to 50% of pre-Covid operations.

As on Friday, the Union health ministry’s list of “at risk” countries include the UK, South Africa, Brazil, Bangladesh, Botswana, China, Mauritius, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, Singapore, Hong Kong and Israel. But since air travel demand is nowhere close to pre-Covid levels, even this limited resumption will be enough for the present times and help lower fares. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) order on resumption of regular flights has placed countries in three different categories for a graded return to normalcy.

1. Countries not categorised as being at risk: Flights can be restored 100% by Indian and their carriers as per air service agreements (ASA). This includes over 90 countries from where fully vaccinated with approved jabs and Covid negative passengers can fly in quarantine free to India.

Full report on www.toi.in

Rain to continue in TN for 2 days, schools & colleges shut in 21 dists


Rain to continue in TN for 2 days, schools & colleges shut in 21 dists

27.11.2021

Heavy to very heavy rain that lashed Tamil Nadu on Friday will continue for the next 48 hours, the Meteorological department has said. A red alert has been issued for Chennai, Puducherry and most of the coastal districts of Tamil Nadu.

At least five people died in rain-related incidents on Friday and 10,500 people were moved to relief camps in 12 districts, including 620 to five relief centres in Chennai. Twenty-one districts, including Chennai, have declared holiday for schools and colleges on Saturday. Kayalpattinam in Tuticorin district recorded 306mm rainfall in 24 hours till Friday morning.

The rain, which has been persisting over Sri Lanka, has started pounding northern districts, including Chennai, from Friday due to the shifting of wind convergence from south to north. At least 54 streets in Chennai were inundated and several subways were closed for traffic on Friday.

Nungambakkam received 3.38cm rain, while Meenambakkam recorded 2.4cm rain till 5.30pm on Friday. Corporation staff have kept 850 pumps ready and officials have been asked to be available for duty at night. TNN. P6&10


ROAD TURNS RIVER: Rajamannar Salai in Chennai’s K K Nagar was completely inundated

Friday, November 26, 2021

Flights return to Kol, 1 from Chennai diverted to city


Flights return to Kol, 1 from Chennai diverted to city

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kolkata:26.11.2021

Two Andaman-bound flights from Kolkata operated by Vistara and Go First returned to the city on Thursday due to bad weather at Port Blair. The Vistara flight with 159 passengers had departed from Kolkata at 9.07am and returned at 1.12pm. The Go First flight left Kolkata at 8.10am with 180 passengers and returned at 3.13pm. The passengers were either refunded or rescheduled. A Port Blairbound flight from Chennai was diverted to Kolkata, but flew to the destination in the afternoon when weather conditions improved.

Emergency landing after flyer collapses, man declared dead at hosp


Emergency landing after flyer collapses, man declared dead at hosp

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kolkata: 26.11.2021

An AirAsia flight from Guwahati to Bengaluru made an emergency landing at Kolkata airport late on Wednesday night after a passenger lost consciousness on board. He had no pulse and, on being taken to a hospital in Kolkata, was declared dead by an attending doctor.

Ashok Kumar Jha (52), travelling by flight I5 0673, lost consciousness while the plane was travelling through the Kolkata flight information region. The pilot then contacted the ATC in Kolkata and requested emergency landing.

“The 134 passengers and six crew members landed in Kolkata at 10.35pm. After the unconscious passenger was examined, he was taken to Charnock Hospital along with another person travelling with him. The patient was diagnosed with intestinal obstruction and his pulse rate/BP were not recordable,” an airport official said.

At 11.41pm, the flight took off for Bengaluru with 132 passengers and six crew members.

Mumba: Parents sell newborn for ₹1L, booked


Mumba: Parents sell newborn for ₹1L, booked

Pradeep Gupta@timesgroup.com

Kalyan: 26.11.2021

The police have booked the parents of a 15-dayold for selling their infant for Rs1 lakh to a doctor running a children’s hostel in Kalyan in Dombivli. Police also booked the doctor, who runs a private children hostel in Kalyan.

The police said the accused Priya and Santosh hails from Shelar Naka area in Dombivli.

Police sources said when the woman became pregnant for the third time, they consulted the doctor, at whose hostel the couple had already given up one child. The doctor gave the couple Rs1 lakh to pay for the delivery and other expenses and said he would take care of the child.

Despite spike, Bhopal continues to stay ‘unmasked’


#MASKINDIA

Despite spike, Bhopal continues to stay ‘unmasked’

Ashutosh.Shukla@timesgroup.com

Bhopal:26.11.2021

Even as Covid cases are inching up in the city, people continue to ignore the precautionary norms for protection from infection of the deadly virus and more worrisome is the fact that their numbers are rising by the day. Decision of the state government to lift all Covid restrictions, administration and police giving up on efforts to enforce the Covid protocol at public places has only contributed to a popular belief that wearing masks, maintaining social distance or washing of hands with soap or sanitiser is no longer necessary.

Meanwhile, the state government has allowed the opening of schools, colleges, hostels and coaching classes with 100% capacity and students, too, are being callous towards observing Covid norms, which may turn out to be risky.

A scene outside Nutan Girls College and adjacent Subhash School of Excellence on Thursday afternoon showed why school students are more vulnerable to the virus. While girls coming out of college campus were largely wearing masks, students of Subhash School of Excellence were mostly without masks, even those who had masks on their face were not properly worn and there was a sizeable crowd of students just outside the school gate; laughing, talking and calling out for an ice cream vendor standing nearby.

“You can check for masks when the students come into the school but as they run out after the classes, nobody can ensure that they are all wearing masks. We on our part try to see that the students observe Covid norms but children are children, you know”, said a teacher of the school, who, too, had come out of the school campus after the leave.

It’s not that all the college students are observing Covid norms. Staff in several colleges would tell you that students don’t wear masks even when asked to. But, there is a vital difference between school and college students. All the college students are vaccinated, most of them having both the doses while most of the school students are not. Moreover, if college students are not observing Covid norms, it’s deliberate but school students, particularly the smaller ones may simply forget to pull up the mask if it falls below their nose or gets stuck on their chin.

However, it’s not only the children who are vulnerable to Covid infection but also their elders, who in place of setting an example before their school or college going wards by keeping the masks on or not getting into a crowded place, in most cases don’t seem to be bothered about Covid protocol at all.

“Weather is changing. We have had a long spell of festivals. Now, it’s marriage season. So, people are socialising a lot. In such a situation, you only expect Corona cases to go up. And, people would do well to continue observing caution despite restrictions taken off by the state government. Lifting of restrictions doesn’t mean throwing caution to wind and not observing Covid norms”, said a senior faculty at Gandhi Medical College.


NO COVID CONCERN? Shoppers without mask at New Market on Thursday

Wearing a mask would not only save people from Corona but also from pollution. During winter pollutant particles in the air don’t go up, they are around you and harm your body as you breathe. Air quality index shows that air quality in the city is poor. So, it would only be advisable that people wear masks not only to prevent the spread of Coronavirus but to avoid breathing polluted air

—Subhash C Pandey ENVIRONMENTALIST

K’taka students among 10,000 NEET toppers double in 2 years


K’taka students among 10,000 NEET toppers double in 2 years

Delay Provided More Time For Prep: Experts

SruthySusan.Ullas@timesgroup.com

Bengaluru:  26.11.2021

The number of students from Karnataka among those securing the top 10,000 ranks in NEET-UG has more than doubled this year from pre-Covid times — 436 state students made it to the 1-10,000 bracket as compared to 351 in 2020 and 198 in 2019.

The number of those who secured more than 700 marks out of 720 in the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (UG) this year was nearly four times more than that of 2020. As many as 11 students from Karnataka scored above 700 in 2021. As per the data shared by National Testing Agency, no student could get over 700 in 2019. In 2020, three students managed to make the cut.

In the top 50,000 ranks, there are 2,291 students from Karnataka, an increase of 279. In the first one lakh students, 5,364 are from Karnataka. The number was only 4,775 in 2020.

In the bracket of 650-699 marks, Karnataka has 212 students this year, as against 143 last year and 32 in 2019. In all, there are 629 students who scored above 99 percentile from Karnataka. The number of students in the 600-649 bracket remains more or less the same with only nine more entering it. In the 550-599 group, 42 more students secured the marks, taking the total to 1,328.

The trend in Karnataka is in sync with the national performance, where there is an 83% increase in the total number of candidates scoring more than 700. TOI had reported that state-wise candidates from Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh continued their dominance in the exam.

Experts say the numbers are overwhelming. “There are two reasons why students are scoring well in NEET,” said Sridhar G, founder, Deeksha. “When NEET started, the physics and chemistry papers were on a par with JEE papers. But after the pandemic, the papers were made simple and faithful to NCERT,” he said.

“Additionally, with board exams getting cancelled students could focus completely on NEET. The delay in conducting the test also gave them more time to prepare,” he added.

Sridhar said this has also contributed to improvement in the relative performance of Karnataka students in comparison with other states. “This is because in Karnataka most students who take NEET are first-timers. Unlike states like Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh or Tamil Nadu, repeating is not a culture here, as the engineering options are very good. Repeaters have the advantage of not focusing on board exams, which the freshers also got this time. This provided a levelplaying field to both,” he said.

Mahesh Yadav, south India head of Allen career institute, said students have also adjusted well to the online mode. “Last year, they were not as comfortable with online classes as they were this year. They have been in regular touch with teachers now. With classes going online, students also saved time they spent on travel,” he said.

However, whether the cutoff for UG medical/dental admissions will rise will depend on the seat matrix, which is yet to be announced in Karnataka.

HC commutes death for 3 Shakti Mills rape convicts to life term


HC commutes death for 3 Shakti Mills rape convicts to life term

Swati.Deshpande@timesgroup.com

Mumbai:26.11.2021

Eight years after two shocking gang rape cases in the abandoned Shakti Mills premises in central Mumbai, the Bombay HC commuted the death sentence awarded to three convicts involved in both crimes to life imprisonment on Thursday.

The court upheld their conviction for gang rape and other offences and said the sentence shall mean “rigorous imprisonment for the remainder of their natural life” with no remission, including parole and furlough. It dismissed an appeal by another convict and upheld his life term.

“Women are the backbone of every nation and therefore, they deserve their due respect and honour. Honour and respect for women are the marks of a civilised society,’’ the HC said.

Convicts don’t deserve to assimilate in society: Court

A bench of Justices Sadhana Jadhav and P K Chavan said the crime was grave and the convicts “don’t deserve to assimilate in society”. “The statute has not prescribed mandatory death penalty. Although the offence is barbaric and heinous, it cannot be said… the accused deserve only death penalty,” said the HC, adding they “deserve imprisonment for life to repent the offence committed by them as death puts an end to the concept of repentance”.

Vijay Jadhav, 19 at the time of the crime, Mohammad Qasim Shaikh (20) and Mohammed Salim Ansari (27) had been sent to death row in April 2014 by the trial court in a case of gangrape of a photojournalist, then 22, on August 22, 2013. Besides the three, one person was sentenced to life and a minor accused was penalised under the juvenile justice board. The accused did not appeal the death penalty.

The three had got the death sentence as they were also convicted in another gangrape of a 19-year-old telephone operator on July 31, 2013, on the same premises at Mahalaxmi.

Their court-appointed counsel Yug Chaudhry cited several irregularities in the trial court proceedings in awarding them death sentence under section 376E of the IPC, a stringent law for repeat offenders, saying the charge was not invoked as per law. But special public prosecutor Deepak Salvi argued that the law permits death sentence for second conviction and the “sequence and time of the offence is immaterial”.

On March 20, 2014, the sessions judge had first held the three common accused guilty for the gangrape of the telephone operator and about 30 minutes later, pronounced a guilty verdict in the case of the photojournalist too. In this gap, the state had made a plea to invoke section 376E. The court, therefore, handed the death sentence.

The HC bench held that it was not a case of a previous conviction “since both the sessions cases were being tried simultaneously and the conviction in both was on the same day without giving an opportunity to the accused to place before the court the mitigating circumstances”.

It added: “In a case like the present one, the court cannot ignore the fact that this incident had shocked the conscience of the society and there was public outcry.” But the court cannot punish based on public outcry alone, it is a court’s duty to consider the case “dispassionately’’ and it cannot ignore legal procedures. “A sentence of death is irrevocable and therefore, the basic principle in sentencing policy would be life imprisonment as a rule and death penalty as an exception,” the court added.

On Thursday, in a separate judgment, the high court dismissed an appeal and upheld the life sentence of Mohd Ashfaq Shaikh, 25, for the July 31 gangrape.

In the death sentence confirmation hearing, the HC said “there is no doubt that the incident as narrated by the survivor on August 22, 2013, had occurred in the backdrop and in the manner in which it was narrated. The courage of the survivor needs to be appreciated’.


The statute has not prescribed mandatory death penalty. Although the offence is barbaric and heinous, it cannot be said the accused deserve only death penalty... they deserve imprisonment for life to repent the offence committed by them as death puts an end to the concept of repentance

—BOMBAY HC

A sentence of death is irrevocable and therefore, the basic principle in sentencing policy would be life imprisonment as a rule and death penalty as an exception

Court

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