Sunday, July 5, 2020

DU extends admission registration till July 18


DU extends admission registration till July 18

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:  05.07.2020

Delhi University on Saturday announced that the online registration process for admission to undergraduate, postgraduate, MPhil and PhD programmes has been extended till July 18.

The decision to extend the deadline was taken in view of the notification of declaration of CBSE results and postponement of JEE and NEET examinations, according to a varsity official.

CBSE has said it would be declaring the results by July

15. On Friday, JEE and NEET exams were postponed to September. So far over three lakh students have registered for undergraduate courses at DU, of which 2.1 lakh have even made the payment. For postgraduate courses, over 1,31,000 students have registered with over 1.02 lakh completing the payment. Meanwhile, for MPhil and PhD programmes, 23,284 applications have been received, with 13,258 already paying for the registration.

The last date for registrations at DU was July 4, which has now been extended to July 18.

3 L ENROLMENT FOR UG COURSES AT DU SO FAR

Record one-day spike of 24K+ cases, 608 deaths on Saturday


Record one-day spike of 24K+ cases, 608 deaths on Saturday

Covid Tally Set To Cross Russia’s Count Today If Infection Trends Hold

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi  05.07.2020

: India recorded its highest single-day spike in Covid-19 cases as well as fatalities, with 24,201 fresh infections and 608 deaths from the virus reported on Saturday. This was the third straight day of record rise in infections as more than 23,500 cases were reported on Friday and over 22,000 the day before.

India’s Covid-19 caseload has risen to 6,72,968, as per data collated from state governments. The tally is set to cross Russia’s Covid-19 count (at present 6,74,515) on Sunday, if current infection trends hold. That will put India at the third spot, behind the US (over 29.1 lakh cases) and Brazil (15.5 lakh), among countries with the highest coronavirus cases.

Saturday’s record surge in infections was again led by Maharashtra, which recorded a massive 7,074 new cases, crossing the 7,000 mark for the first time. At least six other states reported their highest single-day jump in cases, with Karnataka registering 1,839, Bengal 743, Gujarat 712, Rajasthan 480 and Kerala 240. Fresh cases crossed the 100 mark for the first in Goa, which added 108 to its tally.

The daily death toll also went past 600 for the first time, discounting the 2,003 deaths reported on June 16, which mostly comprised backdated fatalities recorded during data reconciliation exercises in Maharashtra and Delhi. These two states reported the highest deaths on Saturday too, with Maharashtra adding a record 295 fatalities to its count and Delhi reporting 81 deaths. The toll was high in Tamil Nadu, where 65 deaths were recorded, Karnataka

(42), Uttar Pradesh (24), Gujarat (21) and Bengal (19).

As south India continued to witness a huge spike in the coronavirus infections, Telangana and Karnataka pushed Bengal to the eight position while climbing to the No. 6 and 7 spots, respectively, in the list of states with the highest cases.

In an ominous warning of the way the pandemic could play out over the next few weeks, Karnataka’s Covid-19 caseload crossed 21,000 on Saturday, with the state reporting 1,839 more cases. With this, the state tally touched 21,549.

Full report on www.toi.in


OMINOUS WARNING: A health worker collects a sample from a woman for Covid-19 test in Kolkata on Saturday

New rlys timetable likely to see cut in halts and trains


New rlys timetable likely to see cut in halts and trains

Dipak.Dash@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:  05.07.2020

Train operations are unlikely to be what they were before the pandemic with the Indian Railways preparing a ‘zerobased’ time-table for all trains. This means the schedule and frequency of all earlier time-tabled passenger trains will be rewritten giving the railways flexibility to reduce the number of halts of mail/express trains and some other trains as well, sources said.

Railway board chairman, V K Yadav had told reporters early this week that the plan to roll this out has been delayed due to the pandemic, but this will be implemented.

Sources said in some cases stoppages of express/ mail trains would be done away with after assessing the number of passengers boarding and de-boarding at these stations. “It would also be easier to stop the services of some trains that run once or twice a week. Many halts were approved in the past due to political considerations. In recent years, this approach has changed,” said an official.

Each zone is working on this plan. The reduction in number of halts is expected to result in reducing the travel time as trains can run nonstop for longer distances. The railway board chief had said the 151 trains to be operated by the private players will also be part of the zerobased time-table trains.

There are indications that railways would run more trains on routes including Delhi-Amritsar, Delhi-Gorakhpur, Lucknow-Delhi, Indore-Delhi, Mumbai-Ghazipur. All these trains will have the “Special” tag.

Before the Covid crisis hit the country, railways used to run around 11,000 passenger trains daily.

Meanwhile, some of the railway officials told TOI that the railway ministry should take care while deciding the timing of the trains by private operators.

Probe ordered into spread of Covid in Jipmer


Probe ordered into spread of Covid in Jipmer

Bosco.Dominique@timesgroup.com

Puducherry:  05.07.2020

The Puducherry administration on Saturday ordered an inquiry into the spread of Covid-19 infection in the campus of Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research (Jipmer) to examine whether the institute failed to ‘follow the standard operating procedures’ in preventing the spread of the infection.

Puducherry collector cum district magistrate T Arun, in an order dated July 2, directed officer on special duty (health) Muralidharan to conduct a detailed inquiry on the spread of Covid-19 on Jipmer campus and submit a report for evolving a proper mechanism to contain the spread of the infection.

Arun sought director (health and family welfare services) S Mohankumar to depute a team comprising a doctor and necessary supporting staff to the inquiry officer to assist him in the inquiry. He sought the Oulgaret tahsildar to brief the village administrative officers to extend necessary assistance to the inquiry team in identifying the Covid positive cases and earmark the areas to be declared as containment zones.

He observed that despite several preventive measures undertaken, more than 20 positive cases including health officials have been reported in the campus. He sought the cooperation of Jipmer director for the inquiry.

“Healthcare workers in a premier institute like Jipmer contracting the virus is a matter of serious concern. Their counterparts employed in Puducherry government general hospitals and primary health centres (PHCs) continue to remain safe. Even the staff members in PHCs come in close contact with about 800 people every day, but there are only a few stray cases of healthcare personnel testing positive. Jipmer cluster alone accounted for more than 56 positive cases so far,” said Arun.

Meanwhile, Puducherry recorded the second highest spike of Covid-19 positive cases in a single day with 80 more people, including 40 women, testing positive.

Let govt pay staff salaries: School in HC


Let govt pay staff salaries: School in HC

Sureshkumar.K@timesgroup.com

Chennai:  05.07.2020

Since Tamil Nadu government has barred private schools from demanding and collecting fee from parents, it is duty-bound to compensate the monetary burden of these educational institutions, a school has said in the Madras high court.

The city school — St Francis Xavier’s Matriculation School — seeking a direction to the government to release the salary to staff as part of the extraordinary disaster relief, linked it to the fundamental duty of the government to provide compulsory education to children from 6 to 14 years.

Admitting the plea moved by the school, Justice R Mahadevan has directed the government to file its response by July 8.

The petitioner-school, managed by Regular Tertiary Franciscans Sisters of Our Lady of Bon Secours-Society, said fees paid by students is to meet the salary and allowances for teaching and non-teaching staff, administration and curricular activities, maintenance of the infrastructure, besides statutory payments like EPF, ESI, property tax, water charges, etc.

Apart from that, students have to pay for books/ notebooks, uniforms, other personal implements and material and optional co-curricular and extra curricular activities for effective education. All these activities, curricular, co-curricular and extra-curricular, form part of a healthy, holistic and integral education, the petitioner said.

While so, the petitioner was totally surprised by the sudden jolt in the financial administration of the school, due to GO prohibiting collection of fees. Initially, the petitioner was under the impression that it will be only for a short-period. Therefore, it mobilized all its resources to manage the payment towards the salary of the staff, for the months of April, May and June. As of now, the petitioner is financially exhausted with its limited resources, it added.

“On the one hand, the state has blocked all the financial resources for schools and on the other hand it is directing the school to continue to pay,” the petitioner said.


On the one hand, the state has blocked all the financial resources for schools and, on the other hand, it is directing the school to continue to pay

ST FRANCIS XAVIER’S

MATRICULATION SCHOOL

petitioner-school

Only graduates of govt law colleges will get ₹3k stipend


Only graduates of govt law colleges will get ₹3k stipend

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:  05.07.2020

Only new law graduates from government law colleges, and those with less than ₹2.5 lakh annual income and aged under 30 years are eligible for Tamil Nadu government’s monthly stipend of ₹3,000, the state bar council has announced.

This apart, the beneficiaries should submit a proof of practice, endorsed by a senior advocate, every six months. Applicants must be a resident of Tamil Nadu and should produce Aadhaar as proof. Only one person from a family is eligible for the stipend, said P S Amalraj, chairman of the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry.

A day after CM Edappadi K Palaniswami announced the stipend scheme to be given to young advocates during their first two years of practice, the statutory council fixed the eligibility criteria for beneficiaries.

Lawyers can apply online at http://ams.bctnpy.com from July 6. Eligible applications will be forwarded to the directorate of legal studies, where they will be scrutinised. Once approved, the stipend will be paid through bank transfers to beneficiaries.

No diagnosis or cause of death in Jeyaraj’s case sheet


No diagnosis or cause of death in Jeyaraj’s case sheet

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:  05.07.2020

No referral was made to a bigger hospital, no specialists called for consultation, no diagnosis or cause of death — the case sheets of P Jeyaraj, the direct eyewitness to the custodial torture death of his son Beniks, raise more questions than answers.

The two key elements of a usual case summary — diagnosis and cause of death — have not been derived although patient Jeyaraj spent at least seven hours at Kovilpatti hospital.

Jeyaraj and Beniks were arrested by the Sathankulam police on June 19 and taken to Kovilpatti subjail on June 20. On June 22, Beniks died within 75 minutes of admission at Kovilpatti government hospital.

Documents available with TOI show Jeyaraj was admitted at the hospital at 10.45pm on June 22. This was an hour and 45 minutes after the death of his son Beniks at the same hospital.

The casualty medical officer, Dr T Balasubramanian, had told health department that it was too late to refer Beniks to Tirunelveli Medical College and Hospital. But the case sheets of Jeyaraj do not show any attempt by the medical team to transfer him for higher level of care. Dr Balasubramanian, who holds a diploma in ENT, did not even call for a specialists’ opinion. “He could have called for a doctor from the same hospital who has seen these patients in the sub-jail or a senior physician. That is the normal protocol,” said a senior doctor.


CB-CID teams will interrogate 5 cops

Five arrested policemen, including an inspector, would be taken into custody by CB-CID next week for interrogation in the Sathankulam custodial deaths case. CB CID IG K Shankar said his teams were checking the possibility of retrieving deleted CCTV footages from the station. As of now, the teams are conducting inquiries with the witnesses and are examining material evidences and documents. P 8

Sathankulam deaths: Mismatch in doc notes

However, when TOI contacted, Dr Balasubramanian said: “I have given my response to the government in writing. I have no comments.”

Beniks was taken to the Kovilpatti GH at 8pm with difficulty in breathing, palpitation and sweating by two warders – Marimuthu and S Velmurugan. Dr Balasubramanian attended on him. Beniks had high pulse, mildly elevated BP and low oxygen saturation. Examination found nearly foot long – 25x20cm and 20x20 cm – wounds on both buttocks. He called for an ambulance to transfer him to Tirunelveli Medical College and Hospital. But at 9pm, he was pronounced dead.

In less than two hours, Jeyaraj was brought to the hospital with fever, body ache but no “breathlessness”. He too was attended by Dr Balasubramaniam, who noted similar wounds on his buttocks. Jeyaraj had a high blood pressure (170/ 110 mmHg against normal 120/80), high blood sugar (437mg) and mild fever (98.4F). He was known diabetic, as per the case sheet.

“In normal circumstance, when there are two people from the same case brought one after the other for unknown medical reasons, they are transferred to higher centre for better care,” said a senior government doctor.

Jeyaraj was shifted to the ward, and prescribed intravenous fluids, insulin, antihypertensive medications, drugs to bring down fever and other supportive drugs. In one hour, at around 12am on June 23, Jeyaraj’s blood sugar dropped to 258mg% and his BP was 140/ 100mmHg.

Hospital superintendent A Kamalavasan has told the joint director of health services that “a sudden cardiac arrest was noted by the staff nurse and the duty doctor rushed to the ward and team coordinated to resuscitate him.” This, according to the patient chart happened at 5.20am on June 23.

The summaries sent to health department late last month did not mention what happened between midnight and the cardiac event. But, on July 3 (Friday), doctors had sent an hourly update which showed no abnormal changes in blood pressure or blood sugar.

It said that after the cardiac arrest, Jeyaraj became unconscious, and was not responding to stimuli. He was gasping, his blood pressure could not be recorded and his pulse was feeble. The team performed a cardiopulmonary resuscitation, pumped oxygen using ambubag, gave him injections such as adrenaline and steroids to revive him. He died at 5.40am.

Their bodies were sent to the medical college one after the other on “oral” inquest from the police.

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