Sunday, September 5, 2021

The Teacher Who Inspired Me


The Teacher Who Inspired Me

This Teachers’ Day, Sunday Times shines a light on educationists who inspired some of the leading lights of our generation

Learning the value of common salt, and excellence

NR Narayana Murthy,

Founder, Infosys

My belief is that a nation is only as good as its culture. Its achievements in every field — science, arts, sports, economy and education — are dependent on the kind of culture its citizens have embraced. There are several factors that influence the formation of a desirable culture — societal leaders, family, teachers, bosses, co-workers and friends. Family elders and early teachers play a crucial role in forming the culture of a person. I believe that primary and secondary school teachers have the biggest influence on the impressionable minds of youngsters. My culture was very heavily influenced by my parents, a secondary school teacher, an engineering college professor, and, most importantly, my boss at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. I must confess that the actions of these people rather than their words were what left an indelible mark on my psyche.

Sri K V Narayan (KVN), my high school headmaster at Sharada Vilas High School, Mysore during 1959-1961, taught me the most important lesson which came in handy in founding and nurturing Infosys between 1981 and 2014. One day about sixty years ago, KVN was conducting a Chemistry experiment with common salt. KVN was extremely careful in minimising the amount of common salt he poured into the test tube. My friend, sitting next to me, burst out laughing. KVN asked my friend what made him laugh. Children are generally honest. My friend said he found it bizarre to watch KVN being so stingy with inexpensive common salt. KVN said that the common salt he used was a community property, it belonged to everybody in the school, and it was the duty of every member of the school to treat it with utmost care. KVN further offered to take my friend to KVN’s own home after the classes were over, and give my friend a jar full of common salt free since it was KVN’s personal property. By his action, KVN wrote indelibly, on a set of impressionable young minds, that a society would make progress only when its citizens treat community property more carefully than they treat their private property. The strong force for the successful Infosys journey from 1981 to 2014 was our conviction that putting the interest of Infosys in our decisions today would lead to the betterment of every Infoscion tomorrow. Alas, KVN is no more.

Dr N Krishna Murthy (NK) was my teacher at the National Institute of Engineering, Mysore, between 1962 and 1967. NK was excellence-personified in everything he did — his eloquence; his subject matter expertise; his passion to make the dullest student understand every bit of what he taught in the classroom; his beautiful handwriting on the blackboard; and how hard he prepared for his lecture. When I asked NK why he was obsessed with excellence, he said he had experienced several extraordinary teachers in the US when he was a doctoral student, and that he wanted to be the best teacher in the entire world and not just in India. The initial seeds of the quest for global excellence of Infosys were sown in me by him. My respects to him.

Prof. Krishnayya (JGK), my boss and a professor at the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIMA), imparted several lessons on leadership to me. The most important lesson JGK taught me was the importance of starting every transaction on a zero base. One morning in 1970, he and I had a strong and angry disagreement on an issue. That evening, at 5 pm, he came to my room in a happy mood and invited me for a dinner. His demeanor was as if nothing had happened in the morning. I was flabbergasted. I asked him sheepishly whether he was not angry with me. He said he had forgotten that incident. He explained why it was important to start every transaction on a zero base and not carry the hysteresis of prior transactions to the current transaction. His advice to me was to live and learn. “Live and learn” is how I have tried my best to live life since then. I have committed many mistakes, introspected on them, learnt lessons, and tried my best not to repeat the same mistakes. JGK also taught me to use data and facts, and not opinions and biases, to decide each transaction; to hire juniors smarter than myself; and to create a hierarchy of ideas rather than a hierarchy of age and seniority in every discussion. JGK did not hector me about these lessons but etched them on my mind by his quiet actions. A Princeton professor, on a visit to Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, weaned me away from Control Theory to Computer Science. But, it was IIMA that added most to my development as a human being and as a professional. I thank teachers like JGK and Mohan Kaul, and colleagues like Subhash Bhatnagar, Late Rama Rao and Sharad Sharma for my development.

I have been lucky to know several respected leaders in many fields from all over the world. Many of these leaders have told me how their character was influenced by the actions of their teachers. No wonder, the 4,000-year-old Indian culture has immortalised the importance of teachers by the saying, ‘Acharya Devo Bhava’.

A heart surgeon should behave like a thief: Lesson from Mr Yates

Dr Devi Shetty, Chairman and Founder, Narayana Health

I owe my career to many teachers, but there is one person who made a huge difference in my life: my former boss Allen Yates, director of cardiac surgery at Guy’s Hospital, London, who trained me in 1980s, and under whom I worked as a registrar in cardio thoracic surgery.

When we do heart surgeries, it takes a minimum three hours, wherein, he would keep on talking about life. He once told me this as an important lesson for a heart surgeon: “When you open somebody’s chest, you should behave like a thief entering a house.” As I looked puzzled, he said, “The thief keeps the back door open, so that he can run away without getting caught, in case anyone finds him.”

Similarly in heart surgeries, the lesson is that one should keep the back door open. It’s better not to do the procedure and close the chest if the surgeon finds that the problem hasn’t been addressed, so that somebody more experienced can do the best thing for the patient. I am grateful to him for such insights.

When I told him that I was going back to India, he was disappointed. But he made it possible for me to get what I wanted in India. During my recruitment to a new Indian hospital, the owner of the hospital found me too young for heart surgery so Mr Yates even arranged for the owner to watch me doing a surgery at Guy’s Hospital. When I got an offer to head the cardiac unit in a Kolkata hospital, he even trained the entire operating staff for two months in Guy’s Hospital, London so that I could continue to work with the same team in India. He even sent five British nurses to manage the entire hospital for two years in Kolkata which made a huge difference.

When a prank gets thanks

Sadhguru, Founder, Isha Foundation

My most memorable teacher has been Miss Saraswati from Demonstration Multipurpose School in Mysore. I remember how I once pranked her. We were the first class that she handled and, being a new teacher, I am sure she was nervous. We wanted to do something to disrupt her life. She was talking to the class, facing the other side and leaning on my table. I felt inspired. I opened my pen and let out the ink on her starched white cotton saree, which very readily absorbed all of it. Of course, she did not notice. Probably someone in the staff room would have told her. After lunch hour, I was asked to come to the staff room. I went there, and she asked me for my pen. I gave it to her, thinking she was going to confiscate my empty pen as proof. She took out an ink bottle, filled my pen and gave it back to me. I said, ‘Thank you, ma’am,’ and went back to class. That one thing made me never forget that one teacher. There are many moments in school. Children should relish and enjoy all that because they don’t come back later.

Lillee: Legend with some life-changing advice

Javagal Srinath, Former cricketer

Since I was pursuing an engineering degree and cricket, there were many people who were instrumental in shaping my career and inspiring me. My club — Mysore Gymkhana had a huge impact on my life. My club secretary CS Subramanium was my real mentor. I could go to him for anything.

Australian legend Dennis Lillee was another great teacher. In the 1991-92 season, on my return from Australia, I took an eight-month break to go back to college. On my return, I played a domestic tournament. In a match, I went for 70 runs in 10 overs. It was a huge shock for me. After that, I went to the MRF Pace Foundation in Chennai to sort myself out. I couldn’t pitch in the right areas and the ball was all over the place. People started doubting my ability and even said the sting in my bowling was gone. Lillee said, ‘You bowl I’m watching you.’ After a few balls he told me, ‘You haven’t bowled for over six months and without practice for so long, nobody in this world can put the ball in the right areas.’ To grow, you need that kind of advice, and the mind to accept it.

Mother as well as chess guru

Viswanathan Anand, Five-time world chess champion

My first teacher (my mother) was also the one who had the greatest influence on me. She was the one who taught me the game and made sure I went to a chess club. The simple rules she told me at the beginning are still very important. One was to go and play as often as possible. That advice is golden and is still true till this day. The more you play, the more you practice and the better you get. The second was that she encouraged me to learn from my mistakes. The way she put it was: after a game write down your thoughts quickly and do this in a disciplined way. This is incredibly useful if you want to analyse and see where you can improve. It is difficult to separate out what my mother inspired me as a teacher and as a mother, but these are things I remember the most and I still think it’s the best advice I got.

Importance of admitting your mistakes

Soumya Swaminathan,

Chief Scientist, WHO

One of the lessons I learnt from my class teacher when I was in Class 11 was the importance of being truthful to yourself and to others. She taught us to believe in what we said, and to admit when we go wrong in our judgement. She told us to take the responsibility and have the willingness to correct our views if there was new evidence, data or if some confronted us with facts. She taught us to be humble enough to accept mistakes and graciously accept the right view. This is a life lesson I learnt from my teacher Rosline Wilson when I was in Springdales School in Delhi.

Sparking curiosity in learning

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw,

Founder, Biocon

I consider myself lucky to have had Neville Gower as one of my lecturers at the Ballarat College of Advanced Education in Melbourne, Australia, from where I graduated as a Master Brewer in 1975. Mr Gower, who taught us brewing fermentation and bio-engineering, once said: “Science is about curiosity-driven learning, and unless you are curious, you will never find science exciting.”

Those words are etched in my mind even today and have been formative in guiding me through every step of my entrepreneurial journey and moulding me as an independent thinker both personally and professionally. His words are behind my firm belief that India needs an education system that facilitates curiosity-driven education, where students are encouraged to explore and experiment, to think differently, to develop their own perspective and personality. This Teacher’s Day, I hope curiositybased learning will drive the pedagogy in our schools.

The four teachers who spotted something that others didn’t

Amit Chaudhuri, Author

There are four teachers who have inspired me through different stages of my life as a student. First, Mr Elisha, my history teacher at Cathedral School (Mumbai) who also taught me English. I wasn’t a very serious student and disliked school intensely but Mr Elisha — an erudite and elegant man from Kerala with a wonderful sense of irony — was very kind towards me and my writing. Not in a charitable sense but in terms of affection and respect, something one doesn’t usually feel from teachers who either patronise or reward you. In the school leaving character certificate that teachers mandatorily write for students, Mr Elisha wrote a little essay about what he thought of me. He was the only person in school who found something valuable in the person I was and that makes me think of him with affection and gratitude.

Next is Dan Jacobson, South African novelist at University College, London who became my tutor in my final year there. I was leading a life of utter eccentricity, never attending classes but he was extremely kind about me and my writing abilities. Two weeks before I graduated, I found out that he had been passing my essays to Karl Miller, head of the department and editor of the London Review of Books. In a life of complete loneliness and not having any plans, this was extraordinary generosity.

Pt Govind Prasad Jaipurwale was a teacher from whom I received the idea of subtlety of style and taiyyari in Hindustani classical music and his brother-in-law Hazarilalji became a midwife in my process of learning the complexities. He even sat for hours to tape thekas for me on a cassette for my practice on the eve of my departure to England. What was important in the gestures of all four was their ability to spot certain qualities not visible to others but could mean a lot to the student.

Shaped by the screen

Manish Malhotra, Fashion designer

Growing up, my most prominent teacher has been the movies. Films have been my primary inspiration; between the age of 5-15, I made it a point to watch every single movie released in the theatres of Bandra, and multiple times if I liked them. From the colours, clothes, makeup, music to the story, everything about it amazed me. Eventually, I picked up a new perspective every time I exited a cinema hall, thereby unknowingly honing my skills in fashion. Add to it my love for painting and modelling in my college days that helped me evolve in the practical world and enter the industry, where I continue to share the same love and passion for the films and my craft where I learn something new everyday.


FROM THE ALBUM: Murthy mounting a magnetic tape at the IIMA computer center in 1970







HC gets 4 new judges; women judges a record 14

HC gets 4 new judges; women judges a record 14

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:05.09.2021

The Madras high court is set to get four new judges, taking the sitting strength to 60 against the sanctioned strength of 75. With the induction of S Srimathi, the number of women judges in the court will go up to a record 14, highest in the country.

D Bharatha Chakravarthy, R Vijayakumar and Mohammed Shaffiq are the other three advocates recommended for elevation by the Supreme Court collegium.

Born on December 22, 1970, Vijayakumar was enrolled as an advocate on October 13, 1993. In 28 years of practising law, Vijayakumar specialised in civil, criminal, constitutional and service laws. He is a second-generation judge. His father Justice A Ramamurthy had been elevated to the high court from the subordinate judiciary in the state. Though he initially practised before the principal bench of the high court in Chennai, since August 2004, he shifted his practice to the Madurai bench of the court.

Bharatha Chakravarthy, enrolled as an advocate on July 15, 1993. He specialised in the original, appellate and criminal sides of the high court. In his 27 years of practice, he had also served as a public prosecutor for the Union territory of Puducherry for the high court.

This apart, he represented public sector undertakings such as the Puducherry Slum Clearance Board, Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Veterinary Sciences, Puducherry, and Andhra Pradesh Power Development Company Limited. He is also an accredited mediator and trainer empanelled with the Mediation & Conciliation Project Committee, Supreme Court of India.

Mohammed Shaffiq is a taxation law specialist who had served as government pleader for taxes.

Srimathi is also a Trichy Government Law College product, and enrolled as advocate in October 1989.


(Clockwise from top left): S Srimathi, R Vijayakumar, D Bharatha Chakravarthy

New IT rules to check fake news: Centre to Madras HC


New IT rules to check fake news: Centre to Madras HC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:05.09.2021

The Union government about its new Information Technology Rules said they were necessitated by fake messages that go viral, resulting in riots, lynching and other heinous crimes.

In its counter-affidavit, which is identical to those filed in other high courts, the Central gocernment said the rules would also empower ordinary users of digital platforms to seek redressal for their grievance and command accountability in case of infringement of their right.

It said the new rules would help curb crime against dignity of women and sexual abuse of children.

The counter-affidavit is in response to a batch of PILs filed in various courts, including Madras high court, challenging the validity of Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021.

In Madras high court, the pleas were moved by Carnatic vocalist T M Krishna and Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA).

270kg stale fish seized, destroyed; 13 samples sent for toxicity test


270kg stale fish seized, destroyed; 13 samples sent for toxicity test

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:05.09.2021

Food safety officials have seized more than 275 kg of stale fish from vendors and warehouses at the Kasimedu and Chintadripet markets. The fish were taken away in trucks and destroyed as per bio-medical waste norms, Chennai food safety designated officer Dr Satish said.

In addition, at least 13 samples were picked from vendors – big and small – as they were suspected to be laced with toxic preservatives such as formalin. The Tamil Nadu Food Safety Commissionerate had recently ordered inspection of fish markets following complaints from various sources including CM’s cells and collectorate about sale of stale fish and use of harmful preservatives, officials said. On Saturday, city teams inspected three major city markets in Kasimedu, Chintadripet and Nochikuppam. “Over 200kg of fish in Chitradripet storage units and another 75kg in Kasimedu stored in deep freezers or heaps of ice were found to be stale,” Dr Satish said.

Most of these fish varieties came from states such as Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Maharashtra and West Bengal by trains to Chennai. “Fish have a short shelf life and must be stored in the right temperature during transport. Since they are expensive, vendors use excess amounts of chemicals such as formalin,” Dr Satish said.

Public health experts warn that formalin, a derivative of formaldehyde, called “human carcinogen” is used to preserve bodies. When food laced with formalin is eaten, it triggers a metabolic process and produces toxins. While in the short term it can cause digestive problems, it may eventually cause diseases such as cancer.

Schools to keep complaint box for girls


Schools to keep complaint box for girls

Allow Boys Also To Report Sexual Abuse, Say Activists

Ragu.Raman@timesgroup.com

Chennai:05.09.2021

Following recommendations from the Madras high court, the school education department has directed all schools to keep complaint boxes to receive complaints about sexual offences from girl students. However, child rights activists say boys are also affected by such offences and should be allowed to drop complaints in those boxes.

"While confirming an order of a Mahila court sentencing a pastor to five years of rigorous imprisonment under the Pocso Act for sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl in 2019, the court opined that the female students were deterred from tendering complaints against teachers or school management regarding sexual offences considering future studies. The court recommended the state government to form a committee comprising of the district social welfare officer, secretary of the district legal services authority, a woman police officer not below the rank of superintendent of police, district educational officer, a woman psychiatrist and physician from government hospital," a letter from K Jeyalalitha, deputy secretary of the school education department, to the commissioner of school education said. It was forwarded to all the chief educational officers and district educational officers for taking action.

The court also directed to keep a complaint box regarding sexual offences in every educational institution and the key of the box should be kept under the control of the secretary, district legal services authority. "The box shall be inspected by the district legal services authority and district social welfare officer, once in a week and inquiry in the same, if prima-facie reveals any sexual offence, and forward it to the police station concerned," the letter further said.

"Apart from the above, it is suggested that the phone numbers of the jurisdictional all women police stations may also be displayed in the notice board of the educational institutions to create awareness and also seek police assistance, if required," it added.

It requested to take necessary action on the above directions of the high court of Madras and to form a committee to prevent sexual offences against girl students. The action taken report may be sent to the government at the earliest, the letter said.

Activists said the recommendations are not practical as it is not possible for district level officers to open the complaint boxes once a week in schools.

"We need a protection mechanism at schools. However, the complaint boxes should be gender neutral as boys are also equally affected. The boxes should be put up in a place where there are no CCTV cameras and accessible to children inside the school campus," said A Devaneyan, a child rights activist. He said children are facing different types of abuses including physical, emotional, sexual, neglect and online abuse. He said creating a child protection committee at school level will be a solution.

J Shyam Sundar, director of Institute of Social Education. said the complaint boxes may not encourage children to notify the sexual offence. "We need to empower the children to share their issues inside and outside the school freely at regular intervals. It will encourage children to share their issues rather than complaint boxes," he said.

TN to use 2,000kg temple jewels to generate income


TN to use 2,000kg temple jewels to generate income

Times of India Chennai

05.09.2021

TN will use 2,000kg of jewellery offered to temples over the past 10 years to generate funds for welfare schemes, reports Shanmughasundaram J. Gems and precious stones would be removed from small jewels and gold would be taken to government refinery in Mumbai for being converted into bars. The gold bars will then be deposited with banks to generate interest, HR & CE minister P K Sekar Babu said on Saturday. Big jewels will be retained for adorning deities. Three panels, headed by retired HC judges, will supervise the exercise. 

With Covid test stopover, Indian tourists can fly to Canada from Tuesday


With Covid test stopover, Indian tourists can fly to Canada from Tuesday

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Mumbai:05.09.2021

Fully vaccinated tourists from India can fly to Canada from September 7 as long as they stop in a third country to undergo an RT-PCR test. What has come to the rescue of passengers from India is that certain destinations in Middle East opened up to Indian tourists, so they can now transit from places like Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Turkey too relaxed entry norms and did away with 14-day mandatory quarantine for fully vaccinated passengers from India.

“In the past several months, Middle Eastern airports too were shut to Indians. So the only option before students travelling to Canada was to transit via countries like Egypt and Mexico, where they underwent an RT-PCR test. With Canada open to tourists from India as well, a holiday travel itinerary with a short stop in Dubai or Abu Dhabi could be planned,’’ said Anoop Kanuga from Bathija Travels.

Fares for travel to Canada with a transit halt in a third country were comparatively cheap too. For travel this month-end and return in mid-October, the return fare on offer on the Mumbai-Toronto route was a transit halt in, say, London was priced at ₹80,000- ₹90,000. For a transit halt in Middle East, the economical options were available only 3-4 weeks down the line.

In case of Canada and Turkey, entry has been permitted only to passengers who have taken both doses of Covishield, at least 14 days before arrival. To enter Canada, passengers have to undergo a pre-arrival RT-PCR test taken no more than 72 hours before their arrival in the country.

Full report on www.toi.in

Some await vax certificate, others get incorrect ones

Some await vax certificate, others get incorrect ones

Komal.Gautham@timesgroup.com

Chennai:05.09.2021

Radhika got the first dose of the Covishield vaccine at Alwarpet in June, but didn’t get her certificate. Now, the Cowin portal says the 21-year-old hasn’t been vaccinated at all.

Several others are in a similar situation. One had to get vaccinated a third time because staff at a Greater Chennai Corporation centre didn’t enter his details into the portal while administering the first dose. Another person was given a Covishield certificate after taking a Covaxin shot. The civic body has been getting at least 50 such complaints almost daily since the vaccination drive began, said an official.

Reasons are aplenty. Lack of trained data entry operators, problems with network and Wi-Fi, website traffic and lack of adequate staff. “Even if the website isn’t working, the staff may ask the person to get vaccinated and may forget to upload the details on the portal later. Sometimes, they aren’t registered at all. And wrong entries by staff are common,” said a corporation official, adding that efforts are made to try and help those with grievances.

Residents say there should be a common portal or a specific grievance mechanism. Umanath V of Mogappair completed both doses of vaccination, but the portal didn’t accept the second dose because his age was entered wrongly. “I have been asked to go to Ripon Buildings for correction. Why are we faced with so much hassle for their mistake,” he asked. Bharath Ragunathan of Kodambakkam got a Covaxin shot with his Aadhaar card but a Covishield certificate and was asked for his PAN card to change it.

As per the Cowin portal, until September 3, 50.8 lakh people in Chennai have been vaccinated so far, but the corporation figure is 40.4 lakh.

Such wrong entries won’t affect actual numbers, said deputy commissioner (revenue and finance) Vishu Mahajan, adding that the Cowin portal was only for registration and while the actual numbers were entered on the e-win portal. “Our numbers may not match Cowin numbers until properly reconciled,” he said. A health department official said residents can get errors rectified at the vaccination centres concerned. “The state is helping us as we are sending details of all the wrong entries and corrections daily.”

Lack of trained data entry operators, problems with network and Wi-Fi, website traffic and lack of adequate staff among the reasons cited

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Information Bulleting MDS counselling 2021

 https://mcc.nic.in/Webinfo/File/ViewFile?FileId=4&LangId=

NEET 2021: Demand for exam deferment escalates, Over 15,000 candidates sign online petition

NEET 2021: Demand for exam deferment escalates, Over 15,000 candidates sign online petition: New Delhi: Seeking the postponement of the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET), students have started signing an online petition urging the Education Minister to reschedule the exam to...

HC dismisses appeal seeking refund of discontinuation fees


HC dismisses appeal seeking refund of discontinuation fees

Sep 2, 2021, 04.59 AM IST

Madurai: Upholding the order of a single bench, the Madras high court has dismissed an appeal by a woman seeking to refund the discontinuation fees collected from her while she discontinued the super specialty course at Thanjavur Medical College.

The court was hearing an appeal filed by Priya Sreeraj. The appellant had completed MBBS in 2009 and subsequently completed her postgraduation in medicine in 2015. Following a notification published by the state government for admission as a non-service candidate for the super specialty course for the year 2016-17, the appellant applied for the same and was allotted the course at Thanjavur Medical College in 2016. A condition was incorporated in the prospectus to the effect that in case of discontinuance of any candidature in respect of the course, a fee of Rs 5 lakh should be paid. The appellant in August 2016 discontinued the course by paying the discontinuation fee.

The appellant filed a writ petition before HC Madurai bench in 2021 challenging the portion of the prospectus with respect to the discontinuation fee and also consequently sought to refund the fee paid by her. The single bench on March 21, dismissed her petition. A division bench of justices M Duraiswamy and K Murali Shankar observed that on a perusal of the materials available on record, it could be seen that the request for refund was rejected by the authorities in 2017, however, the appellant chose to file the writ petition only in 2021. 

It is a settled position that if a person is aggrieved over any order, the same should be challenged at the earliest point of time. 

The judges further observed that the appellant had knowledge about the condition imposed in the prospectus while joining the super speciality course. Having accepted the conditions, the appellant cannot turn around and subsequently, contend that the same cannot be applied to her case. The judges observed that the single bench, by taking into consideration all these aspects, has rightly dismissed the writ petition. “We do not find any ground to interfere with the order passed by the single bench,” said the judges while dismissing the appeal.

Doctor seeks refund of Discontinuation Fee paid for SS course: HC rejects plea

Doctor seeks refund of Discontinuation Fee paid for SS course: HC rejects plea: Madurai: The Chennai High Court recently dismissed an appeal of a doctor for reimbursement of discontinuation fee which she had paid when she discontinued from a super-speciality course at...

Madras HC seeks report from NMC, IPS over Queerphobia in MBBS course, directs curriculum update

Madras HC seeks report from NMC, IPS over Queerphobia in MBBS course, directs curriculum update: Chennai: Highlighting the need for revamping medical courses and make them up to date, Madras High Court has sought report from National Medical Commission (NMC) and the Indian Psychiatric Society...

Techie’s check-in baggage cut in flight from Kolkata


Techie’s check-in baggage cut in flight from Kolkata

Petlee.Peter@timesgroup.com

Bengaluru:04.09.2021

A Bengaluru techie’s check-in luggage was cut open in a suspected theft attempt during his flight from Kolkata to Bengaluru last month. He lodged a complaint with the airline and Kolkata airport authority and a probe is under way.

Chandan Prakash, 35, employee of an American multinational retail chain in Bengaluru, flew to Kolkata on August 20 to celebrate Raksha Bandhan with his sister. He returned by IndiGo flight 6E 875 on August 22 and went to his HSR Layout residence from KIA.

“I landed on Sunday, collected my trolley bag and went home. When I opened it the next morning, I spotted an unusual tear inside the bag. Someone had cut the fabric from inside to access contents after opening the outer compartment,” Prakash said.

He emailed a complaint to the airline about a possible theft post check-in. He also shared his experience on social media with photographs and videos of his black bag.

IndiGo airlines replied that it couldn’t initiate action like compensation as he hadn’t lodged a complaint at the baggage delivering area on arrival. Prakash said: “The reply was ridiculous as there was no visible damage to my bag. Someone had opened the top pouch and cut through the inner fabric to access stuff inside. I didn’t lose anything valuable and I don’t need compensation but this must be probed and culprits brought to book.”

Some airlines have discontinued sealing outer compartments of check-in bags with plastic wire locks.

Theft bid may have occurred at Kolkata airport: Airline

Airline representatives investigated the matter and said the theft attempt may have taken place at Kolkata airport. Airport officials confirmed a probe is under way as some other passengers had complained of similar problems.

After Prakash’s complaints gained traction on social media, IndiGo approached him. “It sent me a new trolley bag and urged me to take down my social media post but I refused. I said I didn’t need compensation but closure. I’m glad an investigation is on,” he added.

IndiGo airlines told TOI Prakash has been suitably compensated and the incident is being probed.


Chandan Prakash, an HSR Layout resident, said when he opened the trolley bag the day after he landed in the city, he spotted an unusual tear inside. The airlines said he has been suitably compensated and the incident is being investigated

Pandemic Lesson for Scientists, Students: Be Honest


Pandemic Lesson for Scientists, Students: Be Honest

Research fraud, exam cheating are two worrying outcomes of science & education in Covid times

SK Sarin

04.09.2021

The Covid pandemic generated unprecedented scientific urgency to search for new treatments and vaccines, resulting in over 100,000 scientific publications in 2020, purportedly for rapid dissemination of knowledge and for abating human suffering.

In the race to be faster, scientific journals diluted their multilayer peer review criteria and slashed average turnaround time from 60 days, to sometimes less than a week. Inevitably, scientific misconduct and fraud happened.

HCQ, mask, ivermectin papers

Many such papers were retracted after publication. The most painful flameout was the Surgisphere scandal: Twin articles published in two of the world’s most prestigious medical journals, The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine, related to hydroxychloroquine and its cardiovascular side-effects.

In another instance, Annals of Internal Medicine backtracked on a highly-cited paper it published in April 2020, that asserted face masks were ineffective in preventing the spread of Covid. The article had included just four study subjects, but the misinformation led to careless exposure and infection in millions. Such publications demean the very foundations of science.

A flawed ivermectin preprint paper showed that this anti-parasite drug reduced Covid death rates by more than 90%. However, this July 14, the paper was withdrawn from the preprint server, ‘Research Square’, due to scientific dishonesty.

Revenues of pharma companies making ivermectin had swelled over months, and unsuspecting patients had paid for scientific misinformation.

Even Nobel-winners cheat

Frauds and misconduct have been common in the history of science. ‘Nobel prize winners’ are no exception. Frances Arnold of Caltech announced a retraction from Science last December and nearly half a dozen ‘Nobels’ had in the past accepted misconducts.

Scientific integrity is perhaps declining. But ethics are more essential than ever now. In pandemic times, we rapidly need new information, which should be unbiased and trustworthy. Moreover, there should be honest and prompt public admission of errors by the scientific community.

Covid is going to be with us. So science must regain its ethical centre. The pressure of incomplete enrolment of patients in clinical trials, lack of adequate consumables and kits for carrying out basic science experiments, research workers being away for months due to lockdown and above all, no money with funding agencies to support ongoing scientific projects, are reasons given for altering ‘facts and findings’.

Sponsors and funding agencies should help. Research funding and human resources need to be increased several fold without political meddling.US scientists recently requested President Joe Biden not to politicise research.

Dishonest students

There’s ‘academic dishonesty’, too. Unethical behaviour to gain an unfair academic advantage during online learning and assessments are common now – nearly 50% students in different parts of the world accept indulging in such dishonesty, with excuses such as: It’s not such a big deal, it’s not really cheating, it’s my teacher’s fault or everyone cheats.

Even good students get tempted due to the unstructured assessment system in a pandemic. Besides producing semi-educated and inappropriatelyskilled students, such conduct will have long-term ramifications. A generation of ‘ethically compromised’ children will soon populate India.

Solutions have to come from parents and society. The Academic Integrity Office of the University of UC San Diego found 1,042 students guilty of integrity violations last year. We need such offices of academic integrity in our colleges too. Maybe an independent National Agency for Scientific and Academic Integrity as well.

The meaning of ‘education’ and ‘learning’ rather than ‘passing out’ needs to be drilled in our systems. We need to initiate dialogues on values and build ethics in teachings and curricula in school and college education.

We do not want our physicians and scientists to be corrupt. Tomorrow is Teachers’ Day. An appropriate occasion to remind ourselves of why education and research must be ethical.

The writer is Director, Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences

Three more doctors resign from BJMC, total 7 in 3 days


Three more doctors resign from BJMC, total 7 in 3 days

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:04.09.2021

Without naming anyone, Dr Rajnish Patel, president of Gujarat Medical Teachers’ Association (GMTA), said that the senior doctors are resigning not due to the physical duress they experienced during the Covid-19 pandemic, but ‘mental distress’.

After resignation of Civil Hospital superintendent and dean of BJ Medical College among four top doctors, three others including Dr Dinesh Rathod and Dr Shailesh Shah put in their papers. The resignations however were not accepted till Friday night.

“If you observe, majority of these doctors are institutional/departmental heads. It can only be inferred that they might be facing mental harassment or pressure from above. They all performed exceptionally during the pandemic and are the most qualified doctors the state has,” said Dr Patel. “But still they are citing personal reasons to put in their papers. If all are resigning with such a succession, it needs introspection from above.” Dr Patel told TOI that the departure of some of the most experienced hands would hamper the preparations for the third wave of Covid-19.

Dr J P Modi, former medical superintendent of Civil Hospital – who had resigned on Wednesday – told media that he has not resigned under duress. “Not all officers are the same, many visited the hospital regularly and understood our operational issues,” he said without naming any person.

Retired government teachers appeal for DA


Retired government teachers appeal for DA

04/09/2021

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

Retired teachers have appealed to the Tamil Nadu government to reinstate dearness allowance which has been withheld.

The teachers said that while the Central government had released prospectively the DA payment that it had suspended from January 2020 to July 2021 at 11%, the State government had in its Budget announced that the DA payment would be withheld for another nine months.

The Tamil Nadu Retired College Teachers’ Association has pointed out that the government employees and pensioners had been hard hit, and the COVID-19 pandemic had hurt them further.

‘Fundemental right’

They said that DA/DR is a fundamental right of an employee and pensioner and is meant for survival of the employee and pensioner against erosion of wages and pension. The association cited the rules that protect the payment of salary/pension to government employees, and appealed that the government revoke its decision to withhold the DA and disburse it.

பயிற்சி டாக்டர் பணி இயக்குனருக்கு உத்தரவு


பயிற்சி டாக்டர் பணி இயக்குனருக்கு உத்தரவு

Added : செப் 04, 2021 00:22

சென்னை:அரசு மருத்துவக் கல்லுாரி மருத்துவமனைகளில் பணிபுரியும் பயிற்சி டாக்டர்களுக்கு, கூடுதல் பணி நேரம் ஒதுக்கப்படுகிறதா என்பதை, மருத்துவ கல்வி இயக்குனர் கண்காணிக்கும்படி சென்னை உயர் நீதிமன்றம் உத்தரவிட்டு உள்ளது.

சமூக சமத்துவத்துக்கான மருத்துவர் சங்க பொதுச்செயலர் ரவீந்திரநாத் தாக்கல் செய்த மனுவில், 'அரசு மருத்துவக் கல்லுாரி மருத்துவமனைகளில், பயிற்சி மருத்துவர்கள் மற்றும் மேல்படிப்பு மாணவர்களை, எட்டு மணி நேரத்துக்கும் அதிகமாக பணியாற்றும்படி நிர்ப்பந்திக்கின்றனர்.'பணிச் சுமை காரணமாக சிலர் தற்கொலை செய்துள்ளனர்.

எட்டு மணி நேர பணி நிர்ணயித்து, 2015ல் பிறப்பித்த அறவிப்பை அமல்படுத்த வேண்டும்' என, கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.இம்மனு, தலைமை நீதிபதி சஞ்ஜிப் பானர்ஜி, நீதிபதி ஆதிகேசவலு அடங்கிய அமர்வில் விசாரணைக்கு வந்தது. மனுதாரர் சார்பில், வழக்கறிஞர் தங்கசிவன் ஆஜரானார்.

அரசு தரப்பில், அரசு பிளீடர் முத்துகுமார் ஆஜராகி, ''கூடுதல் பணி என எந்த புகாரும் இல்லை. புகார் அளிக்க குழு அமைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது,'' என்றார்.இதை பதிவு செய்த நீதிபதிகள், பயிற்சி மருத்துவர்கள் மற்றும் மேற்படிப்பு மாணவர்களுக்கு கூடுதல் பணி நேரம் ஒதுக்கப்படுகிறதா என்பதை, மருத்துவ கல்வி இயக்குனர் கண்காணிக்கும்படி உத்தரவிட்டது.

Kerala varsity syndicate okays norms for faculty posting


Kerala varsity syndicate okays norms for faculty posting

It applies to university departments, aided colleges, as per UGC Regulations, 2018

Published: 03rd September 2021 05:47 AM |

Image of Kerala University used for representational purpose. (File Photo | EPS)

By Express News Service

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The syndicate of the University of Kerala has approved the guidelines for appointment of assistant professors in university departments and aided colleges as per the University Grants Commission (UGC) Regulations, 2018.

As prescribed in the regulations, appointment will be made solely on the basis of the interview that will be held after shortlisting eligible candidates. The syndicate also approved the interview format prescribed in the UGC regulations.

After preparing a shortlist, 10 candidates will be called for interview for a single post and five more candidates for subsequent vacancies. Aided colleges are also free to follow the appointment guidelines ratified by the syndicate. The entire interview procedure should also be video graphed.

Pension revision

The syndicate of also decided to urge the government to withdraw its order which stipulated that the additional financial burden arising out of the pension revision of former university employees should be borne by the varsity from its own fund.

A five-member sub-committee of the syndicate has been tasked with taking up the issue with the government. The pension revision was supposed to be carried out with retrospective effect from 2019. Barring Kerala University that cited fund crunch, all other state universities had gone ahead with pension revision.

Other key decisions

University to urge govt to withdraw order on pension revision using varsity’s own fund

To explore possibility of offering online UG, PG courses through distance mode

Online courses

The Syndicate also constituted a sub-committee to undertake a study on the feasibility of offering online UG and PG courses through the School of Distance Education.

Anna University allows two colleges to start engineering courses in Tamil


Anna University allows two colleges to start engineering courses in Tamil

While Erode Sengunthar will offer 60 seats in Mechanical Engineering stream in Tamil medium, Rathinam Technical Campus will teach Computer Science Engineering in the regional language.

Published: 03rd September 2021 05:38 AM 

Anna University (File Photo | EPS)


Express News Service

CHENNAI: Decks have been cleared for Erode Sengunthar College and Rathinam Technical Campus, to start Tamil medium engineering courses, after finally receiving necessary approval from Anna University (AU) on Thursday.

While Erode Sengunthar will offer 60 seats in Mechanical Engineering stream in Tamil medium, Rathinam Technical Campus will teach Computer Science Engineering in the regional language. The All-India Council of Technical Education (AICTE) had granted approval to both colleges long back but both were in dilemma over starting the courses this year as they did not receive requisite permission from AU — their affiliating university.

The colleges were worried over the delay in getting permission from AU as the last date for applying for Tamil Nadu Engineering Admissions (TNEA) ended on August 24. Sources said AU was hesitant to grant approval as it doesn’t have sufficient study material in Tamil to provide these colleges. Besides, they were worried that a number of seats might fall vacant as there could only be a few takers for the courses, and placement issues may also ensue.

However, both the colleges are relieved after getting approval from AU. The permission has come late but the colleges are confident of filling up their seats. “We had surrendered the Tamil medium seats to Directorate of Technical Education (DOTE) earlier and had informed that we will admit students only after getting AU approval. Now, DOTE has also postponed the release of rank list for engineering admissions to September 14. All these will favour us,” said V Venkatachalam, principal of Erode Sengunthar college.

‘Several enquiries’

B Nagaraj, principal of Rathinam Technical Campus, said Computer Science stream is in much demand and they are receiving a good number of enquiries for the Tamil medium course. “We won’t face problems in attracting students,” he said

Three students, 3 teachers test +ve in TN since school reopening


Three students, 3 teachers test +ve in TN since school reopening

Contacts Tested, Classes Continue

TIMES NEWS NETWORK


04.09.2021

Trichy/Coimbatore/Cuddalore:

Three school students and three teachers have tested positive for Covid-19 so far in the state since schools reopened on Wednesday. They included two girls in Ariyalur, another in Namakkal and two teachers handling higher secondary classes in Cuddalore.

Among the two Ariyalur girls, one is a Class XII student and hosteller at Annai Lourd higher secondary school in Varadarajanpettai. As she developed mild upper respiratory infection (URI) symptoms, she gave her swab for RT-PCR test at Jayankondam GH on September 1. As the result came positive, she was moved to Jayankondam GH for further care. However, she had attended classes on Thursday. In the other case, a Class IX girl, a day scholar at Nirmala girls higher secondary school, had higher body temperature during thermal scanning at the school on Wednesday. She subsequently underwent RT-PCR test and tested positive even though she had no other symptoms. She did not attend classes on Thursday.

The Class IX student who had been undergoing chemotherapy in recent years, was asymptomatic and was admitted to Ariyalur government medical college hospital. The district health department has collected more than 60 samples from the primary and secondary contacts of the two girls including family members, classmates and teachers. Hostels and school managements were told to ensure the screening process further, she said. The schools have closed the classrooms and blocks used by these students. Officials said the schools will continue to function and students will be accommodated in the unused classrooms.

In another case, a Class X student from Namakkal who attended classes on Wednesday tested positive when her Covid test result came the next day. “All the 300-odd students and teachers underwent test to check for the virus spread. While none of them were found to have contracted the virus, alternative arrangement was made for the students to continue classes from Friday,” said Namakkal DEO A Balumuthu.

In Cuddalore district, two teachers handling higher secondary classes at Jawahar matriculation HSS in Neyveli tested positive for Covid-19. The teacher along with others gave swab samples before the schools reopened on September 1. Their test results which were announced on Friday returned positive following which the school management requested the students who were in contact with the teacher to isolate themselves. A trained graduate teacher posted at Venugopalapuram government GHSS in the district also tested positive. Health officials said the teacher, who started attending school from September 1, was resting in the staff room on Thursday. She complained of nausea and vomiting and was isolated immediately. She and her daughter had given swab samples a day before the school reopened.


One of the cases was caught during thermal screening at a school. A RT-PCR test showed that the student with higher body temperature was Covid positive. She had no other symptoms

Maruti recalls 1.8 lakh cars sold from 2018 to ’20 for faulty unit


REPLACEMENT TO BEGIN FROM NOV

Maruti recalls 1.8 lakh cars sold from 2018 to ’20 for faulty unit

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

New Delhi:04.09.2021

Maruti Suzuki on Friday announced a recall of as many as 1.8 lakh cars sold between May 4, 2018, and October 27, 2020, to replace a faulty motor generator unit. The cars being recalled are certain petrol variants of Ciaz sedan, Ertiga utility vehicle, and SUVs Vitara Brezza, SCross and XL6.

Maruti said that the replacement of the affected part shall begin from the first week of November. “Till then, customers are requested to avoid driving in water-logged areas and direct water spray on electrical/electronic parts in vehicle.” The change of faulty parts will be undertaken free of cost, the company said, adding that customers will receive a communication from dealerships regarding the exercise.

“Recall campaigns are undertaken globally to rectify faults that may be potential safety defects. In the interest of customers, Maruti has decided to voluntarily recall the affected vehicles for inspection/replacement of motor generator unit, free of cost,” the company said.

Announcing recalls must for auto companies: Government

It added, “Affected vehicle owners would be receiving a communication from Maruti authorised workshops.”

The company said that customers of suspected vehicles can also visit the ‘Imp Customer Info’ section on the company websites www.marutisuzuki.com (for Ertiga and Vitara Brezza) or www.nexaexperience.com(for Ciaz, XL6 and S-Cross) and fill in their vehicle’s chassis number to check if their vehicle needs any attention.

While previously it was voluntary, the government has now made announcement of recalls mandatory for vehicle manufacturers in case they notice defects that are generic in nature.

Penalties have also been stipulated with regards to the exercise. Previously, there used to be instances where vehicle companies would avoid calling out generic defects, fearing impact on the branding.

HC notice to cops over plea to examine Sasi, EPS


HC notice to cops over plea to examine Sasi, EPS

Kodanad Case: Police To Reply By Sept 27

Sureshkumar.K@timesgroup.com

Chennai:04.09.2021

The Madras high court has ordered notice to the Nilgiris police on a plea by three accused in the Kodanad Estate murder-burglary case seeking to examine former chief minister Edappadi K Palaniswami, and former general secretary of AIADMK V K Sasikala before trial court.

Admitting the plea on Friday, Justice M Nirmal Kumar observed that the petitioners had not produced any materials to show why Palaniswami, Sasikala and others must be examined by the trial court. The court then adjourned the plea to September 27 for the police to file its counter.

According to D Deepu, M S Satheesan and A Santhosh Samy, all accused in the case, the sessions judge of the Nilgiris had taken up the trial even during the peak of pandemic situation and the court hall and campus was crowded with police, accused, advocates, politicians and presspersons. “In the above circumstances, we filed a petition before the sessions court seeking to permit us to examine Palaniswami, Sasikala, J Eelavarasi, V Sudhakaran, the then Nilgiris district collector Shankar, the then SP Murali Rambah, AIADMK state office-bearer Sajeevan, manager of Kodanad estate Natarajan, and Sunil, a resident of Gudalur,” the petition said.

On April 30, the sessions court passed an order partly allowing the petition, permitting them to examine only manager Natarajan, they said. Therefore, challenging the trial court order, they have moved the high court.

The petitioners alleged that the trial court had failed to note that it was the right of the accused to lead witnesses on his side in order to substantiate his case. “The court has failed to note that one of the main charges in the case is Section 396 (dacoity) of IPC wherein the material object secured from the accused by investigating officer is nothing but a Rhinoceros miniature made of glass which is unacceptable, and obvious that the police have attempted to fill the lacunae and acted in a biased manner in order to save the skin of some person under priority,” they alleged.

Colleges plan online classes for freshers from Sept 3rd week

Colleges plan online classes for freshers from Sept 3rd week

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:04.09.2021

Several colleges in the city plan to start from the third week of September orientation and bridge courses online for first year students, many of who are not eligible for vaccination.

Physical classes for second and third year undergraduate students and postgraduate second year students began on September 1, with vaccinated students allowed to attend classes on a rotation basis. The process of admissions for the 2021-22 academic year is on the verge of being completed.

“Most of the first year students are in the under-18 years category who may not be vaccinated. So, we will not call them to campus. We are planning to start classes for first year students only in online mode from September 16,” said Lalitha Balakrishnan, principal of MOP Vaishnav College for Women. The college will begin with orientation and communication skills training. “The bridge course will be conducted from October 1. After conducting an assessment, we will pay more attention to students who are not up to the mark during the bridge courses,” she added. Psychological counselling will be given to students to overcome pandemic related stress.

DG Vaishnav College in Arumbakkam plans to start orientation for first year students online after September

15. “Students will have to attend at least15 days of orientation and bridge courses online. We have asked heads of departments to find experts to conduct bridge courses for science stream students,” said principal S Santhosh Baboo.

Ethiraj College for Women and Women’s Christian College has also planned such courses for first year students.

Friday, September 3, 2021

Principle Of Equal Pay For Equal Work Cannot Be Applied Merely On Basis Of Designation: Supreme Court


Principle Of Equal Pay For Equal Work Cannot Be Applied Merely On Basis Of Designation: Supreme Court

LIVELAW NEWS NETWORK  1 Sep 2021 10:54 AM

Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Hrishikesh Roy

The Supreme Court observed that the principle of equal pay for equal work cannot be applied merely on basis of designation.

In this case, the court had to examine the claims made by Private Secretaries (Grade-II) ("PS-II") employed in the Eastern Central Railways (Field Office/Zonal Railways),for parity in pay with their counterparts working in the Central Secretariat Stenographers Service ("CSSS")/Railway Board Secretariat Stenographers Service ("RBSSS")/Central Administrative Tribunal ("CAT").

Interpreting the Sixth Central Pay Commission report, the court noticed that the aspect of disparity between the Secretariat and the field offices was a matter taken note of by the Commission itself while making the recommendations. "Yet to some extent, a separate recommendation was made qua Secretariat Organizations and non-Secretariat Organizations. Once these recommendations are separately made, to direct absolute parity would be to make the separate recommendations qua non-Secretariat Organizations otiose. If one may say, there would have been no requirement to make these separate recommendations if everyone was to be treated on parity on every aspect", the court observed.

One of the contentions raised was that as a result of parity being given up to the level of Assistant (which would put them in the grade of Rs.4200 (later Rs.4600)), they, being one post higher, would automatically have to get one higher grade. The bench rejected the contention noticing that the report stipulated that parity would need to be absolute till the grade of Assistant and beyond that "it may not be possible or even justified to grant complete parity because the hierarchy and career progression will need to be different taking in view the functional considerations and relativities across the board."

"We are fortified in the view we are seeking to adopt in interpreting the aforesaid paragraphs of the Pay Commission by the observations in Union of India v. Tarit Ranjan Das, where it was opined that the principle of equal pay for equal work cannot be applied merely on basis of designation. While dealing with the 5th Pay Commission recommendations with respect to functional requirements, it was held that there was no question of any equivalence on that basis. The said case dealt with Stenographers of the Geological Survey of India. While observing that as a general statement it was correct to state that the basic nature of work of a Stenographer remained by and large the same whether they were working for an officer in the Secretariat or for an officer in a subordinate office; it was held that Courts ought not to interfere if the Commission itself had considered all aspects and after due consideration opined that absolute equality ought not to be given", the court said.

Case: Union of India vs. Manoj Kumar ; CA 913-914 OF 2021

Citation: LL 2021 SC 409

Coram: Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Hrishikesh Roy

NEET PG 2021 : NBE Allows Two Pregnant Candidates To Change Centre; Supreme Court Disposes Writ Petition

NEET PG 2021 : NBE Allows Two Pregnant Candidates To Change Centre; Supreme Court Disposes Writ Petition: The Supreme Court was informed on Thursday that the National Board of Examination has granted the

மகாளய அமாவாசைக்கு கயா, காசிக்கு சிறப்பு ரயில்

மகாளய அமாவாசைக்கு கயா, காசிக்கு சிறப்பு ரயில்

Added : செப் 02, 2021 21:56

சென்னை:மகாளய அமாவாசைக்கு, கயா, காசிக்கு சிறப்பு சுற்றுலா ரயிலை, இந்திய உணவு மற்றும் சுற்றுலா கழகமான ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி., இயக்குகிறது.

இந்த ரயில், மதுரையில் இருந்து வரும் 30ம் தேதி புறப்பட்டு, திண்டுக்கல், திருச்சி, கும்பகோணம், மயிலாடுதுறை, சிதம்பரம், கடலுார், விழுப்புரம், சென்னை எழும்பூர் வழியாக செல்லும்.

இப்பயணத்தில், பீஹார் மாநிலம் கயாவில் மகாளய அமாவாசையன்று, முன்னோர்களுக்கு தர்ப்பணம் செய்யலாம். உத்தர பிரதேச மாநிலம் அயோத்தியில் ராமஜென்ம பூமி, காசி விசுவநாதர், விசாலாட்சி, அன்னபூரணி கோவில்களில் தரிசனம் செய்யலாம். அலகாபாத் திரிவேணி சங்கமத்தில் நீராடலாம். கோல்கட்டா நகரை சுற்றிப் பார்க்கலாம். ஆந்திர மாநிலம், விஜயவாடா கனகதுர்க்கா சக்தி பீடத்தை பார்த்து வரலாம். மொத்தம் 12 நாட்கள் சுற்றுலாவுக்கு, ஒருவருக்கு 11 ஆயிரத்து 340 ரூபாய் கட்டணம் நிர்ணயிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

ஐ.ஆர்.சி.டி.சி.,யின் சென்னை அலுவலகத்தை, 90031 40680; மதுரை - 82879 31977; திருச்சி, 82879 31974; கோவை அலுவலகத்தை, 82879 31965 என்ற எண்களில் தொடர்பு கொள்ளலாம். மேலும் விபரங்களை, www.irctctourism.com என்ற இணையதள முகவரியிலும் தொடர்பு கொள்ளலாம்.

மூடப்படும் ஓட்டல்கள்: ஆபத்தில் 10 லட்சம் குடும்பங்கள்

மூடப்படும் ஓட்டல்கள்: ஆபத்தில் 10 லட்சம் குடும்பங்கள்

Updated : செப் 03, 2021 00:37 

கொரோனா பாதிப்பை தொடர்ந்து, தமிழகம் முழுதும் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான ஓட்டல்கள் மூடப்பட்டு வருகின்றன. இதனால், நேரடியாக 10 லட்சம் குடும்பங்களும், மறைமுக மாக 10 லட்சம் பேரும் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளதாக தகவல் வெளியாகியுள்ளது.

ராஜ்குமார், மாநில தலைமை செயலர் - தமிழ்நாடு ஓட்டல் உரிமையாளர்கள் சங்கம்:

குறைந்தபட்சம், 20 சதவீத லாபம் கிடைக்கும் என்ற கருத்தில், ஏராளமானோர் ஓட்டல் தொழிலுக்கு வந்தனர். பலர் அதில் புதுமைகளை புகுத்தினர். 'பிராண்ட்' உருவாக்கி, அதன் கிளைகளை பல இடங்களில் ஏற்படுத்தினர். பொதுவான ஒரு இடத்தில் சமையல் கூடம் அமைத்து, அங்கே சமைத்து கிளைகளுக்கு அனுப்பி வைத்தனர். இதனால், உற்பத்தி செலவு குறைந்தது. வெளி மாநிலங்களில் இருந்து குறைந்த சம்பளத்தில் ஆட்கள் வேலைக்கு வரவழைக்கப்பட்டனர். 'ஸ்விக்கி, சுமாட்டோ' போன்ற இணைதள சேவை வாயிலாக உணவு களை, 'டோர் டெலிவரி' செய்ததால், ஓட்டல் தொழில் செழிப்பாகவே இருந்தது.

சீனிவாசராஜா, உரிமையாளர் - அடையாறு ஆனந்த பவன்:

இந்தியா முழுதும் அடையாறு ஆனந்த பவன் நிறுவனத்துக்கு, 140க்கும் மேற்பட்ட ஓட்டல்கள் இருந்தன. அதில், 10 சதவீதம் மூடப்பட்டு விட்டது. எங்கள் ஓட்டல்களில், 10 ஆயிரத்துக்கும் மேற்பட்ட தொழிலாளர்கள் வேலை பார்த்து வந்தனர். அவர்களில் பலர் வேலை இழந்துள்ளனர். ஓட்டல்கள் மூடப்பட்டு, வியாபாரம் இல்லாவிட்டாலும், தொழிலாளர்களுக்கு முழு சம்பளம் கொடுக்க வேண்டும். வாடகையை குறைக்க கட்டட உரிமையாளர்கள் மறுக்கின்றனர். வியாபாரம் இல்லாமல் பல லட்சம் ரூபாயை, எப்படி வாடகையாக கொடுக்க முடியும்?கொரோனா காலத்திலும், அரசுக்கு அனைத்து வரிகளையும் முழுமையாக செலுத்த வேண்டிய கட்டாயம் உள்ளது.அத்துடன் தாள முடியாத கடன் சுமை. மேலும், முன்பை போல ஓட்டலுக்கு வருவதை மக்கள் குறைத்து விட்டனர். இதனால், பழைய வர்த்தகம் இல்லை. முன்பு இருந்ததில், 20 சதவீதம் அளவுக்கு தான் வர்த்தகம் நடக்கிறது; செலவுகளோ குறையவில்லை; 5 சதவீத லாபம் கூட கிடைக்கவில்லை. ஓட்டல் தொழிலில் ஜாம்பவானாக அறியப்பட்ட, சரவண பவன் நிர்வாகமே தடுமாறி, தங்களுடைய பல கிளைகளை மூடிவிட்ட போது, சாதாரண ஓட்டல் தொழில் அதிபர்களின் நிலை மிக மோசம்.

ரவி, உரிமையாளர் - வசந்த பவன் ஓட்டல்கள்:

வருமான வரி, ஜி.எஸ்.டி., வரி, கடனுக்கு அபராத வட்டியில் இருந்து விலக்கு, திருப்பி செலுத்தும் காலத்தை அதிகரிப்பது, வட்டி விகிதத்தை குறைப்பது என எந்த சலுகையையும், ஓட்டல் அதிபர்களுக்கு மத்திய அரசு வழங்கவில்லை. சொத்து வரி, தண்ணீர் வரி, கழிவு நீர் வரி, மின்சார கட்டணம் என எதிலும், மூடி கிடந்த ஓட்டல்களுக்கு சலுகை கொடுக்கப்படவில்லை. ஓட்டல் தொழிலையும், அதை நம்பி இருக்கும், ௧௦ லட்சம் குடும்பங்களை காப்பாற்ற வேண்டும் என அரசு நினைத்தால், தகுந்த நிபுணர் குழு அமைத்து, ஓட்டல் தொழிலில் இருப்போரிடம் விசாரித்து நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க வேண்டும்.

தாமோதரன், மேலாளர் - சரவண பவன் ஓட்டல்கள்:

பெரும்பாலான ஓட்டல்கள், வாடகை கட்டடங்களில் இயங்குகின்றன. இவர்களுக்கு தான் கொரோனா காலத்தில் பெரும் சிக்கல் ஏற்பட்டது. கார், வீடு வாங்க கொடுக்கப்படும் கடனுக்கான வட்டி, 6 சதவீதம். ஆனால், தொழிலுக்கு கொடுக்கப்படும் கடனுக்கான வட்டி, 14 சதவீதம். அமெரிக்கா, சிங்கப்பூர், துபாய் என பல நாடுகளில், தொழில் கடனுக்கான வட்டி 4 சதவீதம் தான். ஓட்டல் தொழில் நசிவடைவதால், நேரடியாக 10 லட்சம் குடும்பங்களும், மறைமுகமாக 10 லட்சம் பேரும் பாதிக்கப்படுவர். இவ்வாறு அவர்கள் கூறினர். - நமது நிருபர் - -

Skipped Exam After Depression Got Aggravated In Lockdown


HC relief for ‘depressed’ SVNIT student

Skipped Exam After Depression Got Aggravated In Lockdown

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:03.09.2021

The Gujarat high court has quashed a decision made by Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology, Surat (SVNIT) to expel a student for missing out on semester examinations because he was a victim of depression aggravated by the lockdown last year.

The student approached the HC and challenged his termination on the ground that he had been suffering from depression since January 2020 and the illness reached its peak during the lockdown. Therefore, he could not take the exams, which resulted in his expulsion. The problem arose because the student failed to intimate the institute about his illness ahead of the exams. The Academic Review Committee decided in September 2020 to remove the student from the course because he could not earn 25 credits at the end of the second semester.

While quashing the student’s termination and directing the institute to take a fresh decision on continuation of his studies, Justice N V Anjaria on Wednesday observed, “The depressive cycle which the petitioner suffered was during the period of Covid pandemic itself. It was a period of wide-spread despondence. It is reasonable to believe that the situation brought about by the pandemic created an adverse effect on the tender mind of the petitioner, who disengaged himself from the studies. The ground advanced by the petitioner could be viewed as genuine as there is nothing to disbelieve the same.” After the student moved the HC through advocate Ronith Joy, the court ordered SVNIT to allow him to appear in supplementary exam in May 2021. He secured the minimum credit marks and became an eligible contender to pursue the studies further.

The high court was critical of the institute and said that doubting the student is insensitive even after a psychiatrist issued a medical certificate. The court also took into consideration that the student has cleared the exams and acquired minimum marks and his illness was attributable to the pandemic period. It will “be inequitable, arbitrary and contrary to the tenets of justness, fairness and equality, to disregard the factor” in expelling him from the course, it said.

The court asked the institute to take a fresh view on its decision by showing sympathy to the student. It said, “Approach of sympathy is not the rule of law, yet the law has to be benevolent to sub-serve the interests of justice, wherever the facts and circumstances so justify and demand. This is one such case.”

The student moved the HC challenging his expulsion stating that he had depression and it peaked during the lockdown leaving him unable to take the exam

NEWS TODAY 21.12.2024