Friday, June 29, 2018

UP IN ALMS INSIDE CHENNAI’S BEGGING INDUSTRY

DRIVEN BY NECESSITY: WHERE EVERY LASH BRINGS MONEY

Sholaga Tribe, Origin Identified By Madras Univ Report, Awaits ST Certification

Ekatha.Ann@timesgroup.com: 29.06.2018

The scars seared into his skin by years of selfinflicted whipping in his youth and the number of children he fathered later fetched V Natarajan money for years and now the title of the leader of a clan of beggars.

At 39, Natarajan knows he is too young to be called ‘pedu moopar’ — the title given to the community’s leader, usually the eldest. But for the 45 families who stay on a hillock in Kanniamman Nagar, around 12km from Avadi, tradition is something they are trying to break free of. For the past 70 years, members of this clan, who identify themselves as Sholagas, have moved three states, lashing themselves with ‘saatai’ (a whip made of tightly wound jute fibres) to win sympathy and coins. “We didn’t move by choice,” says Natarajan. “We were forced out by residents and panchayat heads. They say we pollute their land,” says Natarajan.

In 2010, the group found a home in Kanniamman Nagar after Natarajan, with the help of an NGO, brought their discrimination to the attention of the state. When they arrived, they had to share space with another community engaged in begging. “This is where beggars like us are dumped, but we aren’t complaining. At least no one is asking us to leave,” he says, absent-mindedly running a hand across the lash marks on an arm. Just then, a brawl breaks out. A three-year-old from Natarajan’s clan had tottered across the path that divides the two settlements. The groups don’t see eye-to-eye. “They think we are lowlives. For them, begging is a business. For us, it is survival,” he says, watching his men resolve the fight. One of them takes out his whip and the sight makes the other group back off. “We don’t want trouble. We prefer solving issues on our own,” he says.

The 45 families under Natarajan have around 350 children. While the older children, he says, go to a government school, infants and toddlers accompany the women to beg in the city. Some of them carry drums to draw attention to their babies, the older men carry whips. Mari, who estimates his age to be 79, is among them. Sporting dark glasses, he usually begs outside Perambur railway station, making around ₹100 a day. “When I bleed, I wipe my blood on some of these babies for more sympathy,” he says. When asked why the community uses torture, he scratches his matted grey hair. “That’s what our ancestors taught us,” he says, while showing off his only inheritance, a whip.

But the community is a sub-sect that was created only in the 1900s. “The group is part of the Sholaga tribe that was forced out of the hills in southern Karnataka after the Forest Act in 1878 made them trespassers in their own land,” says S Sumathi, head of anthropology department at Madras University. Her department was given the task of proving the communities in Madurai and Tiruvallur belong to the Sholaga tribe, which the government had refused to accept because of lack of documentation. As a result, none of them have schedule tribe certificates, depriving them of reservations in education and jobs in the government sector.

When the act banned shifting cultivation, foraging, grazing and hunting in the forests, around 1,000 Sholaga families were displaced. Some moved to Andhra, while others settled in Madurai and Tiruvallur. In a land and culture alien to them, all of them took to begging for a livelihood. “No clan or community engages in or encourages begging. For them it is a means of survival,” says Sumathi, who submitted a report last month confirming the communities’ Sholaga origin. Various parameters such as kinship, migratory pattern, dialect and belief system were taken into account. “They don’t think in terms of lineage because they rarely have any story to say or boast of, but they think like a clan and function as one unit,” says Sumathi. The community is endogamous, they speak a mix of Telugu, Kannada and Tamil (confirming their migratory route), their gods are not brahminical and their beliefs are intertwined with their eco-system. Their sense of kinship and clear political structure is distinctive. At dusk, when the women return with infants tied around their chests with ragged pieces of cloth, all of them hand over the earnings of the day to Natarajan. He counts the money and splits it into 10. “We have a register. The money is given to 10 families,” he says. The community collectively makes ₹3,000-₹3,500 every day. “We get more when children are sent to beg on weekends,” says Natarajan, who has seven children. Not everyone in his community begs. Men and teenagers who drop out of schools make money by digging wells. Women stay at home and bear babies who are used to beg. Natarajan’s sister Mari, 29, has eight children, the birth of her twins a year ago was a cause for celebration

as a child means more revenue. While the leader of the neighbouring settlement refused to talk to TOI, Natarajan agreed on one condition. “We are not criminals and we aren’t beggars by choice. We want to get out and want people to know our story,” he says.







500 property regns in TN rejected

Registration Department Finds Fraudulent Parent Docus

Yogesh.Kabirdoss@timesgroup.com

Chennai: 29.06.2018

A fortnight after verification of parent documents for new property registrations was made mandatory, registration of about 500 land documents has been rejected across the state. Of these, 350 pertained to fraudulent parent documents, while registrations for the rest could not be facilitated due to absence of parent documents. Sub-registrar offices in Chennai and suburbs witnessed highest attempt to register property using fraudulent parent documents in Tamil Nadu.

Registration department sources said sub-registrars needed to go an extra mile to ensure that submitted documents were genuine.

As per the revised rules, verification of parent documents by the sub-registrars concerned is a compulsory procedure for (property) sale deeds. The sub-registrar must sign on the first page of the parent document as a mark of completing the task with due diligence, which would be scanned and maintained in the registration department. “During such verifications, about 350 parent documents were detected to be forged,” registration department official said.

This apart, nearly 150 land registrations could be not carried out due to non-availability of parent documents for various reasons including missing owners.

Among the 500 rejected documents, according to sources, 75% were recorded in the sub-registrar offices of Chennai and its peripheries. “Fraudulent parent documents both on individual houses and plots were relatively high in the city and suburbs,” the official said. However, the sub-registrars did not file any complaint with police, sources added.

In a recent case of fraudulent creation of Power of Attorney (PoA) for a two ground property, the sub-registrar of Madhavaram in north Chennai said he had seen the parent document before facilitating the PoA. But, official sources said the parent document was not verified, and a fake PoA was registered by forging the identity proof of the original owner of the property with the connivance of the official, sources added. The crime branch police has registered a case, in which the sub-registrar has been made an accused.

The registration department mandated verification of parent documents for registering properties from June 7 to eliminate registrations using forged documents. In case the parent documents are mortgaged with banks, a statement from the financial institutions should be submitted.

Noting that a sub-registrar would be responsible for any discrepancies in property registrations under his purview, sources said they would also be held accountable and action taken.

TN admission season begins: Engg, med, law rank lists out

Vinayashree J & Pushpa Narayan TNN: 29.06.2018

The Tamil Nadu government on Thursday released the admission rank list for engineering, MBBS and BDS, and law courses. With engineering admissions starting only after the first round of medical counselling, the government hopes to prevent students from dropping out of allotted courses. The engineering counselling is expected to begin after July 10.

Health minister C Vijaya Baskar said the state released the rank lists based on NEET scores — one for applicants to government colleges and selffinancing colleges under government quota and the other for management seats in self-financing colleges. The state received 28,067 applications from students for government college seats. Entry to medical courses can be tougher this year as cutoff is likely to go up by 50 marks for all categories. When the counselling for admission begins on July 1, the state will have 3,328 seats — 2,447 seats in state-run medical colleges, 127 seats in Rajah Muthiah Medical College, 65 seats in ESIC in KK Nagar, and 668 seats in self-financing colleges under the state quota. In addition, it will admit students to 516 seats under the management quota.

With not many state board students scoring centum this year, CBSE candidates may have a good chance of securing more seats in the counselling process. The Tamil Nadu Dr Ambedkar Law University has also released the rank list for five-year integrated law courses for which counselling will start on July 11and 12 at 9am.



CAMPUS CALLING
Disconnect your phones to connect with your elderly

Priya.Menon@timesgroup.com

Chennai: 29.06.2018

The wired world has helped connect people across the globe. But those caught in the tangled web of technology have also been disconnected from the people who are physically close to them. This gap is felt more by the elderly, who often have to vie with smartphones and laptops to gain their loved ones’ attention. That’s why HelpAge India launched their country-wide campaign ‘Disconnect to Connect’ at the beginning of this month.

According to their report ‘Elder Abuse in India – 2018, Changing Cultural Ethos & Impact of Technology’ the most common form of abuse the elderly experienced was disrespect (56%), verbal abuse (49%) and neglect (33%).

“Many elderly people tell us they feel disrespected as their children, who are young working adults, and grandchildren are on their phones and computers at home,” says Sonali Sharma, director (communications), HelpAge India. “So we wanted to create awareness among young working adults that, though it may not be intentional, it is hurtful to older people when you do not pay attention when they are talking to you.”

For the survey, aimed at understanding the extent and reasons behind abuse of elderly, 5,014 respondents across 23 cities participated. Almost 65% stated that attention to phones/computers was disrespectful and 73% elders felt their adult children are too busy on the phone. More than 60% agreed quality time spent with their adult children had decreased with increase in usage of phones/computers and 78% agreed that social media had eaten into the time they spend together.

“Our campaign urges people to disconnect from gadgets to connect with older people sitting in front of them,” says Sharma. “We also conduct digital literacy workshops with older people for them learn to use smartphones, tablets.”

In Tamil Nadu too, the campaign aims to sensitise elders and youngsters. “As part of our ‘Students Action for Value Education’ programme, we visit schools and talk to them about the need for companionship to the elderly. They learn more values from their elders than from books and it will also keep the seniors healthier and happier,” says V Sivakumar, state head (TN), HelpAge India.

HC upholds jail for teacher in sexual assault of student

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 29.06.2018

A science teacher who was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment after being found guilty of sexually assaulting a 11-year-old girl student, failed to earn any relief from the Madras high court, which upheld the sentence.

Justice R M T Teeka Raman, declining to offer any relief to Sivanesan, said: “The petitioner/accused, is a teacher is handling children. His duty is not only to impart education, but to also preach moral and ethical principles to them. A teacher should be a role-model to the students.”

Sivanesan had sexually assaulted the girl at a school near Tirunallar, in Puducherry, on August 4, 2016. A case under Pocso Act was registered following her parents’ complaint. The prosecution had paraded 17 witnesses to prove the accused guilty, and a trial court sentenced him to 10 years in jail, besides imposing a fine of ₹5,000. Assailing the order, he filed the present appeal.

The judge pointed out that the witnesses had “given cogent, unblemished and corroborating evidence about the act of the accused. “Considering the entirety of the circumstances and the evidence placed, I am not inclined to grant the relief for the present.”
Banks can deny loan based on applicant’s credentials, says HC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 29.06.2018

Can a father’s default in repaying a bank loan adversely affect the loan prospects of his ward?

The Madras high court has answered in the affirmative and observed: “Rather than running behind defaulters, a loan can be rejected at the threshold by identifying a person’s credentials. In this case, the bank has rightly done so, as the petitioner’s father defaulted in paying several loans.”

Justice S Vaidyanathan passed the order, after dismissing a petition by A Deepika, who had joined BSc nursing and wanted the court to direct a nationalised bank to sanction her education loan.

In his order, Justice Vaidyanathan said: “I have held that in view of Model Educational Loan Scheme for pursuing higher education in India and abroad, fixation of 60% of marks as eligibility for education loan by the bank cannot be faulted with. Banks/financial institutions are giving loan to several people under various political pressures and ultimately public money is being misappropriated and defaulters flee from the country. Innocent employees, who are forced to sign the loan grant, are ultimately taken to task. Whether the loan amount is small or huge, it needs to be recovered from defaulters. Hence, I find that except the reason that nursing course does not come under IBA guidelines, all other reasons are found to be sound and the petitioner is not entitled for the loan. Accordingly, the petition stands dismissed.”

Deepika said she had obtained admission in Karthikeyan College in Nagapattinam, and had approached the State Bank of India’s Thalaingaiyur branch for a loan of ₹3.4 lakh towards tuition fee, transportation costs and mess expenses. The request was rejected on many grounds including that nursing course did not come under IBA educational loan scheme.
Now, download MU provisional certificate from website

Siddharth.Prabhakar@timesgroup.com: 29.06.2018

Chennai: Students graduating from colleges affiliated to University of Madras will no longer need to run from pillar to post to get a provisional degree certificate.

The university’s syndicate on Thursday has decided that the certificates will be published on the institutions website and students can download it free of cost.

Provisional degree certificate is an important document when applying for higher studies. There is a time lag between the time results are announced and the convocation where the final degree certificate is given.

However, educational institutions as well as employers demand some proof of the candidate having cleared the exams. For this, universities issue the provisional degree certificate which is valid for a short period of time. But for this, students are made to run from one section to another.

The University’s move is keeping in line with Vice Chancellor P Duraisamy’s philosophy to make things easier for students. “Students can download it and print it. It will have a validity for three months,” a university official said. It will have a unique QR code as well. Syndicate members also discussed the possibility of linking it with Aadhaar number. This will be applicable for the undergraduate and post-graduate students from affiliated colleges and the university.

The syndicate also deliberated on approving the principals appointed by affiliated minority colleges like Stella Maris and New College.

Sources said that the approvals were withheld by the syndicate as there was a discussion if the colleges have formed the selection committees as per the 2010 UGC guidelines which includes an amendment specific to minority institutions.

The syndicate also approved the promotions of 15 professors under the Career Advancement Scheme (CAS).

There was also a discussion on a Rs 67 lakh audit objection pertaining to an irregularity regarding procurement of pen drives by the Institute of Distance Education (IDE) more than a decade ago. This was deferred as the members could not converge on a common resolution.

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