Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Naveen went to Ukraine as he couldn’t get medical seat despite 97% marks: Father


Naveen went to Ukraine as he couldn’t get medical seat despite 97% marks: Father

The fourth-year MBBS student, who died in the attack at Kharkiv, was a native of Haveri district

02/03/2022

Relatives and friends gather at the residence of Naveen at Chalageri village in Haveri on Tuesday. PTI PTI

Girish Pattanashetti HUBBALLI

“Despite scoring 97% in PUC, my son could not secure a medical seat in the State. It became inevitable for us to send him to Ukraine for studies. But we lost him,” a distraught Shekarappa said referring to the tragic death of his son Naveen in Ukraine.

Naveen, a fourth-year MBBS student who died in the Russian attack in Kharkiv, was a native of Chalageri village in Ranebennur taluk of Haveri district.

Mr. Shekharappa, a mechanical engineer, who took up farming after retirement, and his wife Vijayalaxmi were inconsolable as relatives, well-wishers, and political leaders continued to visit them on Tuesday after the news about their son’s death spread.

“Naveen was a bright student from the beginning. However, as the family could not afford the cost of medical education here, he was sent to study medicine in Ukraine,” his cousin Gangadhar Gyanagoudar recalled, from the residence of Naveen.

Mr. Shekharappa spent most part of his career outside Haveri. He worked for an oil company in Abu Dhabi before returning to India and joining South Indian Paper Mill at Nanjanagud in Mysuru district.

It was in Nanjangud that Naveen had his primary, high school, and PU education. Having retired two years ago, Mr. Shekharappa and Ms. Vijayalaxmi settled down in Chalageri, where they had ancestral property. “My uncle bought additional land and took to farming. Naveen’s elder brother Harsha has completed M.Sc. Agri,” Mr. Gangadhar said.

According to him, Naveen had called his father on Tuesday morning over phone. However, Mr. Shekharappa had not noticed it. After some time, he received a call informing him about the death, Mr. Gangadhar said. “We were told that the tragic incident happened when they were trying to return,” he said.

The incident has shaken families of students still stuck in the crisis-hit country. Sridhar Vaishyar, father of Suman Vaishyar, who is in Kharkiv, alleged that repeated attempts made by his son to contact Shivakumar Udasi, local MP, had failed.

“He tried several times, but Mr. Udasi is not answering the call. We had informed the MP’s local aide. He said he had informed the MP and asked Suman to call him. But when he did, his call was not received,” Mr. Sridhar said adding that their only hope was the Almighty.

Venkatesh Vaishyar, whose son Amit also studies in Kharkiv, lambasted the politicians for what he termed as their apathy towards the stranded students.

Later in the evening, Mr. Udasi visited Naveen’s residence and consoled his parents. He even clarified that he had spoken to Suman and contacted the MEA authorities and was doing his best. The residents appealed to him to help bring back the mortal remains of Naveen, and to help the remaining students return safely.

Sri Lankan Airlines to operate daily service to Colombo from March 27


Sri Lankan Airlines to operate daily service to Colombo from March 27

02/03/2022

Special Correspondent TIRUCHI

Sri Lankan Airlines will operate a daily service on the Tiruchi-Colombo sector from March 27. The airliner is presently operating four flights a week .The flight is being operated on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday now.

As per the revised plan, on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, it will depart from Tiruchi at 3.30 p.m. The flights on Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday will leave Tiruchi at 9.40 a.m. The proposed increase in service is expected to scale up international passenger movement at the airport.

Cash-strapped Madurai Kamaraj University starts paying salaries from pension fund

Cash-strapped Madurai Kamaraj University starts paying salaries from pension fund

By Jeyalakshmi Ramanujam| Express News Service 

| Published: 02nd March 2022 05:36 AM

Madurai Kamraj University

MADURAI: With the State government refusing to release funds to Madurai Kamaraj University (MKU) owing to audit objections, the university administration has started using Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) funds to pay salaries and pension.

MKU needs around Rs 12 crore every month for salary and pension. Of this, Rs 4.9 crore is for 1,165 pensioners. Remaining amount is spent on the salary of 202 UGC-scale teaching staff, 303 administrative staff, and more than 500 consolidated salaried non-teaching staff.

MKU Pensioners Association President and former syndicate member R Srinivasan said the university has already exhausted a corpus fund of around Rs 400 crore, kept for paying retirement benefits. “Now, the university has started using CPS, which is against MKU’s statutes,” he said.

A panel appointed under retired HC Judge Akbar Ali had pointed out violations made in faculty appointments but no remedial action was taken, he said. The documents related to the 3,000 audit objections, accessed by TNIE, reveals that most of the objections are related to appointment of teachers and excess non-teaching staff.

An MKU professor said from 2010 onwards there has been lot of irregularities, including appointment of project assistants and appointment of associate and assistant professors at the Department of Film Studies.

Save Higher Education Forum Co-Convener and former General Secretary of Madurai Kamaraj, Manonmaniam Sundaranar, Mother Teresa and Alagappa University Teachers’ Association (MUTA) P Vijayakumar said, “For more than 10 years, there have been no elected representatives in senate and syndicate. The present senate and syndicate have only nominated members,” he said.

According to Registrar VS Vasantha, the university started utilising the CPS fund as it does not have enough money. “The university’s main source of income of fee from students and affiliated colleges is not enough to meet the expenses. A proposal for `27.50 crore funding has been sent to the government,” she said.

“A committee led by syndicate member R Lakshmipathi was appointed to clear objections in teaching staff recruitment. Another committee led by syndicate member A Meshach Ponraj was appointed for non-teaching staff appointments. Of the 102 teachers recruited over the past 15 years, audit objections have been raised in 70 cases,” she added.

This doc lived amid Covid infected for 2 yrs, unscathed


This doc lived amid Covid infected for 2 yrs, unscathed

Mar 2, 2022, 03.41 AM IST

Hyderabad: Lakhs of Covid-19 patients, some very severe cases, were treated under his watch, yet Gandhi Hospital superintendent Dr Raja Rao is a medical marvel, who has remained uninfected since the pandemic began and even after the widespread Omicron wave. He is the first medical professional in the state to treat Covid-19 patients, interact with them and even touch them.

Dr Rao himself is perplexed by the fact that though he tested himself four times, at different intervals despite not having symptoms, as he had close contact with severe patients, but the results proved him lucky. Even antibody tests to check for asymptomatic infection ruled out any infection.

"At first, we used personal protection equipment (PPEs). Since then, I've been using double masks, taking vitamins, eating eggs daily and non-veg once a week. As a result, I've gained weight," Dr Rao says.

He did not take a day off since the first case was reported in 2020, as did many other Gandhi Hospital medical staff. For him, the whole experience at Gandhi Hospital is surreal.

"I completed MBBS and PG (general medicine) from Gandhi, joined as an assistant professor in the same hospital in 1998 and eventually took over as superintendent in April 2020, exactly a month after the first Covid-19 patient was admitted. Since then, I may have touched nearly 8,000 patients. They would hug me in emotion and pain," he told TOI.

When the first few cases were reported, Gandhi was the only centre treating patients, and the doctors were directly in video conferences with doctors in the United States, he added.

"When I used to tell them I touched patients, they would wonder or warn me about an infection. In fact, it is a puzzle and a wonder to me as well," he explained. Surprisingly, none of his family members was infected, including his wife, son, and daughter till now.

"I lived separately in the same house for a year, used to drive back home alone at night, used to wash my clothes, it was a strange feeling those days, I would pray for traffic on those days during the lockdown," he explained.

The deaths and births during the pandemic have moved all the staff at Gandhi. "However, one death that moved me was that of a bodybuilder from the city, who spent three months in the hospital during the second wave. I would give him courage for days on end, until one day when I went to see him, he was just lying there, and when I touched him, he just fell apart, and I realised he was dead. I couldn't stop crying, but many recovered patients offer me many things with love; one tailor who recovered sent me clothes stitched after he returned home; there are many such accounts; this would not have been possible without our staff," he said.

COURT NEWS


Miffed assistant stabs magistrate in Tamil Nadu

TNN | Mar 2, 2022, 06.17 AM IST

SALEM: A judicial magistrate in Salem was stabbed in his chambers on Tuesday by his office assistant who was angered that his request for a transfer was not granted.

M Ponpandi, judicial magistrate-IV, was at his chambers on Tuesday morning, when his assistant A Prakash, 37, of Annadhanapatty, stabbed him thrice with a knife.

"A few minutes after Prakash entered the room, officials in the court hall heard the cries of magistrate Ponpandi," said an official at the Hasthampatty police station. They rushed in and found the magistrate bleeding from the injuries.

An officer said, “His assistant was standing near him holding a knife.” “The magistrate received a deep stab injury on the chest, close to the heart and lungs,” a source at Salem Government Mohan Kumaramangalam Medical College and Hospital told TOI. Prakash was first posted as night watchman in the Sankari sub-court in 2015. Later, he was elevated as office assistant in 2019 and transferred to Mettur subcourt. “From there, he was transferred to Omalur subcourt in January 2022,” the police officer said, adding that from Omalur, he was again transferred to Salem district combined court a few days ago. He joined duty on Monday.

“He approached the magistrate with a request to transfer him back to the Omalur court,” the police officer said, adding that the magistrate had asked him to approach the principal district judge. “Irked over this, Prakash stabbed the JM,” the police officer added. Hasthampatty police registered a case and arrested Prakash. Further inquiries were on.



Anna univ increases research fellowship at par with IITs, NITs

Mar 2, 2022, 03.47 AM IST

Chennai: To attract talented students towards research, Anna University has increased the monthly research fellowship to PhD scholars from ₹20,000 to ₹38,000, which is at par with IITs and NITs.

Each year, the university offers research fellowship to 50 PhD scholars joining various departments.

The university’s syndicate, which met on Monday, approved the proposal to increase the fellowship.

“Since central institutions offer better fellowship, we could not attract good talent towards research. The enhancement of fellowship will attract good students,” vice-chancellor R Velraj said.

The university will evolve a different selection process to award the fellowships. As per the existing method, top 50 students of the entrance test get the fellowship.

The university’s syndicate has also given permission to start 11 centres of excellence for driving the research in emerging areas like automobile technology, robotics and automation, IoT, e-vehicles, AI and data science research and application, wireless system and design, multi-disciplinary system research and energy storage.

“Some of the centres established by former VCs Kulaindaiswamy and Anandakrishnan at Anna University are doing better research compared to IITs. However, the university has not started any centres in the past two decades. Now we are creating 11 centres that are important for societal and technological development,” Velraj added.

Among the centres of excellence, two are unique. Bose-Einstein Science and Technology Centre for Fundamental Research is aimed to focus on research in basic sciences. The Centre for Liberal Arts for Science, Engineering and Technology will offer arts courses such as public policy, economics, history and archaeology to engineering students.

“Engineering students will get creative ideas by studying some arts subjects during their course,” the vice-chancellor said. Each centre will get ₹25 lakh seed funding from the university. The university also got permission to relax the norms for industry experts to do PhDs.

Madras HC slams teachers for private tuitions



Madras HC slams teachers for private tuitions

TNN | Mar 2, 2022, 06.25 AM IST

MADURAI: Government teachers running tuition centres or taking private tuition, engaged in private business or part-time employment beware. The Madras high court has ordered the principal secretary of the education department to form district-level teams to take action against such teachers, as these activities amount to misconduct.

Justice S M Subramaniam, blaming the deterioration of the education system in Tamil Nadu on teachers and teachers' associations, directed the government to provide telephone numbers to enable parents, students and the public to provide information on irregularities and misconduct by teachers, inside and outside the schools.

Such numbers must be legibly displayed in all education department offices and government and aided schools in the state, the court said.

The judge further directed the principal secretary to collect information, complaints, materials regarding activities of the recognized / registered teachers’ associations in the state to ensure that they are functioning according to the statutes and rules in force. If any illegality or irregularity is identified, all appropriate actions are to be initiated against all such associations and their office bearers. “In many countries, the government schools are considered as the best educational institutions.

However, even after spending huge funds for the development of the government institutions in Tamil Nadu, we are unable to create a competitive atmosphere in government schools on par with the private institutions. This situation must be changed,” observed Justice Subramaniam. The government is allocating a considerable amount of funds for the improvement of government schools across the state and is paying a decent salary to the teachers. Unfortunately, the students in government schools are not coming out with an expected level of standard on par with the private schools.

The judge observed that teachers are largely indulging in the practice of taking private tuition classes, doing business or part-time employment etc. This is because they get more holidays and a considerable amount of free time.

The working days and hours of the educational institutions are far less than that of the working hours and working days of other government departments. In the event of allowing such misconducts, undoubtedly, the government cannot expect better performance of the duties and devotion to duty from the teachers. Justice Subramaniam observed that the activities of these associations are to be monitored by the government.

The court passed the directions and made the observations while rejecting the plea moved by K Radha, a secondary grade teacher in the panchayat union middle school at Eachangudi at Papanasam union in Thanjavur district, seeking a direction to consider her transfer to a school which is within 30km radius from the school where her husband is working in Thanjavur town, under the spouse category as per GO passed by the school education department in 2021.

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