Sunday, August 2, 2020

‘Missing’ Mandarin adds to confusion at Sanchi varsity

NEW EDU POLICY

‘Missing’ Mandarin adds to confusion at Sanchi varsity

Bhopal:  02.08.2020

The ‘dropping’ of Mandarin from among the foreign languages in the new National Education Policy (NEP) announced two days ago, has led to confusion among students pursuing higher studies at the Sanchi University. The varsity offers a one-year diploma course and a short-term six-month certificate course in Chinese language.

The NEP approved by the Union cabinet does not mention ‘Chinese’ among the foreign languages for students at the secondary level.

The ‘Chinese’ language (rather than Mandarin or Cantonese) was mentioned in the draft released in 2019. It had named French, German, Spanish, Chinese and Japanese as foreign languages which could be offered as electives.

Interestingly, the diploma and short-term course in Chinese language at Sanchi University were popular among the ITBP personnel. This could be gauged from the fact that 36 personnel were enrolled for the course.

A faculty at the university specialising in Mandarin wishing anonymity said, “it is early to comment whether Chinese language courses will exist or not at the higher education level in India. The policy as of now has dropped it at the secondary level. Nevertheless, it is a matter of concern for both students and teaching faculty.”

When contacted, university PRO, Vijay Dubey said, “The policy has just come and it is too early to comment at this stage. We will put the issue before the academic council and executive council if required.”

This University is meant to address the global issues and shall generally cover educationalists, academicians, philosophers, researchers, practitioners from all over the world, but primarily focuses on Asian countries - the land of genesis and spread of Buddhist-Indic culture. All aspects of Buddhist-Indic Studies from philosophy to culture, from economics to governance are addressed in totality.

3 asst profs who ‘blew whistle’ get termination orders

3 asst profs who ‘blew whistle’ get termination orders

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Patiala:  02.08.2020

The three professors of Government Mohindra College, who had, last year, blown the whistle on the misappropriation of the college funds by the authorities, have been issued termination orders for ‘interacting with the media’.

Last year, three assistant professors of the college — Amarinder Singh Tiwana, Mandeep Singh and Jashandeep — had filed a complaint with the state vigilance bureau and higher officials of the state education department alleging that former principal of the college had violated the rules and engaged in misappropriation of funds worth several crores of rupees. The complaint entailed a vigilance probe, which has not been completed till date.

However, on July 29, the board of governors, headed by college principal Prof Simrat Kaur, ordered termination of the services of the three assistant professors, who had been appointed in the college on contractual basis. The reason mentioned in the termination letter is, ‘instead of resolving the issues through mutual interaction, the three assistant professors went to the media.’ As the vigilance probe was heading nowhere, the three assistant professors in February had held a press conference at Chandigarh alleging ‘lack of professionalism in the inquiry’. The professors had claimed that they had written to the principal secretary (higher education), superintendent of police (vigilance), the director public instructions and the college principal. Even as two separate inquiries — one by the vigilance and the other by the secretary higher education had been ordered — both the authorities continued to drag their feet over the issue.

In their complaint last year, the three had stated that the college authorities had indulged in large scale misappropriation of funds of RUSA, the parent-teacher association (PTA) and the Higher Education Institute Society, a self-finance society of the college.

While the state government had held back the retirement benefits of the former principal of the college, but till now no further action has been taken into the complaint filed by them.

Principal Kaur said, “The decision to terminate the services of three assistant professors has been taken by the board of governors.” When asked if the board was being headed by her, she refused to take any further questions and switched off her mobile phone. The assistant professors have now alleged that they were repeatedly called to the principal’s office and asked to withdraw the complaint.


Last year, Amarinder Singh Tiwana, Mandeep Singh and Jashandeep had claimed said that former principal has misused funds

Nurses protest to seek better benefits

Nurses protest to seek better benefits

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bengaluru:  02.08.2020

Nursing employees from various institutions that come under the medical education department held a protest at Bowring and Lady Curzon Hospital on Saturday, demanding better pay and benefits.

Clad in PPE suits, they sought a 50 per cent hike in basic salary, government insurance and cover under the Jyothi Sanjeevini Scheme. They also said that they should be brought under the New Pension Scheme.

“We are frontline workers in a pandemic. The government should treat us like government employees by providing better pay and insurance cover,” said a nurse at the demonstration.

The employees wore black armbands as a mark of protest. “We have been pleading for basic socioeconomic demands for the past five years, but the government has been turning a blind eye to our problems. We will continue to wear black armbands till our demands are fulfilled,” said another nurse.

She added: “The government must bring us under the New Pension Scheme and treat us with some dignity as we have been working tirelessly during the pandemic.”

Nurses said though they and their family members were more vulnerable to Covid-19, the government had not offered any assurance on proper treatment. They claimed many staff members on Covid-19 duty contracted the virus but didn’t get access to good healthcare facilities.


FRONTLINE ANGER: Staffers protest at Bowring & Lady Curzon Hospital

Kuwait bans flights to India among 31 ‘high risk’ nations

Kuwait bans flights to India among 31 ‘high risk’ nations

toi Vadodara

02.08.2020

New Delhi: Kuwait on Saturday banned commercial flights to 31 “high risk” countries — including India, Singapore, Italy, Spain, Hong Kong and China — till further notice to prevent the spread of coronavirus. Indian aviation authorities had on Friday said that recently a “transport bubble agreement had been signed with Kuwait to uplift stranded passenger both to/from India”. After the Kuwaiti move, officials said this special travel arrangement could now be affected. TNN

Disastrous start to MSU’s mock exam

Disastrous start to MSU’s mock exam

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Vadodara:  02.08.2020

M S University’s first attempt to conduct online examination turned into a mockery of sorts on Saturday.

The university had developed its own exam portal for holding the exams for which the first mock test was scheduled on Saturday morning. But as thousands of students tried to access the exam portal, they received message of ‘server error’, ‘service unavailable’ among others, as the portal crashed within minutes.

MSU was the first publicly funded university of Gujarat to make such an attempt.

Ahead of the mock test, getting user id and password had also become an ordeal for students, who had kept waiting for the details till last moment. On Saturday, when they tried to access the portal, most of them could simply not login. Those who logged in face hurdles of low speed and other technical errors.

Officials said that of the nearly 4,000 students who were supposed to appear for the exams, more than 3,000 students could not login.

The university officials termed it as a cyber attack by unidentified outside ‘agencies and hackers’.

“Since Friday evening, some professional agencies and hackers were trying to damage and hack our portal. There were many technical hitches that students faced today,” said K M Chudasama, officiating registrar of MSU, adding that the university will register a FIR with cyber crime.

“ We will make the server strong and secure after which the new dates of mock test and semester-end exams will be declared. Both exams are postponed till then,” he said.

While the mock tests were scheduled on Saturday and Sunday, the semester-end exams in which over 17,000 students were to be appear, were scheduled from August 5 onwards.

Student union leaders stage protest against the VC on Saturday

Wife, relatives murder man over sexual torture

Wife, relatives murder man over sexual torture

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Madurai:02.08.2020

Unable to tolerate sexual torture, a school teacher murdered her engineer husband with help from her relatives on Friday.

The deceased was identified as E Sundar alias Sudeer, 34, from Mayandi Street in Thirumangalam. He got married to S Arivuselvam, 31, a government teacher, eight years ago. The couple have a daughter.

Early on Friday morning, Arivulselvam rushed Sundar to a hospital, claiming that he became unconscious after falling off from a bed. Doctors declared him brought dead.

A police team from the Thirumangalam police station conducted an inquiry and noticed injuries on his private parts, raising suspicion. Arivuselvam was picked up by the police for an inquiry. During interrogation, she admitted that she along with her relative B Balamani, 43, and her son B Sumaiyar, 26, had murdered Suresh. In her statement, she stated that Sundar, an alcoholic, often forced himself upon her. When she denied sex, she was beaten up.

On Thursday night, she mixed sleeping pills in the milk he drank. After sometime when he fell asleep, she asked Balamani and Sumaiyar to come in and the trio suffocated him with a plastic bag.

When Sundar tried to get away, Sumaiyar attacked him and injured his private parts, resulting in his death.

Based on a complaint from Sundar’s uncle A Somasundaram, 63, a case was registered under the CrPc Section 174 (suspicious death) and a detailed inquiry was conducted.

MKU to start online classes for PG students

REGION DIGEST

02.08.2020

MKU to start online classes for PG students

Madurai Kamaraj University (MKU) will start online classes for postgraduate (PG) students from Monday onwards, except for first year students that will be from August 24. The Choice-Based Credit System (CBCS) academic calendar for PG (odd semester) courses was released on Friday. As per the schedule, students will have six hours of online classes per day - three hours each in the morning and evening. The classes will either be live lectures or tutorial sessions using Google Meet. All the will also be made available through the MKU app.

DMK to oppose new edu policy: The DMK will consult political parties across the country on the new education policy introduced by the Centre a few days ago and put forward points that it is opposed to. Political parties should do everything to protect Indian students’ future, said DMK president M K Stalin in a letter to party cadres on Saturday. The DMK is opposed to the threelanguage formula. Through the policy, the Centre aims at usurping powers of states on matters concerning education, from school to university level, he said.

Man held for molesting 10-yr-old girl: A 39-year-old man was arrested on Friday for molesting a 10-year-old girl in Tirupur city. Police identified the accused as K Abdul Rasheed. On Thursday evening, Rasheed lured the girl into his house by promising to get her a laptop to play games and molested her. The girl managed to escape and told her mother, who lodged a complaint with police on Friday. Police registered a case under sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (Pocso) Act and arrested Rasheed on Friday night.

Hospitals get showcause notices for failing to report Covid deaths Can Lead To Licence Cancellation

FIGHTING COVID-19

Hospitals get showcause notices for failing to report Covid deaths
Can Lead To Licence Cancellation

Pushpa.Narayan@timesgroup.com

Chennai:02.08.2020

Chennai-based hospitals that failed to inform Covid-19 deaths have been sent showcause notices asking them why action should not be initiated against them for violations under the Clinical Establishments Act. The directorate of medical services (DMS) has also issued notices to hospitals in Madurai for not sending adequate details or not using the standard RT-PCR test for diagnosis. Failure to submit valid reasons will lead to action including cancellation of registration that can lead to closure of the hospitals, the notice said.

The notices were sent to the city hospitals as part of the weekly reconciliation exercise for Covid-19 deaths. On July 23, when the state added 444 additional Covid deaths between March and July to the Chennai toll, state health secretary J Radhakrishnan announced that a reconciliation committee will verify data based on information from labs, hospitals and burial or cremation grounds every week. All hospitals treating Covid 19 patients must send scanned clinical documents regarding deaths within 24 hours (8am to 8am) to the directorate of medical services.

“We have sent notices to 10 hospitals including some of them in the city, for not reporting deaths or not following protocols,” said director of medical services S Gurunathan. The death of a 54-year-old man at a private hospital in Arumbakkam on July 9 came to the Greater Chennai Corporation’s notice on July 29 when they were collating information from the crematoriums. The same day the civic agency got reports about deaths in two other private hospitals -- on OMR and Nanganallur -- on July 26 and July 19. At the hospital in OMR, a 63-year-old woman was admitted for more than a month and at the Nangallur hospital, an 89-year-old man died on the same day of admission.

In June, when the directorate of public health found that 256 deaths from March to June 10 were added to the state toll, it formed a committee to streamline Covid deaths. In the second week of July, the reconciliation committee added 186 more deaths taking the total number of unreported deaths to 444. When these deaths were added to the toll on July 23, the state put in place a committee for weekly review.

Notices were also sent to two private hospitals in Madurai. One medical college hospital was pulled up for not sending adequate details including the name, address and contact details of the diseases or the name of the laboratory that confirmed Covid-19 infection for three patients admitted to the hospital. Another private hospital has been pulled up for using antibody tests instead of the prescribed RT-PCR for confirming Covid-19.

Just 14 graft cases booked in TN since March: DVAC data


Just 14 graft cases booked in TN since March: DVAC data

Govt Offices Shut, Staff Focused On Covid Work

Siddharth.Prabhakar@timesgroup.com

Chennai: 02.08.2020

The still raging Covid-19 pandemic seems to have slowed down corruption across Tamil Nadu including Chennai, Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption data suggests.

Since March 24, when the lockdown began, the DVAC registered only 14 cases across the state and uploaded details of the FIRs registered on its website. The DVAC usually registers 20-25 cases every month.

The DVAC, whose investigative units are divided into central, western and southern ranges and the special cell, now has 50% of its staff working on a rotation basis as per government rules, sources said.

The units posted in Chennai, under the central range, have not registered a single case since March 16, according to the website. In the western range, which comprises 14 units, the Erode unit registered a case on June 5, Vellore on June 26 and July 11, Tirupur on July 13, Coimbatore on March 26, while the unit in Perambalur conducted 2 traps in June.

The southern range includes 15 units and the Trichy unit registered FIRs on June 1 and 19, Dindigul on May 19 and June 8, Tirunelveli on July 15, Kanyakumari on July 9 and Karur on July 9.

One reason, say DVAC sources, is that government offices across Chennai and Tamil Nadu were completely shut in April and May. There was no movement of people and the circumstances for corruption at government offices may not have arisen, they say.

Secondly, the near complete focus on battling Covid may have affected movement of files. The 2017 amendment to the Prevention of Corruption Act has mandated the DVAC to take permission of the vigilance commissioner before filing an FIR against any government employee. In Tamil Nadu, the vigilance commissioner is the chief secretary who is involved in Covid-19 prevention. “So, even if DVAC may have processed files, they may be stuck with the secretariat,” sources said. However, traps have been laid and people arrested based of the complaints received. “But for arrest, we have to maintain a proper safety protocol, to avoid spread of COVID19,” an official said. Paperwork on older cases is being systematically processed, sources added.

Jayaram Venkatesan, convenor of Arappor Iyakkam, an NGO working towards eradicating corruption, said it the reduction in the number of cases was inevitable due to the lockdown. “However, registration department’s offices have started functioning. DVAC should give information on how many surprise checks were conducted.” In February, Jayaram recalled, a complainant had approached the DVAC officials concerned, seeking to trap an official demanding a bribe for issuing a legal heir certificate. No action was take, Jayaram said. “DVAC has not converted many pending complaints, where it could have collected evidence and converted it into FIRs during the lockdown period,” he said.

Drop in cases inevitable during lockdown, says Arappor Iyakkam, an NGO. Wants info on checks conducted at registration department offices across TN during this period

TN people most keen to skip hosp, meet docs online

TN people most keen to skip hosp, meet docs online

U.Tejonmayam@timesgroup.com

Chennai: 02.08.2020

As hospitals fight Covid, many people in Tamil Nadu are now getting their health status checked in less than six minutes at a click of a button. With 22,502 consultations, the state ranks number one in utilising the national free teleconsultation service esanjeevaniOPD, by the ministry of health and family welfare.

For patients, this service has come as an alternative to hospital visits at a time when there is a fear of Covid spread. For doctors and government authorities, it is the best way to avoid crowds in hospitals busy treating Covid patients. The service is active in 15 other states.

“We get not less than 1,200 calls a day. We have doctors in the state and district control rooms and we work along with 102 and 104 helplines,” said Dr T S Selvavinayagam, director of public health. “This service is for the common man when there is a difficulty in accessing their regular doctors. Minor ailments are handled and if need be, they are referred to a hospital. Though PHCs, medical colleges are working, this additional facility has become very useful during this lockdown,” he added.

The portal works similar to a hospital/ clinic visit, except that the wait time to meet a doctor is less online. People from any corner of the state could log on to the portal. At a time, nearly 25 to 50 doctors attend patients’ calls.

“I had skin allergy for the past three months and I was scared to go to a hospital. So, I used this service and a doctor from Nagapattinam attended. Within the next five minutes, she sent an e-prescription,” said Sundar R of Anna Nagar, Chennai.

More than cities, the portal seems to have benefitted more people in the districts and rural areas. Tiruppur district was the first in the state to reach 1,000 consultations and has 2,293 consultations to date.

“We aggressively took this up since its inception a couple of months ago. We wanted to avoid crowds in GH and other PHCs. So we have arranged computer systems in block hospitals so people from towns like Mulanur or Udumalpet need not come to the district hospital in Tiruppur,” said Dr K Vijayakarthikeyan, Tiruppur district collector. “We have suggested that prescriptions be forwarded to vendors and medicines be home-delivered to patients,” he added.

BLDE Admission Notification 2020-21

Saturday, August 1, 2020

இ-பாஸ் கெடுபிடியால் மக்களுக்கு மன அழுத்தம்: வாழ்வாதாரம் பாதிப்பதால் அரசு மறுபரிசீலனை செய்யுமா?

மதுரை  1.8.2020

மாவட்டம், விட்டு மாவட்டம் செல்ல இ-பாஸ் நடைமுறை தொடரும் என மீண்டும் அறிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதால் நடுத்தர மக்கள் அன்றாட வாழ்வாதார இடங்களுக்கும், நெருங்கிய உறவினர்களின் திருமணம், குடும்ப உறுப்பினர்கள் மரணம் ஆகிய வற்றுக்கு செல்ல முடியாமல் மன அழுத்தத்துக்கு ஆளாகியுள்ளனர்.

ஊரடங்கு விதிமுறைகளை மத்திய அரசு தளர்த்திவிட்டு மாவட்டம் விட்டு மாவட்டம், மாநிலம் விட்டு மாநிலம் செல்ல இ-பாஸ் தேவையில்லை என்று அறிவித்துள்ளது. ஆனால் திருமணம், மருத்துவம், நெருங்கிய உறவினரின் மரணம் மற்றும் வேறு இடங்களில் சிக்கித் தவிப்பவர்கள் இ-பாஸ்க்கு விண்ணப்பித்தால் அதை பரிசீலித்து மாவட்டம் விட்டு மாவட்டம் சென்று வர தமிழக அரசு அனுமதி அளிக்கிறது.

இதற்காக தமிழ்நாடு கோவிட்-19 இ-பாஸ் வெப்சைட் உருவாக்கப் பட்டுள்ளது. அத்தியாவசியப் பணிக் காக செல்லும் 7 துறைகளைச் சேர்ந்தவர்களுக்கு மட்டும் இந்த இ-பாஸ் நடைமுறையில் இருந்து விலக்கு அளிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. அதே சமயம் நெருங்கிய உறவினர்கள் மரணம், அவசர மருத்துவ சிகிச்சை ஆகியவற்றுக்காக அருகில் உள்ள மாவட்டங்களுக்குச் செல்ல சான்றுகள் வைத்து விண்ணப்பித்தாலும் பெரும் பாலான விண்ணப்பங்கள் நிராகரிக் கப்படுகின்றன.

இ-பாஸ் விண்ணப்பங்களை, விண்ணப் பித்தவர் செல்லும் மாவட்ட நிர்வாகம்தான் பரிசீலிக்க வேண்டும். ஆனால், புதியவர்கள் நமது மாவட்டத்துக்கு வந்தால் அவர்கள் மூலம் கரோனா தொற்று பரவக்கூடும் என்று கருதி இ-பாஸ் கட்டுப்பாடுகளை கடுமையாக்குகின்றனர். தினமும் ஒரு சிலருக்கு மட்டும் பெயளரவுக்கு இ-பாஸ் வழங்குவதாக குற்றச் சாட்டு எழுந்துள்ளது.

இது குறித்து சமூக ஆர்வலர் ஹக்கீம் கூறியதாவது:

சென்னை பெரு நகரம், தெற்கு மண்டலம், கிழக்கு மண்டலம், மேற்கு மண்டலம், வடக்கு மண்டலம் மற்றும் மத்திய மண்டலமாக தமிழகம் செயல்படுகிறது. ஒவ்வொரு மண்ட லத்திலும் உள்ள மாவட்டங் களுக்கு இடையே மக்கள், அன்றாடம் தங்கள் வாழ்வாதாரத்துக்காகவும், சுப மற்றும் துக்க நிகழ்வுகளுக்காகவும் சென்று வருவார்கள். ஆரம்பத் தில் இ-பாஸ் நேர்மையாக வழங்கப்பட்டன. தற்போது விண்ணப்பதாரர்கள் இ-பாஸ் பெற அதிகாரிகள், ஆளுங்கட்சியினரிடம் பரிந்துரை செய்ய வேண்டி உள்ளது. மரணம் அடைபவர்களுக்கு அவர்களது உறவினர்கள் உடனடியாக எப்படி சான்றுகளை பெற முடியும். மருத்துவம், இறப்பு தவிர்த்து நிறைய அத்தியாவசிய தேவைகள் உள்ளன. ஆனால் அதற்கு இ-பாஸ் மறுக்கப்படுகிறது. இ-பாஸ் நடைமுறை யால் அரசு ஊழியர்கள், தனியார் நிறுவனங்களில் பணிபுரிவோர் தவிர மற்றவர்கள் வாழ்வாதார இடங்களுக்கும், உறவினர் திருமணங்களுக்கும், துக்க நிகழ்வுகளுக்கும் செல்ல முடியாமல் மனஅழுத்தத்துக்கு ஆளாகியுள்ளனர். அதனால், மண்ட லங்களுக்கு இடையேயாவது இ-பாஸ் நடைமுறையை ரத்து செய்ய வேண் டும் என்றார்.

இதுகுறித்து மாவட்ட நிர்வாக உயர் அதிகாரி ஒருவரிடம் கேட்ட போது, ‘தகுந்த சான்று களுடன் விண் ணப்பித்தால் நிராகரிக்க வாய்ப்பே இல்லை’ என்றார்

பள்ளிகள் மூடப்பட்டதால் 5,000-க்கும் மேற்பட்ட மாணவிகள் கர்ப்பம்

பள்ளிகள் மூடப்பட்டதால் 5,000-க்கும் மேற்பட்ட மாணவிகள் கர்ப்பம்

கரோனா தொற்றுப் பரவலைக் கட்டுப்படுத்த உலகம் முழுவதும் பொது முடக்கம் எனும் ஒற்றை ஆயுதத்தை கையிலெடுத்த நாடுகளில், தற்போது சந்தித்து வரும் பல்வேறு சிக்கல்களில் ஒன்று குழந்தைகள் திருமணம்.

தென்கிழக்கு ஆப்ரிக்க நாடு மாலவி. ஜாம்பியா, தான்சானியா, மொசாம்பிக் போன்ற நாடுகளுடன் தனது எல்லையை பகிர்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கும் மாலவியில், கரோனா பொதுமுடக்கம் காரணமாக சுமார் ஐந்து ஆயிரத்துக்கும் மேற்பட்ட மாணவிகளுக்கு திருமணம் செய்யப்பட்டு, அவர்கள் கர்ப்பம் அடைந்ததாக புள்ளி விவரங்கள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன.

உலகம் முழுவதும் கரோனா தொற்றுப் பரவத் தொடங்கியதுமே மார்ச் 20ம் தேதி மாலவியில் பொது முடக்கம் அறிவிக்கப்பட்டது. இதுவரை அங்கு 3,664 பேருக்கு தொற்று பாதிப்பு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. 99 பேர் கரோனாவுக்கு பலியாகியுள்ளனர்.

இந்த நிலையில், கரோனா தொற்றுப் பரவல் காரணமாக அறிவிக்கப்பட்ட பொதுமுடக்கம், மாலவி நாட்டின் இளைஞிகளின் வாழ்க்கையையே புரட்டிப்போட்டுவிட்டதாக கல்வித் துறை இயக்குநர் பெனெடிக்டோ கொண்டோவ் தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.

கரோனா பொது முடக்கத்துக்கு முன்பேயே உலகத்தில் அதிக குழந்தைகள் திருமணம் நடைபெறும் நாடாக மாலவி இருந்தது. தற்போது கரோனாவால் இது மேலும் அதிகரித்துள்ளது.

கரோனா காரணமாக பள்ளிகள் மூடப்பட்டதுமே, ஊரகப் பகுதிகளில் குழந்தைகள் திருமணம் அதிகரிக்கத் தொடங்கிவிட்டதாக தகவல்கள் கிடைத்துள்ளன.

இந்த பொதுமுடக்கக் காலத்தில் மட்டும் சுமார் 5000 சிறுமிகளுக்கு திருமணம் முடிந்து கர்ப்பம் அடைந்திருப்பதாகவும் அவர் கூறுகிறார்.

இதற்கிடையே, கிழக்கு மாவட்டமான மங்கோச்சியில் இருந்து கிடைக்கும் தகவல்கள், மாலவியில் கடந்த ஜனவரி முதல் ஜூன் மாத காலத்தில் மட்டும் 7,274 சிறுமிகள் கர்ப்பம் அடைந்திருப்பதாக தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

இதே காலக்கட்டத்தில் கடந்த ஆண்டு கர்ப்பமடைந்த சிறுமிகளின் எண்ணிக்கை 1,039 ஆக உள்ளது. இதில் 166 சிறுமிகளின் வயது 10 முதல் 14 வயதுக்கு உள்பட்டே இருக்கும் என்று கூறப்படுகிறது.

Dailyhunt

தங்கம் இனி நமக்கு காட்சிப் பொருளே! சவரன் விலை ரூ.41,200

தங்கம் இனி நமக்கு காட்சிப் பொருளே! சவரன் விலை ரூ.41,200

Updated : ஆக 01, 2020 00:21 | Added : ஜூலை 31, 2020 23:48 |



சென்னை : தங்கம் இனி நமக்கு காட்சிப் பொருளாக இருக்கும் நிலைமை உருவாகியுள்ளது. சவரன் விலை நேற்று, 41 ஆயிரம் ரூபாயை தாண்டியது. கிராம் விலை, 5,150 ரூபாயாக உயர்ந்துள்ளது. இப்போதைக்கு விலை குறைவதற்கான சாத்தியக் கூறுகள் தென்படவில்லை.

தமிழகத்தில், நடப்பாண்டில் ஏழு மாதங்களில் மட்டும், ஆபரண தங்கம் விலை சவரனுக்கு, 11 ஆயிரத்து, 320 ரூபாய் அதிகரித்துள்ளது. சர்வதேச தங்க சந்தையின் நிலவரத்திற்கு ஏற்ப, உள்நாட்டில் தினமும், தங்கம், வெள்ளி விலை நிர்ணயம் செய்யப்படுகிறது. தமிழகத்தில், நடப்பாண்டு ஜனவரி, 1ல், 22 காரட் ஆபரண தங்கம், கிராம், 3,735 ரூபாய்க்கும்; சவரன், 29 ஆயிரத்து, 880 ரூபாய்க்கும் விற்பனையாகின. கிராம் வெள்ளி, 50.30 ரூபாயாக இருந்தது.

உயர்வு

அமெரிக்கா - சீனா இடையிலான வர்த்தகப் போர், வைரஸ் பாதிப்பு உள்ளிட்ட காரணங்களால், உள்நாட்டில், மார்ச் முதல், தங்கம், வெள்ளி விலை, வரலாறு காணாத வகையில் அதிகரித்து வருகிறது. தமிழகத்தில், நேற்று முன்தினம், கிராம் தங்கம், 5,093 ரூபாய்க்கும்; சவரன், 40 ஆயிரத்து, 744 ரூபாய்க்கும் விற்பனையாகின. கிராம் வெள்ளி, 70.20 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்பனையானது.

நேற்று ஒரே நாளில், தங்கம் கிராமுக்கு, 57 ரூபாய் உயர்ந்து, 5,150 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்கப்பட்டது. சவரனுக்கு, 456 ரூபாய் அதிகரித்து, 41 ஆயிரத்து, 200 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்பனையானது. வெள்ளி கிராமுக்கு, 90 காசுகள் உயர்ந்து, 71.10 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்பனை செய்யப்பட்டது. ஜூலை, 1ல், தங்கம் சவரன் விலை, 37 ஆயிரத்து, 472 ரூபாயாக இருந்தது. அம்மாதத்தில் மட்டும், சவரனுக்கு, 3,728 ரூபாய் உயர்ந்துள்ளது.

நடப்பாண்டில், ஏழு மாதங்களில் தங்கம் விலை கிராமுக்கு, 1,415 ரூபாயும்; சவரனுக்கு, 11 ஆயிரத்து, 320 ரூபாயும் அதிகரித்துள்ளது; வெள்ளி விலை மட்டும் கிராமுக்கு, 20.80 ரூபாய் உயர்ந்துள்ளது.

இது குறித்து, சென்னை தங்கம் மற்றும் வைர நகை வியாபாரிகள் சங்க தலைவர் ஜெயந்திலால் சலானி கூறியதாவது: தங்கத்தின் விலை ஏற்றம், அதில் முதலீடு செய்தால் கிடைக்கும் லாபம், புதிய முதலீட்டாளர் களை ஈர்த்துள்ளது. இதனால், ஏற்கனவே முதலீடு செய்பவர்கள் மட்டும் அல்லாமல், புதிய முதலீட்டாளர்களும், அதிகளவில் தங்கத்தில் முதலீடு செய்ய துவங்கியுள்ளனர்.

முதலீடு

சர்வதேச அளவில், பல நாடுகளில் உள்ள வங்கிகளில், வைப்பு நிதிக்கான வட்டி விகிதம் மிகவும் சரிவடைந்துள்ள நிலையில், பலரும், வைப்பு நிதியில் உள்ள தங்களின் பணத்தை திரும்ப பெற்று, தங்கத்தில் முதலீடு செய்து வருகின்றனர். இதன் காரணமாக, சர்வ தேச சந்தையில், தங்கம் விலை தொடர்ந்து உயர்ந்து வருகிறது.

நேற்று மட்டும், 31 கிராம் எடை உடைய, 1 'அவுன்ஸ்' தங்கம் விலை, 45 டாலர் உயர்ந்து, 1,975 டாலராக, அதாவது, 1 லட்சத்து, 48 ஆயிரத்து, 125 ரூபாயாக அதிகரித்து உள்ளது. இது போன்ற காரணங்களால், உள்நாட்டில், தங்கம் விலை அதிகரித்து வருகிறது. பலரும் வெள்ளியிலும் அதிக முதலீடு செய்வதால், அதன் விலையும் உயர்ந்துள்ளது. இவ்வாறு, அவர் கூறினார்.

Madras HC Warns Private Schools Of Contempt If They Insist Upon Collection Of Entire Fees For Upcoming Academic Year [Read Order]

Madras HC Warns Private Schools Of Contempt If They Insist Upon Collection Of Entire Fees For Upcoming Academic Year [Read Order]: Taking 'serious note' of violation of its order dated July 17, 2020 pertaining to collection of tution fee by unaided private institutions, the Madras High Court warned the erring institutions

State Can Revoke 'Essentiality Certificate' Granted To Medical College On The Ground Of 'Gross Deficiencies': SC [Read Judgment]

State Can Revoke 'Essentiality Certificate' Granted To Medical College On The Ground Of 'Gross Deficiencies': SC [Read Judgment]: The Supreme Court has held that State Government has power to revoke the 'Essentiality Certificate' once granted for opening of a new medical college on the ground of 'gross deficiency'. It would not ...

State Can Revoke 'Essentiality Certificate' Granted To Medical College On The Ground Of 'Gross Deficiencies': SC [Read Judgment]

State Can Revoke 'Essentiality Certificate' Granted To Medical College On The Ground Of 'Gross Deficiencies': SC [Read Judgment] 

Ashok Kini 31 July 2020 7:12 PM 

State Can Revoke 

The Supreme Court has held that State Government has power to revoke the 'Essentiality Certificate' once granted for opening of a new medical college on the ground of 'gross deficiency'. 

It would not be in public interest nor appropriate for the State Government to remain a mute spectator and not move into action when the college miserably fails to translate the spirit behind the Essentiality Certificate within a reasonable time, the bench comprising of Justices AM Khanwilkar, Dinesh Maheshwari and Sanjiv Khanna said. 

In this case, the Madhya Pradesh Government revoked the Essentiality Certificate granted to Gyanjeet Sewa Mission Trust for establishing a medical college at Jabalpur in the State of Madhya Pradesh. This was challenged before the Madhya Pradesh High Court which upheld the Government's order observing that it has taken into account the fraud played by the college in securing the Essentiality Certificate, the inability of the college to provide for the minimum standards of infrastructure and other facilities specified by the MCI for running of a medical college and also complete loss of substratum and larger public interest, as reasons for revocation of Essentiality Certificate. 

The main contention of the college was that the State Government has no power to withdraw Essentiality Certificate on the ground of Deficient Functioning of a college. In support of this contention, the college relied on a Supreme Court judgment in Chintpurni Medical College and Hospital v State of Punjab. 

Closely examining the said judgment, the three judge bench said that it agrees with the view that the act of the State in issuing Essentiality Certificate is a quasi judicial function. It added: 

Having said that, it must follow that Section 21 of the 1897 Act cannot be invoked and in absence of an express provision in the IMC Act or the 1999 Regulations empowering the State Government to revoke or cancel the Essentiality Certificate, such a power cannot be arrogated by the State relying on Section 21. That, however, does not deprive the State Government to revoke or withdraw the Essentiality Certificate in case where (a) it is secured by playing fraud on the State Government, (b) the substratum for issuing the certificate has been lost or disappears and (c) such like ground, where no enquiry is called for on the part of the State Government. 

The court further observed that in Chintpurni Medical College (supra), it was clarified that the State Government can cancel/revoke/withdraw Essentiality Certificate in exceptional cases. It said: 

"We hold that Chintpurni Medical College (supra) does not lay down in absolute terms that the State cannot revoke the Essentiality Certificate once granted for opening of a new medical college within the State." 

The court then took note of the fact that no renewal permission has been granted to the college by the MCI for three successive academic sessions due to gross deficiencies. 

"The State Government whilst discharging its role of parens patriae of the student community cannot remain a mute spectator and expose them to a college, which is deficient in many respects. The fact that no renewal permission has been granted by the MCI for three successive academic sessions due to gross deficiencies in the appellant­ College, is itself indicative of the state of affairs in the appellant­-College, warranting a legal inference that the substratum on the basis of which Essentiality Certificate was issued to the appellant-­College had completely disappeared." 

It observed that the authority of the State to grant Essentiality Certificate is both power coupled with a duty to ensure that the substratum of the spirit behind the Certificate does not disappear or is defeated. 

"The exercise of power and performance of duty with responsibility and in right earnest must co­exist. Notably, the duty under Article 47 is, in the constitutional sense, fundamental in the governance of the State. This duty does not end with mere grant of a certificate, rather, it continues upto the point when essentiality of basic medical infrastructure is properly taken care of within a reasonable time frame. Any future application for such certificate, be it by the present appellant (in terms of directions in this judgment) or by a different applicant, must be dealt with accordingly, and supervision of the State must continue to ensure that the purpose and substratum for grant of such certificate does not and has not disappeared." 

The Court also observed that while dealing with the case of maintaining standards in a professional college, a strict approach must be adopted because these colleges engage in imparting training and education to prospective medical professionals and impact their academic prospects. It added: 

"Thus, the future of the student community pursuing medical course in such deficient colleges would get compromised besides producing inefficient and incompetent doctors from such colleges. That would be posing a bigger risk to the society at large and defeat the sanguine hope entrenched in the Essentiality Certificate issued by the State." 

The court added that merely because the applicant has made certain investments for starting the medical college, that by itself, cannot be the basis to undermine power of the State Government coupled with duty to ensure that the medical college is established in terms of the Essentiality Certificate within a reasonable time. It added: 

"We are conscious of the view taken and conclusion recorded in Chintpurni Medical College (supra). Even though the fact situation in that case may appear to be similar, however, in our opinion, in a case such as the present one, where the spirit behind the Essentiality Certificate issued as back as on 27.8.2014 has remained unfulfilled by the appellant-­College for all this period (almost six years), despite repeated opportunities given by the MCI, as noticed from the summary/observation in the assessment report, it can be safely assumed that the substratum for issuing the Essentiality Certificate had completely disappeared. The State Government cannot be expected to wait indefinitely, much less beyond period of five years, thereby impacting the interests of the student community in the region and the increased doctor-patient ratio and denial of healthcare facility in the attached hospital due to gross deficiencies. Such a situation, in our view, must come within the excepted category, where the State Government ought to act upon and must take corrective measures to undo the hiatus situation and provide a window to some other institute capable of fulfilling the minimum standards/norms specified by the MCI for establishment of a new medical college in the concerned locality or within the State. Without any further ado, we are of the view that the appellant-College is a failed institute thus far and is unable to deliver the aspirations of the student community and the public at large to produce more medical personnel on year to year basis as per the spirit behind issuance of the subject Essentiality Certificate dated 27.08.2014. To this extent, we respectfully depart from the view taken in Chintpurni Medical College (supra)." 

Case Details 

Case name: Sukh Sagar Medical College & Hospital Versus State of Madhya Pradesh 

Case no.: CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2843/2020 

Coram: Justices AM Khanwilkar, Dinesh Maheshwari and Sanjiv Khanna 

Counsel: Sr Adv Dushyant Dave for Appellant, Sr Adv Vikas Singh for MCI and AAG Saurabh Mishra, for the State of Madhya Pradesh.

Madras HC Warns Private Schools Of Contempt If They Insist Upon Collection Of Entire Fees For Upcoming Academic Year [Read Order]

Madras HC Warns Private Schools Of Contempt If They Insist Upon Collection Of Entire Fees For Upcoming Academic Year [Read Order]: Taking 'serious note' of violation of its order dated July 17, 2020 pertaining to collection of tution fee by unaided private institutions, the Madras High Court warned the erring institutions

Dad refused to purchase smartphone, boy kills self

Dad refused to purchase smartphone, boy kills self

A 14-year-old boy allegedly killed himself at his residence at Siruthondamadevi village near Panruti after his father refused to purchase a smartphone for him to take online classes.

Published: 01st August 2020 03:39 AM 

By Express News Service

CUDDALORE: A 14-year-old boy allegedly killed himself at his residence at Siruthondamadevi village near Panruti after his father refused to purchase a smartphone for him to take online classes.

According to police sources, Vignesh (14), son of Vijay Kumar, a cashew farmer, had been studying in class X at a private school in Panruti. Owing to the lockdown, the school had been conducting online classes for students.

“The son had been forcing his father to purchase a smartphone for him to attend online classes, like the rest of his friends. Vijay Kumar had assured to buy him the phone, once he makes some money selling the cashews,” police said.

However, on July 29, disappointed over not getting a phone, Vignesh hung himself from the ceiling fan, using his mother’s saree, the police added. He was rushed to Panruti GH, but died the following day, as per the police report. The Kadampuliyur police have registered a case for an inquiry.
Power shutdown in parts of Chennai on August 3. Here's the full list

The supply will be resumed before 2 pm if the works are completed, said a Tangedco statement.

Published: 31st July 2020 09:27 PM 

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: To facilitate maintenance, power supply to be suspended in parts of Chennai between 9 am and 2 pm on Monday (August 3). The supply will be resumed before 2 pm if the works are completed, said a Tangedco statement.

The details of areas as follows:

In the areas of Selaiyur: Kannan Nagar, IOB Colony, Ponniamman Koil Street, Selaiyur, Karnam Street, Raja Iyyer Street, Ranganathan Street, Muthalamman Street, Part of Velachery Main Road, Elumalai Street, New Balaji Nagar, Mullai Street, Avvai Street, Bharathi Nagar, Bajanai Koil Street, Madha Koil Street, Palayathan Street, Part of Ranganathan Nagar, Burma Colony Harington Road, Easwaran Koil Street, Ramasamy Street.

In the areas of Tondaiarpet: Cornation Nagar, TNSCB Quarters, J.J Nagar, Sudhandirapuram, Sigiranthaplayam, Motchapuram, K.H Road, Meenambal Nagar, Bharathi Nagar, Bharathi Nagar Quarters, Kamaraj Nagar, New Sasthiri Nagar, Jeeva Nagar, Driver Colony, E H Road, Thiyagappa Chetty Street.

Vels Institute announces V-SAT results

Vels Institute announces V-SAT results

The scholarships are targeted towards students who are facing financial challenges to continue their higher studies, especially due to the pandemic.

Published: 01st August 2020 03:43 AM 

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Vels Institute of Science, Technology & Advanced Studies (VISTAS), announced its Vels Scholarship Admission Test (VSAT) results. Over 10,000 students from Tamil Nadu and other states took part in the online admission test and more than 3,000 students have availed scholarships.

The scholarships are targeted towards students who are facing financial challenges to continue their higher studies, especially due to the pandemic. Based on their V-SAT scores, the selected students will avail scholarship under five categories (100%, 75%, 50%, 25% and 10%) which will enable them to pursue their dreams of higher education.

Students who had appeared for the scholarship test can now check their results on http://www.velsuniv. ac.in/VSAT.asp. Ishari K Ganesh, founder and chairman, Vels Group of Institutions, said, “We are glad to have been able to identify deserving students through our V-SAT exam and provide them with an opportunity to pursue higher education. Congratulations to all the students who have succeeded and qualified for scholarship.”

Digital certificates are enough for provisional admission to jr college


Digital certificates are enough for provisional admission to jr college

1.8.2020
Vinamrata Borwankar

Mumbai:

For first-year junior college aspirants in the state, digital statements of their Class X marks, certificates or an undertaking would be enough for provisional admissions amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

In a circular issued on Thursday, the school education department has stated students applying under various quotas can upload their relevant documents online. In case students do not have the documents or are unable to upload them due to technical difficulties, they can give an undertaking that they would submit the original documents at a later date. The students’ admission until then would be provisional.

Similarly, students will also be able to use the digital statement of marks received for their Class X results in case they do not have a hard copy of the marksheet. “Considering the current situation, students can upload the digital statement of marks. The students can submit the school leaving certificate or passing certificate to be verified later," said the circular.

Students would have three months to submit the original documents.

The Phase I of form filling, which requires students to fill out personal information and marks, will be opened up on August 1. Students will also be able to access the admissions information booklet in a few days.

State govt scraps pension for Emergency detainees

State govt scraps pension for Emergency detainees

Decision Taken In View Of Shortage Of Funds

Prafulla.Marpakwar@timesgroup.com

Mumbai: 1.8.2020

The cash-strapped Uddhav Thackeray-led state government on Friday scrapped the pension scheme for Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA) detainees during the Emergency to mobilize funds for tackling the Covid-19 pandemic. The proposal was approved in the cabinet meeting held on June 2 and presided over by CM Thackeray.

A one-page order issued by the deputy secretary (general administration) S M Khode states that since the state government is facing acute shortage of funds in view of a slowdown in the economy, it has been decided to scrap the pension scheme for detainees during the Emergency from 1975-77 with immediate effect. “In view of huge revenue deficit, the government has decided to wind up the pension scheme,” Khode said in his order.

The decision is being viewed as a major setback for former chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, who had on June 7, 2018 drafted the scheme to provide pension of Rs 10,000 per month to detainees during the Emergency era. Thackeray has cancelled a large number of key policy decisions taken by the erstwhile Devendra Fadnavis government, the most significant being the waiver of Rs 1.5 crore stamp duty granted to an organization associated with the RSS.

On the pension scheme, a senior GAD official said that after Fadnavis declared the scheme, out of 5,000 MISA detainees in the state, 3,267 applied for pension, and pension was approved for 1,179 persons. For the financial year 2018-19, a budgetary provision of Rs 42 crore was made, of which Rs 29 crore had been disbursed.

BJP’s chief spokesperson Keshav Upadhye took strong objection to the state government’s decision, saying it was politically motivated. “In our opinion, those people who fought against the Emergency imposed by Indira Gandhi are also freedom fighters as they fought for the basic rights of people. After due consideration, Fadnavis had approved the pension scheme for MISA detainees,” Upadhye said.

There had been demands earlier that those detained and arrested during the Emergency years should be given a citation too.

IoEs to take lead in rolling out 4-year degree courses

IoEs to take lead in rolling out 4-year degree courses

Manash.Gohain@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:1.8.2020

Some of the 20 “institutions of eminence” will be asked to take a lead in rolling out the four-year degree programme announced in the National Education Policy this year itself while other IoEs can follow suit if they wish to adopt the programme in the 2020-21 academic session.

The move to initiate the roll-out of the four-year degree is among some features of the NEP that will be implemented in this year itself. The first of its kind Academic Credit Bank (ACB) will also be ready by December 2020. The draft of Higher Education Commission of India (HECI) Bill will be placed in the public domain for feedback in September 2020 before taking it to Parliament. The framework for the common entrance test for admissions to higher education institutions (HEIs) will also be ready by February-March 2021 and the first test is likely to be delivered in May 2021.

In August 2019, the government offered IoE status to 20 HEIs, which include four IITs, Banaras Hindu University, Delhi University and 10 private institutions, among others.

According to higher education secretary Amit Khare, some IoEs can start the fouryear-multidisciplinary undergraduate programme with multiple exit and entry options immediately. “The phase-wise implementation of the NEP will start from this month itself. IoEs will be encouraged to start immediately in 2020-21, because 20 IoEs are selected and some of them have already signed the MoU. And they can have multiple entry and exit because by that time the credit bank would have become operational,” said Khare.

The secretary said other central universities which are ready can join by 2021 and latest by 2022. Regarding the ACB, Khare said it will be pilot-tested first in a few IITs and central universities before introducing it nationally.

The common entrance test too would be ready by February-March 2021 and the first test is likely to be delivered in May 2021 immediately after the Class XII Board exams.

Ask states to pay salaries to docs on time, SC tells Centre

Ask states to pay salaries to docs on time, SC tells Centre

New Delhi:  01.08.2020

The Supreme Court on Friday took a serious view of Delhi, Maharashtra, Punjab, Tripura and Karnataka defying the Centre’s directions for timely payment of salaries to doctors and health workers on Covid-19 duty and said the Centre should know its powers to force states to obey its orders, Dhananjay Mahapatra.

Responding to allegations made by petitioner Arushi Jain and doctors associations about non-payment of salaries despite the court’s June 17 order, solicitor general Tushar Mehta informed a bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, R S Reddy and M R Shah that the Centre had written to states on June 18 for timely payment of salaries to doctors and healthcare staff.

He said the government had sent reminders to all states on July 20. But till date, Delhi, Maharashtra, Punjab, Karnataka and Tripura have not filed reports indicating compliance of the Centre’s June 17 direction and July 20 reminder.

Full report on www.toi.in

No scheduled flights abroad till Aug 31; more travel bubbles likely


No scheduled flights abroad till Aug 31; more travel bubbles likely

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi/Mumbai:  1.8.2020

The government has extended the suspension of scheduled international flights from July-end to August 31.

However, travel will take place within the air bubbles India has created with the US, Germany and France. In coming days more countries — like the UK, Canada and Israel — could have bubbles with India, allowing people, as per government norms, to travel to and from there. The most recent transport bubble agreement is the one with Kuwait “to uplift stranded passenger both to/ from India”, the DGCA said on Friday. More such arrangements are likely to fructify and ease passenger movements from different nations, it said. The continued suspension of scheduled international flights, however, does not apply to international all-cargo operations and flights specifically approved by the regulator.

India had suspended scheduled international passenger flights on March 22. Since then, the DGCA note of Friday says, over “2,500 repatriation flights by foreign carriers to uplift stranded passengers to/from India have been approved. Under Vande Bharat Mission, Air India and AI Express have uplifted 2,67,436 stranded passengers and other charters have uplifted 4,86,811 stranded passengers between May 6 to July 30, 2020.”

The aviation ministry says resumption of schedule international flights will be considered once domestic flights reach the 50% mark of the originally approved summer schedule. Schedule domestic flights were allowed to resume on May 25 and so far airlines are operating at about 30% of the summer schedule. They have been allowed to raise the capacity to 45% by November 24, but this may be relaxed depending on how the pandemic situation develops.

Full report on www.toi.in

The aviation ministry said resumption of scheduled international flights will be considered once domestic flights reach the 50% mark of the originally approved summer schedule

Kin of 33 govt workers, who died of Covid, to get ₹50L each


Kin of 33 govt workers, who died of Covid, to get ₹50L each

Shanmughasundaram.J@timesgroup.com

Chennai:1.8.2020

Thirty-three government employees, including 16 frontline workers, have died of Covid-19 in Tamil Nadu. The deceased were 11 employees of the Chennai Corporation, eight personnel of the police department, a doctor and two other health department staff, three revenue department employees, an assistant commissioner of civil supplies, a senior private secretary at CM’s office, two town panchayat staff members and one employee each from the commissionerate of revenue administration, the Tiruvallur corporation, the energy department and the rural development department.

Chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami on April 22 had issued an order increasing the solatium from ₹10 lakh to ₹50 lakh for the families of frontline workers, who died due to Covid-19. The CM had also stated that a family member of each deceased frontline worker would be provided with a government job based on qualification.

Citing the CM’s announcement, director of social security scheme, commissioner of revenue administration, N Venkatachalam has sought medical and death certificates of the frontline workers to extend a financial assistance of ₹50 lakh each to the kin of the deceased. Venkatachalam sought the details from director of public health and preventive medicine Dr T S Selvavinayagam.

The authority sought the details and supporting documents such as certificates of the employee deployed in Covid-19 duty, his or her medical reports of being tested positive for the virus, death certificate, photocopy of the ration card and certificate of his/her legal heir.

Chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami on April 22 had issued an order increasing the solatium from ₹10 lakh to ₹50 lakh for the families of frontline government workers, who died due to Covid-19. infection

Sastra university releases 2020-21 admissions rank list


Sastra university releases 2020-21 admissions rank list

01.08.2020

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: The rank lists for admission to various engineering & law programmes for 2020-21 offered by Sastra Deemed University were released on Friday.

In stream 1 (70% of seats based on 1st JEE Main & Class XII marks) Narasimhan Srikanth of Maharishi Vidya Mandir, Chennai, came first in the all-India category with a combined score of 99.2 and in stream 2 (30% seats based on Class XII marks) Dyuthi Thampan of Palakkad scored 1,191 out of 1,200 to secure the top spot. Mainam Harshini from NTR Junior College, Telangana, came first in the School of Law rank list after scoring 98.1% in Class XII, said a press release.

Sastra is the only deemed university which uses JEEMain scores and Class XII aggregate together for its admission process without conducting its own entrance exams. For law programmes, rank list is released based on Class XII aggregate score.

The detailed rank lists are available at www.sastra.edu.The merit-based online counselling for admissions will be held from August 1-29. Students across the country have registered for admission.

Students from Jammu & Kashmir, north-eastern and Himalayan states and Andaman will be admitted under a special category and 30% of seats are allotted for students from Trichy & Thanjavur districts. Freshers’ online orientation for engineering and law programmes will begin from August 30.

Only 12% of engg colleges got above l failed in 11

POOR SHOW

Only 12% of engg colleges got above l failed in 11

Absence Of Quality Faculty, Tough Maths Paper Cited As Reasons

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

01.08.2020

Just 12% of affiliated engineering colleges in the state had more than 50% of students passing theNovember 2019 semester exams, while 11 got nil results. Of 443 engineering colleges, 220 had less than 25% students passing, raising serious questions about the quality of education.

While colleges cite a tough math question paper and stricter evaluation as main reasons, senior professors say it is because several senior faculty members were laid off following the relaxation in teacher-student ratio by All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) from 1:15 to 1:20.

The academic performance chart for the April and November 2019 semester exams released by Anna University shows that in April 100 colleges had more than 50% students passing compared to 57 colleges in November. The number of colleges with less than 25% students passing rose from 155 in April to 220 in November.

“The math exam in November was one of the toughest and many students were not able to clear it,” a principal of a city college said.

Even otherwise, Valliammai Engineering College principal B Chidambararajan said, students struggle to clear engineering math. “These include some top rankers from prominent institutions.” There is bound to be a difference in pass percentage compared to April and November, he said. “Many take exams in odd semesters (November) lightly and clear them in even semesters.”

M A Maluk Mohammed, director and correspondent of MAM College of Engineering and Technology in Trichy, said this showed the standard of students. “So far, the university used to give moderation and increase results of colleges. In an effort to standardize engineering education, the vice-chancellor of Anna University has done away with the moderation process. These marks are a true reflection of students. From here, the standard of engineering colleges will only improve.”

Some colleges said the pass percentage was fluctuating due to stricter evaluation and the lack of uniform answer keys across the state. “Anna University debarred 1,000 faculty members for deviation in marks after revaluation two years ago. It has affected the morale of faculty members and evaluation has become stricter,” an official of a college said.

A professor from another college said the quality of faculty members had come down after the relaxation of faculty-student ratio. “Many colleges sent their experienced faculty members away and it has now started to reflect on the performance of students,” he said.

Sources in Anna University said many top-performing affiliated colleges had become autonomous colleges and this was being reflected in the results. “In 2019 alone, 17 affiliated colleges got autonomous status. The university is making efforts to reduce the difficulty level in maths that is affecting the pass percentage of colleges.”


NEW APPROACH: )

Beds vacant but pvt hospitals turn away Covid-19 patients


Beds vacant but pvt hospitals turn away Covid-19 patients

Ram.Sundaram@timesgroup.com

Chennai:01.08.2020

The state government’s Covid-19 dashboard shows more than half the number of beds in private hospitals meant for infected patients are vacant, but hospitals turn away patients.

Tamil Nadu has 52,427 beds for Covid-19 patients. Of this, 39,104 are in government hospitals controlled which report 40% occupancy. The remaining 23,568 beds were vacant on Thursday. Private hospitals have 13,323 Covid beds and 47% (6210 beds) were occupied, according to the dashboard.

A 61-year-old man from Royapettah told TOI that soon after he developed breathing difficulties, he reached out to a private hospital on Mount Poonamalle High Road. The hospital stabilised his oxygen level, but refused further treatment saying they did not have oxygen-supported beds. “The same happened at another hospital on the same stretch. Later I got admitted to the Omandurar government hospital,” he added.

TN Government Multi Super Specialty Hospital dean R Jayanthi said the hospital gets last minute referral.

5,881 new cases, 97 deaths in TN

TN’s fresh Covid-19 infections dipped for the second day on Friday with 5,881new cases and 97 deaths. The number of actives cases in the state is now 57,968. Hotspot Chennai had 1,013 cases, marginally lower than Thursday’s 1,175, and 21deaths. Its three adjoining districts together added 1,192 cases —Kancheepuram 485, Tiruvallur 395 and Chengalpet 334. The remaining seven northern districts added 995 cases and 19 deaths, taking the tally for the 11districts to 3,200 and toll to 53. P 14

‘Not all hosps can handle severe cases’

Chennai: “Things are much better than they were last month, but we continue to get critical cases from private hospitals,” she said. A doctor at Stanley Medical College Hospital said such patients coming in at the last minute are at high risk and such deaths increase the mortality rate.

The situation has been worse in districts like Tirunelveli and Theni, which have limited number of hospitals. Theni has only three empanelled Covid-19 hospitals which can handle moderate to severe cases, and patients have been on waitlist. Eventually, they arrive at Theni General Hospital, said a postgraduate assistant working there.

Indian Medical Association state secretary A K Ravikumar said non-availability of oxygen beds or ICU beds was the main reason why private hospitals send away patients.

People should understand that not all Covid-designated hospitals can treat people with moderate and severe symptoms. There are three categories of Covid hospitals. Only category-I (dedicated hospitals) can handle them. The other two categories (health centres and care centres) can’t admit such cases.

TN has 134 such hospitals in category-II and category-III and most of them are in tier-II cities or smaller towns. Tamil Nadu Health Development Association president Rex Sargunam said the government should ensure that all patients get enough care. “If it cannot take over private hospitals, it should at least ensure they treat at insurance council-prescribed rates,” he said.

Full fee demand: Court warns schools, colleges

Full fee demand: Court warns schools, colleges

Seeks Report By August 17

Sureshkumar.K@timesgroup.com

Chennai:01.08.2020

Private schools and colleges demanding payment of full annual fee from parents in violation of an earlier order by the Madras high court will face contempt of court proceedings, the court said on Friday.

Justice N Anand Venkatesh issued the warning after additional government pleader V Annalakshmi made an urgent mention about the state receiving several complaints from parents about schools and colleges insisting on paying the entire fee in violation of the interim order. She said parents are hesitant to give a written complaint fearing adverse consequences.

Taking a serious note of the issue, the judge directed authorities to conduct an inquiry and file a report by August 17.

Making it clear that persons incharge of such private educational institutions will be hauled up for contempt, the judge said, “This court is taking a very serious note of the violation brought to its notice. Based on the oral complaint, the education department shall conduct an immediate enquiry and if it is found that the institutions are collecting fees in violation of the interim orders passed by this court, immediate action shall be taken against them.”

Only 40% advance fee permitted

The issue pertains to challenges made by associations of educational institutions against the government order prohibiting them from demanding fee during lockdown. On July 17, the court allowed them to collect an ‘advance’ fee of 40% before August 31. This apart, since fee fixed for some institutions had expired and fee fixation committees were yet to frame the new structure, it was agreed to fix 75% of the last year’s fee as this year’s annual fee provisionally. The remaining 35% (minus 40% advance) shall be collected within two months of reopening of institutions, the court had said.

NEWS TODAY 21.12.2024