Thursday, June 4, 2020

AIIMS nurses warn of indefinite strike


AIIMS nurses warn of indefinite strike

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:

The AIIMS Nurses Union, protesting for the past three days over poor working condition, on Wednesday warned the administration that they would go on an indefinite strike from June 15 if their concerns were not addressed.

More than 300 people working at the institute, including 47 nursing staff, have tested positive for Covid-19.

In a fresh mail to AIIMS director Dr Randeep Guleria, the union said no heed had been paid in task force meetings to their letters and regular representations. “At this difficult juncture...we are still left unheard by the AIIMS authorities. So we have been forced to resort to severe steps, including mass casual leave on June 10,” the mail read.

If the union has to go on an indefinite strike, the AIIMS administration will be responsible for all consequences, the mail added. Seeking a prompt meeting with the director, the union said, “We also do not want to go for strike during this difficult time.”

The union is demanding implementation of a uniform four-hour shift with personal protective equipment in Covid-19 areas of the Centre-run hospital, a uniform rotation policy between Covid and non-Covid areas, and establishment of proper donning and doffing areas.

Union president Harish Kajla earlier said working at a stretch for six hours, which often extended to seven-eight hours, in PPEs was affecting the physical well-being of the nursing staff, especially women. “Several of us are getting rashes and urinary tract infections while many have lost weight,” Kajla said. Women can’t even change sanitary pads as “a PPE cannot be taken off just like that”, he added.

Tit-for-tat: US to bar Chinese airlines


Tit-for-tat: US to bar Chinese airlines

Flights To Be Suspended From June 16

04.06.2020

The Trump administration said on Wednesday that it would block Chinese passenger airlines from flying into or out of the US starting June 16 in retaliation for a similar ban by the Chinese government on US companies, further escalating tensions between the two economies. Relations have deteriorated in recent weeks as officials scuffled over the origin of the pandemic and China’s move to tighten its authority over Hong Kong.

The aviation dispute threatens to further chill economic relations. Flights between the countries were already sharply curtailed by the pandemic and Chinese restrictions on foreign airlines that effectively halted trips by United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and American Airlines, the major US carriers that go there. China’s aviation regulators said on March 26 that they would limit foreign carriers to one flight per week based on schedules that were in place earlier that month. But those three airlines had already stopped service to the country by then because of the coronavirus. Chinese airlines continued to fly to US cities.

The Chinese restrictions became a problem only in recent weeks, as Delta and United sought to resume flights in June. Both carriers appealed to the Civil Aviation Authority of China but did not receive a reply. Delta said it still hoped to restart flights to China as soon as next week, pending approval, and that the airline appreciated the government’s intervention. United said it would fly to China “when the regulatory environment allows us to do so.”

In January, US and Chinese carriers operated about 325 weekly flights between the two nations. By mid-Feburary, only 20 remained, all of them run by Chinese airlines. The US transport department said it would block any scheduled passenger flight by a Chinese carrier from June 16. “Currently, four Chinese carriers operate scheduled passenger flights between US and China.” NYT NEWS SERVICE

The decision by the US transport department is a response to Beijing’s failure to let American airlines resume flights this week to China

No mention of ‘Covid’ on death certs raises questions


No mention of ‘Covid’ on death certs raises questions

Sumitra.DebRoy@timesgroup.com

Mumbai:04.06.2020

The term ‘Covid’ was missing from the death certificate of a 65-year-old Bhandup man who passed away on May 31 after three days of treatment in the Covid ward of Sion Hospital. Taking it to be a case of ‘natural’ death as was mentioned in the certificate, his son carried out the last rites following all rituals, only to be told the next day that his father was Covid-positive and that their house had to be placed under containment.

In another incident last week, a Vile Parle family faced a similar situation when Cooper Hospital doctors allegedly labelled the death of their 41-year-old Covid-positive relative as ‘natural’ and gave them the body. This man’s funeral was attended by almost 15 people, and the body was not even wrapped. As the death certificate didn’t even mention ‘Covid suspect,’ the family carried out the cremation on a wooden pyre instead of the electrical one.

Though BMC states that it is transparent about numbers and that cases are added to the overall tally after they are confirmed and scrutinised, such curious incidents of the terms ‘Covid’ or even ‘Covid suspect’ being missing from death certificates have led to BJP leader Kirit Somaiya alleging these were tactics employed to hide deaths. Civic officials admitted that if the deceased’s Covid report was awaited, the term ‘Covid suspect’ should be mentioned in the certificate.

The 65-year-old Bhandup resident, Atmaram More, died on May 31 after suffering from fever and cough for more than a week. His son, Krishna, who was taken to a quarantine centre in Kanjurmarg on Wednesday, said his father was refused by four hospitals before Sion Hospital admitted him on May 28. More also had hypertension as an underlying condition, which complicated things for him, the son said. More was admitted in ward 15, a Covid ward, where his swabs were taken during the course of treatment. The report, however, did not arrive till after he passed away at 9am on May  31.

“The death certificate said he had died of ‘Type-1 respiratory failure’ and even mentioned pneumonia. It didn’t say Covid anywhere and not even Covid suspect,” the son said.

The son pointed out, “We were taken by surprise when civic authorities arrived at our house on June 1 to seal it.

Full report on www.toi.in

Killing of pregnant elephant triggers nationwide outrage


Killing of pregnant elephant triggers nationwide outrage

NGO Announces ₹1L Cash Reward For Info Leading To Culprits’ Arrest

TNN & AGENCIES

Palakkad: 04.06.2020

The killing of a pregnant wild elephant has triggered a nationwide outrage even as Kerala chief minister promised strict action against the offenders. “The forest department is probing the case and the culprits won’t be spared,” chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan said on Wednesday.

Mannarkkad forest division registered a case and initiated a probe into killing of the 15-yearold cow elephant. Two organizations announced cash reward to anyone providing information that would lead to the arrest of the offenders.

The elephant had chewed on an explosive-stuffed pineapple that went off in its mouth. The injured animal stood in Velliyar River, where it died on May 27 at Thiruvizhamkunnu forest section in Kottopadam grama panchayat. The forest department had employed two kumki elephants to rescue the injured animal. The efforts went in vain.

According to Mannarkkad divisional forest officer (DFO) Sunil Kumar, the elephant might have come from Silent Valley National Park’s buffer zone. It died on a private land 300m from Thiruvizhamkunnu forest section. “We have registered a case for killing the wild elephant but nobody has been arrested. We are waiting for the postmortem report to find out the exact cause of its death,” he said. The officer said the firecracker-filled fruit could have been placed to kill crop-raiding wild animals.

Wildlife warden of Silent Valley National Park Samuel V Pachuau said that patrolling has been intensified after the elephant’s death.

Meanwhile, BJP leader Maneka Gandhi slammed the state government—and Rahul Gandhi—for not taking cruelty against animals seriously. She came down heavily on the illtreatment of captive elephants. “Forest secretary should be removed and the minister (for wildlife protection), if he has any sense, should resign. Rahul Gandhi is from that area, why has he not taken action,” she asked. The elephant’s tragic end became public after a forest official, Mohan Krishnan, tendered an emotional apology on his Facebook page.

“Sorry sister,” Krishnan, who witnessed the elephant’s death, posted on Facebook. “With her mouth and tongue destroyed in the explosion, she paced around hungry without being able to eat. She must have been more worried about the health of the child inside her than about her own hunger.”

Several celebrities including Virat Kohli, Anushka Sharma, Shraddha Kapoor, Randeep Hooda, John Abraham and Akshay Kumar demanded action against animal cruelty.

Announcing a reward of ₹1 lakh, Wildlife SOS, an NGO, said the practice of stuffing explosives in food materials has been often done to maim and kill wild animals. It added that it would ensure that the heinous act would not go unpunished. The NGO could be contacted over its elephant hotline 9971699727 or over email, info@wildlifesos.org.

(With inputs from Thiruvananthapuram and Kochi)

In East Godavari village,1man infects 150


In East Godavari village,1man infects 150

Umamaheswara.Rao@timesgroup.com

Kakinada:04.06.2020

About 20km from Kakinada, situated between green fields and coconut groves, lies Gollala Mamidada village. The otherwise nondescript hamlet in Pedapudi mandal in East Godavari district is now making headlines for having earned the dubious distinction of being the first village in the country to have 116 confirmed cases of Covid-19 as of Wednesday.

Gollala Mamidada is the mandal headquarter with a population of about 16,000. While most of the infected villagers are in home quarantine, a few have been isolated at a local private medical college.

On May 20, a 53-year-old Covid-19 infected person from the village succumbed to complications brought on by the virus at the Governmental General Hospital (GGH) in Kakinada within half-an-hour of admission.

The deceased, who was employed at a hotel and doubled up as a photographer, is believed to have been a super-spreader because of the nature of his job, as well as the delayed onset of symptoms. The patient directly or indirectly transmitted the virus to at least 150 people in Pedapudi and neighbouring Ramachandrapuram, Anaparti, Bikkavolu and Mandapeta mandals.

The deceased was believed to have contracted the virus while photographing an event in Ramachandrapuram. It was also learnt that the deceased participated in a mask distribution programme conducted by a local organisation.

However, district officials are yet to establish the origin of the disease in the super-spreader. The son of the deceased was also diagnosed with the disease around the same time as his father, raising doubts over who transmitted the virus to whom. According to officials, the son had thrown a party for his friends at a local bakery before testing positive. Medical tests are being conducted on all primary and secondary contacts of Covid-19 patients.

The 53-year-old man was employed at a hotel and doubled up as a photographer, is believed to have been a super-spreader because of the nature of his job, as well as the delayed onset of symptoms. The patient directly or indirectly transmitted the virus to at least 150 people

Health min issues rules for safe ENT practice


Health min issues rules for safe ENT practice

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:04.06.2020

The health ministry on Wednesday issued guidelines for safe ENT practice amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The guidelines are aimed at minimising the spread of Covid-19 infection among ENT doctors, nursing staff, support staff, patients and their attendants.

According to the guidelines, all patients entering the ENT OPD shall be thermal screened.

The ministry said that Covid-19 positive patients are to be operated only for emergency indications in designated operation theatres for Covid-19 patients.

Patients having symptoms suggestive of Covid-19 pertaining to both ENT symptoms or respiratory symptoms, should be seen in a separate Covid-19 screening clinic and not in the ENT OPD, it said.

The ministry also recommended teleconsultation as a preferable option. “Avoid performing endoscopy (nasal endoscopy, 90 rigid or flexible endoscopy for larynx) in routine OPD,” it said, adding even if this has to be performed, it should preferably be performed in a separate demarcated area with Level II PPE kit i.e. Cover-all gown, N-95 mask, gloves and goggles.

The ministry said that the Covid-19 suspect patients should be treated in a separate ward , and should be shifted to ENT ward only after confirmation of Covid negative status while it must be ensured that suspected and confirmed Covid patients are kept separately.

Number of recoveries crosses 1 lakh

New Delhi:Even as new cases of Covid-19 are increasing rapidly, on the brighter side, the number of recovered people crossed the 1 lakh-mark on Wednesday to touch 1,00,303 or 48.31% of those infected by the Sars-Cov-2 virus. The number of Covid-19 cases in India rose to 2,07,615 with yet another biggest single-day spike as 8,909 fresh cases and 217 deaths were recorded by the health ministry on Wednesday. The death toll has gone up to 5,815. There were1,01,497 active Covid-19 cases in the country, the ministry said.

“We are expecting cases to increase because restrictions are gradually being lifted. While containment exercise will continue, it is a relief that recovery rate is improving fast and deaths are limited. Our focus is to keep death rate as low as possible. Increasing number of recoveries shows that our strategy of early detection and clinical management are right,” a health ministry official said.

According to ministry data, Maharashtra has reported 72,300 cases so far, followed by Tamil Nadu with 24,586 cases and Delhi with 22,132. Of the 5,815 deaths across the country, Maharashtra accounted for the highest number at 2,465, followed by Gujarat

No call yet on opening places of worship in state


No call yet on opening places of worship in state

Julie.Mariappan@timesgroup.com

Chennai:04.06.2020

The state government on Wednesday chose to remain non-committal on the demand by religious leaders to reopen places of worship after it received mixed views from representatives of various congregations. It, however, indicated that when religious places are finally opened, as suggested by the Union government, it would start with rural areas of Tamil Nadu. Some of the religious leaders preferred a cautious approach and suggested deferring a decision for now.

The Tamil Nadu Jama’Athul Ulama Sabai and the Tamil Nadu Bishops’ Council, a supreme body of Catholic bishops in the state, urged the government to allow religious places to open from June 8, assuring maintenance of social distancing norms and strict enforcement of the safety guidelines imposed by the state. “Many leaders said people were getting emotional and wanted religious places opened, others took a cautious approach as they did not want to be the cause for spreading the disease,” chief secretary K Shanmugam told TOI. “They said the government could take the call and they would follow whatever conditions were laid down. We will have to be cautious,” said the officer.

A section of Muslim leaders too recommended that the government defer reopening mosques by at least a month. The Tamil Nadu Jama’Athul Ulama Sabai representatives had stated that the community was keen to begin worship in mosques, and even prayers during Ramzan. “We assured that all safety precautions would be in place, forbidding vulnerable people from coming, avoiding hand shakes or hugging and maintaining a strict schedule. People are more aware about the dangers of Covid than they were earlier,” TNJUS state deputy secretary Ilyas Riyaji said. The officials told the leaders that chief minister Edappadi K Palnaiswami would be apprised of the developments after which he would take a decision.

A section of Hindu leaders, including Ramakrishna Mission, had left it to the government to decide on the date. “We feel that the government should defer plans, if any, to reopen since the Covid cases are on the rise in Chennai and neighbouring districts,” said Swami Satyajnananda of Ramakrishna Mission. The leaders suggested banning devotees from sitting or standing for too long in the temple in the initial days.

Tamil Nadu Bishops’ Council deputy secretary L Sahayaraj said all congregations had requested that Churches be opened. “Apart from our own rules and regulations, if the government insists on imposing more conditions, we will adjure the visitirs to follow that too. We don’t need police protection as we have our volunteers. Marriages have been deferred during lockdown,” he said. The Bishop council members expressed similar views.

UNIVERSITY OF MADRAS AWAITS A VISIONARY VC


UNIVERSITY OF MADRAS AWAITS A VISIONARY VC

Ahead Of NAAC Assessment, The 163-Yr-Old Institution Stares At Issues Of Vacancies, Poor Evaluation System And Financial Crisis

K Jothi Sivagnanam  04.06.2020

Once again the search for a new vice-chancellor for the University of Madras has begun, even as the education system grapples with the changes due to Covid-19. For the 163-year-old institution facing a financial crisis, staff vacancies and an impending National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) assessment, only a vice-chancellor of mettle can lay the foundation for a university to regain its lost position.

From inadequate finances to wrong appointments, demoralised faculty, lack of motivation among students and overall inefficiency of the system, a large number of challenges await the VC. Priority needs to be given to recruitment. At present, about 60% of the teaching positions and more than 50% of the non-teaching seats remain vacant. Due to this many departments have lost student enrolment, research funding under programmes such as SAP, CAS and DST. Confusing reservation issues for faculty positions is further complicated by scores of litigations. The process of identifying vacancies is difficult as it is politicised within departments. Further, there is a dearth of quality teachers since central universities with better service conditions, age of retirement and hassle-free flow of funds attract better talent. The problem lies in the lack of recruitment rules, irregular appointments and promotions, which VCs in the past have failed to address.

The controversy regarding payment of pension to the university staff has forced many good teachers to leave. Pension arrears and some other payments have accumulated to ₹55 crore and it is mounting with each new retiree every month. The institution handles pensions through a corpus fund, but spiralling expenses after the amendment to the seventh pay commission has created a crisis. For a permanent solution, a financial system for the universities in Tamil Nadu is needed so that the salary and pension liabilities are borne by the state government, as it is being done for government-aided schools and colleges.

The second issue that needs to be addressed is the archaic examination system of the university. Based on the age-old central evaluation system, the university has to spend at least ₹3 crore each semester to evaluate about 13 lakh answer scripts and revalue 1 lakh more. Since most colleges don’t have teachers with the mandatory three-year service criterion for evaluation, teachers from other non-autonomous affiliated colleges have to be brought in. While these teachers complain of not getting paid after six months, questions are also raised on their quality. It is alleged that the number of applications for revaluation is high is a reflection on the poor quality of evaluation. It results in low credibility and poor delivery of an essential service expected from a university — proper evaluation and timely announcement of results.

In the aftermath of the pandemic, when most institutions are shifting to online examination and evaluation systems, University of Madras is yet to take any concrete step.

At the school level, the Class X examination taken by more than 12 lakh students is an orderly process through a digitised database. Answer sheets of each candidate has their details printed. In contrast, the university follows the ageold dummy number system that is manual written. This allows scope of corrupt practices. An overhaul is needed to ensure economy, efficiency, and speedy delivery of results with credibility.

Addressing these issues paves the way for better scores in the NAAC assessment. The university is due in June 2021 for which preparations have to be completed and the selfstudy report should be submitted in January 2021. The university is yet to take the first step in this direction. The accreditation may be extended to 2021-22 due to Covid-19, but the self-study report still has to be prepared. The National Institutional Ranking Framework score of the Madras university in recent years leaves much to be desired. There are many instances of underutilisation of allocated research funds. For instance, the money under the Ministry of Human Resource Development Ministry’s RUSA 2.0 scheme has not been fully used. The university has also failed to spend allocations under the University Grants Commission, Department of Science and Technology and state government. Soliciting fresh funds with this dismal track record is impossible. For the university to emerge as an institution of higher learning and research, the leadership of an able academician and visionary administrator is inevitable. It is hoped that assisted by the search committee, the governor, who is also the chancellor of the university, will shoulder the responsibility of selecting a suitable candidate who will live up to challenges.

(The author is head of department of economics and membersyndicate, University of Madras)

Email your feedback to southpole.toi@timesgroup.com


ISSUES AT HAND

VACANCIES About 60% of the teaching and more than 50% non-teaching positions are vacant. The last faculty recruitment was done in 2014

EXAMINATION SYSTEM The manual poor evaluation system costs the university at least ₹3 crore every semester. Steps have not been taken to ensure evaluation is done by qualified teachers to increase credibility and reduce the number of re-evaluation requests

NAAC RATING According to the last assessment the University of Madras secured an A grade from NAAC. A higher grade makes the institution eligible for higher UGC grants for research projects, infrastructure. The issues of vacancies and of evaluation may not bode well when the next assessment is due in 2021

No room for social distancing as buses run crowded across state


No room for social distancing as buses run crowded across state

Ram.Sundaram@timesgroup.com

Chennai:04.06.2020

Despite assurances from the state government that bus frequency will be increased based on demand, many buses in Tamil Nadu remained overcrowded on Wednesday, with social distancing gone for a toss. Tamil Nadu witnessed the first case of a bus driver being infected with Covid-19 on Tuesday.

The infected employee was driving a bus on the Tiruvannamalai-Cuddalore route, in which 140 passengers had travelled.

On Wednesday, in some areas like Bodi in Theni district and Pollachi in Coimbatore district, passengers, who waited for long at bus stands, resorted to minor protests demanding that more services be run.

Though the government promised that 50% of buses will be operated, only 30% were out on the roads, multiple sources confirmed to TOI. The transport department, however, was unavailable to comment on it.

Conductors too had a tough time in stopping excess passengers from boarding the buses.

“We have been instructed to drop and pick up passengers at intermediate bus stops. If there are 10 passengers waiting at one such stop for more than an hour, will they listen to us if we say only two seats were vacant? Eventually, we were forced to carry on despite risks of getting infected,” said Siva, a Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation (TNSTC) conductor.

K Arumugam Nainar from CITU-affiliated state transport union, said Wednesday being an auspicious day for marriages saw more than the anticipated crowd arriving at bus stops and that local authorities didn’t respond appropriately. “Now that the government has allowed most shops and factories to run, more people will depend on buses to travel to work and back home as trains are not operated. So there is no point holding back on 50% of the bus fleet,” he added.

In response, a state transport department official said managing directors of all transport corporations and branch managers were given powers to operate more buses to avoid crowding and that scenarios as Wednesday’s will be rectified from Thursday.

“Despite huge losses due to the pandemic, we haven’t hesitated to spend money on buying masks, personal protective equipment (PPEs) and disinfectants for buses. There will be no compromise on workers’ health and welfare,” the transport official added.


LIKE ANY OTHER DAY: A video grab shows a fully packed bus in Pollachi

Deemed univs to hold final yr exams online


Deemed univs to hold final yr exams online

AI Tools To Help Keep A Check On Test Candidates

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:04.06.2020

In view of pandemic-related restrictions, a majority of deemed universities are likely to conduct exams for final year students online to help them graduate. The institutions are offering choices varying from online open book tests to permitting students with connectivity issues to take tests offline.

Some of the deemed universities are preparing question banks for the online exams.

SRM Institute of Science and Technology (SRMIST) is conducting viva-voce online for final year students. “In a few branches, students have course work in the final semester. We are offering them online tests,” said Sandeep Sancheti, institute vice-chancellor. For students who are not able take the tests online, the university will conduct tests in the offline mode at the earliest.

“If, for some reason, say lack of proper smart devices or connectivity issues, they fare poorly in the online tests, students can give the test again offline. We plan to consider best of the two results. It will make students more comfortable while taking exams online,” Sancheti added.

The institute’s online tests for all students will include multiple choice questions, descriptive questions and will be monitored by artificial intelligence (AI) tools. For some courses, the institute plans to reduce the weightage for end semester exams and increase weightage of internals.

Sastra University also plans to conduct end semester exams for final year students online. “It will be an open book online test backed by oral assessment,” said S Vaidyasubramaniam, its vice-chancellor. “A software will allot questions — a mix of MCQs, descriptive and analytical questions — randomly to students so they do not get identical ones. The oral assessment will ensure students know the concepts,” he added.

Students in other years of their degrees, given they have 50% attendance, will be graded based on internal exams and can opt to appear for an improvement exam later.

Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology is planning to conduct exams online if the situation does not improve by the first week of July. “We plan to conduct pen and paper mode exam for final year students. For others, we may conduct it online depending on the Covid-19 situation,” a senior official from the institute said.

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Telangana government staff to get half pay this month too


Telangana government staff to get half pay this month too

DECCAN CHRONICLE. | S.A. ISHAQUI

PublishedMay 28, 2020, 8:10 am IST

In May, the government's revenues have been a mere Rs 3,100 crore, which includes the state’s share of Rs 982 crore in central taxes

Although lockdown restrictions have been lifted for the major part, revenues to the state government are still slack. (DC Photo: Deepak Deshpande)y the collers to cool themselves from the heat and the governement has given the orders to open the Electronics and coolers shops in city pics Deepak Deshpande

Hyderabad: Reeling under low revenue collection due to the national lockdown, the Telangana government has decided to pay only 50 per cent salary to its employees for the month of May also. It has paid only the half salary for the month of March and April also.

Ministers, MLAs, MLCs, chairpersons of government corporations and urban and rural local bodies members would get 25 per cent of their salaries, while IAS, IPS and IFS officials would get 40 per cent salary. Pensioners would get 75 per cent of their pension, while outsourcing and contract workers would get 90 per cent. The government has also decided to stop the financial aid of `1,500 given to labourers including guest workers as they are getting work after lockdown was eased.

During a review meeting held by chief minister K. Chandrashekar Rao on the economic situation of the state, it was found that there was no substantial increase in revenue in spite of relaxations given to the lockdown.

“The state has to get Rs 12,000 crore revenue every month. But due to the lockdown, the state revenue has declined drastically. In May, the state received Rs 3,100 crore, which includes the state’s share of Rs 982 crore in the central taxes,” Rao said.

While there is no uptick in the state’s revenue, the chief minister said that the state government has an obligation to pay Rs 37,400 crore a year for debt servicing.

He blamed the Central government for the plight of the Telangana government as it did not alter the state’s loan repayment schedule. Though the Centre increased the borrowing limits of state governments, the Chief Minister said conditions imposed for that were not acceptable for the state.

The chief minister said the state government needs Rs 3,000 crore to make full payout to government employees and pensioners. If the full salaries and pensions were paid, Rao said the state treasury will go empty.

The meeting has also decided to promptly pay loan instalments, Asara pensions, supply 12-kg rice to poor in the month of May also.

மார்ச் மாதம் எடுக்கப்பட்ட ரூ.1000 பஸ் பாஸ் ஜூன் 15 வரை செல்லுபடியாகும்: போக்குவரத்துக் கழகம் அறிவிப்பு


மார்ச் மாதம் எடுக்கப்பட்ட ரூ.1000 பஸ் பாஸ் ஜூன் 15 வரை செல்லுபடியாகும்: போக்குவரத்துக் கழகம் அறிவிப்பு


மார்ச் மாதம் எடுக்கப்பட்ட ரூ.1000 மாதாந்திர சலுகை கட்டண பாஸ் ஜூன் 15 வரை செல்லுபடியாகும் என அரசு போக்குவரத்துக் கழகம் அறிவித்துள்ளது.

இது தொடர்பாக மதுரை மண்டல அரசு போக்குவரத்து கழக பொது மேலாளர் வெளியிட்டுள்ள செய்தி குறிப்பு:

தமிழக அரசு போக்குவரத்துக் கழகம் சார்பில் மதுரை மண்டலத்தில் ரூ.1000 மாதாந்திர சலுகை கட்டண பஸ் பாஸ் வழங்கப்படுகிறது. கடந்த மார்ச் மாதம் ரூ.ஆயிரம் பாஸ் எடுத்தவர்கள் அதைப் பயன்படுத்தி 16.3.2020 முதல் 15.4.2020 வரை பஸ்களில் பயணம் செய்திருக்க முடியும்.

இதற்கிடையே கரோனா தடுப்பு தொடர்பாக 25.3.2020 முதல் பொதுப் பஸ் சேவை நிறுத்தப்பட்டது. ஜூன் 1 முதல் 50 சதவீத பொது பஸ் சேவை தொடங்கியுள்ளது.

இதனால் ஏற்கெனவே பெற்ற ரூ.ஆயிரம் மாதாந்திர சலுகை கட்டண பாஸை பயன்படுத்தி ஜூன் 15 வரை பஸ்களில் பயணம் செய்யலாம்.

இவ்வாறு அந்த அறிக்கையில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

போக்குவரத்துக் கழகத்தின் இந்த அறிவிப்பிற்கு பயணிகள் மத்தியில் பலத்த வரவேற்பு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.

சித்த மருத்துவர் கைது பிரச்னை கமிஷனர் பதிலளிக்க உத்தரவு


சித்த மருத்துவர் கைது பிரச்னை கமிஷனர் பதிலளிக்க உத்தரவு

Added : ஜூன் 01, 2020 23:42

சென்னை : குண்டர் சட்டத்தின் கீழ் கைது செய்யப்பட்டதை எதிர்த்து, சித்த மருத்துவ சிகிச்சை அளித்தவர் தாக்கல் செய்த மனுவுக்கு, தமிழக அரசு பதில் அளிக்க, சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றம் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது

சென்னையில், சித்த மருத்துவ சிகிச்சை அளித்து வந்த, திருத்தணிகாசலம் என்பவர், கொரோனா வைரஸ்க்கு மருந்து கண்டுபிடித்திருப்பதாக, சமூக வலைதளங்களில் தெரிவித்தார். இவருக்கு எதிராக,போலீசில் புகார் செய்யப்பட்டதை அடுத்து, கைது செய்யப்பட்டார். பின், குண்டர் சட்டத்தின் கீழ், காவலில் வைக்க, சென்னை மாநகர போலீஸ் கமிஷனர் உத்தரவிட்டார்.இதை எதிர்த்து, சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றத்தில், திருத்தணிகாசலத்தின் தந்தை கலியபெருமாள் தாக்கல் செய்த மனுவில், 'பரம்பரை சித்த வைத்தியரான திருத்தணிகாசலத்துக்கு, 25 ஆண்டுகள் அனுபவம் உள்ளது; பல மருந்துகளை கண்டுபிடித்துள்ளார். அவசரகதியில், கமிஷனர் உத்தரவு பிறப்பித்துள்ளார்' என, கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.இம்மனு, நீதிபதிகள்கிருபாகரன், ஹேமலதா அடங்கிய, 'டிவிஷன்பெஞ்ச்' முன், விசாரணைக்கு வந்தது.மனுதாரர் சார்பில், வழக்கறிஞர், கே.பாலு ஆஜராகி, ''வைரஸ் பரவாமல் தடுக்க, கபசுர குடிநீர் குடிப்பதை, திருத்தணிகாசலம் ஊக்குவித்தார். அரசு பற்றி, சில கருத்துக்களை தெரிவித்தார். அதற்காக, குண்டர் சட்டத்தில் கைது செய்தது, சட்ட விரோதமானது,'' என்றார்.போலீஸ் தரப்பில், கூடுதல் குற்றவியல் வழக்கறிஞர் பிரபாவதி, ''சித்த மருத்துவத்தில் சிகிச்சை அளிக்க, திருத்தணிகாசலம் தகுதி பெற்றிருக்கவில்லை. மனுவுக்கு பதில் அளிக்க, அவகாசம் வேண்டும்,'' என்றார்.இதையடுத்து, 'கபசுர குடிநீர் குடிக்கும்படி ஆலோசனை கூறியதற்காக, குண்டர் சட்டத்தில் கைது செய்யப்பட்டாரா' என, நீதிபதிகள் கேள்வி எழுப்பினர். மனுவுக்கு பதில் அளிக்கும்படி, தமிழக அரசு, மாநகர போலீஸ் கமிஷனருக்கு, நீதிபதிகள் உத்தரவிட்டனர்.

'இ -பேப்பர்' சேனல்களை நீக்க: டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனத்திற்கு 'கெடு'


'இ -பேப்பர்' சேனல்களை நீக்க: டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனத்திற்கு 'கெடு'

Updated : ஜூன் 01, 2020 23:25 | Added : ஜூன் 01, 2020 22:33 

புதுடில்லி: 'காப்புரிமை சட்டத்தை மீறி, 'இ - பேப்பர்' வெளியிடும் சேனல்களை, 48 மணி நேரத்தில் நீக்க வேண்டும்' என, 'டெலிகிராம்' சமூக வலைதள நிறுவனத்திற்கு, டில்லி உயர் நீதிமன்றம் உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது.

சட்ட விரோதம்

டில்லியைச் சேர்ந்த, ஜாக்ரண் பிரகாஷன் நிறுவனம், 'தைனிக் ஜாக்ரன்' பத்திரிகையை வெளியிட்டு வருகிறது. இந்நிறுவனம், டில்லி உயர் நீதிமன்றத்தில் தாக்கல் செய்துள்ள மனுவில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ள தாவது:எங்கள் நிறுவனம், தைனிக் ஜாக்ரன் பத்திரிகையின், மின்னணு பதிப்பான, 'இ - பேப்பர்' படிக்கும் வசதியை, சந்தா செலுத்துவோருக்கு மட்டும் வழங்குகிறது. இந்நிலையில், துபாயைச் சேர்ந்த, டெலிகிராம் என்ற சமூக வலைதளத்தில், எங்கள் அனுமதியின்றி, சட்ட விரோதமாக, தைனிக் ஜாக்ரன் இ - பேப்பர், தினமும் வெளியிடப்படுகிறது. அதை வெளியிடும் சேனல் குறித்த விபரங்களை தர, டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனம் மறுக்கிறது.

எங்கள் மின்னணு பத்திரிகை இலவசமாக பகிரப்படுவதால், அதை வெளியிடும் சேனலில், மே, 20 நிலவரப்படி, 19ஆயிரத்து, 239 சந்தாதாரர்கள் இணைந்துஉள்ளனர். இதனால், எங்களுக்கு பெரும் இழப்பு ஏற்படுகிறது. எனவே, காப்புரிமை சட்டத்தை மீறி, மின்னணு பத்திரிகையை வெளியிடும் சேனல் மற்றும் அதற்கு தளம் அமைத்துக் கொடுத்துள்ள, டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனம் மீது நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க வேண்டும். மின்னணு பத்திரிகை பகிர்வதை தடை செய்ய வேண்டும்.இவ்வாறு அதில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனம்

இந்த மனுவை விசாரித்த, டில்லி உயர் நீதிமன்றம், காப்புரிமை சட்டத்தை மீறிய சேனல்களை, 48 மணி நேரத்தில் நீக்க வேண்டும் என, டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனத்திற்கு உத்தரவிட்டுள்ளது. அத்துடன், சேனல் உரிமையாளர்களின் விபரங்களையும் வழங்க வேண்டும் எனவும் தெரிவித்துள்ளது. இந்த வழக்கில், டெலிகிராம் நிறுவனம், துபாயில் உள்ளதால், அதை கட்டுப்படுத்தும் அதிகாரம் தனக்கில்லை என, மத்திய அரசு சார்பில் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

தமிழக ஊடகங்களும் இந்தப் பிரச்னையை எதிர்கொள்வதால், 'டெலிகிராம்' நிறுவனம் மீது, மேலும் பல வழக்குகள் தொடரப்படும் எனத் தெரிகிறது.

கால் டாக்சிகள் நாளை, 'ஸ்டிரைக்?'


கால் டாக்சிகள் நாளை, 'ஸ்டிரைக்?'

Added : ஜூன் 02, 2020 00:23

சென்னை : கட்டண உயர்வு உள்ளிட்ட கோரிக்கைகளை வலியுறுத்தி, கால் டாக்சி உரிமையாளர்கள், நாளை முதல் வேலை நிறுத்தம் செய்ய முடிவு செய்துள்ளனர்.

இதுகுறித்து, கால் டாக்சி சங்கங்கள் கூட்டமைப்பின் ஒருங்கிணைப்பாளர், ஜாஹிர் உசேன், நேற்று கூறியதாவது:தமிழகத்தில், ஆறு லட்சம் கால் டாக்சி ஓட்டுனர்கள் உள்ளனர். அவர்களில் பெரும்பாலானோர், வங்கிக் கடன் பெற்று, வாகனங்கள் வாங்கி உள்ளனர். இரண்டரை மாதங்களாக, சவாரி இல்லாமல் கஷ்டப்படுகின்றனர். தற்போது, வெகு துாரம் சென்று, ஓரிரு சவாரி ஏற்றும் நிலை உருவாகி உள்ளது. ஓலா, ஊபர் நிறுவனங்கள், 30 சதவீதம் கமிஷன் பெறுகின்றன. இப்பிரச்னையில் அரசு தலையிட்டு, கால் டாக்சிகளுக்கான கட்டணத்தை நிர்ணயிக்க வேண்டும்.

அனைத்து ஓட்டுனர்களுக்கும் நிவாரணம் வழங்க வேண்டும்.கால் டாக்சி நிறுவனங்கள், தற்போதுள்ள கட்டணத்தை, 50 சதவீதம் உயர்த்த வேண்டும். இல்லாவிட்டால், நாளை முதல், வேலைநிறுத்தத்தில் ஈடுபடுவோம்.இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.

கொரோனா பயமே இல்லை


கொரோனா பயமே இல்லை

Added : ஜூன் 02, 2020 05:47

தஞ்சாவூர் : கொரோனா பரவலை தடுக்க, அனைவரும் முகக்கவசம் அணிய வேண்டும் என அரசு அறிவுறுத்தியுள்ள நிலையில், தஞ்சையில் பலரும், முகக் கவசம் அணியாமல் சுற்றி வருகின்றனர்.

'கொரோனா பரவலை தடுக்க, அனைவரும் முகக்கவசம் அணிய வேண்டும், சமூக விலகலை கடைப்பிடிக்க வேண்டும், சானிடைசர் பயன்படுத்த வேண்டும்' என மத்திய, மாநில அரசுகள் வலியுறுத்தி வருகின்றன.முதல்கட்ட ஊரடங்கில் கொரோனாவுக்கு பயந்து, அறிவுறுத்தல்களை கடைப்பிடித்த பொதுமக்கள், தற்போது அவற்றில் ஆர்வம் காட்டவில்லை. ஊரடங்கில் தளர்வுகள் அறிவிக்கப்பட்ட நிலையில், நேற்று தஞ்சையில் பொதுமக்கள் பலரும், முகக்கவசம் அணியாமல் வெளியில் சுற்றித் திரிந்தனர்.அதோடு, சமூக இடைவெளியையும் கடைப்பிடிக்காமல் இருந்தனர்.

தஞ்சையில் முகக்கவசம் அணியாமல் சென்றால், 100 ரூபாய் அபராதம் விதிக்கப்படுகிறது. அப்படி இருந்தும், பெரும்பாலான மக்கள், நேற்று முக்கவசம் அணியவில்லை. போலீசார், அரசு அதிகாரிகள், அரசியல்வாதிகள் என, அனைவரும் முகக்கவசம் அணியாமல் தஞ்சையில் உலா வருகின்றனர்.

E-learning: ANU gets global certification


E-learning: ANU gets global certification

02/06/2020, STAFF REPORTER,GUNTUR

Acharya Nagarjuna University has got QS I-Gauge E-Lead certification for excellence in ensuring preparedness of Indian higher education for the digital age.

ANU has become the first Indian university to receive e-learning excellence for Academic Digitization Certification from the coveted QS I -Gauge – the Indian wing of QS Ranking learning excellence.

The certificates were conferred virtually and colleges were assessed on the quality of online education.

The I-Gauge has certified ANU as a globally recognised and benchmarked higher education institution to offer online education programmes.

Online classes and e-learning need to be benchmarked with the best in practices and this certification ensures that ANU is meeting exceptional parameters and offers the best and engaging solution to its students.

Vice-Chancellor, ANU, Rajasekhar Patteti, said that ANU has always tried to benchmark its teaching, learning and quality assurance systems with the best available ones in the world.

The key process of promoting effective online learning involved transforming the user journey of students and faculty members from a physical classroom to an online platform, ensuring a seamless transition.

The online system required video connectivity for video and audio conferencing for groups and individuals with online direct messaging, and resource sharing from any access point like phones, laptops or handheld tablets. "With captive student data, we set up the virtual technology infrastructure expeditiously and efficiently with complete data protection," said the V-C.

Schools, colleges may reopen in July


Schools, colleges may reopen in July

Chief Minister says State will wait for Centre’s instructions

02/06/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT ,THIRUVANANTHAPURAM

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said here on Monday that the government would consider reopening of schools and educational institutions and resumption of campus life only in July.

The Centre said it would issue guidelines for the recommencement of campus education and allied academic activities after the first phase of the staggered lockdown relaxation ended on June 30. Kerala awaited the strictures, he said at his daily media briefing on the COVID-19 situation in the State. Mr. Vijayan said students who had missed the online classes on June 1 should not worry.

Repeat sessions

Teachers would repeat the sessions on the Victers channel and other online platforms. The government had put 1,20,000 laptops, 7,000 projectors and a large number of televisions to help educators take learning to children.

He said school and college teachers should ensure that online teaching benefited all sections of students. They could organise special classes for students with limited access to cable TV and online platforms of learning.

He said 99.92% of students appeared for the SSLC examination. The percentage of attendance for higher secondary and vocational higher Secondary examinations were 98.3 and 98.92 % respectively.

Low-interest loans

The Kerala State Financial Enterprises (KSFE) would set up neighbourhood study centres for children without access to smartphones, television sets, or the Internet. The KSFE would also give low-interest loans to members of the Kudumbashree Mission to purchase laptop computers. Only those women who were members of the KSFE micro-chit scheme would be eligible for the loan.

Mr. Vijayan encouraged philanthropists and businesses to sponsor remote learning centres for underprivileged children in tandem with the KSFE.

TRS government has many reasons to pat itself


TRS government has many reasons to pat itself

Sixth anniversary of Formation Day of Telangana State today

02/06/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,HYDERABAD

Telengana Martyr’s Memorial at Gun Park in Hyderabadfile photofile photo

Telangana State which celebrates its sixth State Formation Day on Tuesday has a reason to feel proud and satisfied as its major initiatives in key sectors to realise its ultimate goal of making the State a model to the country are on track and some of them as in the irrigation sector are closer to realising their grand objectives, according to the ruling party functionaries.

The State that came into existence with the slogan of ‘Neellu, Nidhulu and Udyogalu’ for the region and its people, turned around sectors like power, irrigation and provided a revived focus on health and education in public sector to make government educational institutions and hospitals and health care centres make a mark amidst domination by the private sector.

Under the stewardship of Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, who led the movement for a Statehood for Telangana, and achieved the goal of Statehood, TRS government conceived, conceptualised and executed several flagship programmes under irrigation, agriculture, health, infrastructure, industry and information technology, afforestation and greenery.

The State pioneered Rythu Bandhu investment assistance scheme, Rythu Bima which became model for the rest of the country and so also its Mission Bhagiratha drinking water scheme to every household, Palle Pragathi and Pattana Pragathi programmes to focus on sanitation, hygiene and make the villages and urban areas as models.

The ambitious Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Project to utilise Godavari waters, when completed, would bring 235 tmc ft of water for irrigation and irrigate 45 lakh acres. The government’s ultimate aim is to give irrigation facility to 1.25 crore acres by completing Kaleshwaram and several other irrigation projects to meet irrigation and drinking water requirements and make agriculture profitable for farmers.

The government sources said that in the united State, ₹94,000 crore were spent on irrigation sector for 23 districts in 10 years and in Telangana State, over ₹50,000 crore were spent on irrigation sector in four years.

The crisis in power sector was overcome within six months after formation of the State to put an end to power cuts. Telangana was the only State providing 24x7 power supply to agriculture sector from January 1, 2018 free of cost and 30% of power generated was being utilised for free supply. The power generation went up from 7,778 MW in 2014 to 15,980 MW now including 3,681 MW of solar power. In the next three years, another 10,000 MW would be generated to make Telangana a power surplus State. The distribution and transmission sectors were also being strengthened and construction of sub-stations and power transformers, distribution transformers and other power infrastructure was taken up at a cost of ₹27,770 crore.

In health sector, several innovative schemes were introduced and medical and health infrastructure was strengthened in public sector and achieved bringing down maternal and infant mortality rates. It set up 20 ICU units with 10 beds each to deal with emergencies in 25 district and area hospitals. It also set up diagnostic centres in district headquarters to conduct 58 types of tests. Under ‘Amma Vodi’ scheme, emergency 102 vehicles were introduced to bring pregnant women from their homes to the government hospitals. It pressed 104 vehicles into service to provide mobile medical services in rural areas.

In the education sector, the number of residential educational institutions increased to 959 as Telangana government so far set up 661 new residential schools for SC,ST, BC and minorities and it was extending overseas scholarships to SC, ST, BC, EBC and minorities students.

Welfare remained at the heart of governance apart from development programmes and spending close to ₹40,000 crore on various welfare schemes like Aasra pensions, Kalyana Lakshmi, food security among others.

Pension, salary deferment pleas posted to June 15


Pension, salary deferment pleas posted to June 15

02/06/2020, SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT,HYDERABAD

Telangana High Court

The Telangana High Court on Monday posted a batch of PIL petitions challenging deferment of pensions by 25% to retired employees and salaries by 50% of serving employees by State government to June 15.

A bench of Chief Justice Raghvendra Singh Chauhan and Justice B. Vijaysen Reddy heard the separate pleas filed by senior lawyer S. Satyam Reddy, lawyer Ravi Shankar Jandhyala and some retired government employees on these matters. Pensioners told the court that they are dependent on pension to meet all their expenses.

With the government deciding to defer 25% of their monthly pension, the pensioners are finding it difficult to meet their medical expenses in the lockdown period, their lawyer said.

Advocate General B.S. Prasad sought adjournment of the matters stating that government would be ready to present its arguments on the matters.

In another PIL petition, the bench said it cannot direct GHMC to take action against industrial units causing pollution since the civic body is occupied in tackling coronavirus pandemic.

The bench was hearing the plea seeking a direction to the civic body to close down industries damaging environment in Shastrinagar, Tatanagar, Katedan and other localities where some persons are operating industries without permission from the government.

The petitioners alleged that such factories, by releasing wastage into drains, are causing irreparable damage to the environment. The bench directed the GHMC authorities to file a detailed counter affidavit explaining how many industries were put on notice and closed for damaging the environment.

16-year-old boy kills grandmother for pension money


16-year-old boy kills grandmother for pension money

02/06/2020, STAFF REPORTER,HYDERABAD

A 16-year-old boy allegedly murdered his sexagenarian grandmother at Moinabad on Sunday night after she refused to give him money to meet his expenses. Police said that Kavali Venkatnamma (65) was smothered to death at her house in Sriramnagar.

Moinabad police said that the offence took place around 10 p.m. “Their neighbour’s saw the boy beating her grandmother with a belt for her pension money. They warned him too. Later, at night, he smothered her to death,” the investigators said.

His father passed away a few years back and his mother and two siblings went to a village.

Man succumbs to injuries

In a case of hit and run, a private employee suffered severe injuries and succumbed on Monday at KPHB Colony. The victim, Yalala Swamy Venkata Ramana, 36, from KPHB Colony, was hit by an unidentified auto-rickshaw at a foot over-bridge at Seventh Phase. The accident took place at around 8 p.m. on Sunday and soon he was rushed to Sankhya Hospital where he died while undergoing treatment on Monday evening.

Newly-married minor girl found dead

A 17-year-old girl, who got married two months ago, was found dead at her parents' house in Gumdal village in Doma mandal of Vikarabad district on Sunday night.

She committed suicide by hanging herself from a ceiling fan around 6.30 p.m. According to Doma Sub-Inspector G Suresh, the victim was depressed as her husband, Shiv Kumar Reddy (22) of the same village, was refusing to take her home.

“They were in love and got married three months ago with their parents' consent. They were living in Hyderabad, and before lockdown, she came to her parents home to appear for Class X board exams,” the officer said. Later, when the exams were postponed, she went back to Hyderabad, and again in the April first week, Mr. Reddy dropped his ‘minor’ wife at her parents' house. “Since then, he did not return to take her back and was avoiding her calls and messages,” Mr. Suresh said.

(Roshni - Suicide prevention helpline: 914066202000 and 6666 1117).

Students studying abroad are running out of time, money


Students studying abroad are running out of time, money

Classes are to start soon, but many struggling to book tickets

02/06/2020, TANU KULKARNI,BENGALURU

Several students studying in foreign universities, who had come to India for a short vacation, are now stuck in different cities. Classes are to commence soon, but the students are unable to book tickets and have been left in the lurch.

Many of them have visas expiring in the months of June and July and have to get back before that date as they are required to apply for visa extension at the immigration office in their respective countries.

Students studying in many European countries have their examinations in the third week of June. Some others are required to be present to defend their Master’s thesis. “Failure to reach in time will result in many of us losing an academic year while adding to our financial debts,” said a group of Indian students who study in Germany in a statement.

Many students also said interviews for internships and jobs have been put off or cancelled as they could not return in time. The students also said their savings were diminishing because of payment of rent, insurance, and loans, and the rates of Air India flights were not affordable.

Costly affair

Amrutha Varshini, an M.Sc. student from Berlin, Germany, said she had come to Bengaluru on March 12 and had scheduled a return flight on April 15, but it was cancelled because of the lockdown. “A one-way ticket costs around ₹90,000 and it is very difficult for students to shell out so much money on tickets.” She said that she was supposed to intern in July and was pressed for time to return to Germany.

Another student, from Brussels in Belgium, said she has written multiple letters to the Ministry of External Affairs and Air India as her flight scheduled in March was cancelled. “I had booked a flight from New Delhi to Paris, but later had to cancel it because in Europe you can enter another country only if there is no direct flight to your country. After I booked the ticket to Paris, I saw a flight to Brussels. So I had booked that flight, but have still not got any refund or update on my cancelled flight to Paris,” she said.

Dental treatments may have to wait longer


Dental treatments may have to wait longer

Most dentists are still concerned after one of them tested positive for COVID-19

02/06/2020, STAFF REPORTER,BENGALURU


sebastian francis

Your toothache may have to wait longer before your dentist fixes it. Though a few dentists have restarted their practice, they are only offering out patient services and not conducting procedures. However, a majority of dentists are still concerned over the spread of COVID-19 and are yet to return to work.

Even those who had opened their clinics are now contemplating shutting them again after a dentist who had restarted her practice in HSR Layout tested positive for COVID-19 three days ago.

“The dentist contracting the infection has set in a fear psychosis in the community. We are scared to restart our practices,” said Sudarshan Sajjan, hon. secretary, Indian Dental Association, Bengaluru Branch. “With respiratory and saliva droplets being one of the main sources for the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19, our work poses the great risk of contracting the infection. There is no way we can escape coming in contact with saliva droplets. Social distancing has no meaning in a dental clinic,” he said.

The few who have restarted their practice are also a worried lot today. A. Yeshwanth, a dentist with a chain of dental clinics in the city, said while they were not doing any procedures that involved the usage of aerosols — an air and water hose used in dental procedures — as it spreads droplets, they were taking utmost precautions otherwise. “All the dentists and their assistants wear Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) suits while seeing the patients. Use of disinfectants to sanitise the patient’s body, especially mouths, thermal guns to check temperatures and a detailed medical history are some of the other measures in place,” he explained.

The Dental Council of India issued a detailed advisory on May 7, which has categorised dental issues as emergency, urgent and has advised against performing any procedures that involves use of aerosols. This essentially rules out root canals, implants and most other surgical procedures, leaving many patients disappointed. “I had the first few sittings for a root canal in March, but before the procedure was completed, lockdown began. The dentist asked me to wait till things settle down, which doesn’t seem to have happened even two months later,” said Meera C., a resident of Malleshpalya.

Dr. Sajjan hasn’t restarted his practice yet. “I have put up my contact number on the doors of my clinic. Anyone can call me. I have opened the clinic twice during lockdown to conduct emergency procedures. But for that, I have been prescribing medicines online or over phone. Most patients tell they are in extreme pain and claim their case is an emergency. But we are scared to conduct any procedure. Some dentists have also asked for COVID-19 test reports before treating patients,” he said.

The Indian Dental Association, Bengaluru Branch, has distributed over 5,000 PPE kits to dentists. “Of the nearly 1,500 dentists in the city, I think less than 20% of them have opened shop,” he said.

IDA, Bengaluru Branch, has also approached the Department of Health and Family Welfare seeking a relief package that includes subsidy on PPE kits, dental equipment, tax waivers and a minimum income support scheme. “Dental clinics are essentially small businesses and over two months of lockdown has pushed most of them to the brink. We need to pay salaries and rents, which many are not able to manage,” Dr. Sajjan said.

RTC staff to get May salary in instalments


RTC staff to get May salary in instalments

With drop in demand, RTCs incurring losses even by plying buses

02/06/2020, STAFF REPORTER,BENGALURU

There are nearly 1.25 lakh workers in the four road transport corporations in the State. Sampath Kumar G.P.Sampath Kumar G.P.

Workers of the four road transport corporations (RTCs) in the State will get only half of their salary for May in the coming week, while the State government and the corporations chalk out a road map to mobilise resources to pay the second instalment. A couple of RTCs are even planning to deploy their workforce on rotation as per demand.

There are nearly 1.25 lakh workers employed in the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC), North Eastern Karnataka Road Transport Corporation (NEKRTC), North Western Karnataka Road Transport Corporation (NWKRTC), and Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC).

With most bus operations hit, the corporations are dependent on the government to pay salaries, senior officials in the RTCs told The Hindu. All the four corporations paid full salaries in one instalment for April as the government released money towards it. However, problem has risen for payment of salaries for May as the government has sanctioned only half the salary bill presently. The salary bill of the four corporations comes up to around ₹366 crore a month, sources said.

A rude welcome for Odisha’s migrants as villages lack basic facilities


A rude welcome for Odisha’s migrants as villages lack basic facilities

The hapless workers find shelter in abandoned toilets and dry culverts

02/06/2020, SATYASUNDAR BARIK,BIRIPALI


Desperate measures: Migrants workers taking refuge under a culvert in Odisha’s Balangir district. Biswaranjan RoutBiswaranjan Rout

After a back-breaking 1,300-km cycle ride from COVID-19 hotspot Mumbai to his village in Odisha’s Balangir district, Kishore Behera thought he had escaped hell. But little did the 31-year-old mason anticipate the appaling conditions in his village, Biripali.

With 12 positive cases reported in the village of 3,000 people, Mr. Behera went neither to a quarantine centre, as required, nor to his house. Instead, he took refuge in a road culvert. “I opted to cycle all the way from Mumbai on May 7 and did not seek pickup from passing trucks fearing I could contract the virus. However, on reaching my village, I found no social distancing being adhered to in quarantine centres. I took shelter in a half-constructed Indira Awas Yojna house with my friends,” he said.

As there was no water connection in the house, he and his seven migrant labourer friends decided to stay under culverts that offered some respite from the scorching temperature, soaring past 45° Celsius and the unseasonal rain.

“My neighbours definitely won’t feel happy to find me staying near them. Moreover, my family members will be in trouble if I get into my house,” said the mason, who admits to being scared of snakebites out in the open.

His struggle has already spilled over from May to June but he does not foresee any feasible solution any time soon. Barely 200 metres away from the culvert lives Thabir Behera, another Mumbai returnee, in a small, abandoned toilet, built under the Swachh Bharat Mission.

“I cannot go home. The toilet is too small but will be my home for the next two weeks,” he said.

Like them, more than 150 migrant labourers, who have returned from other States, have quarantined themselves at half-constructed temples, makeshift agricultural watchtowers, riverbeds and village forests as they dread staying in official centres. They are also facing resistance from fellow villagers who do not want them to enter their homes at this point of time.

Facing stigma

Despite the unusual risks the migrant labourers have taken to get back, there is a sense of apprehension as well as stigma surrounding them. Wary of getting infected, their own family members are keeping a distance from them while supplying food.

“For the sake of a few, a whole village cannot be put in jeopardy. People are of the view that these returnees should not be allowed to go back to their homes until they test negative,” said Lingaraj Saraf, a Biripali native.

Situated on the border of neighbouring Nuapada district, Biripali seems to have fallen off the development map of the district. For the past two decades, people have been waiting for irrigation water from Nuapada’s Tikhali dam to cover the village’s fields. At any given time, 500 able-bodied men and women of the village can be found doing manual work in the construction sector, brick kilns and industrial projects.

The pandemic has left the poor families bewildered, forced to stay indoors and away from their fields during the crucial pre-monsoon season.

With 12 cases, the administration should have continued containment zones as is the SOP. On May 1, Balangir reported its first COVID-19 case. Without containment, the district’s tally has now touched 80.

Balangir Collector Arindam Dakua does not seem to have time for the poverty-stricken village. His office said he could not be contacted over his phone as he did not want to be disturbed at odd hours.

Train services resume


Train services resume

02/06/2020, S. SUNDAR,MADURAI

Passengers standing in a queue in front of Madurai railway station to board the special train bound for Villupuram after resumption of train services on Monday. G. Moorthy

Scheduled special trains open for all passengers resumed here on Monday.

While Madurai-Villupuram special train left the station at 7 a.m., another special train from Tiruchi bound for Nagercoil passed through Madurai at 8.15 a.m.

Though the schedule of the two trains were announced two days back, the announcement of e-pass continuing to be mandatory for passengers going from one zone to another one caught many passengers unawares. However, revenue officials set up special facilitation centres at Madurai, Virudhunagar and Dindigul stations to help the passengers get e-passes.

In Madurai, a handful of village administrative officers were deployed to generate e-passes for passengers using their mobile phones. “Since the announcement came late in the night, not all had e-pass. We are either generating e-pass or helping the passengers register themselves for it with the hope that they would get the pass by the time they reach their destination,” an official said. This is only a temporary arrangement and hereafter e-pass would be made mandatory for passengers to board the trains, he said.

In Virudhungar, passengers who came from Tiruchi without e-pass were asked to give their details like name, address, Aadhaar card number and mobile number before they were allowed to leave the railway station.

On the first day, the trains had only a moderate crowd. Southern Railway had advised the passengers to arrive at the station at least 90 minutes ahead of the scheduled departure so that they could be screened with thermal scanners. Only asymptomatic passengers are allowed to board the trains. Passengers must compulsorilty wear a mask. Only passengers with confirmed tickets are allowed to enter the station. Passengers have been advised to bring their own food.

Train timings

Train No.02636 Madurai- Villupuram Intercity special will leave Madurai at 7 a.m., Dindigul at 8 a..m., Tiruchi at 9.15 a.m., Ariyalur at 10.10 a.m. and reach Villupuram at 12.05 p.m.In the return direction, train No.02635 will leave Villupuram at 4 p.m., Ariyalur at 5.25 p.m., Tiruchi at 6.40 p.m., Dindigul at 8.05 p.m. and arrive Madurai at 9.20 p.m.

Nagercoil train

Train No.02627 Tiruchi– Nagercoil superfast special will leave Tiruchi at 6 a.m., Dindigul at 7.15 a.m., Madurai at 8.15 a.m., Virudhunagar at 8.57 a.m., Tirunelveli at 11.10 a.m..and reach Nagecoil at 1 p.m.

In the return direction, train No.02628 will leave Nagercoil at 3 p.m., Tirunelveli at 4.25 p.m. Virudhunagar at 6.25 p.m., Madurai at 7.25 p.m. and reach Tiruchi at 10.15 a.m.


NEWS TODAY 21.12.2024