Sunday, May 10, 2020

347 returnees quarantined in Thissur


347 returnees quarantined in Thissur

10/05/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,THRISSUR

The quarantine centres for Keralites returning from abroad and other States have accommodated 347 people in Thrissur district. They were sent to the centres as institutional quarantine has been made mandatory for them. Pregnant women, children, and elderly people have been sent for home quarantine under stringent restrictions.

Of the NRIs who returned from the Gulf in the past two days, 67 persons were sent to institutional quarantine.

There were 38 persons from Thrissur on the Bahrain-Kochi flight that arrived on Thursday night. Of them, 10 persons, including pregnant women, were taken home for quarantine. Others were sent to Garuda Express.

Gulf returnee tests positive; admitted to isolation ward


Gulf returnee tests positive; admitted to isolation ward

10/05/2020, STAFF REPORTER,KOCHI

A 23-year-old man who returned from Abu Dhabi on a repatriation flight, has tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. The district now has two positive recorded cases of COVID-19.

The patient had been on the flight carrying Non-Resident Keralites from Abu Dhabi that landed at the Cochin International Airport on Thursday. On landing, the Malappuram native had shown symptoms of COVID-19 and was immediately admitted to the isolation ward at the Government Medical College Hospital, Kalamassery. His condition was reported to be stable.

As many as 556 persons were placed in home quarantine on Saturday, taking the total number of people in home quarantine to 1,284 in the district. Of them, 47 were identified as high-risk. Twenty people are being monitored in hospitals.

HC sets aside order on the suspension of IT employee


HC sets aside order on the suspension of IT employee

Labour Court had directed firm to pay all allowances from termination date

10/05/2020, MARRI RAMU,HYDERABAD

Justice P. Naveen Rao of Telangana High Court set aside an order of a Labour Court which directed an IT company to pay all allowances to one of its suspended employees, observing that he was not given opportunity to defend his case.

Legal remedies

The judge, however, said the employee Pedda Appala Naidu, who earlier worked as project manager with Cognizant Technology Solutions, had right to seek legal remedies challenging “illegal termination” of his service. Mr. Naidu approached the Labour Court in Vikarabad following termination of his service by the company in 2013.

In an order issued four years later, the court held that inquiry against him was not conducted properly. He was not given ample opportunity to defend his case either, the order said.

The court also directed the tech company to pay allowances to the employee from the date of termination to the day the order was passed.

No jurisdiction

Challenging this order, the company moved the High Court. Announcing the verdict, the judge said the company satisfied the parameters of Information Technology/Information Technology Enabled Services as per the guidelines issued by the then government in 2002.

The Labour Court or the Appellate Authority established under the Shops and Establishment Act is empowered to adjudicate disputes involving an ‘establishment’.

If the establishment is exempted from the Act by any order of the government, the Labour Court or the Appellate Authority had no jurisdiction to adjudicate disputes connected to that establishment.

Exemptions

In Cognizant Technology Solutions case, the government had given exemption to it under Section 73 (4) of the Act since it was an IT/ITES company. Hence, any disputes relating to that company cannot be addressed by the Labour Court or Appellate Authority, the verdict said.

“The decision taken by the management of an establishment exempted from the purview of the Act was not amenable for challenge before the Labour Court or the Appellate Authority,” the order said.

Police, not judges, award ‘punishment’

Police, not judges, award ‘punishment’

Moving the barricades in the sun is their punishment, say police

10/05/2020, B. PRADEEP



The accused young men, mouth covered with a cloth, manning the barricades at Vadapalli on AP-TS border in Nalgonda district on May 5. Singam Venkataramana

Pawan (name changed), skinny and in his early 20s, had already moved the metal barricade some 200 times till 12.45 p.m. that day.

He and his four friends were told to reach the Andhra Pradesh-Telangana border at Vadapalli by 8 a.m., only to follow the order – “move the barricades” for the next 12 hours.

Each time a vehicle approached the check post, they walked up to the passengers to find the whereabouts, occasionally carried documents to and fro to the tent and moved the barricades left and right.

The sun was directly overhead, thanks to the limestone-rich geography, the asphalt road and cement factories around, and the mercury level was well over 40 degrees Celsius, they said.

Neither Pawan nor his four friends are home guards or constables of the Nalgonda police, but, reportedly, accused under Section 319 in the Miryalaguda rural police limits for their alleged involvement in an altercation that led to simple injuries to another party.

On May 5, when this correspondent was at Vadapalli to interact with check post officials, sub-inspector B. Sudheer Kumar said the men were involved in a case and did not belong to the department.

Sitting next to Inspector A. Ramesh Babu in the khaki tent, another official, who checked documents and recorded entries, explained further.

“Every day five petty case accused are brought from various stations under the rural police limits. It is the fourth day. These men are involved in simple hurt case. Moving the barricades in the sun is their punishment, they should not rest when the police are working hard. Even the SP and DSP appreciated the inspector’s initiative,” he said, as the other two officers nodded with a smile. Miyalaguda DSP Venkateswara Rao, when contacted, said, “The men were voluntarily helping. Like many who are giving food and masks, can’t they move the barricades? It’s the same. Anyone can help the police.”

Local sources confirmed that the five accused men left Vadapalli on their two motorcycles around 7 p.m.


IT firms told to use buses


IT firms told to use buses

‘They can operate with 33% workforce in red zones, including GHMC area’

10/05/2020, TAFF REPORTER,HYDERABAD

Cyberabad Commissioner of Police V. C. Sajjanar

The Cyberabad police on Saturday asked IT companies to engage buses to the maximum extent, following social distancing norms, to reduce the number of individual vehicles on the road.

With the State government permitting the IT/ ITES industry to operate with up to 33% work force, in red zones, including GHMC area, Commissioner of Police V. C. Sajjanar issued certain guidelines after a meeting with the heads of a few top companies.

Staggered timings

He suggested that the companies follow staggered timings (login between 7 am and 10 am and logout between 3 pm and 6pm) and asked them to issue authorisation letters for employees and cabs which should be utilised only for the purpose of travelling from home to office and back home. “Every employee must carry the authorisation letter along with ID card to commute to work,” he said.

Movements are strictly restricted during curfew hours (7pm to 6am) and the companies should ensure health, safety and hygiene measures as per the guidelines issued by the Health department.

Mr. Sajjanar said that two passengers besides driver were allowed in a car and no pillion rider on two-wheeler, while company-operated buses were limited to 50% occupancy.

‘No gatherings’

“Do not allow gathering of employees outside IT parks and campuses, which encourages street hawkers and other activities on roads. Strict action will be initiated if any violations are observed,” the Commissioner said, directing the companies not to operate the cafeteria until further notice.

Mr. Sajjanar said that no socialising or gathering of employees in common areas within the IT companies or IT parks would be allowed.

Punjab to give ₹50 lakh ex gratia to govt. staff


Punjab to give ₹50 lakh ex gratia to govt. staff

State records 31 new COVID-19 cases

10/05/2020, VIKAS VASUDEVA,CHANDIGARH


Amarinder Singh.File photo

The Punjab government has announced an ex gratia of ₹50 lakh to the dependants of government employees who die while on duty fighting the novel coronavirus.

The Finance Department in an order on May 8 said “... the government of Punjab, after careful consideration, has decided to put in place special provisions with regard to ex gratia admissible to dependant/legal heirs of employees who die in harness while on government duty during the fight against Coronavirus pandemic”.

The order shall be applicable to all categories of regular government employees including those recruited on or after January 1, 2004, and covered under the new pension scheme.

Punjab recorded 31 fresh COVID-19 cases on Saturday and reported two more deaths, taking the tally to 31, according to an official statement.

The number of positive cases has reached 1,762 on May 9. The patients who died were from Ludhiana and Hoshiarpur districts. The Health Department said majority cases, 17 and five, were reported from Jalandhar and Fatehgarh districts respectively. The active cases are 1,574 and 157 patients have so far recovered, it added.

Contact tracing

Health Minister Balbir Singh Sidhu said that across the State, 11,078 persons were identified who came in contact with COVID-19 patients; of these cases, 11,056 have already been traced by the department — 99.9% contact tracing.

In Chandigarh, 23 new cases surfaced, taking the tally to 169.

A tailor’s long journey from Jaipur to Farrukhabad to be with family


A tailor’s long journey from Jaipur to Farrukhabad to be with family

The sudden lockdown announcement, an uncertain future, concern for family pushed him to walk to his hometown in Uttar Pradesh hundreds of kilometres away

10/05/2020, ROHINI SOMANATHAN,BHAVISHYA MEHTA

The following narrative is based on an interview conducted on April 15 with a tailor who walked most of the way from Jaipur to his home in Farrukhabad district of Uttar Pradesh after the announcement of the nationwide lockdown. In 2018, he moved to east Delhi with his wife and three children. Initially they were quite happy in Delhi and found the schools relatively good. When communal tensions rose in 2019, the family moved back to the safety of their home. He started work again in his father’s shop but there was not enough work to meet school and household expenses. His sister invited him to come to Jaipur where there was more work. The lockdown was announced after he had been in Jaipur for three months. His story illustrates that there are no stereotypical migrants — they come from many different walks of life. Their shared experience is their loss of livelihood and the traumatic separation from their family during a life-threatening crisis.

Setting out

I saw the news of the lockdown on my mobile phone on the night of March 24. I had been staying with my sister in the Idgah neighbourhood of Jaipur for over three months and working in a tailoring shop in the area. Four of my relatives also worked in the same shop. My wife and three boys were at our home in Farrukhabad.

I spent the first day of the lockdown indoors. The following evening, a van came to the road crossing near us with packets of food from a local NGO. A group stood with large sticks and took control over the food packets. Some claimed they were policemen, but no one was in uniform. The next morning, we saw some of those packets (empty or half-eaten) strewn by the rubbish dump and in the drains.

I was well-provided for at my sister’s house but my co-workers were hungry. I carried food for them and we decided we should somehow leave for home. While there was no dearth of necessities at my sister’s house for now, there was no telling what would happen if the lockdown continued and my nephews lost their tailoring jobs. I could not bear to burden my sister’s family or beg from others. My employer owed me ₹3,000 but he said he could not pay me until the situation improved.

We set out after nightfall on April 27. My sister handed me a packet of food and ₹1,000, adding to the ₹500 of my own. We started walking, three or four metres apart, afraid to be recognised as a single group. We saw others coming in from all directions, and by the time we reached the police barricade, about 3 km away, we were a large number, too many to control or hold back. There were all sorts of people in the crowd. They let us pass.

We must have walked 50 km towards Agra before we lay down by the side of the road, and slept fitfully for a couple of hours. We got to our feet as the sun rose. The eldest among us turned back saying, “It is a long road, I will not manage it.” The rest of us continued. We felt death at our heels and had to somehow get home.

There were villages along the way. At the first village, there was a religious reading going on in a tent. They let us in to rest, brought us buttermilk. We kept receiving bits of food. In the small towns, there were sometimes food packets, chips and bottles of water. Neither the travellers nor the villagers cared about class or religion. They wished us well, took video clips of us on their phones and gave us faith in humanity and confidence that we would reach our destination. We finally reached Bharatpur and found a tractor that gave us a ride for about 30 km. Then we walked again until we reached the Agra bus station later that night. At a police outpost, 25 km from Agra, we were told we would be quarantined in schools if we went ahead, but we kept moving. In Agra, I called a relative who said we were welcome if we could make our way there. They had omelettes waiting for us and we stayed the night.

The curfew-like conditions in Agra were much worse than Jaipur. We left at 8 the next morning when people were allowed out of their houses for essentials. We walked to Tundla, where an autorickshaw driver took us 50 km for ₹1,500. From there we walked to Etah. Luckily, we found a matador van carrying vegetables and scrambled in the back until its destination in Aliganj and another tractor carrying wheat harvest to Karimganj. I then called my sister who sent an e-rickshaw to take us the remaining 10 km. We reached home on April 29 night, a little over two days after leaving Jaipur.

Waiting to exhale

It has been over two weeks but still feels as if I have just entered my house and sat down with my family. When I see news of crowds of workers at bus stations, I feel their pain — our story is one. Stuck far away, one does not think of food or belongings, just a desperate longing to reach their family and a place they belong. I am not quite sure what the future holds. The police are taking bribes from labourers wanting to work and from grocery shops, which are supposed to be open. My father’s tailoring shop is closed for now. My wife usually works from home on embroidery and stitching accessories on fashion garments for city shops. There is no work these days because the sequins and other accessories are mostly from China and there are also no customers. We will manage something provided the lockdown ends soon.

(Rohini Somanathan is professor of economics at the Delhi School of Economics and Bhavishya Mehta a student in his final semester of the M.A. Economics programme.)

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