Sunday, December 5, 2021

When students wept for teacher who took a transfer


When students wept for teacher who took a transfer

S Bhuvaneshwari TNN

Bengaluru:  05.12.2021

Emotions ran high at government higher primary school in Lakkuru of Nelamangala taluk in Bengaluru Rural on Friday as tearyeyed kids pleaded with their teacher, who took a transfer to another institution, to stay back. The teacher, though overwhelmed, expressed helplessness as he had to live close to his aged parents.

With a heavy heart, the children bid adieu to their beloved tutor Gangamallaiah C. He had applied for transfer to a school near his native village and his request was approved.

Gangamallaiah had been working at the Lakkuru school, which has a strength of 124, since 2014 and taught Kannada and social science to students of classes 1-8.

School headmaster Venkatesh N said: “Gangamallaiah used to take care of his students at an individual level. He used to come to school on his two-wheeler and pick up kids on the way if they were unable to reach the institution for some reason.”

He added: “If he was on leave, he used to tell me to pick up the students from Madenahalli near Dobbaspete and would call to remind me so that they don’t miss classes.”

The children too were attached to him. Venkatesh said: “Without telling the students, we (staff members) gave Gangamallaiah a farewell last Wednesday. After the students learnt he was transferred to another school, they requested me to call him and tell him to meet them on Friday.”

When Gangamallaiah came visiting, the kids cried and requested him not to leave them. Class 7 student Harshitha N told STOI: “If we didn’t come to school, he would call our parents to know the reason. We liked his teaching and moral stories.” Class 8 student Sumayya chipped in: “He never allowed our parents to scold or beat us. In fact, he would even guide them if they had any problem.”

The students said they’ll miss Gangamallaiah as he took care of them even more than their parents.

Gangamallaiah said: “After witnessing the love and affection of my students, I’m happy that I became a teacher. Due to poverty, some brilliant kids used to work with their parents to support them financially. I used to go to their houses and convince such parents to send their children to school.”


TEARFUL ADIEU: Students of the government higher primary school in Lakkuru of Nelamangala bid farewell to their teacher

Save your bus ticket next time, you may get back lost items


Save your bus ticket next time, you may get back lost items

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Bengaluru:  05.12.2021

Most BMTC passengers don’t keep their tickets with them after the journey; some even tear them while on board. But Whitefield resident Anjali S found out the benefits of retaining the ticket after she left a box of plants in the bus.

“I recently travelled by a Vayu Vajra bus from the airport. But I left the box of plants in the bus and realised only after I got down at Marathahalli. But I had the ticket with me which had the bus and depot numbers,” she said. “I connected with depot manager Wilson and sent him my ticket on WhatsApp. I got my box back the next morning.”

A senior BMTC official said if any passenger leaves anything in a bus and has the ticket, it will be easier for the authorities to track the vehicle and find the lost item.

This is not the first instance of BMTC passengers getting back items left behind. M Madhusudhan, a resident of Vidyaranyapura, said on November 22, his wife left her bag at the Esteem Mall bus stop. “BMTC recovered and returned jewellery and cash worth Rs 6.3 lakh. We were grateful to BMTC traffic controllers Prakash and Shamisab for this,” he said.

Woman thanks BMTC crew for safe ride at night

BMTC staff have been drawing praise from some passengers. Yogada Joshi, who travelled in a Vayu Vajra bus at night last month, recently took to LinkedIn to thank the bus crew for the safe journey.

“I was the only woman in the bus which had five other male passengers, the driver and conductor. Women usually feel unsafe in public transport but I took the bus because I thought it was much safer for odd-hour travel, thanks to rogue cabbie incidents reported every now and then along the KIA-city route… Throughout the journey, I sat happily. Finally, the bus arrived at my destination and here comes an experience showing care and concern: The conductor and driver peeped outside and saw that nobody was there yet to pick me up at midnight. They insisted upon waiting till my father came. I was touched. Appa arrived shortly and the bus left. I want to thank BMTC and Bengaluru city for making me feel happy and safe,” Yogada wrote.

Following this, BMTC honoured Parth Shetty, the bus conductor, and Ramachandra, the driver.

BMTC staff have been drawing praise from several passengers of late

A BMTC official said it will be easier for the authorities to track the vehicle and find the lost item if the passenger has bus ticket details

Pvt labs try to procure RT-PCR kits which can spot Omicron variant


Pvt labs try to procure RT-PCR kits which can spot Omicron variant

Sunitha.Rao@timesgroup.com

Bengaluru:05.12.2021

Private labs in the city have been trying to procure RT-PCR test kits targeting the S gene, following concerns over the Omicron variant.

Currently available RTPCR kits can detect Covid-19 positivity in a person, but can’t specifically say if it is Omicron or some other variant, say experts.

Testing kits look for specific genes to confirm the presence of SARS-Co-V2 in a sample. While N gene points to the presence or absence of the nucleocapsid protein of SARS-Co-V2 in a given swab sample, the ORF1 gene searches for the polyprotein. Mutations in the latest variant — B.1.1529 — have occurred in the S gene that encodes the spike glycoprotein. If a sample is negative for S gene, then it is an indicative marker of the presence of Omicron variant, which needs to be further confirmed through genomic sequencing.

Dr Sujay Prasad, medical director, Neuberg Diagnostics, said conventional Covid RT-PCR test kits in use at present have reagents that detect the presence of N and ORF1 genes, but not the S gene.

“It is now established that the Omicron variant escapes the S gene. But RT-PCR testing kits that we have now don’t contain the reagent for S gene. If the test shows negative for the presence of S gene in a given sample, it is an indicator that the person may have been infected by the Omicron variant,” said Dr Prasad.

“We need to find out if a given sample shows negative or positive for S gene. If negative, such samples must be immediately sent for genomic sequencing,” said Prasad.

Dr HM Venkatappa, chairman of Bangalore Diagnostics Centres’ Association, said labs will now have to procure test kits with S gene. “We are in the process of finding out test kits that help us in early identification of the Omicron variant. But if we use the new kits, the government’s price cap of Rs 800 at private labs and hospitals can’t be adhered to...,” he said.

‘Genomic sequencing can point to specific strain’

Dr CN Manjunath, nodal officer for Covid testing, said the currently available kits are good enough to detect viral positivity in a patient and it is genomic sequencing that can point to the specific variant.

Only one testing kit produced by Thermo Fisher has a Covid-19 diagnostic product with S gene detection, which is being highly sought after by private laboratories now.

Some of the government laboratories in Karnataka are using the kit, where swab samples of vulnerable persons from clusters and those of international passengers are being tested.

CURBING SPREAD: A BBMP worker collects a swab sample at Bengaluru’s KSR railway station

A marketing gimmick: Virologist

Dr V Ravi, virologist and member, Technical Advisory Committee, said all RT-PCR test kits are spike-gene independent and variantproof. “We have been detecting Delta, which has so many mutations in the spike protein. Nobody raised these issues then. It’s more of a marketing gimmick. Indian kits are not missing Omicron. However, if any cluster shows the variant, we should think of replacing the testing kits. Ultimate proof will come from genomic sequencing,” he said.

HC says no student, staff can be allowed entry without vax dose


HC says no student, staff can be allowed entry without vax dose

Bengaluru: 05.12.2021

No students, teachers or staff will be permitted to attend school or college without being vaccinated, the high court said on Saturday, dismissing the PIL that challenged the government order in this regard.

“We are of the considered view that no students, teachers or staff who have not received vaccines shall be permitted to attend school or college where students gather in large numbers. As such no directions can be issued to permit teachers, students or staff who have not received at least one dose to attend colleges in terms of the government order dated July 16, 2021,” a division bench headed by chief justice Ritu Raj Awasthi said.

Dr Srinivasa B Kakkilaya, a medical practitioner from Mangaluru, a couple of professors teaching in Ayurveda colleges and a student had challenged the circular/GO seeking directions for modification.

The petitioners had claimed the circular makes the Covid-19 vaccination process mandatory in nature and further discriminates on the basis of status of vaccination of a person, thus violating the fundamental rights of citizens.

Contending that the circular is coercive in nature, they pointed out even the World Health Organisation (WHO) has held that vaccines do not prevent spread of the disease from person to person and thus had little potential of stopping the pandemic or preservation of the public health. The circular violates the dictum of the Supreme Court in Common Cause Vs Union of India (2018) case which recognised the right, choice and liberty of an individual to prefer the medicine of his/her choice, it was argued. TNN

Chaos outside malls as visitors struggle with vax certs for entry


Chaos outside malls as visitors struggle with vax certs for entry

Some In Queues Question Mandate, Others Say It Will Ensure Safety

Farheen.Hussain@timesgroup.com

Bengaluru:05.12.2021

For many Bengalureans, a favourite weekend activity is hanging out with friends and family members in shopping malls. But several citizens stared at long queues in front of the establishments on Saturday. Reason: Visitors were being checked for double vaccination certificates.

With the state government announcing that entry to malls and theatres should be granted only to double jabbed individuals, malls across the city saw lines of confused visitors struggling to produce their vaccine certificates. In some malls that STOI visited, verbal arguments were witnessed between shoppers and security guards who were stopping the latter to show proof of vaccination.

“Am I travelling internationally? When a majority of the elected representatives are moving around shamelessly with their masks down, why am I being forced to show the certificate? Should we stop coming to malls?” a visitor argued outside a mall while the guard tried to calm him down. He claimed though he had received both shots, it took him time to download the certificate.

The security personnel later told STOI that there are always some visitors who have issues. “It is a government mandate and we are doing it for their own safety. They hold up the queue and make it difficult for others,” the guard said, announcing loudly to people to keep the certificate and an ID ready before their reach the entry. She said the long lines are because of the weekend crowd.

BBMP chief commissioner Gaurav Gupta, while explaining the decision to grant entry to the double vaccinated, stated: “The state government has implemented regulatory measures to prevent the spread of Covid-19 and its new variant Omicron. We request everyone to follow Covid protocol and safety precautions at all times.”

Several visitors at a mall in Yeshwantpur, who were unaware of the regulatory measure, were surprised but quick to follow it. Krishnaprasad said it took him 15 minutes to download the certificate on his new phone. “This is for our own safety so I stepped aside, downloaded it and rejoined the queue,” he said, adding he will share the details on his social media platforms so that people will know that a vaccine certificate is a must to enter shopping malls.

Confusion will abate; no impact on footfall: Establishments

Shopping malls in the city said that the confusion on the first day will subside as people will get to know about the measure. Manoj Singh, cluster director (Karnataka), Nexus Malls, said it took a little longer on Saturday for customers to enter the mall as they had to produce their vaccination certificates. However, it did not affect footfall as the vaccination rate in Karnataka is high. “Most of the patrons are eligible to gain entry into malls as per the new advisory. We have also realised that people have been very self-aware. Malls are the only places which provide a controlled and hygienic shopping environment,” Singh said.

Sunil Munshi, AVP, operations, Orion Malls by Brigade Group, said: “Since this is the first day, we have faced a few challenges in terms of queues as customers took some time to download the certificates on their mobile phones, but going forward as awareness spreads, we do not see this as a point of concern. We have put up notifications and made announcements at all entry points of our malls to inform our customers on the new Covid directive,” he said explaining there has been no impact on footfall.

ENFORCING NORMS: As per state guidelines, entry to malls should be granted only to double-jabbed individuals

In some malls, verbal arguments were witnessed between shoppers and security guards who were stopping the latter to show proof of vaccination. Many visitors took some time to download their certificates

Why Qutub Minar has been closed for 40 yrs


TOI + EXCLUSIVE

Why Qutub Minar has been closed for 40 yrs

45 Visitors, Many Of Them Students, Died In A Stampede Inside The Minar on Dec 4, 1981

Abhilash.Gaur@timesgroup.com

Years ago, Friday used to be the busiest day of the week at Delhi’s Qutub Minar because entry was free and schools and colleges brought their students to picnic in the morning. On December 4, 1981, a Friday, the Qutub grounds were abuzz with tourists and there was a crowd at the minar door trying to get inside.

While public access to the minar’s top had been stopped in the 1950s, to prevent suicides, tourists were still allowed to go up to the first balcony, which is roughly as high as a 10-storey building.

By 11am busloads of tourists were inside the spiral staircase that leads up to the balcony. Around 11.30am – reports from that day say – the power supply tripped and the lights inside went out. The minar has large vents at regular intervals for air and light, but as scared visitors sought safety close to the staircase wall, they cut out the daylight. Then, as the crowd tried to exit desperately, a stampede occurred. Within minutes, dozens of people lay dead and injured in the darkness.

Anil Kumar, a student of Delhi’s Aurobindo College at the time, was inside the minar with seven of his friends when the stampede occurred. He told TOI they were descending the dark stairs in a single file when they suddenly “found themselves sliding down uncontrollably”. He survived with chest injuries.

Trapped behind jammed doors

The minar gate had heavy steel doors that opened inwards. As the number of people inside swelled, the chowkidar had pulled the doors shut. But when hundreds of people tried to barge outside at once, the doors jammed against the frame. Rescuers couldn’t enter through the gate because of the mass of people behind it.

Luckily, a scaffolding had been built behind the minar to carry out repairs, and local hawkers and tourist guides used it to enter the minar through the vents. They extricated many survivors and bodies over an hour.

By the time police and the fire brigade arrived, the dead had been laid out in the Qutub lawns and the injured rushed to AIIMS and Safdarjung hospitals in the tourist buses that had brought them in the morning.

At 3.30pm, then home minister Giani Zail Singh informed Lok Sabha that 45 persons had been killed and 21 injured.

A team of 12 doctors formed to do the autopsies finished its work around 1.30am on December 5. They said most of the deaths were due to suffocation and trampling, not bleeding. Few bodies had external injuries.

What caused the stampede?

Survivors that day gave different accounts of what had happened. Some said a group of unruly boys had misbehaved with women tourists in the dark, and the stampede started when those women tried to rush downstairs. Others said someone had slipped in the dark and set off a chain reaction while trying to regain balance.

Next day, Delhi Police denied receiving any complaint of molestation, but news reports from the time say two tourists from New Zealand, Jackie and Marie, had alleged they were molested. One of them was seen leaving the Qutub compound wearing a borrowed lungi and shirt. Later, district and sessions judge Jagdish Chandra’s inquiry report in the case also made a mention of their harassment.

Overcrowding was an old problem in the minar, especially on holidays.

There had been another stampede on August 15, 1978 when a man had fainted from suffocation in the packed staircase. Twelve people were injured that day, six of them seriously.

After the December 1981 tragedy, education minister Sheila Kaul told Lok Sabha a system of crowd-control had been in place since the 1950s, when tickets were introduced at the Qutub. There are 155 steps up to the first balcony, so 300 visitors were allowed in at a time. They walked up single-file, looked around from the balcony, which had space for 40-50 persons, and then descended single-file. When 50 visitors exited the tower, 50 more were sent inside.

Ensuring that the tourists ascended and descended the steps – which are about 5 feet wide at the base and narrow to 4 feet at the balcony – in an orderly double spiral was crucial for safety, but on Fridays and other holidays this was impossible. By some accounts, more than 500 people were inside the minar on December 4, 1981.

‘Qutub is falling…’

Just as the police denied reports of molestation, the Delhi municipal corporation at first said there had been no power outage at the minar between 10.50am and 12.30pm on December 4. A truck had dashed against an electricity pole, tripping power at 9.15am, but supply had been restored by 10.50am, it said.

But the Chandra Commission report found power failure to be one of the major causes of the tragedy, and held Delhi Electricity Supply Undertaking responsible for it. The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) was held equally culpable for the “very bad and dangerous condition” of the steps, which had “dangerous depressions and contours” because they had never been repaired, it said.

The inquiry commission concluded that the stampede had occurred when a girl – not one of the New Zealand tourists – slipped near the minar’s 8th ventilator and some boys raised a false alarm: “Qutub is falling...go down, go down.”

RT-PCR report must for Vaishno Devi visit



RT-PCR report must for Vaishno Devi visit

05.12.2021

Reviewing precautionary measures taken in view of the new Covid-19 variant Omicron, Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Board (SMVDSB) has mandated for all visiting devotees to have verifiable RT-PCR reports not older than 72 hours, reports Sanjay Khajuria. Urging those taking up the pilgrimage not to let down their guard in the wake of a recent spike in Covid cases, SMVDSB chief executive officer Ramesh Kumar has appealed to the devotees to adhere to Covid-appropriate behaviour and carry valid RT-PCR reports with them.

Indian spouses were losing jobs because of H4 delays so we decided to go to court


FOR THE RECORD

Indian spouses were losing jobs because of H4 delays so we decided to go to court

For spouses of H1B visa holders, the American dream wasn’t all rosy. Not only did they need employment authorisation to work in the US, but it had to be renewed every two years with the process taking months or even a year. After a brush with this system, an Indian-origin couple from Canada decided to take the matter to court and won a landmark settlement agreement. Amandeep Shergill, lead plaintiff in the Shergill vs Mayorkas lawsuit, and her husband Ripan Shergill spoke to Sonam Joshi about why they took up this battle

Can you tell us about your journey from Punjab to Canada and now Seattle?

Ripan: I studied at Panjab University and moved to Canada in 2001 as a permanent resident. We got married in 2003 and settled in Toronto. In 2015, we relocated to Seattle as Canadian citizens. US law is brutal and archaic, it only considers your country of birth. So, though we are Canadian citizens, we had to join the Indian immigration queue. We never thought being on H1B would be so stressful. Every three years, you have to renew it. I changed multiple companies and every time, you don’t know who is adjudicating your visa renewal. Someone in a cranky mood could find some technicality to deny your visa. My son is in 12th grade. In the last four years, every time this paperwork renewal came, we’d have a conversation about whether he’d be going to the same school next year, or whether we’d be moving lock stock and barrel. Every Indian American can relate to that situation.

Aman, what were the challenges you faced as a spouse on an H4 visa?

Aman: I have a MSc degree from Punjabi University. In Canada, I was working fulltime as a teacher but here an H1B spouse can only work if the employer sponsors a green card. It was very frustrating to stay at home doing nothing. I had even taken classes and got my license to work as a realtor. It took two years but in 2017, his employer did that and I got the H-4 Employment Authorisation Document (EAD) or work permit. But that wasn’t the end of it.

How did the pandemic impact your EAD?

Aman: The Trump administration had made it harder for immigrants. Then Covid happened, and everything was backlogged. A process that used to take two to four months started taking six to twelve months. So many others too were in the same boat, forced to give up their full-time jobs and stay home. I was upset because I was doing very well and had 20-30 clients that I had to give up because I couldn’t work for 25 days till the EAD came through. It is so unfair because all other visas have automatic extension.

What prompted you to file a lawsuit?

Ripan: For Aman, the EAD delay was only 25 days but we still wanted to proceed, so no one else has to go through this mess. There is no reason for USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services) to sit on an application that just takes two minutes to approve. As Canadian citizens, it’s easy for us to renew our H4 visa. All we have to do is drive across the border, make a U-turn to return and get the stamp. That’s not a privilege those holding Indian passports have. In the end, litigation was the only way because you have to fight for your rights.

Who were the other plaintiffs?

Ripan: It was just 15 of us who connected on a WhatsApp group to share our experiences. Around 13 were Indian, one was Polish, and we were Canadian. Some women were on the brink of losing their jobs, some had lost their jobs waiting for the EAD to come through. The case was filed under Aman’s name. When we were told they want to settle, we decided to expand the benefit into a class action that solves a bigger problem for everybody, and gets rid of this nonsense of making people wait, lose their jobs and create upheaval in their lives.

Tell us how this settlement changes lives and the challenges ahead?

Any Indian H4 spouse born in India and applying for a standalone H4 will benefit from this settlement. Apart from H4, many Indian IT companies send their executives on L2 visas. Their spouses are the biggest winners as they are authorised to work from the day they land in the US. Prior to this, they had to apply and wait. But the fight isn’t over for the larger Indian diaspora. Common sense reform needs to happen. When this H4 benefit was initially bestowed in 2015, H4s and H1Bs were adjudicated immediately at the same time. Then came Trump with his hardline approach separating the two applicants. This was just red tape introduced to discourage Indian professionals, because largely H1Bs are from India. Should the Biden Administration go back to adjudicating H4 applications concurrently with H1Bs in a 15-day timeframe — as it was before the Trump administration — it will solve a problem for all Indian H4 spouses.

US returnee flees with swab from airport in Jharkhand


US returnee flees with swab from airport in Jharkhand

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Jamshedpur:05.12.2021

A 28-year-old man who flew into Jharkhand’s Jamshedpur from the US on Friday created ruckus at the airport Covid test centre and eventually fled with his swab sample. Health department authorities got in touch with him over the phone on Saturday and requested him to come for the test, additional chief medical officer Sahir Pall said.

Not just this man, several other foreign returnees to Jamshedpur and the rest of East Singhbhum are not cooperating with health officials when it comes to Covid tests, sources said. Health officials have sought police help in making sure that the US returnee comes to a Covid test centre. Some returnees are switching off their phones soon after leaving the airport. Some others are sharing their international numbers with the authorities, sources said.

Heavy rain likely in 4 WB coastal districts


Heavy rain likely in 4 WB coastal districts

Prithvijit.Mitra@timesgroup.com

Kolkata:05.12.2021

Cyclone Jawad lost strength and weakened into a deep depression on Saturday even as it approached the Odisha coast and is set to recurve near Puri on Sunday afternoon and move towards Bengal coast, losing further strength. It may reach Bengal as a low-pressure or a cyclonic circulation on Sunday that will curb its impact a great deal, though heavy rain has still been predicted in some areas of the four coastal districts of the state. Kolkata could receive just light to moderate showers on Sunday.

Three factors led to Jawad losing its strength, said weather experts. First, the lack of a uniform ‘wind shear’ that was needed to keep the cyclone intact and make it move towards the coast. Secondly, north Bay of Bengal — over which the system is now hovering turns cool in December which cuts off the supply of moisture to cyclonic systems, rendering them weaker. Finally, cool winds have been blowing into the sea from the land which is making the system disintegrate.

“A cyclone is a mammoth system which needs to be pushed by a uniform wind speed which is now lacking. Disparate wind currents tend to break the system and leave it weaker, which has happened to Jawad. Due to low temperatures and cool winds, which now prevail over Bay of Bengal, cyclones are rare in December,” said Regional Meteorological Centre (RMC) director GK Das.

With Jawad fizzling out as a cyclone, Kolkata is now set to receive just light to moderate rain on Sunday, instead of the very heavy showers that had been earlier predicted.

Full report on www.toi.in

Will India see Omicron wave? ‘It will be clear in 6 to 8 weeks’


Will India see Omicron wave? ‘It will be clear in 6 to 8 weeks’

Doctor: Have To Study If Omicron Displaces Delta As Dominant Variant

Malathy Iyer TNN

Mumbai  05.12.2021

: While Maharashtra’s first Omicron case has been detected in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region, experts said it would take another six to eight weeks for an “Omicron wave”, if at all, to become apparent.

The state health machinery is going to use the time to focus on vaccination. State additional chief secretary (health) Dr Pradeep Vyas said, “We will focus on quickly completing the vaccination process and ensuring that people follow Covid-appropriate behavior, particularly proper wearing of face mask.”

Dr Shashank Joshi, a member of the state government’s Covid task force, said, “There are too many unknowns with the Omicron variant at the moment. We shouldn’t panic, but maintain a vigil. We have to study if Omicron in the next few weeks displaces the Delta variant (which caused the second wave in India) as the dominant variant in circulation.”

He said the next six to eight weeks are crucial to see how the Omicron variant behaves in India which has seen a wide exposure to the Delta variant. “Most Omicron cases are related to travel. We have to study clusters of cases in countries other than South Africa that may have developed after the first travel-related case. It will help us prepare,” added Dr Joshi.

Full report on www.toi.in

JABBED: A health worker administers a dose of Covid-19 vaccine to a beneficiary at a vaccination centre in Patna on Saturday

RT-PCR report must for Vaishno Devi visit

Reviewing precautionary measures taken in view of the new Covid-19 variant Omicron, Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Board (SMVDSB) has mandated for all visiting devotees to have verifiable RT-PCR reports not older than 72 hours, reports Sanjay Khajuria. Urging those taking up the pilgrimage not to let down their guard in the wake of a recent spike in Covid cases, SMVDSB chief executive officer Ramesh Kumar has appealed to the devotees to adhere to Covidappropriate behaviour and carry valid RT-PCR reports with them.

Patient accuses radiologist of sexually harassing her


Patient accuses radiologist of sexually harassing her

Madurai:05.12.2021

A radiologist at Government Rajaji Hospital (GRH) has been accused of sexually harassing a 24-yearold woman transplant patient from Madurai and an internal committee has conducted an inquiry based on her complaint. The committee has submitted the report to director of medical education Dr R Narayana Babu and further action is awaited.

According to sources, the woman had come to GRH on November 26 for a scan and was attended to by a radiologist at the hospital. She was asked to come the next day for another scan. However, on November 27, the radiologist allegedly sent the nurse out of the room and sexually harassed the woman on the pretext of examining her.

The woman subsequently filed a complaint with the government hospital. TNN

2 medicos among 3 dead in accident


3 OTHERS WOUNDED

2 medicos among 3 dead in accident

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Tirunelveli:05.12.2021

Three people, including two fourth year MBBS students of government Tirunelveli medical college hospital, died in an accident on Saturday morning when an SUV collided with their scooter at Reddiarpatti on the Madurai-Kanyakumari highway. A passenger seated next to the SUV’s driver also died on the spot. A third classmate, who was also riding pillion on the scooter, the driver of the SUV and another passenger were hospitalised with grievous injuries.

Police said the speeding SUV, which was heading for Tuticorin from Nagercoil, hit the median at a turn about 500m from Reddiarpatti Hill. “It rolled over a couple of times and stopped on the other side of the road where it hit the three students on a scooter,” deputy commissioner of police T P Suresh Kumar told TOI.

Students P Divya Gayathri, 21, of Avudayanoor in Tenkasi district and R Freeda Angelin Rani, 23, of Parasurampatti in Madurai, and passenger Shanmugasundaram, 41, of Kottar in Kanyakumari district died on the spot. K Divya Bala, 21, who was seated third on the scooter, sustained critical injuries to the head and thoracic area and was under ventilator support and but is said to be stable. Car driver Santhosh Kumar, 45, and another passenger were also out of danger. Santhosh Kumar was booked under various IPC sections including rash driving and causing death due to negligence.

Police said the women who were in uniform attended class till 9.45am. Their sudden deaths left their fellow students in tears as the bodies of the women were brought to the hospital for autopsy. Suresh Kumar said a committee will probe the accident and submit a report to the police commissioner.

TN nurse goes beyond call of duty, gives back life to accident victim


TN nurse goes beyond call of duty, gives back life to accident victim

Gokul.Rajendran@timesgroup.com

Mannargudi:05.12.2021

A 22-year-old college student who fell unconscious on the road after an accident got his life back, thanks to a cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) done by a nurse on the spot in Mannargudi on Friday. The video has gone viral.

M Vanaja, 39, of government headquarters hospital at Mannargudi was travelling in a car with her family from Madhukkur to Mannargudi on her weekly off when she saw the victim lying head down on the road near Lekkanampettai on Madhukkur road. Vasanth, a polytechnic student of Karuvakurichi who was riding a bike, had rammed into a herd of goats, skidded and fallen down.

Vanaja got off the car, cleared through the crowd which was looking at the man, and without any hesitation performed CPR on the youth. “He showed signs of life after 30 seconds of pressing. Usually, we require oxygen facility while applying CPR. In this case, I was ready to give him oral breathing but the youth himself breathed,” she told TOI. She said she continued the process for two more minutes. “Soon, he caught my hand due to the discomfort of pressing and opened his eyes,” Vanaja said. A 108 ambulance vehicle reached the spot and in the next few minutes Vasanth walked to it with Vanaja holding his hand. He was admitted to Thanjavur medical college hospital.


GOOD SAMARITAN: The video of M Vanaja performing CPR on Vasanth has gone viral

Social service outfit urges TN govt to regularise Vanaja’s job

As he hit his face and the forehead on the road, he became unconscious due to the shock. So we referred him for medical examination,” Vanaja said.

As the photographs and video of Vanaja saving the youth in the golden hour went viral, netizens overwhelmed her with wishes. A nursing diploma holder, she has been a contractual employee for the past one year and had recently undergone training in Tamil Nadu Accident and Emergency care initiative (TAEI) in Trichy.

“The youth is safe now because of Vanaja’s timely action. The medical examination showed he has no life threatening injuries,” said Dr N Vijayakumar, chief medical officer of the hospital where Vanaja works.

Meanwhile, a social service organisation called ‘Nesakaram’ of Mannargudi bestowed Vanaja with the title “Nightingale of Mannargudi” at the hospital on Saturday. The outfit appealed to the state government to regularise her job.

Friday, December 3, 2021

NTR varsity staff, students up in arms against fund diversion Hans News Service


NTR varsity staff, students up in arms against fund diversion Hans News Service 

 1 Dec 2021 2:08 AM IST 

 Dr NTR University of Health Sciences employees protest against transfer of university funds to the government, on the university premises in Vijayawada on Monday 

HIGHLIGHTS JAC of students and faculty decides to boycott duties and classes from today Vijayawada: 

A Joint Action Committee (JAC) of students and faculty and staff of NTR University of Health Sciences on Tuesday decided to boycott the classes and other duties from December 1 in protest against the alleged diversion of university funds by the government. 

The JAC is alleging that the state government had diverted Rs 400 crore funds of the varsity from bank account to Andhra Pradesh Finance Services Corporation. The employees have demanded that the government immediately withdraw their funds from APFSC and deposit into their bank accounts. The employees are alleging that the cash starved state government may divert the funds for other purposes. 

The JAC of students, faculty and staff met at the varsity on Tuesday resolved to "protect the university and its funds" from the evil designs "at any cost". It said it would also meet the state Governor Biswa Bhusan Harichandan to apprise him of the situation. Leaders of the JAC accused the university authorities of succumbing to the pressure of the CMO in diverting the funds.

 The JAC consisted of all unions and associations of the university, they said. Education minister Audimulapu Suresh, however rebutted the charge to say "the government will not take away any university's funds if it has any problems. Anyway, this university does not fall under my purview". He went on to add that the state government had launched several welfare programmes for the students and 11 lakh students had been reimbursed Rs 650 crore so far under fee reimbursement programme. The government was sensitive to people's problems and stood by them always including during the troubled Covid-19 times, he added.

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CU ranks first among all Indian state-run universities in QS Rankings


CU ranks first among all Indian state-run universities in QS Rankings

While CU is ranked first among all state-run universities in India, it occupies the third rank among all the universities in India.

Published: 04th November 2021 12:41 PM 

Calcutta University (Photo | Calcutta University Website)

By PTI

KOLKATA: Calcutta University has ranked on top above all state-run universities in the country in the QS Asia University Rankings 2022.

Vice-Chancellor of Calcutta University Prof Sonali Chakraborty Banerjee said on Wednesday that while CU is ranked first among all state-run universities in India, it occupies the third rank among all the universities in India - first being Delhi University and second being JNU, both of them being Central universities.

"I got the information after the ranking 2022, Released by QS Rankings on Asian Universities, was out. We have to carry on the good work in academics," she said Calcutta University is ranked 154th in Asia.

In the QS Asia University Rankings 2022, the universities are ranked across 11 parameters including academics and employer reputation, the number of staff having PhD, proportion of students from abroad.

NTR varsity employees’ JAC boycotts duties


NTR varsity employees’ JAC boycotts duties

The survival of the university will become questionable if the government doesn’t return the amount to the University.

Published: 02nd December 2021 07:59 AM |

NTR University of Health Sciences

By Express News Service

VIJAYAWADA: Intensifying their agitation against the alleged diversion of Rs 400 crore funds to Andhra Pradesh Financial Services Corporation (APFSC), the Joint Action Committee (JAC) leaders of Dr NTR University of Health Sciences boycotted their duties and participated in a protest at the university campus here on Wednesday.

JAC convener Venkata Narayana expressed his concern over the unilateral decision by vice-chancellor P Syam Prasad for diverting Rs 400 crore to APFSC, instead of developing the University on all fronts.
The V-C had no authority to divert funds and how can the government give only a meagre amount of Rs 5 crore per annum as against Rs 30 crore expenditure, including payment of salaries for the staff and other maintenance, the leaders said.

The survival of the university will become questionable if the government doesn’t return the amount to the University. Apart from that, students’ futures would also be affected, quality education and practicals could not be conducted, they added. JAC convenor also questioned who would guarantee the condition of the employees now that the salaries of contract employees would be stagnant.

Doctors protest delay in PG admissions


Doctors protest delay in PG admissions

In Chennai, resident doctors boycotted OP at Madras Medical College and Government Stanley Medical College.

Published: 02nd December 2021 06:36 AM 

Image of medical students attending class used for representation. (Photo | Vinod Kumar T, EPS)

By Express News Service

CHENNAI: Expressing solidarity with the the Federation of Resident Doctors Association, resident doctors in Tamil Nadu boycotted outpatient services on Wednesday due to delay in NEET PG-2021 admission counselling. The doctors said they will boycott non-emergency services from Thursday.

In Chennai, resident doctors boycotted OP at Madras Medical College and Government Stanley Medical College. One of the PG doctors at the Government Stanley Medical College said the delay was causing a lot of mental trauma to doctors who are waiting for the admissions. PG doctors on duty are also burdened with too much work in the absence of first year PG students.

“TN is also seeing a surge in dengue and fever cases. Apart from Covid-19, we have to deal with seasonal fevers also. If this continues, 2021 would be a zero academic year. Our protest is against the Union Government,” the doctor said. The counselling is delayed due to the case in the Supreme Court on EWS quota in All India Quota seats in PG medical admissions.

Why Make Examinations Larger-Than-Life Events?


THE SPEAKING TREE

Why Make Examinations Larger-Than-Life Events?

Pulkit Sharma

03.12.2021

It is commonplace to experience anxious thoughts, negative emotions, obsessive rituals, sleepless nights and butterflies in the stomach during examination time. Moderate levels of stress motivate us to work hard, overcome our limitations and give our best performance. However, when we are overly distressed, our worries can make us dysfunctional at the physical, emotional and behavioural levels. Consequently, an inner sense of vulnerability and hopelessness incapacitates us, stopping us from listening to the voice of reason. During this time, we may feel like a complete failure and see no hope in making an effort.

As a society which now believes firmly in competing, achieving and winning, we have erroneously turned examinations into larger-than-life events. We seem to have forgotten that an examination is just an innocuous assessment to tell us how well we have grasped a particular curriculum and where we need to improve in that specific programme. Whatever be the results of an examination, they can never change who we are and what we eventually do in our lives. Therefore, whenever we are stressed, we must remind ourselves that it is just one exam and in our long life, it is not going to be the end of the world. Life will give us many other chances to grow and evolve into a better person.

Letting go of this immense pressure, breathing out our worries and smiling freely during examinations is the right approach.

Comparing ourselves with others builds a lot of fear in our psyche and derails our progress. Rather than thinking about either defeating others or getting defeated by them, we should drop this unhealthy thought process and make self-perfection our long-term goal. Let us always strive to improve ourselves, working hard on overcoming our weaknesses and realising our inherent potential.

Give up smaller, mundane goals to pursue a higher ideal is the key. We can create a broad vision by visualising a better self imagining a healthy body, a strong mind, a happier self, harmonious relationships and a meaningful life. Reminding ourselves of this vision and working on it consistently will take us closer to the transcendent point of psychic evolution.

At a larger level, we also need to introspect and reform our education system. We seem to be teaching children almost everything apart from who they are, what the purpose of their birth is, how they can fulfil it, and how they can know themselves better. These questions are generally dismissed as being too esoteric for young minds and it is implied that such concerns fall outside the purview of modern education systems. But without such opportunities for inner reflection and deeper self-knowledge, our children end up wasting their energies in trivial pursuits and worrying about pointless things. Later in life, when some of them realise this, it is too difficult for them to abandon flawed assumptions and start afresh.

We need our children to be in a perpetual state of fulfilment, growth, tranquillity and joy regardless of the ups and downs of their life. Therefore, let us think of ways to empower them so that they awaken from their present state of ignorance and pursue the fullness inherent within them.

The writer is a clinical psychologist in Puducherry

Expensive tests at airport


Expensive tests at airport

02/12/2021

As stricter COVID-19 testing norms at airports kicked in from Wednesday, passengers from “at-risk” countries had to brace for massive queues, long waiting time for test results and missed connecting flights.

Their only way out was to pay for the expensive Rapid PCR test that cost up to ₹4,500 — nearly nine times the regular test.

Resident doctors boycott OPD over NEET-PG counselling delay


Resident doctors boycott OPD over NEET-PG counselling delay

Tamil Nadu Resident Doctors’ Association has called for a Statewide agitation

02/12/2021

Seeking a remedy: Members of the resident doctors’ association staging a dharna at the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital on Wednesday. B. JOTHI RAMALINGAMB. JOTHI RAMALINGAM

Special CorrespondentCHENNAI

Several postgraduate medical students, under the banner of Tamil Nadu Resident Doctors’ Association, boycotted outpatient department (OPD) services as a sign of protest over the delay in holding counselling for NEET-PG 2021.

As part of the Statewide protest, the resident doctors decided to stay away from OPD services from Wednesday until their demand to conduct counselling was met. In Chennai, the doctors staged demonstrations at the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital (RGGGH) and the Government Stanley Medical College Hospital.

While the NEET-PG was held in September, counselling had not been conducted because of a case in the Supreme Court over the EWS quota. “First, the NEET-PG was postponed and held in September. Now, the counselling has been delayed. This led to washout of an entire academic year for medical students,” said a doctor at the Government Stanley Medical College Hospital.

Faced with financial constraints, many aspirants were in a dilemma as to whether to wait for counselling or take up employment.

“The next court hearing is scheduled to be held in January. It will take another two or three months [to get a clear picture]. So, the government should conduct counselling on an urgent basis by following the existing reservation structure,” a resident doctor of RGGGH said.

The association urged the Centre and the Supreme Court to take note of the grievance of resident doctors and take steps to expedite NEET-PG counselling as well as the admission process and speed up court proceedings.

The delay in admission had caused a strain on the existing resident doctors. They said the workload of the existing postgraduate doctors had increased as they were involved in COVID-19 vaccination, flood relief camps and dengue management.

DVAC search at house of former MKU Controller of Examination


DVAC search at house of former MKU Controller of Examination

Documents of 22 vehicles and properties seized

02/12/2021

Special Correspondent MADURAI

Sleuths of the Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption on Wednesday seized documents of 22 vehicles and properties from the residence of former Controller of Examination, Madurai Kamaraj University, O. Ravi, 57, who has been charged with amassing wealth disproportionate to his known sources of income.

A day after DVAC DSP M. Sathyaseelan filed a first information report against Ravi and his wife Sumathi on Tuesday under the provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, Inspectors A. Kannan, K. Kumaraguru, A. Ambrose and T. Suryakala conducted a surprise house search during which the documents were seized.

A DVAC source said 18 rental vehicles, including 12 vans, were registered in the name of Sumathi, a homemaker. Besides, they found documents of properties in the name of Sumathi, their daughter and son-in-law.

Ravi is now the Principal of Pasumpon Muthuramalinga Thevar College, Usilampatti.

Based on specific information, DVAC conducted an investigation into his income and wealth between July 2013 and June 2020 and found that the family had acquired wealth of ₹2.91 crore over and above the known sources of income.

CBSE exam question on 2002 riots causes stir


CBSE exam question on 2002 riots causes stir

It violated guidelines, says CBSE

02/12/2021

Priscilla Jebaraj NEW DELHI

A question in the Class 12 Board examination of the CBSE on sociology on Wednesday has created a stir. “The unprecedented scale and spread of anti-Muslim violence in Gujarat in 2002 took place under which Government?” asked question no. 23 in the sociology paper. The choices offered to students were: “(a) Congress (b) BJP (c) Democratic (d) Republican.”

“A question has been asked in today’s Class 12 sociology Term 1 exam which is inappropriate and in violation of the CBSE guidelines for external subject experts for setting question papers. The CBSE acknowledges the error made and will take strict action against the responsible persons,” said a statement on the CBSE’s Twitter handle.

Several teachers said the question was within the syllabus. In the textbook “Indian Society”, a chapter on “The challenges of cultural diversity” includes a section on communalism.

“To the extent that Governments can be held responsible for communal riots, no Government or ruling party can claim to be blameless in this regard,” says a paragraph on page 134 of the text approved by the NCERT.

“In fact, the two most traumatic contemporary instances of communal violence occurred under each of the major political parties. The anti-Sikh riots of Delhi in 1984 took place under a Congress regime. The unprecedented scale and spread of anti-Muslim violence in Gujarat in 2002 took place under a BJP Government.”

Another teacher who has previously set questions for the CBSE agreed that the question was within the syllabus, but noted that the Board’s guidelines for examination papers were more restrictive. “Ensure that the questions should be class-neutral, religion-neutral, not touching the controversial, social, political, critical issues under the prevailing conditions in the country,” say the guidelines seen by The Hindu.

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