Tuesday, August 4, 2020

GTU to hold e-exams for 25k undergrad students from today

GTU to hold e-exams for 25k undergrad students from today

Ahmedabad: 04.08.2020

Gujarat Technological University (GTU) will begin online examinations for final-semester undergraduate and diploma students from Tuesday. The exams will run through a week. About 25,000 students are expected to take the exams. The varsity has completed the exams for postgraduate programmes, which began a week ago.

Candidates can take the online MCQ (multiple-choice question) exams using laptops, desktops, tablets, or cellphones. A consistent internet speed of 512kbps is recommended.

If students do not have that facility, their institutes will have to provide connectivity with the necessary speed. Webcams are required for students taking the exams using laptops or desktops.Front-facing cameras are needed for those taking the exams using mobile phones or tablets.

Other testing options include the pen-and-paper exams to be held from August 17 and special exams to be conducted in September. TNN

Salem gets Siddha Covid care centre

REGION DIGEST

Salem gets Siddha Covid care centre

The Salem district administration opened an exclusive 60-bed Siddha Covid-19 care centre at Uthamacholapuram on Monday. Collector S A Raman said treatment will be given to Covid-19 patients who wish to try Siddha method. District siddha medical officer Dr K Selvamurthy said patients will be administered with all Siddha medicines prescribed under the Aarogyam scheme, launched to boost immunity of people by the government

File counter in cop’s bail plea, HC to CBI: Madras high court on Monday directed the CBI to file a counter on the bail plea moved by suspended head constable S Murugan, arrested in connection with the Sathankulam custodial deaths of P Jeyaraj and his son J Beniks. After the assistant solicitor general V Kathirvelu appearing for the CBI sought time to file a counter, justice V Bharathidasan directed the CBI to file a counter and adjourned the case to August 17.

Sterlite firing victims’ kin seek govt jobs: Kin of those killed in the police firing at anti-Sterlite protesters and those who were badly injured in the police excess, on Monday petitioned the state government, seeking jobs that match their qualification. They termed the menial jobs given on compassionate grounds as an eyewash. They also alleged partiality in allotment of jobs.

Governor stable: Governor Banwarilal Purohit, who was tested positive for Covid-19, is stable, according to Raj Bhavan release. Purohit also decided not to host the “At Home Reception” at Raj Bhavan on the occasion of Independence Day in view of Covid-19 pandemic.

Rajiv case convicts: Why oppose parole if cabinet backs release, HC asks govt

Rajiv case convicts: Why oppose parole if cabinet backs release, HC asks govt

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 04.08.2020

While the state cabinet has recommended the release of all seven life convicts in former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination case, why does the state vehemently oppose the parole plea of A G Perarivalan, one of the convicts, asked the Madras high court on Monday.

“Your cabinet has recommended his release in toto, then why are you opposing his application for parole for one month? Do not oppose for the sake of opposing it,” a division bench of Justice N Kirubakaran and Justice V M Velumani told state public prosecutor A Natarajan.

To this, Natarajan explained that he is not opposing for the sake of opposing but the applicant must have valid reasons to seek parole.

“Only last year he was out on leave. As per prison rules, a prisoner becomes eligible for next parole only after three years. Moreover, the prison doctor has made it very clear in his report that though the prisoner suffered a series of illnesses, he is currently under medication for the same and he is stable,” Natarajan said.

However, senior counsel R Shanmugasundaram pointed out that there is a provision in the prison rules under which the state can exempt a prisoner from such conditions and grant parole. To this, the prosecutor said, “there are such exemptions, but the same cannot be granted on medical grounds.”

Refusing to accept the contention, the bench said, “If rules prohibit leave on medical grounds then such rule has become redundant. It has to be updated. Do you mean to say illnesses are not extraordinary situations?”

The court then directed the state and the petitioner to file an affidavit on the current status of the multi-disciplinary monitoring agency (MDMA) probing the larger conspiracy behind the former PM’s assassination and the interim orders of the Supreme Court, if any, in connection with the matter. The bench then adjourned the hearing to August 12.

The issue pertains to a plea moved by T Arputhammal, mother of Perarivalan. She wanted the court to grant 90 days parole to her son who needs immediate medical attention in view of various ailments.

The court posed the question when a parole application for Perarivalan, a life convict in the case, came up for hearing

Lack of flights to UAE costs flyers dearly

Lack of flights to UAE costs flyers dearly

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:  4.8.2020

The UAE may have begun allowing visitors and transit travelers, but the lack of scheduled flights from Chennai forces the stranded to spend more on Vande Bharat flights.

The UAE is issuing visas for people of all nationalities for travel to Dubai and Abu Dhabi, a popular transit hub for those from Chennai, but many who could have used Dubai to fly to Europe and the US by flights of their choice are forced to depend on special flights.

Emirates and Etihad Air can fly to Chennai to pick up passengers with resident visas in the UAE but Emirates discontinued flights because aircraft had to land in Chennai empty because of restrictions. From August 6 to 15, Etihad will fly five times a week to Chennai.

Basheer Ahmed of Travel Agents Federation of India said many were waiting to come to Chennai and to travel to UAE. “Scheduled flights at least in limited frequency will help them. The rescue flights are expensive and get cancelled if the airline cannot send in the number of arriving passengers in advance.”

The UAE is opening up, but traders and business travellers are not able to benefit because of the risk of getting stranded there.

Keep vulnerability in mind, care more, docs urge elderly

DIET, EXERCISE CRUCIAL

Keep vulnerability in mind, care more, docs urge elderly

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:04.08.2020

Until recently, most public health officials warned older adults to simply stay at home to beat Covid-19. Now, with the city slowly reopening, things are getting more complicated for senior citizens. Geriatricians say while following golden pandemic rules — social distance, mask and hygiene — the elderly must maintain a healthy diet and exercise.

“This can have mental and emotional benefits. Morning walks on the terrace, yoga and breathing exercises can help,” said senior geriatrician Dr V S Natarajan.

Doctors also insist that elders keep their blood sugars and hypertension under control. “Not skipping medicines is one way. It is also important for caregivers to keep doctors informed about symptoms the elderly experience,” he said.

Amidst the ongoing pandemic, one thing that is irrefutable is that the highest rate of fatalities is among the elderly. While there is no evidence that shows increased risk of Covid-19 for people above 60 years compared to younger adults, medical records across hospitals show that when people over 60 are infected, they are more likely to have severe and life-threatening symptoms. Health department statistics show that nearly 60% of the deaths were among the elderly.

“Older people with underlying medical conditions are at particularly high risk,” said senior liver transplant surgeon Dr Mohammed Rela, who heads Dr Rela Institute of Medical Sciences. “People above the age of 60 walking in with breathlessness invariably have complications and require intensive care,” he said.

Recently, a 70-year-old man, with chest congestion, and his 45-year-old daughter, with more severe symptoms, were admitted to Stanley Medical College Hospital. In a couple of days, the oxygen requirement for the woman dropped, but the father required high pressure (non-invasive) ventilation. While the woman has been discharged, the father is still in intensive care. Intensivists say seniors fare poorly in intensive care units. “Most of the time, they don’t eat well or co-operate much when they don’t see their kin. They also give up on the fight quickly,” said a senior intensivist at the Stanley Hospital.

Anna univ to hold sem exams for final year students online

Anna univ to hold sem exams for final year students online

Proctored Test To Have 30% Weightage, IA & Projects Rest

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:4.8.2020 

With more than 20,000 engineering students with job offers anxiously waiting to start their careers, Anna University has decided to conduct end-semester exams for final year students as online proctoring tests by the end of this month. Anna University is the first state university to decide to conduct online exams amid the Covid-19 crisis. Students without digital devices and internet connectivity will be given a choice to take offline exams later. The final exams are crucial as they would help validate degrees and aid in early on-boarding of recruited students.

The one-hour proctoring test will be conducting separately for each subject, will have multiple choice questions and candidates will be monitored by artificial intelligence tools, which records physical movements of students, computer screen usage and audio to prevent malpractice. The university has floated a tender inviting bids for conducting the test, estimated to cost ₹1.9 crore, for students from affiliated colleges and university departments.

“We decided to conduct the online exam to protect the future of students. It will make their degrees credible and facilitate their early on-boarding and higher studies,” said M K Surappa, vice-chancellor of the university.

Due to the loss of working days, some portions could not be taught and the university has decided to drop one of five units in each subject for the final exams. “We will give a 30% weightage for the online test and 70% weightage for internal assessment and project work,” Surappa added.

When inquired, autonomous colleges said they are also thinking of conducting an online test for final year students. The University Grants Commission (UGC) had instructed all universities to conduct exams online or offline for final year students, a move challenged in the Supreme Court. Academicians, however, said graduates of professional courses like BE, BTech need some form of assessment before graduation.

The state government promoted all except final year students to next year without exams and wrote to the ministry of human resource development to cancel exams for final year students as well, but it is yet to get a response.

Meanwhile, K M Karthik, president of Private Educational Institutions Employees Association, said the university collected fees for the cancelled exams and insisted that it must not collect fee for next sem exams. University officials, however, said the state government approved exam fee collection.

Agents get e-passes approved through govt ‘connections’

Agents get e-passes approved through govt ‘connections’

Ram.Sundaram@timesgroup.com

Chennai:4.8.2020

Common citizens struggle to get e-passes, even for genuine reasons, but some travel agencies and cab operators get them issued easily through ‘connections’ at district collectorates and Greater Chennai Corporation.

This reporter, seeking an epassfor returnof stranded relatives, marriage and a health emergency, approached three taxi operators in Chennai who promised to get the document for ₹250-₹300 per head over and above the base fare (₹10-₹20 depending on the vehicle model).

“It’s ok even if you don’t have hospital records. We can apply for a pass to Kerala and drop you at Madurai,” said Chennai-based travel agent Rajamanickam. Claiming that Tamil Nadu authorities didn’t cross-check documents much for inter-state travel, he said applying from a random address would get the job done.

Vasu, another travel agent, said he could transport even seven people in a Xylo, meant for four, and demanded ₹1,500 for an approved e-pass through an internet centre with ‘connections’ in government. All he wanted was an ID card like Aadhaar or driving licence with a Chennai address. It was not necessary for the person to travel in the car as it was only for e-pass approval. Tamil Nadu e-Governance Agency (TNeGA) mandates local address proof for such travel.

The last agency approached by this reporter, Ragavendra Travels, said it could arrange passes to and from Kanyakumari without hassle and didn’t charge extra for epass approval. Asked how it was able to do this when applications for genuine reasons were rejected, staff at the agency said what was entered in the description column mattered and that they had learned how to get it right.

J Ramanujam of TN Call Taxi Operators Association said some drivers from other districts had started taking regular trips by pooling in people. “Just like share service, people travel together by paying their share,” he said. Every day, on an average, he got 10-15 such calls but avoided many as they had invalid supporting documents.

TNeGA officials said their role ended with facilitating the application process and transferring it to respective district authorities to take the final call.

Corpn e-passes for workers entering city

Corpn e-passes for workers entering city

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

4.8.2020

Greater Chennai Corporation has come up with a new scheme for e-pass for guest workers returning to Chennai from other states and other districts of Tamil Nadu.

Corporation commissioner G Prakash said companies employing the workers have to apply for e-passes after providing their particulars. “The company has to indicate the exact number of workers who are coming and get an e-pass for each of them,” Prakash said.

Apart from this, the companies will have to create quarantine facilities for such workers in the city. “They will have to build some kind of shed where the arriving employees can be quarantined. We understand that it cannot be a very high quality facility, but it has to be suitable with proper facilities like toilets,” Prakash said. These facilities will be inspected by local corporation officials and given approval, he said. “Already we have started giving permissions to some companies who have approached us,” Prakash said.

All employees will be quarantined and they have to stay put during the 14-day period and also undergo testing, the commissioner said. “In case they have symptoms, they would have to report to us and undergo the treatment cycle,” he said. “This is one line of defence.”

Prakash said the corporation was approving 1,000 e-passes on a daily basis. He said Covid-19 prevention and detection activities would continue for at least three more months and complete relaxation of lockdown right now was difficult.

“The number of people wearing masks has improved, 90% are using it and it is a good sign. However, maintaining physical distancing is turning out to be difficult in some places. We will implement it as far as possible,” Prakash, who inaugurated a free quarantine centre at a hotel in Velachery along with health secretary J Radhakrishnan, said.

EXODUS: Thousands of guest workers left Chennai after the outbreak of Covid-19

Tedious e-pass norms, lack of public transport make it a crawl to work Curbs On Travel Among Dists Hit Staff Availability

Tedious e-pass norms, lack of public transport make it a crawl to work
Curbs On Travel Among Dists Hit Staff Availability

Sindhu Hariharan & Mamtha Asokan | TNN

4.8.2020

It’s two steps forward and one back for companies which want to bring back their employees to work. While the services sector appears to have embraced WFH, manufacturing units, particularly those on the outskirts, are facing issues with a tedious e-pass system and the lack of public transport.

Tamil Nadu scrapped the zonal system of boundary demarcation whereby the state was divided into eight zones. “When Chennai and its adjoining areas were one zone, there was no need for e-pass. But that has been scrapped and we have gone back to boundaries by district borders, making it cumbersome and tedious for e-pass procurement,” said the head of a trade body.

Consultancy firm IndiaFilings, which currently has about 100 staff working at its office in Chennai, prefers WFH. “If we apply e-pass for employees on behalf of the company, the approval rate is high. If they apply individually, it’s low,” Lionel Charles, CEO of IndiaFilings, said.

TOI spoke to several company officials and most said only employees living within the city limits and having their own vehicles are able to report to work while those who depend on public transport are not able to.

SECO Controls, an MSME based out of the Perungudi Industrial Estate, said the absence of public transport has hit movement of people. Vaishnavi Vignesh Raja, its VP, said the company is helping staff living outside Chennai limits get epasses to come in to work, but there are a few employees who have been trying to get e-passes and are not able to secure them.

A senior official at the state industries department told TOI that companies have been granted e-passes for inter-district movement of staff earlier and they can continue to apply.

However, in industrial hubs like Coimbatore, where most staff stay in districts outside the city limits, businesses continue to get affected due to curbs on inter-district movement. “Rules must be modified such that an authorization letter from respective companies along with employee identification cards support inter-district movement,” R Ramamurthy, president, The Coimbatore District Small Industries Association, (CODISSIA) said.

Meanwhile, Chennai’s tech companies have embraced the work-from-anywhere model with the product firms like Freshworks, OrangeScape, Chargebee and others also hinting that they will remain remote till the end of the year.

Cognizant has decided to keep its corporate and sales offices closed through the end of 2020. “We are deciding on the reopening of delivery centres based on the local Covid-19 situation and restrictions, client needs and center requirements,” a spokesperson for Cognizant said.

Verizon said they plan to continue the 100% WFH implementation that is currently underway. GAVS Technologies, a software product company on OMR, has made all arrangements to accommodate increased staff but said lack of public transport has led to just around 5% employees coming in. “There is a huge amount of social anxiety about the virus, and we are also not forcing people to come in as we are okay continuing operations remotely,” Balaji Uppili, chief customer success officer, GAVS, said.


A MUST: Police cracked down on those travelling without e-passes during the lockdown

Cut gratuity period to one year:

Cut gratuity period to one year:

panel  ‘Extend it to all kinds of employees’

04/08/2020

The Parliamentary Committee on Labour has, in its latest report, recommended that the eligibility period for gratuity payable to an employee on termination of his employment should be reduced to one year from the present provision of five years.

The Committee made this recommendation in its report on Social Security Code, which has been evolved subsuming nine Central Labour laws. This comes in the wake of extensive retrenchment in all sectors in COVID-19 pandemic-induced economic slowdown.

The committee, which is headed by Biju Janta Dal MP Bharatruhari Mahtab, submitted the report to Speaker Om Birla on Friday.

“Keeping in view the nature of India’s Labour Market where most employees are employed for a short duration period only, making them ineligible for gratuity as per extant norms, the Committee desires that the time limit of five years as provided for in the Code for payment of gratuity be reduced to continuous service of one year,” the report says.

It has also recommended that this facility be extended to all kinds of employees, including contract labourers, seasonal workers, piece rate workers, fixed term employees and daily/monthly wage workers.

The committee has stressed that there should be a robust redressal mechanism in case an employer does not pay up the dues.

Supreme Court Judgments Now Available In More Regional Languages [Read Judgments in Malayalam, Tamil & Punjabi]

Supreme Court Judgments Now Available In More Regional Languages [Read Judgments in Malayalam, Tamil & Punjabi]

LIVELAW NEWS NETWORK

3 Aug 2020 8:21 PM

The Supreme Court has started uploading the translated version of its judgments in more regional languages.

Some judgments delivered by the Court last year and earlier this year are now seen available in Malayalam, Tamil and Punjabi. Mostly the judgments connected to a state is being translated and uploaded in the language of that state.

Last year, the Supreme Court had started to make its judgments available in regional languages. A separate tab titled 'Vernacular Judgments' was added to the home page of the Supreme Court Portal. Initially, the translation was made to six vernacular languages: Assamese, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi, Odia and Telugu.

On finding that the translation is not being made to Malayalam, the Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan had then written to the then Chief Justice of India and Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad requesting that all Supreme Court judgments should be made available in Malayalam also. Anyhow, the Supreme Court is seen to have positively considered this request and is making available the Malayalam version of the judgments in cases related to Kerala.

The translation is being done using an indigenously developed software by the electronic software wing of the Supreme Court.

However all these regional language versions have a 'disclaimer' attached to it it at the end. It states that for all official and practical purposes, the judgments published in English shall be used. It further clarifies that the translated version in regional languages are only for the better understanding of the litigants.

Monday, August 3, 2020

Flipkart: `ஆர்டர் செய்த 90 நிமிடங்களில் டெலிவரி!’ - ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட்டின் புதிய திட்டம்

Flipkart: `ஆர்டர் செய்த 90 நிமிடங்களில் டெலிவரி!’ - ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட்டின் புதிய திட்டம்


ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட்

``அமேசான் நிறுவனமும் விரைவாக பொருள்களை டெலிவரி செய்து வருகிறது. ஜியோமார்ட் நிறுவனம் உள்ளூர் வாடிக்கையாளர்களை வாட்ஸ் அப் வழியாகத் தொடர்புகொண்டு வருகிறது.”

கொரோனா ஊரடங்கு தொடரும் இந்த நாள்களில் பலரும் ஆன்லைன் வழியாக பெரும்பாலான பொருள்களை ஆர்டர் செய்து வாங்கி வந்தனர். காய்கறிகள், பழங்கள், பால் மற்றும் மளிகைப் பொருள்கள் உள்ளிட்ட அன்றாடத் தேவைக்குப் பயன்படுத்தும் பொருள்களையும்கூட மக்கள் முடிந்தவரை ஆன்லைனிலேயே ஆர்டர் செய்து வந்தனர். இதனால், அமேசான், ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட் மற்றும் தொழிலதிபர் முகேஷ் அம்பானிக்கு சொந்தமான ஜியோமார்ட் நிறுவனங்கள் இடையே கடுமையான போட்டியும் நிலவி வருகிறது.

ஆன்லைன் வணிகத்தில் போட்டிகள் அதிகரித்து வரும் சூழலில் நிறுவனங்கள் மக்களைக் கவரும் வகையில் பல்வேறு அறிவிப்புகளை வெளியிட்டு வருகின்றன. அவ்வகையில், ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட் நிறுவனமானது ஒன்றரை மணி நேரத்தில் அதாவது 90 நிமிடங்களில் மளிகைப் பொருள்களை டெலிவரி செய்வதாக அறிவித்துள்ளது. இதுதொடர்பான அறிவிப்பை ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட் நிறுவனத்தின் துணைத் தலைவர் சந்தீப் கர்வா வெளியிட்டுள்ளார். அவர் பேசும்போது, ``மளிகைப் பொருள்கள், காய்கறிகள், இறைச்சி மற்றும் மொபைல்கள் ஆகியவற்றை உள்ளூர் அளவில் மிக விரைவாக ஃப்ளிப்கார்ட் டெலிவரி செய்யும்” என்று தெரிவித்தார். மொபைல் டெலிவரி ஆரம்பத்தில் பெங்களூரில் உள்ள சில குறிப்பிட்ட இடங்களில் மட்டுமே கிடைக்கும் என்றும் இந்த ஆண்டின் இறுதியில் ஆறு முக்கிய நகரங்களிலும் இந்த சேவைகள் விரிவுபடுத்தப்படும் என்றும் அவர் குறிப்பிட்டார்.

அமேசான் நிறுவனமும் விரைவாக பொருள்களை டெலிவரி செய்து வருகிறது. ஜியோமார்ட் நிறுவனம் உள்ளூர் வாடிக்கையாளர்களை வாட்ஸ்அப் வழியாகத் தொடர்புகொண்டு வருவதாகத் தகவல்கள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன. இதனால், மூன்று நிறுவனங்கள் இடையேயும் கடுமையான போட்டி நிலவும் எனக் கூறப்படுகிறது. ஊரடங்கின் காரணமாக ஆன்லைன் வணிகம் மிகவும் அதிகமாக வளர்ந்துள்ளது. இதனால், கடைகளின் வழியாக நடைபெறும் வணிகம் அதாவது, ஆன்லைன் தவிர்த்து வெளியில் நடைபெறும் வணிகங்கள் பாதிப்படைந்துள்ளன. கொரோனா ஊரடங்கு மற்றும் ஆன்லைன் வணிக வளர்ச்சி ஆகியவை பிற வணிகர்களையும் ஆன்லைன் பக்கம் இழுத்துள்ளது எனலாம்.

வெளிநாடுகளிலிருந்து வருவோருக்கான புதிய வழிகாட்டு நெறிமுறைகள்: மத்திய சுகாதாரத்துறை வெளியீடு

வெளிநாடுகளிலிருந்து வருவோருக்கான புதிய வழிகாட்டு நெறிமுறைகள்: மத்திய சுகாதாரத்துறை வெளியீடு   3.8.2020

புது தில்லி: வெளிநாடுகளிலிருந்து வருவோருக்கான புதிய வழிகாட்டு நெறிமுறைகளை மத்திய சுகாதாரத்துறை வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.

கரோனா தொற்றினைக் கட்டுப்படுத்துவதற்கான நடவடிக்கைகள் தீவிரமாக எடுக்கப்பட்டு வரும் நிலையில், வெளிநாடுகளிலிருந்து வருவோருக்கான புதிய வழிகாட்டு நெறிமுறைகளை மத்திய சுகாதாரத்துறை வெளியிட்டுள்ளது

அதன்படி வெளிநாடுகளில் இருந்து வருவோர் கட்டாயம் 14 நாட்கள் தனிமைப்படுத்தப்படுவர்

குடும்ப உறுப்பினர் மரணம், உடல்நலக்குறைவு அல்லது பயணி கர்ப்பிணி என்றால் 14 நாட்கள் வீட்டில் தனிமைப்படுத்தப்படுவர்

ஆனால் பயண நேரத்திற்கு 96 மணி நேரத்திற்கு முன்னதாக பிசிஆர் பரிசோதனை செய்து கொண்டிருக்க வேண்டும்.

பிசிஆர் பரிசோதனை மூலம் கரோனா இல்லையென சம்பந்தப்பட்டவர் சான்றளித்து வீட்டிலேயே 14 நாட்கள் தனிமைப்படுத்திக் கொள்ளலாம்.

இந்தப் புதிய விதிகள் அனைத்தும் வரும் 8ஆம் தேதி அமலுக்கு வருகிறது .
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MHRD to focus on ‘Stay in India’ along with ‘Study in India’

MHRD to focus on ‘Stay in India’ along with ‘Study in India’

c-Sheetal.Banchariya@timesgroup.com

03.08.2020

The COVID-19 outbreak has altered the plans of many students who were aspiring to study abroad this year. Along with ‘Study in India’ scheme, MHRD has now decided to focus on ‘Stay in India’. The move is aimed at helping students who have decided to stay back to pursue higher education in India and Indian students who have returned because of the pandemic. The HRD minister, Ramesh Pokhriyal ‘Nishank’ has constituted a committee, headed by DP Singh, chairman of University Grants Commission (UGC), which will prepare guidelines and measures to strengthen both ‘Study in India’ and ‘Stay in India’.

“Students who have returned to India in the middle of their courses are worried about their plans and many students have cancelled their plans for studying abroad because of COVID-19. Initiatives are being designed to retain students in India by providing appropriate opportunities in premier institutions. Bright students, who have returned to India, maybe accommodated in the IITs and other institutes to help them complete their education,” says Anil Sahasrabudhe, chairman, AICTE, who is also a part of the committee. The committee will also prepare mechanisms for increasing intake of foreign students in well-performing universities.

Separate sub-committees consisting of directors of IITs, NITs, IIITs, Council of Architecture (CoA) and VCs of central universities will also be created. “To strengthen the ‘Study in India’ initiative, we need to have an Indian network of international educators. Many universities do not even have dedicated offices for the international students. Institutional reforms are required to make sure that the number of foreign students choosing India for higher education increases,” says Pankaj Mittal, secretary general of the Association of Indian Universities (AIU). The institutes may have to start multidisciplinary innovative programmes, twinning and joint degrees, and cross-country centres to help foreign students.

Bhushan Patwardhan, vice chairman, UGC, says, “Internationalisation has become imperative but there has been no substantial change in the last decade. The new NEP emphasises internationalisation of education and retention of students in the country. Not just premier institutes but universities across the country need to transform themselves to welcome more foreign students.”

Discontinuing MPhil may improve research quality

Discontinuing MPhil may improve research quality

c-Sheetal.Banchariya@timesgroup.com

03.08.2020

As per the recently approved National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, students will no longer be able to enrol in Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programmes. The minimum eligibility for a PhD will now either be a four-year undergraduate (UG) programme with research, or a master’s degree after a three-year UG degree. Academicians call it a welcome move as MPhil was not “effective” in training students for research.

Besides, the numbers of students opting for MPhil programmes were anyway declining. Around 43,267 students enrolled in MPhil programmes in 2016-17, which dipped to 34,109 in 2017-18 and 30,692 in 2018-19. RK Kohli, vice chancellor of Central University of Punjab (CUP), says that MPhil was a waste of time for students and faculty. “There are no fellowships available for MPhil students and it is extremely difficult to conduct substantial research in around two years of course duration. Discontinuing MPhil may help in improving the quality of research as only serious researchers will commit 4-5 years to a PhD degree.” Many universities that did not see merit in MPhil had already discontinued the programme even before the new policy was announced. The CUP had de-listed MPhil in 2015 while the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) had delinked MPhil course two years ago.

“MPhil is just a preparatory course, which does not provide much skilling in research. Research is a continuous process and cannot be completed within two years. Besides, the young researchers are more interested in joining integrated MPhil-PhD degrees, which is why stand-alone MPhil courses have lost their relevance with time,” says Venugopal KR, vice chancellor, Bangalore University.

Will NEP 2020 transform the future generations

Will NEP 2020 transform the future generations

Aimed to significantly overhaul several aspects of Indian education system, the new education policy might dissect out cramming, reports Priyanka Srivastava

03.08.2020

The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 introduced recently is set to change the face of education ecosystem. In the coming time, we may also hope to see bright young adults with innovative approach towards work and life, instead of pawns obsessing over marks.

Thirty-four years ago, in 1986 when the Rajiv Gandhi-led government changed the education policy, the focus was on ‘operation blackboard’ to strengthen the primary school system. Keeping in view the changing demands, the NEP 2020 now aims to offer skill-oriented education. Change is possible if all the measures introduced are implemented in a structured way. Kiran Hazarika, member of University Grants Commission (UGC), Principal, Tengakhat College, Assam, who was associated with the formulation of NEP is hopeful of the positive outcome in another decade. “This will lead to liberal education in the coming times. We will save the youth from unnecessarily running after degrees,” he tells Education Times.

“The transformation of education will modify the psyche of the coming generation as we will have an educated population armed with innovative thinking,” says Hazarika.

Knowledge Hub

Academics have hailed the policy as an important step to transform India into a knowledge hub. “Besides incorporating the ethos of Indian philosophy, it has also incorporated Sustainable Development Goals at the undergraduate level. Inclusive education from foundation to professional level will help in the long run,” says TG Sitharam, director, IIT Guwahati.

Entrepreneurial mindset

With most sectors moving to the digital platform, India needs to create an army of tech-enabled youngsters willing to take calculated risks. “Emphasis on critical thinking, creativity and stronger conceptual understanding will encourage students to become self-motivated learners,” says Byju Raveendran, Founder & CEO, BYJU'S.

Since Indian students were branded as products of rote-learning, systematic change towards innovation may prove beneficial. “Increased focus on the application rather memorisation is much needed. Having championed the inclusion of 21st century skills in the curriculum, things will change,” says Sriram Subramanian, CEO, Callido Learning, Mumbai.

Multi-disciplinary learning

As the NEP emphasises on offering the exit-re-entry option in HEIs, credit transfer across universities and making all streams equal has come as a breather for students who were getting suffocated of the water-tight compartmentalisation. “Rote learning is passé and with vocational training making headway into mainstream curriculum, a mechanical/electrical engineer can finally fix a motorcycle/fan. Universities will no longer just survive on students’ tuition fees but research funding from corporates,” says Rajesh Panda, founder & CEO, Corporate Gurukul, Singapore.

Discontinuing MPhil may improve quality of research


Discontinuing MPhil may improve quality of research

c-Sheetal.Banchariya@timesgroup.com

03.08.2020

As per the recently approved National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, students will no longer be able to enrol in Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programmes. The minimum eligibility for a PhD will now either be a fouryear undergraduate (UG) programme with research, or a master’s degree after a threeyear UG degree. Academicians call it a welcome move as MPhil was not “effective” in training researchers.

Besides, the numbers of students opting for MPhil programmes were anyway declining. Around 43,267 students enrolled in MPhil programmes in 2016-17, which dipped to 34,109 in 2017-18 and 30,692 in 2018-19.

RK Kohli, vice chancellor, Central University of Punjab (CUP), says ,“There are no fellowships available for MPhil students and it is extremely difficult to conduct substantial research in around two years. Discontinuing MPhil may help in improving the quality of research as only serious researchers will commit 4-5 years to a PhD.”

The CUP had de-listed MPhil in 2015 while the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) had delinked MPhil course two years ago.

Teachers urge SC not to permit final exams in Maha

Teachers urge SC not to permit final exams in Maha

Hemali.Chhapia@timesgroup.com

Mumbai:3.8.2020

The state teachers’ federation has filed an intervention in Supreme Court against University Grants Commission, stating that final exams cannot be held in Maharashtra.

Seeking quashing of a UGC notification that says all universities must conduct final exams by September-end, Maharashtra Federation of University and College Teachers’ Organisation stated it would not be logistically feasible to conduct exams. It said if 11 lakh students in final year are to be seated in exam halls by maintaining social distancing, 60,000-70,000 teachers would be needed as supervisors, in addition to 1 lakh support staff like peons, clerks, laboratory attendants.

“Since 2014, recruitment has stopped and 50% posts of teachers are vacant. Many teachers were on yearly contracts and having lost jobs in or after March 2020 will not be available for exam duties. This will impact exams and assessment,” they said.

Starting the process now would push deadlines too, stated MFUCTO. “The process requires an additional 45 days, so there will be delays, because of which the new semester may not begin until December. This will result in students being unable to enter the job market because of non-declaration of results and issue of mark-sheets. Admissions to higher classes will also get delayed.” Earlier, they had informed the state government that if final exams are held, faculty will not be able to participate.

MFUCTO also trashed the idea of conducting online exams.

NBE Notification

E-pass a must for air travellers to Tamil Nadu

E-pass a must for air travellers to Tamil Nadu

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:03.08.2020

The Airports Authority of India (AAI) has requested all airlines to ensure passengers boarding domestic flights to Chennai and other airports in Tamil Nadu should hold a TN e-pass and also register with the state government website. Earlier, airports here were offering a provision to register for an epass after landing at Chennai and other airports.

The move comes after the state government revised its guidelines for travellers in August.

It also says that all passengers arriving from Maharashtra, Gujarat and Delhi will be tested for Covid-19 on arrival at Chennai.

UGC asks varsities and colleges to create awareness about NEP

UGC asks varsities and colleges to create awareness about NEP

Chennai:3.8.2020

The University Grants Commission (UGC) has asked universities and colleges to create awareness about National Education Policy 2020 among teachers, students and other stakeholders in the higher education system. In a circular, the commission also requested the universities and colleges to conduct webinars and related online activities to discuss the policy highlights and implications of NEP 2020.

UGC also sent the policy document along with salient features for the educational institutions.

It further asked the universities to share the activities on the university activity monitoring portal of UGC. TNN

Sunday, August 2, 2020

All Unaided Private Educational Institutions "Establishment" For The Purpose Of ESI Act: Madras HC

All Unaided Private Educational Institutions "Establishment" For The Purpose Of ESI Act: Madras HC 


1 Aug 2020 5:34 PM 

All private educational institutions will come under the purview of the ESI Act and will be treated as an 'establishment' for all purposes under it, the Madras High Court has ruled. 

The order was passed by an all-women bench of Justice Pushpa Sathyanarayana, Justice Anita Sumanth and Justice P T Asha, dismissing petitions moved by educational institutions, seeking to strike down a November 26, 2010 order of the Tamil Nadu government extending the provisions of ESI Act to the private educational institutions. 

"Whether unaided private educational institutions can be treated to be an establishment within the meaning of Section 1(5) of the Employees State Insurance Act, 1948 and be capable of being governed by notifications issued under the 1948 Act as being an establishment being covered within the word 'otherwise'?", the full bench sought to answer. 

The High Court quoted Philosopher Aristotle as saying, "the one exclusive sign of thorough knowledge is the power of teaching. Teaching profession contributes to the elimination of poverty, significantly, through the provision of education. The teachers and their supporting staff in any educational institution should be given the utmost privileges in particular, any statutory benefit". 

There is no definition for the word "Establishment" in the ESI Act, noted the bench, observing that the ESI Act being a socio-economic welfare oriented legislation, it has brought with it the avowed objective of securing social and economic justice and upholding human dignity and that it is not a law regulating education. 

The bench proceeded to read section 1(5) of the Act, which stipulates that the appropriate Government may extend the provisions of this Act or any of them, to any other establishment, or class of establishments, industrial, commercial, agricultural or otherwise. 

Asserting that it is always the endeavour of the Courts that the social perspective must play upon the interpretative process, the bench opined that the ESI Act can treat the private educational institutions as 'establishments' coming within the meaning of the Act and the term 'otherwise' has clearly been placed to specify that genus of establishments is not restricted to those organisations, which are industrial, commercial or agricultural only, but also includes organisations like educational institutions. 

No overlap between the ESI and two State enactments occupying the field 

"Whether the State Government can extend the applicability of the ESI Act, a Central Act, to educational institutions, when the conditions of service in the field of education find place in two State enactments namely, the Tamil Nadu Recognised Private Schools Act, and the Tamil Nadu Private Colleges Regulation Act, 1976?", wondered the Court. 

Section 1(5) of the ESI Act enables the State Government to extend the scheme to any establishments or class of establishments unaided educational institutions being no exception, remarked the bench. 

As to whether the ESI Act, the 1973 Act and the 1976 Act are operating in the same field, the bench appreciated that the ESI Act is a pre-constitutional law enacted in exercise of powers vested on the Federal Legislature in terms of Entry 27 of List III (Part II) of Schedule VII prescribed under Section 100 of the Government of India Act, 1935. Schedule VII of the Constitution distributes powers between the State legislature and the Parliament. Under Section 100 of the 1935 Act, the power to legislate on the subject of insurance was vested with the Federal legislature in terms of Entry 37 of List I of Schedule VII. 

However, post framing of the Constitution, the power to legislate qua insurance is solely vested with the Parliament in terms of Entry 47 of List I of Schedule VII under Article 246. Whereas, Entry 25 of the Concurrent List deals with Education, while Entry 23 and 24 deal with "Social security and social insurance; employment and unemployment" and "Welfare of labour including conditions of work, provident funds, employers' liability, Workmen's Compensation, invalidity and old age pensions and maternity benefits" respectively. 

"Thus, it is clear that the ESI Act can be said to be a Central Act falling under Entries 23 and 24 of the Schedule VII", concluded the bench. 

It further observed that the 1973 Act is not intended to legislate the subjects covered under Entries 23 and 24, but only with respect to Entry 25, i.e., "education". In order to regulate the functioning of the private schools and the service conditions of teachers and other employees, it was enacted. It cannot be stated that it automatically excludes any other law covering the insurance under Entry 47 of List I or Entires 23 and 24 of List III, merely because Section 19 of the said Act refers to insurance. 

"The natural corollary of the above discussion would be that there is no repugnancy between the provisions of the ESI Act and the 1973 Act, as they entire operate in different fields", the court concluded. 

It is also stated that the State Government is yet to frame any insurance cover to the teachers of private unaided schools and even to the teachers working in self-finance stream in aided institutions. "...it is disheartening to state that they have been prolonging the implementation of social welfare legislation for nearly a decade, by stalling the impugned notification, which would otherwise have benefited", said the bench. 

The bench was of the view that the power under Section 1(5) of the ESI Act has been used by the State to implement what it had envisaged under Section 19 of the 1973 Act, and therefore, there is no illegality in the manner in which, the State has exercised its power, since the overriding provision itself allows for such an order to be made. 

Noting that perhaps instead of enacting a separate rule in terms of insurance, which would further delay the process, the State Government had thought it fit to extend the already overdue benefit to the employees of educational institutions by issuing the Government Order, the bench continued to observe that even assuming that the State Government had introduced a statute qua insurance under the 1973 Act, it would not lead to repugnancy between the said rule and the ESI Act in view of the proviso to Section 17 of the 1976 Act. "A Government Order or enactment, whichever provides better scheme would survive, while the lesser one would automatically become inapplicable as per the proviso which entitles the employee of better benefits", said the court. 

Therefore, it held that apparently there is no repugnancy between the 1973 Act and 1976 Act and the G.O.Ms.No.237 issued under Section1(5) of the ESI Act and hence, no amendment is required to be made either under the ESI Act or under the State Acts to implement/enforce the G.O.Ms.No.237, dated 26.11.2010 

"When the ESI Act (in its section 61) has already excluded the operation of any other enactment in the field that is governed by the ESI Act, a State cannot enact any Act or rule providing benefits that are similar to the benefits provided under the ESI Act. Even otherwise, Section 87 of the ESI Act provides for exemption for those employer providing better benefits to the employees of educational institutions", pointed out the bench. 

No Discrimination between private unaided educational institutions on the one hand and the public and government aided private educational institutions 

"Whether the State discriminated between private unaided educational institutions on the one hand and the public and government aided private educational institutions on the other by issuing a notification applying the same only to the former, which may amount to an act of invidious discrimination under Article 14 of the Constitution of India so as to enable the petitioners to resist the impugned notification dated 26.11.2010 ?, considered the bench 

The bench appreciated that after the advent of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2005, the question of aided or unaided goes, as all the schools are mandated to surrender 25% of their seats and get aid from the government for the Students admitted under the RTE Act. 

"The proviso to Section 1(4) of the ESI Act came to be inserted with effect from 20.10.1989 and after the said amendment, the applicability of the provisions of the ESI Act to the Government owned or controlled establishments is not automatic, when the Government is of the opinion that the benefits given to the employees under those establishments are substantially similar or superior to the benefits provided under the said Act", the bench observed. 

Finally, the bench recorded that a January, 2013 notification issued by the State, has extended the provision of the ESI Act to public, private and aided educational institutions as well, and therefore, there cannot be any discrimination, as alleged. 

சட்ட பல்கலை சேர்க்கை: 5 முதல் விண்ணப்பம்

சட்ட பல்கலை சேர்க்கை: 5 முதல் விண்ணப்பம்

Added : ஆக 02, 2020 00:34

சென்னை; 'சட்ட படிப்பில், மாணவர் சேர்க்கைக்கான விண்ணப்பங்கள், வரும், 5ம் தேதி முதல் வழங்கப்படும்' என, தமிழக சட்ட பல்கலை அறிவித்துள்ளது.

தமிழ்நாடு டாக்டர் அம்பேத்கர் சட்ட பல்கலையின் பதிவாளர், விஜயலட்சுமி வெளியிட்ட அறிவிப்பு:தமிழகத்தில், ஐந்தாண்டு சட்டப் படிப்புகளுக்கான மாணவர் சேர்க்கைக்கு, வரும், 5ம் தேதி முதல் விண்ணப்பங்கள் வழங்கப்பட உள்ளன.

மாணவர்கள் தங்களுக்கான விண்ணப்பங்களை, www.tndalu.ac.in என்ற இணையதளத்தில், வரும், 5ம் தேதி முதல் பதிவிறக்கம் செய்து கொள்ளலாம். பல்கலை மற்றும் கல்லுாரிகளில், 10ம் தேதி முதல் நேரடியாகவும் பெற்றுக் கொள்ளலாம். நிரப்பிய விண்ணப்பங்களை, செப்., 4க்குள் சமர்ப்பிக்க வேண்டும். மூன்றாண்டு சட்டப்படிப்பு மற்றும் முதுநிலை சட்ட மேற்படிப்புக்கான சேர்க்கை விண்ணப்பங்கள் வழங்கும் தேதி, பல்கலை இணையதளத்தில் அறிவிக்கப்படும்.இவ்வாறு, அறிவிப்பில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

All Unaided Private Educational Institutions 'Establishment' For The Purpose Of ESI Act: Madras HC [Read Judgment]

All Unaided Private Educational Institutions 'Establishment' For The Purpose Of ESI Act: Madras HC [Read Judgment]: All private educational institutions will come under the purview of the ESI Act and will be treated as an 'establishment' for all purposes under it, the Madras High Court has ruled.The order was...

Nilgiris medical college a step closer to reality

Nilgiris medical college a step closer to reality

Environment Ministry gives stage-1 nod to build facility inside the eco-sensitive region

Published: 02nd August 2020 05:35 AM |


Express News Service

CHENNAI: The State government’s plan to build a medical college in the Niligiris has received in-principle approval from the Union environment ministry. The regional empowered committee of the Central ministry has accorded stage-1 nod to build the facility inside the ecologically sensitive Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve.

A decision in this regard was made at a meeting held on April 17 at the ministry’s regional office in Chennai. A total of 25 acres of forest land would be diverted for the purpose. The committee, while recommending the approval, has set seven specific conditions.

No tree of spontaneous growth shall be felled and no cutting shall be carried out without prior approval of the Hill Area Conservation Authority. “Felling of trees with more than 60 cm girth may be avoided and translocating of trees may be carried out wherever possible.” No residential constructions shall be built on the diverted forest.

In case any dispute arises over the land considered for diversion or over the structures claimed to be built by Hindustan Photo Films Limited (HPFL), which are existing within the forest area proposed for diversion, the State government shall take full responsibility and resolve the disputes appropriately, the committee said. 

Government sources told TNIE that nine structures build by the HPFL are situated in the forest land proposed to be diverted and they are free of any occupancy. “The Nilgiris district collector, in a letter dated February 19 this year, has submitted to the committee that the entire extent of 292.71 acres of land previously given to the HPFL has been resumed and handed over to the forest department,” sources said.

Post inspection, Anna varsity releases list of seats, affiliated colleges

Post inspection, Anna varsity releases list of seats, affiliated colleges

Anna University has published a list of courses and the number of seats in each affiliated college for the current academic year.

Published: 02nd August 2020 05:35 AM |

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Anna University has published a list of courses and the number of seats in each affiliated college for the current academic year. Some institutions have applied for affiliation to the university but have not submitted the statutory documents.

These institutions are not included in the list. The varsity, in a statement, said the list will be updated when such colleges submit the documents. The last date for granting approval is August 15. 

It may be noted that registrations for the Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions (TNEA) 2020 started on July 15. A top official from the university said that they have already granted affiliation to over 400 institutions. The inspection process was carried out online this year owing to the lockdown. The list of affiliated colleges and seats can be found at: https://www.annauniv.edu/cai/Options.php.

Madurai doctor loses Rs 2.1 crore to ‘mask sellers’

Madurai doctor loses Rs 2.1 crore to ‘mask sellers’

Conmen are as virulent as the virus itself during the pandemic — this is a lesson a doctor from Vadipatti learnt after falling prey to frauds not once but twice within a couple of months.

Published: 02nd August 2020 05:49 AM |

By Express News Service

MADURAI: Conmen are as virulent as the virus itself during the pandemic — this is a lesson a doctor from Vadipatti learnt after falling prey to frauds not once but twice within a couple of months. Scam operators pretending to be representatives of overseas mask manufacturers, cheated the owner of a private hospital of Rs 2.1 crore over two months starting May.

The incident came to light when the 44-year-old doctor approached the District Crime Branch with a complaint, sources said. A Hyderbad-based middleman going by the name, Uday Shankar Parupalli, approached the doctor on May 22 and offered him help to purchase N95 mask in bulk from a Kyrgyzstan- based company at reduced price.

Lured by the offer, the doctor placed an order for 2 lakh masks with the company online. Later, a man named Surya Narayanan, who claimed to be the commercial director of the company, contacted the doctor and confirmed the order. As instructed, the doctor paid Rs 90 lakh, a part of the total amount, in several transactions until July 3.

Madurai doctor loses Rs 2 crore to ‘mask’ men

In June, the doctor placed a second order online for 5 lakh N95 masks with a private company in The Netherlands. Shortly after placing the order, a man named Patrick Van Dick, who claimed to be from the sales section of the company, contacted him to discuss the sale and the transaction. A few days later, another man named Peter Booths, who introduced himself as the manager of the company, contacted him and confirmed the order. The duo asked the doctor to pay 20 per cent of the amount as advance, and he paid $1,60,000 in several transactions between June 9 and June 16. The men sent him an airway bill and demanded a further payment of 30 per cent of the total amount; they said the remaining 50 per cent could be paid after the order reached the Chennai Airport.

Something amiss

In July, the doctor received a document sent by Uday Shankar and Surya Narayanan. A scrutiny proved that the document was fake. Alarmed, the doctor contacted the duo and demanded his money, but to no avail. Around the same time, the doctor contacted ‘The Netherlands’ company, to which he had by then paid more than Rs 1 crore, and tried to cancel the order; both Dick and Booths stopped responding to his calls.

They neither supplied the masks nor returned the advance amount. Based on the complaint lodged by the doctor, the DCB registered two separate cases against seven persons under Sections 120 (B), 406, 420 and 34 of IPC. Police sources said that since foreign nationals are involved in the crime, the embassies concerned should be contacted for further investigation. It may be noted that two businessmen in Mumbai and a doctor in Hyderabad had lost their money in similar frauds while trying to purchase N95 masks and PPE kits online.

An ST with SC certificate: An issue even govt officials cannot solve?

An ST with SC certificate: An issue even govt officials cannot solve?

Even as Jayaraj steps inside the RDO’s office, an employee sitting there will look away from him and into the calendar.

Published: 02nd August 2020 05:50 AM 


Express News Service

CUDDALORE: Even as Jayaraj steps inside the RDO’s office, an employee sitting there will look away from him and into the calendar. He will announce a fresh date, even before Jayaraj can ask about the status of his community certificate. This has become a ritual over the past 18 months. The 21-year-old mathematics graduate has lost all hope, but has not given up his attempts. 



Back in 2018, Jayaraj was an inspiration for the children and youngsters in Samy Nagar, an Irula hamlet in the outskirts of Cuddalore. He had obtained an ST community certificate and was determined to study further. He finished graduation, without major hassles. However, then arose a community certificate conundrum.

“I went through my entire schooling without a community certificate,” explains Jayaraj. “Later, I realised that it would be helpful to have an ST certificate, as I would get fee concessions, scholarships, and other government benefits. So, I applied for an SC certificate. I knew I belonged to the ST category, but I just thought it would be easier securing an SC paper.” He got an SC certificate. However, later, officials conducted inquiries and gave him an ST certificate too, in 2018. Now, he has two community certificates in hand, and his ordeal has been about getting the SC certificate cancelled. “I have been running pillar to post, and it’s taking a toll on my physical, mental, and financial health,” he says. 

The trouble, activists say, is with officials taking terminologies too literally. Initial definition and general perception is that Irulas are hill-tribes. But, many of them migrated or were forcibly brought down to the plains over the years

Jayaraj, so far, has submitted three letters and five petitions. “Over the time, officials have misplaced them,” he claims. “When I approached the RDO office, they told me to submit both my certificates. But, I was apprehensive, as they had misplaced by petitions and documents earlier. It took the officials nearly two months to even see my documents.” Jayaraj says he has made multiple trips to Chennai and regular visits to the RDO office.

“They are yet to cancel my SC certification.” Jayaraj was recently asked to go see the Cuddalore Tehsildar. “But when I went there, they said they were unaware of the procedures through which they can sort out my case. I am deeply worried. If even the officials do not know what to do, what will I do?” Jayaraj at least had the grit to fight. Three of his friends gave up and discontinued studies after class 12. “I kept persuading them not to give up. But, their family situations were such that they could not afford this fight. It consumes too much time and money. They gave up.”

Agreeing that there have been some problems in issuing community certificates to Irulas, Director of TN Tribal Welfare Department Ritto Cyriac says that he has been regularly instructing revenue department officers to consider deserving cases without any undue delay

Chennai private hospital loses its licence for fleecing patients

Chennai private hospital loses its licence for fleecing patients

According to a statement, Health Minister C Vijayabaskar, after receiving complaints against the hospital, had inspected the facility.

Published: 02nd August 2020 05:39 AM |

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Despite the State government fixing a price cap on Covid-19 treatment in private hospitals, some of them continue to charge their patients exorbitantly, thereby making the most out of the pandemic crisis.

One such instance came to light on Saturday when the State government temporarily revoked the permission given to the Bewell Private Hospital at Kilpauk, to treat Covid-19 patients. The hospital allegedly overcharged a Covid patient to the tune of Rs 12.20 lakh for 19 days of treatment. 

According to a statement, Health Minister C Vijayabaskar, after receiving complaints against the hospital, had inspected the facility. The visit revealed that the hospital indeed overcharged the patients and did not adhere to the price cap set by the State. Hence, the licence of the hospital was revoked temporarily. 

The State government fixed rates for private hospitals to provide Covid-19 treatment after reports emerged that some hospitals were fleecing their patients. According to the Government Order in this regard, Grade 1& 2 hospitals can charge a maximum of Rs 7,000 in general ward per day, while Grade 3& 4 hospitals can charge Rs 5,000 per day. 

The order clearly mentions that private hospitals must strictly not charge more than the prescribed limit and that the decision has been taken after considering the requests placed by the State branch of Indian Medical Association (IMA) and media reports on private hospitals going overboard.

Earlier, the State had included the treatment of Covid-19 patients in private hospitals under the Chief Minister’s Health Insurance Scheme. The treatment is provided free-of-cost at all designated government hospitals. The families that have already enrolled and are eligible under the Chief Minister’s Comprehensive Health Insurance scheme can avail treatment as per the announcements.

Asha Bhosle files complaint after ₹2L power bill

Asha Bhosle files complaint after ₹2L power bill

Mumbai:  02.08.2020

Singer Asha Bhosle filed a complaint with state power utility firm MSEDCL after receiving a bill of Rs 2 lakh for her bungalow in Lonavla. Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Company Ltd (MSEDCL) stated that the bill was generated per the ‘actual meter reading’, and that this had been communicated to the singer. MSEDCL has been receiving flak from consumers for ‘inflated’ bills in June.

Bhosle received a power bill of Rs 2,08,870 for June, while the bill for the same house for the months May and April were Rs 8,855.44 and Rs 8,996.98, respectively. According to the power consumption history mentioned in the bill, the singer had received a bill of Rs 6,395.66 for June 2019.

“We received a complaint from Bhosle for an inflated bill. Acting on the same, a senior official from the Pune circle personally went there [Bhosle’s Lonavla bungalow] to check the reading. It was verified that the meter reading was correct and so was the bill,” said an MSEDCL spokesperson. He added that after conducting a proper investigation, it was found that the bungalow was not closed and that shoots were taking place there.

Bhosle was not available for comment. This is not the first time she has complained about inflated electricity bills. In 2016, Bhosale had complained about receiving an exorbitant bill for the bungalow, which was “not much in use”. The then energy minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule had then assured Bhosle that he would look into the matter. PTI

Study: Depression among youth high during lockdown


Study: Depression among youth high during lockdown

Sushil.Rao@timesgroup.com

Hyderabad:  02.08.2020

About 33% of youngsters in the age group of 16-20 were either depressed or stressed during the period from April 1 to May 12 when lockdown was strictly enforced. In a study ‘Psychosocial impact of Covid-19 lockdown on mental well-being among 11 states of India: A Markov model approach’, 22% of respondents had shown signs of depression, while anxiety was seen among 15% of respondents and stress in 10% of them. These findings were published in the ‘Journal of Psychiatry and Psychiatric Disorders’ on July 29.

V Vishwak Reddy, assistant professor, department of psychiatry, Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences, Narketpally, who was part of the group that conducted the study, said 27.5% of 891 respondents had exhibited either depression, anxiety or stress. “This is a very high percentage,” Dr Vishwak told STOI.

“Lack of experience in handling a crisis situation, excessive usage of social media as well as inherent restlessness induced by being house-bound can possibly contribute to the significant high rate of depression in the age group of 16-20 years,” the study said. A total of 891 people responded from 11 states across the country and 90% of them were from the five states in the south.

“Amid unprecedented health and socio-economic crisis emanating from the Covid-19 lockdown in India from March 25 and extending into its fourth phase is a matter of great concern to mental health professionals,” the study said, adding that the aim was to evaluate the psychological impact during the pandemic.

The study was done by consultant psychiatrist Satya Revanth Karri of Nalgonda, Tabitha Jezreel and Shadan Afeen, PG students, department of psychiatry, KIMS, and Praveen Khairkar, professor, department of psychiatry at KIMS.

NEWS TODAY 21.12.2024