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Thursday, February 21, 2019

Dead lizard in midday meal, 40 K'taka students admitted to hospital

Education
The students are out of danger and are responding well to treatment.
Panic prevailed on Thursday afternoon in Karnataka’s Koppal district after 40 students between standards 1 and 8 of a government school fell ill after consuming their midday meal. The students were shifted to the hospital after many of them started vomiting. According to the District Surgeon Dr Daanareddy, all the students of the Bevoor Primary and Middle School are out of danger and are responding well to treatment. A dead lizard was found in the midday meal prepared in the school in Bevoor village in Yelburga taluk, Dr Daanareddy said. “They were initially admitted to the community health centre first and later transferred to the Koppal District Hospital. The food was prepared at the school itself and the midday meal preparation was not contracted to anyone,” Dr Daanareddy told TNM. No complaint has been filed with the police. In the recent past, there have been multiple instances of students falling ill after eating midday meals.   Thursday's incident comes less than a month of 10 students of a Bengaluru school were also taken ill after consuming their midday meal. In December 2018 over 100 students belonging to two different schools in Ballari and Bagalkot districts had to be admitted to hospital on a single day after they consumed their midday meals. In the biggest such case in 2014, more than 350 children of Government Urdu Higher Primary School in Bengaluru’s DJ Halli had fallen ill consuming their midday meal. On that occasion too, a dead lizard was found in the rice.  
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Aero India 2019: Thales is expected to create 3k jobs with new Bengaluru centre

Aero India 2019
Thales is looking to hire thousands of engineers in the next three to five years for its new Global Engineering Competence Centre, the company said.
Representation photo
Thales, which has been providing aerospace solutions to the Indian defence industry for decades, has now launched a Global Engineering Competence Centre in Bengaluru. The company announced the launch of the centre on February 19, and its executive board members are expected to hold talks with officials with government agencies on February 22, at AeroIndia. With the engineering competence centre, Thale is expected to create thousands of jobs in Bengaluru in the next three to five years in the civil and defence sectors. According to a statement released by Thale, the company seeks to localise research and development activities in India and favour manufacturing in India. “With the ECC, Thales seeks to play a major role in job creation and skill development in India as it targets to hire 3,000 engineers in the next three-five years along with its partners. It is a first-of-its-kind Engineering Competence Centre in India focusing on software and hardware capabilities in the areas of civil as well as defence businesses, serving Thales’s global needs,” the statement reads. P Satish Menon, who has worked in the industry for over 30 years, has been appointed as the head of the centre. For years, the Indian government has pursued a proactive policy to develop R&D and create high The centre will be dedicated to value-added systems in the fields of Air Traffic Management, avionics, cockpit, flight management, in-flight entertainment and connectivity systems, radar software, airborne Intelligence Surveillance and reconnaissance tactical management systems. It will also focus efforts on advanced hardware technology such as radio frequency designs for radars and communication equipment, high performance processing units and in airborne digital processing functions. “India is an innovative country with a great pool of skilled engineers. This is why we extend our 65-year-long journey in the country and our global engineering footprint with the launch of our Group Engineering Competence Centre in Bengaluru. This centre is uniquely positioned to serve all domains that Thales operates in and cater to worldwide markets. With our plans of hiring over 3,000 engineers in the coming years, we look forward to significantly contributing to the 'Skill India’ initiative and innovation in the country,” Pascale Sourisse, Thales' senior executive vice-president of international development, said in a statement.
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Fire breaks out in City Centre Mall in Mangaluru

Fire
Activists say that the City Centre Mall was opened in 2010 without clearances.
A fire broke out in the City Centre Mall in Mangaluru at around 11:35 am on Thursday morning. Thick plumes of smoke were seen coming from one of the upper floors of the mall which prompted fire officials from nearby fire stations to reach the spot and extinguish the fire.  According to the Fire Department, no casualties have been reported. The fire has been put out, said officials.  "We received the call immediately after the fire started and we sent four fire engines to the mall immediately. People were asked to evacuate and so far, there have been no casualties reported. We are investigating the cause of the fire. We only know that it has started on one of the upper floors of the mall," a fire official from the Pandeshwar fire station confirmed.  The mall was opened in 2010 and has four floors. However, at the time of its inauguration, reports suggested that it had been opened without clearance.   “The mall was opened without an occupancy certificate and for many years it has operated without an OC. We followed up with the then DC and ministers because this was a disaster waiting to happen,” said activist Vidya Dinker. She added that the multiplex on the fourth floor of the building received a fire department clearance, however, the building itself did not receive the required clearances.  The mall was built at a cost of Rs 115 crore, reported The Hindu.  This is a developing story
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Convicted murderer escapes police custody, allegedly kills wife in Bengaluru

41-year-old Shankar was convicted for killing his first wife in 2011 and was serving a life term sentence at Parappana Agrahara Central Prison.
A convicted murderer, who escaped police custody on February 16, is now suspected to have killed his second wife. 41-year-old Shakar was convicted for killing his wife in 2011 by a Bengaluru court. Shankar’s second wife, 31-year-old Renuka, was found murdered at a lodge in Majestic on Tuesday night, which has led police to suspect Shankar’s involvement. Upparpet Police say that the manager of Surya Nest Lodge called the police when a foul smell began emanating from the room, which Shankar and Renuka had rented. When the police arrived at the spot and broke open the door on Tuesday night, they found her body, which was beginning to decompose. “The cause of death was clear. The woman’s throat was slit. After autopsy, she was identified as Renuka, Shankar’s wife. That’s when we realised that he may have killed her since he has a track record,” the Upparpet Police added.   According to the Upparpet Police, Shankar was undergoing treatment at Victoria Hospital on February 16 after he complained of “terrible pain” in his head. “This was just a ruse. He had hatched a plan to escape. When they were shifting him from the jail ward in Victoria to conduct tests, he escaped,” the Upparpet Police said. What happened on February 16? On February 4, an inmate at Parrappana Agrahara Central Prison, Kalburgi Ramesh, who is a person with physical disabilities, had complained of being unwell. Since Ramesh required support to walk, Shankar and a prison guard had taken him to the jail ward in Victoria Hospital, where he was undergoing treatment. “Kalburgi Ramesh’s health was failing. He was frequently falling ill. Even in prison, Shankar was the one, who helped Ramesh move around if he required assistance. Many a times in the past he had helped Ramesh. So the same happened on February 4 as well. Also, Shankar was prone to falling ill too and he was also taken to Victoria Hospital on multiple occasions but he had never escaped before,” the police added. According to the Police, Renuka and Shankar met at Victoria Hospital, when they were both undergoing treatment a few years ago. Renuka, who was a victim of domestic abuse, was divorced and had moved to Bengaluru from Hassan. “Shankar convinced her that he was in love with her. She too fell prey to it and they got married as well during one of the hospital visits. This time, when Ramesh was being treated, Shankar complained of terrible pain at the back of his head. The doctors were concerned and on February 16, they wanted to run some tests. While they were shifting him from the jail ward, he escaped,” the police said. Police say that Shankar immediately called Renuka and asked her to meet him at the Surya Nest Lodge in Majestic. “According to the manager, they had ordered food at night and he had seen them inside the room on the night of February 16, when he went to deliver the food,” the police added. Police now suspect that Shankar may have killed Renuka too, as he had killed his first wife in Kolar by slitting her throat. “He was a convicted murderer and was serving a life term at Parappana Agrahara. He had slit his first wife’s throat as well. Although the motive is not known yet, we will find out when we apprehend him,” the Upparpet Police added. A case of murder has been registered against Shankar at the Upparpet Police Station.
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Karnataka High Court issues notice to state govt over 'monkey fever' outbreak

Monkey Fever
The notice was issued based on a PIL which has sought directions from the government to make sufficient vaccines available to tackle the outbreak of the disease.
The Karnataka High Court has issued a notice to the state government to provide medical facilities to treat people suffering from Kyasanur Forest Disease (KFD) in the state. The notice was issued based on a public interest litigation (PIL) which has sought directions from the state government to make sufficient vaccines available, particularly for the residents living close to forest areas in Shivamogga.  The petition was filed by KP Sripal, an advocate from Shivamogga. The petitioners have also asked the state government to provide sufficient quantity of dimethyl phthalate (DMP) oil, a tick repellent, to people in affected areas. Ticks act as vectors of the virus and an outbreak of the disease is usually preceded by the death of monkeys in the forest areas. The health department has also been asked to set up KFD disease diagnostic centres in district centres and constitute an expert team to find dead monkeys to conduct scientific studies in the Western Ghats.  The disease, first discovered in 1957 in the Kyasanur forest range of Shivamogga, has now spread to four other states - Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Goa, Maharashtra - all along the Western Ghats. Every year, the disease recurs in a new location in the Western Ghats making researchers and doctors scramble to take measures to tackle the outbreak.  In 2018, an outbreak was reported in Aralagodu village in Sagar taluk of Shivamogga district, which has taken the lives of six people so far. The Health department is under fire after it emerged that there were serious lapses in administering vaccines in the last year prior to the outbreak. The disease has since emerged in Kerala's Wayanad district while cases of monkey deaths have been reported in Udupi district, which neighbours Shivamogga.  Also read:  Lack of proper vaccination drive behind 'monkey fever' outbreak in Karnataka How scientists in Shivamogga are fighting to control latest outbreak of ‘monkey fever’  
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Tributes paid to Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi at first day of AeroIndia 2019

Aero India
Three aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) - Tejas, Su-30 Mki and the Jaguar — flew in the 'missing man' formation on Wednesday as a tribute to Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi who died after a mid-air collision on Tuesday.
A special formation flypast by Indian jets and tributes from foreign pilots marked the opening day of the 12th edition of AeroIndia 2019, Asia's largest air show, held in Bengaluru on Wednesday.  The show was held at the Airforce Station in Yelahanka, in the wake of the tragic demise of Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi, who was part of the Surya Kiran Aerobatic Team (SKAT). He died after a mid-air collision with another plane from the team while rehearsing for the airshow on Tuesday.  Three aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF) - Tejas, Su-30 Mki and the Jaguar — flew in the 'missing man' formation on Wednesday as a tribute to Sahil Gandhi. The Sarang Helicopter Display team dedicated their performances to the pilot, and in the midst of showcasing Rafale's air power, its French Air Force pilot Captain Nativel also paid tribute to Sahil Gandhi. Karnataka Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy also mourned the loss of Sahil Gandhi during his address. "At the outset, I would like to offer my tributes to Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi, who unfortunately died in a mid-air crash yesterday. My deepest condolences to the bereaved family. I wish and hope utmost precaution is taken to avoid such incidents in future", he said as per Times of India.  The air show is expected to draw thousands of people during the last two days when it is open to the general public. The air show has 403 Indian and foreign exhibitors, which is less than the 650 exhibitors who took part in the 2015 edition. Defence officials cited the lack of clarity over the venue as one of the reasons for the drop, reported The Hindu.  The air show has been held in Bengaluru ever since its inception in 1996 Read: 'Flying is risky, but we are trained and resilient': IAF's Sarang team aerobats to TNM
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Wednesday, February 20, 2019

'Flying is risky, but we are trained and resilient': IAF's Sarang team aerobats to TNM

Aero India 2019
As air displays at AeroIndia 2019 paid tribute to Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi, the Sarang Helicopter Team spoke to TNM about their journey and the challenges they face on the job.
Aero India 2019 kicked off on Wednesday with three jets -- Jaguar, Sukhoi-30 Mki and Tejas -- paying tribute to Wing Commander Sahil Gandhi, who lost his life during a practise sortie ahead of the show. Sahil Gandhi was a part of the 12-member Surya Kiran Aerobatic Team, known for flying its Hawks in close formations. The team, however, did not perform on Wednesday. But several displays paid tribute to the deceased wing commander, including the Sarang Helicopter Display Team. “Flying is a risky business and at times such instances happen. We are all trained and emotionally resilient to be able to move on and cope with it. Life goes on, we cannot stop and there will be lessons drawn on how to go about things when such instances occur. That is how it is,” says Wing Commander Girish Komar, who has been with the team for eight years. TNM spoke to a few members of the Sarang Helicopter Display Team about their journey and the challenges they face on the job: TNM: Tell us about your journey with the Sarang display team. Wing Commander Girish Komar: I have been with Sarang with eight-and-a-half years now. I had a tenure earlier with four years prior to this and this is my second innings. It was very exciting when I was inducted into the team. I was way too young then and way too junior and just had over 5 years’ experience in flying after being commissioned. It was a matter of pride for me to have been selected because all the pilots are selected through a small selection process after helicopter pilots volunteer to be a part of it. Thereafter they are selected for the team. It was a matter of pride for me to be selected at such a young age. The selection process is based on basic flying skills and the close formation flying skills. It is also about whether you are a team player and how well you gel and how professionally sound you are. All those aspects are looked into. Squadron Leader Sneha: My brother is in the armed forces and when I used to see him in the uniform, I wanted to be a part of it too. I love flying and I am not afraid. It is thrilling and my love for flying drove me to volunteer for the Sarang team. It is every helicopter pilot’s dream. TNM: At any given point, do any of you feel scared?  Squadron Leader Janpriya: No, we don't ever feel scared because we go through an established method of training and we learn how to fly during this process. Yes, there is a little apprehension when you fly for the first time but it's more thrilling than scary. Currently, we have enough experience to fly and just feel the adrenaline. Initially, there was a lot of adrenaline, but now it’s not so much. I have gotten used to it. Squadron Leader Sneha: You get rid of those at training level. When a person becomes qualified, the person is able to handle all contingencies and become independent. It is a part of training. Every year we have two to three new members who keep rotating. Three years ago, before that I was flying Chetak Cheethas. Second Aero India. It is very thrilling. It is a lot more exciting in the cockpit, even more than it is when watching a display.  TNM: What are the challenges you face in aerobatic formations? Wing Commander Girish Komar: There are a lot of challenges. For aerobatic formations you need to know every single member of your team thoroughly and the one who is flying next to you extremely well. Everything is done in coordination and one small error by anyone is not acceptable. Failure is not an option. We have thorough briefings and the training is pretty rigid and there is no room for doubt when we fly. TNM: How much practise goes into pulling off a stunning display? Wing Commander Girish Komar: There is a syllabus for each person and each person has to go through that and gradually, with increasing level of difficulty he or she is introduced to a sketch and is also introduced to a display campaign. That's when we are introduced to flying as an independent candidate. Everyone is with varied in experience. This is in terms of flying hours. The syllabus will take about 25 to 30 hours of flying time to attain a level of perfection and that after attaining a certain qualification. It contains a good amount of flying to reach that level.  TNM: What are the risk factors involved in close formations?  Wing Commander Girish Komar: Flying is a risky business. Birds fly but for a human being to fly it is not natural and we are doing something unnatural and there are various safety measures attached with our aircraft which are out in place to ensure our safety. Our task is to control the aircraft at such a close proximity, which is a challenge.  TNM: What goes into planning an aerobatic display? Wing Commander Girish Komar: We have to plan the design, check the safety aspects, practise it and we try it out with a single aircraft and then move on to three. We always have to practise our moves before we introduce it. In AeroIndia, we had never performed the heart manoeuvre before but we had in other air displays so we decided to add that this time. There is a lot of maintenance which these aircraft require and we have about 35 technicians to just handle the four Sarang choppers. Each aircraft will require servicing based on the number of flying hours and so on.  TNM: What were the challenges you face during rescue missions? Squadron Leader Sneha: You need to have confidence and faith in your team mates. Rescue missions are the thing for helicopter pilots and that is our basic job. Rescue people, provide relief or reach wherever we are supposed to on time. We have been trained to do it and it is not difficult. During Kerala floods, the weather was detrimental and the number of people stranded and the window of opportunity available was in a restrictive place.  TNM: What was the most difficult rescue mission? Wing Commander Girish Komar: It was the Navalgund flash flood in 2009. There was a village where we were supposed to recuse a few daily wage workers and their children. They were stuck in between water and thorny bushes. There were infants. We could not make a landing there because of heavy flowing water and winching was extremely difficult because of the thorny bushes. Kerala floods come close. The coconut and palm trees were taller than the homes and it was very difficult to ascertain where the houses were and winching was very difficult too. But we did our best and rescued as many people as we could.
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