Sunday, May 10, 2020

200 ATMs without security guards closed in Erode


200 ATMs without security guards closed in Erode

10/05/2020, STAFF REPORTER,ERODE

ATM centres that were closed on Gandhiji Road in Erode on Saturday.M. GOVARTHAN M_GOVARTHAN

For want of security guards, as many as 200 Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) were closed in the district causing hardship to the people on Saturday.

There are around 600 ATMs of nationalised banks, private banks and small finance banks in the district that serve the needs of the people in disbursing cash. After the outbreak of COVID-19, the district administration and the Corporation has asked all banks to ensure security guards at the ATMs so that they can provide hand sanitisers to the people visiting the kiosks. However, over 60% of the ATMs do not have either security guards or sanitisers forcing many people to return.

A report on “Absence of sanitisers in ATMs poses risk to users”, was published in The Hindu dated May 2 after which the district administration and the Corporation has asked all the banks to ensure security guards at the ATMs. Since security guards cannot be posted immediately, around 200 ATMs were closed across the district temporarily, said officials at the District Lead Bank.

They said that recruitment of guards is not possible immediately and hence, ATMs without guards were closed. However, ATMs attached to bank branches would be opened during bank working hours and sanitisers would be placed, they added.

Three more trains leave Coimbatore on Saturday with migrant workers


Three more trains leave Coimbatore on Saturday with migrant workers

One train to Bihar and two to Uttar Pradesh; each train ferries 1,140 passengers

10/05/2020, COIMBATORE BUREAU

Migrant workers mark their places in the queue with luggage at the Coimbatore Railway Junction on Saturday. S. Siva Saravanan

Three trains carrying totally 3,420 migrant workers left Coimbatore on Saturday to Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

The Salem Division of Southern Railway operated the three ‘Shramik’ special trains to transport the migrant workers in Coimbatore district to their respective home States. One train had left for Bihar on Friday evening.

Railway officials said the first train on Saturday that left Coimbatore Junction at around 8 a.m. was bound for Danapur Junction in Bihar. The second train’s destination was Akbarpur Junction in Uttar Pradesh which left at around 4 p.m., and the third train was bound for Jaunpur Junction in Uttar Pradesh that left the Coimbatore junction at around 8 p.m.

All the trains had 24 coaches and each was allowed only 1,140 passengers. Personal distancing was ensured inside the trains and all the coaches were disinfected prior to the operation.

Coimbatore Junction was initially allotted five rakes for operation of special trains. With four used as of Saturday, more rakes will be prepared as per requirements, according to the railway officials.

According to officials in the district administration, the plan is to help nearly 20,000 guest workers in the district reach their respective States. There are no immediate plans to operate train services on Sunday and even if it gets finalised, the train will leave on Sunday evening. Since only those who have registered online are given priority now, there is every possibility that many workers who want to board the train, but have not registered, will come to the railway junction and are sent back to their accommodations here.

Next to Chennai, Coimbatore has the largest number of migrant workers and many of them will leave the district to return home, at least for a few days, when regular train services restart, the officials said.

ICMR to test for community spread


ICMR to test for community spread

10/05/2020

“But we will go into 75 districts to find the spread, if any, and extent of community spread,” said a senior ICMR official. Community transmission is said to have taken place where tracing the source of infection is not possible, he said.

The ICMR, which was supposed to use the rapid antibody test kits for the survey, will now use the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test — used in HIV detection — for the survey.

Fatality rate now 3.3%

On Saturday, the country registered 95 more deaths, taking the total COVID-19 fatalities to 1,981, the Health Ministry said. 17,847 persons have been cured so far with 1,307 cured in the last 24 hours. India now has a fatality rate of 3.3% and recovery rate is 29.9%, a Ministry release said.

Data from State Health Departments put the nationwide death toll at 1992, with 40,382 active cases. A total of 280 new cases were reported from Ahmedabad along with 20 more deaths on Saturday, taking the total case count to 5,540 in the district and fatalities to 363, a Gujarat Health department official said. Maharashtra reported 1,165 new case, taking its tally to 20, 228. The State also reported 48 deaths, taking the death toll to 779, said a health department official.

Cumulatively, 15,25,631 tests have been done so far for COVID-19, the Ministry added.

A.P.’s dire finances drive it to seek Central help


A.P.’s dire finances drive it to seek Central help

Revenue deficit, combined with the burden of COVID-19 and industry distress, leaves the State on edge

10/05/2020, APPAJI REDDEM,VIJAYAWADA


A precipitous slide in revenues, combined with the burden of the costs associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, has left Andhra Pradesh facing a “grave financial crisis”. Add to it the distress in industry, exacerbated by the mass migration of workers, and the State government finds itself with little option but to look at the Centre for liberal financial help, a stimulus package and statutory measures to help the industry.

Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy had apprised Prime Minister Narendra Modi of the dire situation in the State, during a videoconference in April, and made a pitch for liberal financial aid. The State’s revenue had reportedly dipped to a mere ₹2 crore a day.

“We could not pay full salaries for the month of March to our staff due to the grave financial crisis,” Mr. Reddy said during his interaction with the PM.

The revenue shortfall in A.P. in the wake of the lockdown was about ₹5,000 crore a month, Finance Minister Buggana Rajendranath Reddy said. The slump in receipts include deep deficits in excise collections, sales tax, motor vehicles tax and revenue from stamp duty and registration. And the deficit is expected to continue in the month of May, the Minister said.

While the actual calculations of the State’s finances and revenue deficit are yet to be confirmed, sources in the government said revenue receipts in the financial year 2019-20 were likely to be about ₹1.04 lakh crore as against the revenue of almost ₹1.15 lakh crore in the previous fiscal.

Despite the challenges, the government has spent about ₹1,330 crore on COVID-19 assistance to 1.33 crore white ration card holders in the State. In addition, it spent ₹1,400 crore on interest waiver to women’s self-help groups. The government has also made elaborate arrangements, including food and accommodation during the lockdown for nearly 70,000 migrant workers across the 13 districts.

As a measure of support to industry during the current crisis, the State has paid ₹905 crore of industrial incentives, which were pending since 2014, to the MSME sector.

Besides, it has waived ₹188 crore in power demand charges and decided to provide ₹200 crore in low-interest working capital.

The A.P. government is estimated to have so far spent more than ₹10,000 crore on COVID-19-related activities, financial assistance and relief measures, the government sources, speaking on the condition of anonymity, revealed.

There was also no official statement by the State government on the extent of assistance given by the Centre to address the COVID-19 pandemic so far.

Central assistance

The Centre has extended financial assistance amounting to ₹10,947 crore to A.P. through various schemes to mitigate the impact of COVID-19, BJP State Secretary V. Jaya Prakash Narayana said in a statement.

To tide over the crisis, the State government wants the Centre to take a slew of measures to boost industry. In a letter to Mr. Modi on April 30, the chief minister listed A.P.’s contributions to the country’s economy including ₹98,983 crore worth of exports during 2018-19.

Fund for MSMEs

Given the distress across the globe, the CM wanted the Centre to facilitate a fund to support MSMEs for liquidity needed to meet wage liabilities during the lockdown, allow a moratorium on payment of PF, ESI and gratuity for six months, provide for a 12-month moratorium on all repayments for MSMEs, release of delayed payments and waiver of minimum power charges among others.

On the GST front, Mr. Reddy suggested an increase in the threshold limit of GST compliance eligibility to an annual turnover of ₹100 lakh.

He sought several supportive measures for the textiles, auto components, pharma, metals and mining and food processing sectors. And besides a stimulus package, he also urged GST rate cuts.

Home quarantine for Keralites returning home


IN BRIEF

10/05/2020,THIRUVANANTHAPURAM



Home quarantine for Keralites returning home

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, briefing media here on Saturday, said the government has decided to allow Keralites returning home from other parts of the country to undergo home quarantine rather than institutional quarantine, provided they do not have any symptoms.

A lifeline that came in a 40-minute flight from Kerala capital

A lifeline that came in a 40-minute flight from Kerala capital

Heart harvested from a brain-dead woman in Thiruvananthapuram transplanted into a 49-year-old in Kochi

10/05/2020, SARATH BABU GEORGE, JOHN L. PAUL,THIRUVANANTHAPURAM


Hearty gesture: Medical and police team bringing the heart from Thiruvananthapuram by helicopter. Thulasi Kakkat

The Kerala police transported a heart harvested from a brain-dead woman in Thiruvananthapuram to Kochi in a government-rented helicopter that was flown for its first mission as an air ambulance on Saturday.

The heart was transplanted into Lina Shibu, a 49-year-old woman from Kothamangalam, who had been diagnosed with ischemic cardiomyopathy and under treatment at the Lisie Hospital in Kochi for the past three months.

The district administrations of Thiruvananthapuram and Ernakulam joined hands soon after Chempazhanthy native Laly Gopakumar’s death on Friday when her family expressed their desire to donate her organs.

Ms. Gopakumar, 50, teacher at Poundkadavu Government Lower Primary School, near Kazhakuttam, died at KIMS Hospital after a fatal haemorrhagic stroke. During her final days, she had apparently conveyed her wish to donate her organs.

Soon, officials of the Kerala Network for Organ Sharing (KNOS), the nodal agency coordinating State government’s organ donation programme (Mrithasanjeevani), took steps to harvest her heart, kidneys, and corneas. The organs were allotted for transplantation in patients admitted to the Government Medical College Hospital, Thiruvananthapuram, Regional Institute of Ophthalmology, KIMS Hospital, and Lissie Hospital, Kochi.

A medical team of Lisie Hospital came to Thiruvananthapuram by road in the morning and the heart was taken to the Thiruvananthapuram airport around 2.45 p.m. The helicopter arrived at the helipad of Hotel Grand Hyatt in Kochi at 3.45 p.m. The police ensured a green corridor from the helipad to the hospital, helping the team to cover the 5-km in five minutes. The surgery began at 4 p.m.

“The heart has begun to beat without mechanical help at 8 p.m., which shows that the first two phases of the surgery are a success. The procedure will continue into the night,” said a spokesman of Lisie Hospital.

The government arranged the helicopter after hospital director Fr. Paul Karedan took up the matter with former MP P. Rajeev. He spoke to the Chief Minister, who directed the State police to arrange the service, the spokesperson said.

However, the government’s decision to hire the AS 365 Dauphin N3, medium twin-engine 11-seater helicopter from Pawan Hans Ltd. amid the ongoing financial crunch has invited criticism from the Opposition. The helicopter was rented for ₹1.44 crore for 20 hours of flight time a month.

(With inputs from Kochi)

Contributions for COVID-19 relief pour in


Contributions for COVID-19 relief pour in

10/05/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,CHENNAI

Contributions continued to pour in for COVID-19 relief in Tamil Nadu.

The Ola Group announced a contribution of ₹50 lakh to the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister’s Relief Fund to help fight the pandemic.

Yamaha Motor India Group (YMIG) said that both its white-collar and blue-collar employees, as well as some trainees, donated a day’s salary from April, amounting to ₹61.5 lakh, to help the government fight the contingencies arising out of the COVID-19 outbreak in India.

Samsung India contributed ₹2 crore to the Tamil Nadu State Disaster Management Authority to support the State’s fight against COVID-19.

Chennai Petroleum Corporation Ltd. (CPCL) distributed packs of dry rations to 1,399 migrant labourers in Manali.

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