Saturday, November 25, 2017

Nannilam on the boil over ONGC move

Registering protest:A road in Nannilam wears a deserted look on Friday.  

Plan for hydrocarbon exploration at village has traders downing shutters

Deeply agitated over the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation’s reported move to explore hydrocarbons in their neighbourhood, residents and shopkeepers of Nannilam and six other villages in Tiruvarur district resorted to a hartal on Friday.

All shops remained shut during the day and people barely came out for any activity in what was reflective of their collective sentiment against the proposed ONGC move.

After it came to light that the ONGC planned venturing into hydrocarbon exploration at Thennanjar village near Nannilam in Tiruvarur district, people of the region vehemently opposed the exploration plan saying the ecology of the region would be irreversibly affected.

To register their collective protest, people of Nannilam, Andipandal, Sannanallur, Mappillai Kuppam, Achuthamangalam, Vazhkkai and Panangudi villages staged a hartal and traders shut their shops in the villages.

Autorickshaws and taxis remained off roads while the advocates practising at the Nannilam court boycotted hearings scheduled for the day.

Coordinator of the All Farmers Federation of Tamil Nadu P.R. Pandian tried to proceed to the proposed site of ONGC activity but the police prevented him and his supporters.
They resented the manner in which the ONGC was pushing through the project “without heeding public opinion and the manner in which the governmental agencies were brazenly supporting” the ONGC works much to the chagrin of the public in the seven villages.

Mr. Pandian, as also sections of youth in Nannilam, alleged that the ONGC had given the go-by to procedures and legal requirements.

Dreams crushed, high-scoring medical aspirant rears cattle 

Deepak Karthik | Nov 24, 2017, 08:35 IST



Padmapriya had to give up on her MBBS dream as her NEET score was not adequate to get her a seat
TRICHY: The aspiration of 18-year-old Padmapriya was to wear the white coat and be addressed as doctor. However, she had to give up her MBBS dream as her score in the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) was not adequate to fetch her an MBBS seat. Now, even her other option of pursuing Bachelor of Siddha Medicine and Surgery (BSMS) hangs in the balance as her family is incapable of paying the fees for the course at a private siddha medical college.

Padmapriya, who scored 1,114 marks out of 1,200 in her higher secondary board examination, now rears cattle at her native Keezhachinthamani village near Jayankondam in Ariyalur district as she has to support her family too. Daughter of Gunasekaran, a differently-abled man, she hit headlines when she mastered all the 1,330 Thirukkural couplets at the age of seven. As a reward, she received free admission and education at a private matriculation school near Jayankondam. Since NEET was made mandatory for medical education, the medical aspirant who completed her higher secondary in Tamil medium, took up the competitive examination but could score only 77 marks, far below the required slab for medical education.

"Though my MBBS dream was crushed due to NEET, I was reluctant to give up. After attending counselling at Dr MGR Medical University, Chennai earlier this month, I secured admission for BSMS at a private medical college at Coimbatore as I have 184.75 medical cut-off marks," Padmapriya told TOI.

Latest CommentHi I do know why this article has been published now. Padmapriya''s fee was paid on the 19th of October 2017 by one of our friend and we have the receipt for it. She does not need any additional fund... Read MoreNivedita Ambigananthan

However, she is short of money as her poverty has become a hurdle in paying the fee of ?3.30 lakh to pursue the course.

With her differently-abled father taking care of livestock and mother Gandhimathi working as agriculture labourer, Padmapriya will have to abandon her education if they can't find the money.

How a missed call led to 3 deaths

Sindhu Kannan | TNN | Updated: Nov 25, 2017, 06:25 IST



CHENNAI: He missed the first call from his brother. By the time he got the second call, their Innova was in a pit after plunging down from the top of an unfinished flyover in Red Hills.

While Ayyappan and driver Kandavel managed to get out of the car, Ayyappan's wife Pavithra, and her parents Palani and Navaneedham were not such lucky.

The family had set out from their Manimangalam residence in three cars to Minjur for a betrothal. They were returning home when the accident occurred.

Kandavel, who had been employed with Palani's family for the last two years, was unaware of the route and kept checking the google maps on his phone. But when it reached Outer Ring Road, he just took the flyover, instead of the service lane.

Those following them were also checking their phones and realised Kandavel had taken the wrong route. "Suspecting something amiss, Ayyappan's brother tried calling him," said M C Siva, a relative.

"He missed the first call. As soon as he attended the next call, the car had fallen," said Saravanan, another relative.

The eight relatives who are yet to recover from the shock of seeing the car plunge down ran to the pit and tried to break open the windows but in vain. Police soon arrived and with the help of a crane lifted out the car and broke open the doors.

Police said the car was air conditioned vehicle and most of the occupants were asleep. While the driver managed to escape from the front door, Ayyappan did so from the rear.

"Ayyappan tried to save his wife Pavithra who was seated in the rear seat along with him, but in vain and his in-laws were completely stuck as the air bags have opened," said Siva.

Why is the first and last resort suicide?

| Nov 25, 2017, 01:00 IST
The suicide of a girl student at an engineering college in Chennai, after she was allegedly caught copying, has brought to the fore the discussion on the burning issue of why our youngsters are not being able to handle pressure and resort to extreme steps the minute they are reprimanded for even the slightest misdemeanour. We speak to a cross-section of people from state educational officials to institutional heads to counsellors on the same. Social media, isolation within one's home, pressure to complete course in stipulated time, helicopter parenting — there seem to be one too many reasons out there for the statistics to show an alarming rise as far as student suicides go. So, what gives?

Social media, helicopter parenting put pressure on kids

Of late, on social media, many people always want to post things that project the best in them or their children. That result in putting unrealistic expectations on kids. That's the main problem. Secondly, we aren't teaching our kids how to handle failures in life. Earlier, when we were children, we were taught that the means mattered and not the end. But now, it's vice versa. In this case also, the same thing happened. She wanted to do well in the exam at any cost. Too much of helicopter parenting is another reason for putting unwanted pressure on students. A few years ago, the higher education department had initiated the Arts and Science colleges to have counsellors and may be soon, we can have them in engineering colleges as well.

- Sunil Paliwal, IAS, Principal Secretary, Department of Higher Education

Continuous communication between staff and students helps

The kind of democratic setup we have in MCC helps us transfuse concerns, worries and anxieties, especially among the students. Also, we've student leaders in the decision-making body and therefore, there isn't much room for any misunderstanding. Continuous communication between the staff and the students helps us sort out issues and find solutions smoothly. That ensures any untoward incidents. Also, considering the number of stress-related cases that we see these days, we have a full-time counsellor as well.

- Dr RW Alexander Jesudasan, Principal, Madras Christian College

Shame the wrong act he/ she did, not the individual

As a therapist, I feel that we've to be kind in the way we bring up an issue, especially when dealing with youngsters even if they're the ones at fault. These kinds of untoward things happen when the core of a person is disrespected for whatever reason it is. You must shame the wrong act he/she did, not the person. Many fail to differentiate between the two. Even to correct a person, we need not look straightaway at punishment. Also, what needs to be discussed is why an individual is being pressured to do something. In this case, she would have been under so much pressure to pass the exam. So, her intention had been to pass the exam somehow and it ended up this way Magdalene Jeyarathnam,
Psychotherapist

Blame it on the isolation within our own homes

From my experience talking to psychiatrists, some people genetically have this tendency to commit suicide. Meanwhile, in my opinion, this isn't a topic that should be discussed much. Because in some way or the other, that will give people such ideations when they're pushed to a corner. Instead, let's discuss stress management. And the best way to manage it is to talk to someone or call 104 helpline. In the last four years, there have been 1200 people who would have overcome suicide ideation after being counselled by us. There's no way we can avoid pressure, but how we overcome pressure is what that matters. Also, if there's a spurt in the number of suicides, blame it on the isolation that we face within our homes. Everyone is glued on to their mobile phones.
— Counsellor from 104 helpline

We need to build a proper, nurturing ecosystem for children

The family, society, education system and the technological advancement in terms of social media — all these have a cumulative effect on the individual. With social media dominating the web of life (of young adults specifically), the shame the person may have to carry for a minor misdeed amplifies multifold — and becomes a memory that doesn't fade with time. Psychologists have confirmed that we are negativity-biased naturally. Social media seems to increase this vulnerability. Many a time, the individual has been trained or brought up in such a way as to be quite hard on his or her own self — to such an extent that they are not allowed to consider failure or shame as a feather that can be shed. Shame and failure do not come with the same yardstick for all individuals. It is usually not the teacher who's at fault. Let me share my experience here — I went to the school my son studied at one day, so that the parent can observe the proceedings of the class. When asked a question, 80 hands were raised in a 40 student class, with a cry of 'miss, miss'. So much was the enthusiasm to answer. All of them wanted to display their knowledge. When one of them told a wrong answer, the teacher moved on and the kids in the class also didn't care about the wrong answer. It was over at that moment — and the student also never felt any kind of shame in having accidently uttered a wrong answer.

Being a teacher myself, in one of the colleges where students are considered the cream of the country, when I tested the same method as above, trying to draw the attention of the class into answering a simple question, very few hands went up. These hands were of those who were very sure of their answers. For a long time, I did not understand why this shift. It was later, while dealing with troubled students, that I realised why students' behaviour changes when they get into higher classes — it was all about maintaining their image among their friends and peers. The news about failure spreads fast — and this makes these students very touchy about erring. At IIT-M, we have one of the best Student Counselling Programs in India.

We have come to believe in moderate and balanced involvement of parents to be an optimal way. Parents themselves seem to need a lot of counselling, as they often tend to unknowingly transfer their anxiety onto their kids, in the belief that they are providing them with a better future. Actually, we need to do a lot of work in terms of building an ecosystem right from home, school, work and retirement that nurtures the individual in terms of themselves, and helps them shed socially driven anxieties.
— Professor Sivakumar M Srinivasan, Dean (Students), IIT Madras

Students' council needed in our colleges

In these places, there are hundreds of non-teaching staff who've no other job but to monitor students in hostels and ensure that they don't gather in groups for any reason. There are no extracurricular activities in these deemed universities. Basically, it's the fault with our education system. We need to restructure that. It's high time that the University Grants Commission (UGC) checked on these deemed universities and the way they function. Also, students council need to be formed in colleges to address their issues. There's nothing of that sort in our engineering campuses, especially in deemed universities. Now, Tamil Nadu is only second in India in the number of student suicides. In the last five years, close to 40,000 student suicides have happened across India. Several such suicides have happened in our deemed universities in the past. With their influence, they have been able to keep them under wraps. Now, it's because of Anita suicide and its aftermath, such incidents are coming to light.

— D Chandru, SFI south Chennai district president

The punishment must be logical

Children are so mentally fragile these days — I believe they are overprotected by their surroundings and they don't know or want to accept failure. Another reason is that there is not enough communication when the students come to a new college; they don't have friends in the first year, they don't interact with others and feel lonely. I don't know what the inside truth is, but going by the reports, if the girl was caught cheating in the examination hall, a mature teacher would have scrapped her paper and asked her to re-write the paper. They don't need to verbally insult the student in the middle of the examination. But even if the teacher is questioning in the examination hall as to why the student did it, it is not wrong. Today, children are sensitive; they are not able to accept that they are doing something wrong. They do not like anyone questioning them and so is the case with parents these days. If a teacher scolds a student, they are questioned by the parents — 'Why did you talk to my child like that?' So, I don't know where the problem lies exactly. From my experience, I can say that if the students feel and trust whatever their teachers do is for their own good, they won't protest. But teachers must be mature, behave, and the punishment should be logical.
—TV Geetha, Dean, College of Engineering, Anna University

There's unwanted pressure on students to complete course in four years

Pressure is there from both the parents and peers. No matter what, parents want their children to excel in higher studies within a stipulated time and get a lucrative job. Our education system and society are giving too much importance to trivial matters; for example, completing a professional course in four years and doing things only the way it is defined. But if you take the case in the world's most developed countries like America, government expects the students to finish a course in 150% of the time. If it's a four-year course, the number of students completing the course in that stipulated time is very less. And the students there don't feel pressured. Also, when they are caught copying in front of their peers, they fear that their parents will come to know about it and they will be left in embarrassment. Because these students would be coming from the same neighbourhood and their families would know each other. With every parent boasting so much about their wards' achievements, this would be an embarrassment. Another thing is that we only focus on the incident, but fail to discuss the root causes. Lastly, it should also be noted that there's a general perception and talk even among parents that private university education is commercialised. So, such feeling creeps into the minds of students as well and they will not pay attention to teachers. They see us as a commercial entity and give no value to our words.

— Koteswararao Anne, Director of academics, Veltech University

J Jayalalithaa’s thumb impression to be compared with one in Bengaluru jail

TNN | Updated: Nov 25, 2017, 05:48 IST



File photo of J Jayalalithaa

CHENNAI: In a new twist to the debate over the authenticity of former chief minister J Jayalalithaa's thumb impression found in her party candidates' nomination papers filed during her hospitalisation, the Madras high court has decided to compare it with the leader's fingerprints available with Parappana Agrahara jail in Bengaluru.

It also asked the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to furnish Jayalalithaa's thumb impression details to the court.

The superintendent of central prison at Parappana Agrahara and regional officer of Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), which handles Aadhaar, must give the detail pertaining to the fingerprints to the court by December 8, said Justice P Velmurugan.

Jayalalithaa was lodged in the jail after her conviction in the Rs 65.66 crore disproportionate assets case in 2014.

Dr Saravanan, who lost to the AIADMK candidate in the Thirupparankundram byelection last year, questioned the validity of the election saying his rival's nomination was illegal since Jayalalithaa was too ill to sign and attest the documents. He alleged that the candidate forged the former chief minister's signature on nominations. The election commission too had failed to scrutinise it and take action, he said.

In an earlier hearing, the Election Commission of India, which was summoned to present its explanation, said that it accepted Jayalalithaa's thumb impression on the nomination forms based not on personal verification but on an authorisation by AIADMK presidium chairman E Madhusudhanan.

The case has evoked much public debate, as none, other than the treating doctors, paramedics and a few others close to her, was allowed to meet Jayalalithaa during the 73 days of hospitalisation. It was the first time that she had affixed her thumb impression on any official document.

Repeat offender caught at airport with $10,000, arrested

TNN | Updated: Nov 25, 2017, 06:13 IST




 CHENNAI: Customs officials at Chennai airport on Thursday detected two cases of currency smuggling by passengers bound to Kuala Lumpur. One passenger has been arrested.

In the first case, Thameem Ansari, 31, a frequent flyer, was intercepted after he was cleared for immigration on a flight bound for Kuala Lumpur by Malaysian Airlines flight MH 183.

He had no check-in baggage, but when his cabin baggage was checked, foreign currency worth $10,000 equivalent to Rs 6.45 lakh was found. It was concealed inside specially stitched pockets between two layers of black cardboard which was kept inside the bag. He was carrying the currency to buy gold and smuggle it back into India. During investigations, it was found that there were four customs offence cases against him in the past.

As the cumulative value of all offences committed by him exceeded Rs 20 lakh, he was arrested under Customs Act.

Sources said businessmen are allowed to carry up to $5,000 cash but they have to show the source and also indicate the reasons for which they are carrying it. "But that was absent in this case," the source added.

In the second case, Indian currency worth Rs 2 lakh was recovered and seized from Mohammed Nazeer, 35, who was travelling to Kuala Lumpur on the same flight.

The currency was concealed inside a blue shirt and innerwear, which were kept in his hand baggage.

When questioned, he said that he was going to give the money to agents in Malaysia who would use it to pay their labourers. FEMA regulations stipulate that an Indian resident can carry only Rs 25,000 in Indian currency.

Railways to pay Rs 1 lakh to passenger for loss of gold chain

| TNN | Updated: Nov 25, 2017, 05:58 IST
Representative image
 
CHENNAI: In a rare instance, the district consumer court recently penalised and came down heavily on the Southern Railways for negligence on behalf of one of its Train Ticket Examiners (TTEs) who forgot to lock the doors of a reserved compartment in an express train plying between Chennai and Mumbai.

A 61-year-old woman from Chennai lost her gold mangalsutra during this journey.

Though a case was filed three years ago, the railway police couldn't trace the chain and the Chennai (North) consumer forum directed the railways to compensate her loss by paying Rs 1 lakh.

In February 2013, P Jayanthi boarded the Chennai Mail at Mumbai. She travelled in second class-cum reservation compartment.

The train reached Chennai Central Railway Station around 3.30am on February 15 and she was shocked to find out that her four and a half sovereign gold chain, which she was wearing around her neck, was missing. She filed a complaint with the government railway police (GRP) at Central Station suspecting role of railway staff as unauthorised people can't enter inside reserved compartments without their help. A case was filed under Section 379 (theft) of the Indian Penal Code. Aggrieved that authorities couldn't retrieve the chain even a year after the complaint was filed, Jayanthi approached the local consumer forum in December 2015.

Railways argued that the complainant can seek redressal only with the GRP and can't be held liable. Their counsel referred to Section 100 of the Indian Railways Act, 1989 which states the administration is not responsible for loss of luggage.

After hearing both arguments, the forum stated that it is the duty of the TTE to ensure safety of passengers by fastening all locks of doors in reservation compartments after they examined tickets. A third person couldn't have entered the compartment if the doors were locked. Hence, the forum ordered the Southern Railways to pay Rs 1 lakh as compensation for deficiency in service in addition to Rs 5,000 towards litigation expenses within six months.

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