Thursday, December 13, 2018

Revenue staff gets 2-yr jail term in bribery case
A revenue department staff was convicted and sentenced to two years imprisonment by a court here on Tuesday in a seven-year-old bribery case.

Published: 12th December 2018 02:01 AM |

By Express News Service

CHENNAI : A revenue department staff was convicted and sentenced to two years imprisonment by a court here on Tuesday in a seven-year-old bribery case.According to prosecution, R Sekar, then serving as a junior assistant in Mylapore taluk office, had demanded `4,500 as bribe from one C Sekar to issue a patta in 2011. Initially, the complainant paid `500 and the official had asked him to pay the remaining sum the following day.






The complainant approached Directorate of Vigilance and Anti Corruption.R sekar was caught red-handed when accepting the bribe from the complainant.A Special Court under Prevention of Corruption Act on Tuesday pronounced him guilty. Besides the two-year jail term, the judge S Hermies imposed a fine of `3,000 on him.
Chennai doctors rejoice as woman gives birth to 5.2kg boy by normal delivery

The doctors said they believe the child, at 5.2 kg at time of birth, is the heaviest child to be born through normal delivery in this government hospital.

Published: 12th December 2018 02:40 PM 



For representational purposes (File | AP)

Express News Service

CHENNAI: A 30-year-old woman has given birth to a healthy 5.2 kg baby boy at the Government Kasturba Gandhi Hospital for Women and Children here recently. What has come as a reason for rejoice for the government hospital doctors was that it was a normal delivery, at a time when many of the private hospitals go for caesarean citing even minor complications. The doctors said they believe the child, at 5.2 kg at time of birth, is the heaviest child to be born through normal delivery in this government hospital, which is renowned for maternity care in Chennai.

Speaking to Express, Dr S Vijaya, Director (in-charge) of the hospital said, “This is the first time in the hospital we are having such a heavy baby through normal delivery. The mother had no complications following the delivery. The mother and baby are fine now." She said last time the hospital was handling delivery of a child weighing 5.1 kg, they were forced to go for the c-section.


The delivery was conducted on November 28. “But we have kept the baby on observation to check for any complications due to over-weight. But, now the baby is doing fine and we will discharge him soon," said Dr Vijaya.

For the mother Jayashree, a resident of Saidapet, this was the second child. She had given birth to her first child ten years ago.

"Usually, obese mothers or women with well built body would deliver heavy weight baby (through normal delivery) But, in this case the mother of normal weight,” Dr Vijaya said.
Tamil Nadu neurosurgeon murder case: Conspirator turns approver

In a twist to the sensational murder case of a neurosurgeon in 2013, one of the accused turned an approver saying he was 'pricked by his conscience'.

Published: 12th December 2018 05:49 PM 



Image used for representational purpose only.
By PTI

CHENNAI: In a twist to the sensational murder case of a neurosurgeon here in 2013, one of the accused turned an approver saying he was 'pricked by his conscience'.

P Iyappan deposed that on September 14 that year, he and two others, Murugan and Selvaprakash, waited for the doctor S D Subbiah to emerge from a hospital.

When the doctor walked up to his car, Iyappan said Murugan hit the surgeon first on his head and later Selvaprakash hacked him.

Iyappan, in his deposition before an additional sessions court on Tuesday, said he was on a motorcycle just behind the victim's car when the duo attacked the doctor.


Soon after the two assailants committed the crime, he said all three of them fled the scene in the motorcycle.

On why he chose to confess, Iyappan said he was 'pricked by his conscience' that a doctor was murdered for money and jobs abroad.

"I am making this confession voluntarily," he added.

Special Public Prosecutor N Vijayaraj examined him and defence counsel Raghunathan cross-examined the witness.

Also, Iyappan said Murugan apprised him just before the murder that each one of them would be paid Rs 50 lakh for executing the crime and were also assured of jobs abroad.

According to Iyappan, a property dispute at Anjugramam village in Kanyakumari district between the doctor and Ponnusamy (accused-1) led to the crime.

With Iyappan turning approver, the total number of accused in the case has now come down to nine.
DVAC officials raid TNPCB office

VILLUPURAM, DECEMBER 13, 2018 00:00 IST

Officials from the Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) on Wednesday raided the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board office here and seized unaccounted cash of Rs. 3 lakh. According to sources, the raid was carried out following complaints that the officials had been collecting bribe for issuing no-objection certificates to factories. Several officials, including the Assistant Engineer Nakheeran, were questioned.
Siddha students stage sit-in protest

TIRUNELVELI, DECEMBER 13, 2018 00:00 IST




Students of Government Siddha Medical College staging a dharna in Palayamkottai on Wednesday.M. Lakshmiarunm_lakshmiarun

Demand a new hostel building and better basic amenities

Demanding a new hostel building and better basic amenities in the college, students of Government Siddha Medical College in Palayamkottai staged sit-in dharna for a while on their college premises on Wednesday.

While the women’s hostels functioning on the college premises is battling acute water crisis for the past several years, the men’s hostel at Vannarpet, a dilapidated structure, is to be razed down shortly. As precursor, the hostel students have been asked to move out. The affected male students staged dharna on the college premises on Wednesday demanding a temporary hostel with mess facility until the new hostel building comes-up. As the students started raising slogans to highlight their demand, police personnel were deployed in the college campus.

The protesting students said they were asked to move out of the hostel to facilitate the demolition of the existing hostel building in deplorable condition with the assurance that temporary hostel with mess would be created within 90 days.

“However, the officials have comfortably forgotten the promise they gave. While no step has been taken to commence the construction of the new hostel, there is no sign of starting the temporary hostel with mess so as to help the students studying from various parts of Tamil Nadu. If not, we’ll continue to agitate against the official apathy,” they said.

The college authorities assured the protesting students that their demand would be forwarded to the government and informed them that they would be temporarily settled down in a hostel built near Reddiyarpatti on Palayamkottai outskirts for the Government Law College students, which is yet to be occupied. However, the protestors refused to accept it and continued their agitation even after 8.15 p.m.

Salem Government Hospital witnesses increase in deliveries

SALEM, DECEMBER 13, 2018 00:00 IST




567 normal deliveries and 461 Caesarean section performed in November

The Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department of the Government Mohan Kumaramangalam Medical College Hospital (GMKMCH) has achieved a major milestone by crossing 1,000 deliveries this November.

The Department, one among the three Reproductive and Child Health Centres of Excellence in the State, registered as many as 1,028 deliveries last month, thanks to the team of dedicated doctors and modern infrastructure. While 567 were normal deliveries, 461 were Caesarean section.

Set up in 1990, the Department accounted for 500 beds and pregnant women belonging to weaker sections from Salem and surrounding districts of Dharmapuri, Krishnagiri, Namakkal, Erode, Villupuram and Karur get admitted here for safe delivery.

According to M. K. Rajendran, the Dean, GMKMCH, the Department accounted for a committed team of obstetricians, neonatologists, anaesthetists functioning 24 x 7. The State government and the National Rural Health Mission have sanctioned liberal funds for the creation of additional facilities and the procurement of sophisticated equipment in the recent past.

Infrastructure

Dr. Rajendran said that the labour room of the Department headed by S.S. Subha was well-equipped with labour cots, continuous foetal monitoring machines, central oxygen supply facility, multipara monitor, and a blood bank.

The Department has an excellent set up of obstetric intensive care unit with ventilator support, and high dependency unit with facilities that were not available even in the corporate hospitals.

The department also has a spacious patient waiting area, and a shed for attenders sponsored by the Salem Corporation. While 597 deliveries took place here in January this year, it was 618 in February, 764 in March, 698 in April, 806 in May, 796 in June, 811 in July, 864 in August, 837 in September and 935 in October. “We had set a target of 1,000 deliveries in November, but exceeded the target and managed 1,028 deliveries”, Dr. Rajendran told The Hindu .

Apart from obstetric case, the Department also excelled in family planning services by performing laparoscopic hysterectomies and lap sterilization. The Department also serves as a training centre for skilled birth attendants-nurses and basic emergency obstetrics and newborn care for fresh doctors.

We had set a target of 1,000 deliveries in November, and managed 1,028 deliveries.

Dr. M. K. Rajendran,

Dean, GMKMCH
Kerala man’s death penalty commuted

NEW DELHI, DECEMBER 13, 2018 00:00 IST

Courts never considered whether condemned man could reform: SC Bench

The Supreme Court on Wednesday commuted the death penalty of a man who murdered six of a family, including children, in Kerala on the ground that none of the courts that heard the case bothered to examine the probability of his “reform or rehabilitation and social reintegration.”

A three-judge Review Bench, led by Justice Madan B. Lokur, commuted the death penalty of M.A. Antony to life imprisonment, setting aside its own judgment.

The Review Bench said none of the courts, from the trial court to the Supreme Court, gave a thought to the possibility of his reform.

“There is no meaningful discussion on why, if at all, the appellant [Antony] could not be reformed or rehabilitated,” Justice Lokur observed.

Antony, represented by advocate Manoj George, murdered the family in January 2001 after they refused to lend him money to travel to the West Asia for a job.

The Review Bench held that Antony was in dire straits and had gone to the house in the hope of getting some money and after the refusal, he decided to “kill all of them.”

The Bench held that though the socio-economic condition of a convict was not a factor in disproving his guilt, it was a factor that must be taken into consideration for awarding him an appropriate sentence.

However, Justice Lokur, writing the verdict for the Bench comprising Justices S.Abdul Nazeer and Deepak Gupta, did not agree with Mr. Manoj George’s submission that the life of a condemned man should be spared because he had spent years on death row.

“There are a number of cases where convicts have been on death row for more than six years, and if a standard period was to be adopted, perhaps each and every person on death row might have to be given the benefit of commutation of the death sentence to life imprisonment,” Justice Lokur said.

The Review Bench agreed that there was no material to back the State of Kerala’s claim that Antony was a “hardened criminal.”

The Bench also said the courts should consider whether a death row convict from a poor background got adequate legal representation.

“The poor are more often than not at the receiving end in access to justice and access to the remedies available,” Justice Lokur said.

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