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Friday, March 15, 2019

Ahead of polls, Rs 30 lakh unaccounted cash, Rs 63 lakh valuables seized in Karnataka

Lok Sabha 2019
Digital wallet and bank transactions will also be monitored by the EC closely to prevent any misuse of money.
File image
Unaccounted cash amounting to Rs 30 lakh and vehicles and valuables worth Rs 63 lakh were seized by poll officials ahead of the Lok Sabha elections in Karnataka next month, an election official said on Thursday. "The flying squads and static surveillance teams (set up by the Election Commission to enforce model code of conduct) along with the state police have seized unaccounted cash of Rs 30 lakh till date," state Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Sanjiv Kumar told the media in Bengaluru. Valuables including silver and vehicles were also seized in the southern state since March 10, when the model code of conduct came into force with the announcement of the Lok Sabha election schedule. Excise Department officials have seized liquor worth about Rs 4 crore for breach of licence and other issues, Kumar said. A total of 1,512 flying squads and 1,837 static surveillance teams were in place in the state to ensure the model code of conduct is adhered to. The poll officials have removed from across the state 38,325 unauthorised posters and 19,409 banners and lodged two cases under the Karnataka Open Places (Provisions of Disfigurement) Act, 1981, the CEO said. The CEO also directed the public to be prepared to produce relevant documents if they are carrying cash over Rs 50,000 and gifts more than Rs 10,000. Digital wallet and bank transactions will also be monitored by the EC closely to prevent any misuse of money, he said. "People are requested to cooperate during inspection of vehicles and luggage by the poll officials," Kumar said. Polling for Lok Sabha elections will be held in Karnataka in two phases -- on April 18 for 14 seats and on April 23 for the remaining 14 seats. Vote count is on May 23.  
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Thursday, March 14, 2019

TenderRadduMaadi: Bengaluru residents to hit the streets against elevated corridor

Civic Issues
An online petition opposing the project has already got the support of more than l.5 lakh people in a day.
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In October 2016, a massive human chain protest along the then proposed steel bridge in Bengaluru connecting Chalukya Circle to Esteem Mall in Hebbal had sent a strong message to the state government. Little more than five weeks later, on March 2, 2017, the then-Siddaramaiah government had shelved the project. A similar protest organised by citizen groups is set to take place on Saturday asking for the cancellation of the tender for the controversial elevated corridor project, issued by the Karnataka Road Development Corporation Limited earlier this month. At 10am, the protestors will gather at Maurya Circle at the city centre. The activists are running an online campaign with #TenderRadduMaadi which translates to “cancel the tender”. Renowned film and theatre personality, Prakash Belwadi said, “From erstwhile PM Deve Gowda to CM Kumaraswamy to KPCC President Dinesh Gundu Rao to the ex-CM Siddaramaiah, every one has decried the project in the past. They should stay true to their conscience and withdraw this anti-people project. Join us on Saturday to convey our opinion to the decision makers.” The organisations to take part on Saturday's protest include Citizens for Bengaluru (CfB), Bengaluru Bus Prayanikara Vedike (BBPV), CIVIC, Cifos, Bengaluru Environment Trust (BET), Environment Support Group (ESG), ESAF, Praja-Raag, Whitefield Rising, Bellandur Jothege, RR Nagar I Care, Malleswaram Swabhimana Initiative, Cubbon Park Walkers Association, Living Lavelle, Vittal Mallya RWA, Kasturba RWA, D'Souza Layout RWA, The Students' Outpost, Citizens Agenda for Bengaluru, Srishti School of Design, Aikyam Community for Sustainable Living, Malleswaram Social, Bengaluru Suburban Rail Users, Coalition for Water Security, Human Rights Empowerment Council of India (HRECI) among others.  Representatives of some of the organisations addressed the media on Thursday asking people to come out for Saturday’s protest. Tejaswini from The Student Outpost, a pan-city organisation of college students, said, “We students widely use public transport and need more open green spaces. The government must dis-incentivise use of private vehicles for mobility and exhaust alternative systems before implementing the Elevated Corridor Project. We urge for social and ecological inclusiveness in development of urban infrastructure to preserve tree cover, strengthen public transport system and provide cycle lanes” An online petition opposing the same project has got the support of more than l.5 lakh people within a day. The project, according to the Environmental Impact Assessment report prepared by a government body along with private consultants, has said that 3009 trees will be cut to make way for the project.  The Karnataka High Court meanwhile, has asked the state government not to go ahead with the project until it decides on  a case pertaining to the Bangalore Metropolitan Committee.      
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Electronic City residents in B’luru threaten to shun polls over stench from waste plant

Civic Issues
When asked about the smell, a senior engineer working at the plant told TNM, “Yes, the smell is there, but it is not harmful or causing nausea or vomiting.”
Reports of rural pockets threatening to boycott elections as a mark of protest against authorities are not unheard of, but this may be a first for urban areas. Residents of Electronic City Phase-II in Bengaluru say that they have no other option but to boycott the upcoming Lok Sabha polls to make authorities act on the issue of the stench emanating from a solid waste management plant located nearby. When asked about the odour, a senior engineer working at the plant questioned the protests and told TNM, “Yes, the smell is there, but it is not harmful or causing nausea or vomiting.” The Chikkanagamangala plant, run by BBMP, had started functioning in April 2018 in full capacity. The residents have been holding multiple protests since December 2018 against the issue and have approached the authorities multiple times but the stench has not stopped. While a section of residents want the plant to be shut down as it was not part of the Master Plan of the city, some others have demanded that the standard operating procedure be followed for handling waste. Resident activist Pranay Dubey said, “Now that it is summer, the situation has worsened and gone out of control. There is no way that we can keep our windows or door open. Earlier, the smell would waft in only late in the night or early in the morning, but now we get the smell almost throughout the day.” In February, the residents had staged an indefinite protest outside the waste plant, prompting authorities to take note of the stench. The protests were withdrawn after an assurance that a meeting with the BBMP top brass will be held. After the protests were launched again, a meeting was held on March 11 by the BBMP and the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) over the issue. Speaking to TNM,  Randeep D, BBMP Special Commissioner, Solid Waste Management, said that residents should approach the KSPCB if they want the plant to shut down. He claimed there was no major issue with the procedures at the plant. “We operate as per the permissions prescribed by the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board under the Air and Water Act. We have a conditional clearance to run the plant till 2021. The Pollution Control Board has also come and inspected our premises and they have given certain suggestions. They have not found any major fault with regards to the standard operating procedure,” Randeep D told TNM. “There are some suggestions that we will put in place and we will send a report on the action to be taken with clear timelines to the KSPCB within 15 days. We have a technical guidance team who will visit the plant and advise us based on which corrective action will be taken. If the residents have any issue with the plant, they should approach the KSPCB to address their grievances,” he added. Residents, however, have stated that standard operating procedure is not followed. “We know how many people work in the plant. How can one environmental engineer and 3-4 diploma holders manage the 500 metric ton solid waste management plant by themselves?” a resident asked. A senior engineer supervising the plant, who visits the site twice a week, told TNM that there are around 70 people working inside the plant and they have not suffered any side-effects due to the smell. “We admit that there is a smell but it is not harmful or causing nausea or vomiting. There are 70 people working as staff inside the plant and are not near the smell. They have not suffered any effects of the smell, so what are these people on about? There is open dumping outside the plant and this is one of the reasons adding to the smell. We should control this and we all know it. Anyone who goes around this area will know,” Senior Engineer Arasaramrao told TNM. Experts have previously told TNM that issues like these, including the one in HSR Layout Karnataka Compost Development Corporation plant, will continue as long as BBMP does not start ward-level waste management, as has been mandated by the Karnataka High Court.
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Attacked for feeding strays in Bengaluru: Why violence against dog feeders is on the rise

Crime
Ranjit and his wife, a couple in Bengaluru, were allegedly attacked after they protested against stones being thrown at stray dogs.
Ranjit Joseph and his wife are longtime residents of Shastri Nagar in Bengaluru. Having lived in the locality for close to a decade, along with their dog Browny, afternoon or evening walks with their pet were a routine affair. The couple would also frequently feed the strays in the locality who would walk with them.  But a series of events on Sunday, March 10, made the couple keenly aware of the continuing violence against dog feeders in the city. “We were chased and attacked by a bunch of goons and my wife was stabbed in the head, all for protesting against them throwing stones at the strays and at Browny,” Ranjit alleged in a Facebook post.  Speaking to TNM, Ranjit said that the attackers, who stayed in a neighbouring apartment in Shastri Nagar had got agitated as the stray dogs had barked at them while they were riding their bikes.  “They had just crossed us and the dogs started barking. They got down and started pelting stones at the strays and at my pet. This is when we started protesting and they attacked us from nowhere,” he alleges.  While Ranjit and his wife managed to escape the assault and walk back home to collect their phones and report to the police, a third person allegedly approached them with a small metal weapon and attempted to stab his wife.  A complaint was filed at the HAL police station, but the couple say that this problem does not end here.  “Dog feeders and strays regularly face such violence and persecution from people. It is an ongoing menace,” Ranjit tells TNM.  Violence against strays  While Ranjit was filing a complaint with the Shastri Nagar police against the violence he and the strays underwent, a one-month-old stray pup was being clobbered to death in Avadi, Chennai on the same day, for barking at Ramu, a 52-year-old man who has been accused of the crime.  Speaking to TNM, Dawn Williams, General Manager of Blue Cross in Chennai said that CCTV footage of the pup being beaten to death circulated on social media, which prompted him to file a complaint.  “The accused can be seen holding a 7 kg log and beating the 30-day old pup 11 times, until he snuffs the life out of it. I filed a complaint with the Avadi T6 police against the accused Ramu, a carpenter from the locality,” Dawns adds.  A case has been filed under sections 278 (making environment noxious to health), 428 (Mischief by killing or maiming animal of the value of 10 Rs) and 429 (Mischief by killing of maiming cattle etc of any value or animal of any value above Rs 50) the IPC and under section 11 (1A) (besting, kicking, subjecting an animal to any kind of pain or suffering) of Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 196.  The accused was also arrested.  Persecution of stray dogs and feeders  Ranjit believes that hatred against dog feeders have been on the rise mainly due to misconceptions about the ‘stray dog menace’.  “People think that because we feed dogs, the stray dog count is increasing in the street. This is not the case. If the dogs are given food and shelter by the street’s residents, they act as the guardians of the street and will not let other strays as well as strangers enter the territory,” Ranjit says.  Dawn also supports this argument.  “They provide solid security to the street and they alert people if any strangers enter the locality. If you look at it, these dogs rarely ever bark at people who reside in the area. They are only wary of strangers and that is a good thing,” Dawn says.  However, residents who are feeders cannot shirk some of the responsibilities that they have towards the stray dogs.  “It is not just enough to give them food. You need to vaccinate and sterilise them. As a feeder, I always make sure that I give them food in an isolated area so as not to inconvenience other residents. I have also tied up with the BBMP and NGOs to get atleast 7-8 dogs in our street vaccinated and sterilised. Once that is done, there is no risk of diseases of population explosion,” Ranjit adds.  Dawn adds that lack of organisation among feeder networks result in many not doing it the right way.  “I am against violence and assault of feeders who are helping stray dogs. However, if somebody attempts to feed stray by dropping chicken guts or liver in front of my doorstep, I am bound to get annoyed. Dog feeders should understand how to carry out feeding and other activities. If they do want to help, they should maybe speak with experts such as the Blue Cross or other activists and learn the proper way to do it,” he says.  Filing police complaints against attackers  Dawn observes that although cases of violence against stray dogs happen in Chennai, their incidence has reduced drastically since 2010.  “When I moved to Chennai for the first time in 2010, there would be a case of stray dog violence every week. Most of my time I spent visiting police stations and going to court in order to report these cases. In 2014 alone, I had unearthed around 400 carcasses of dogs who had been poisoned or beaten to death by people. Following this, many other NGOs too began filing police complaints. Now, we hardly hear cases of violence against animals. It happens only once in a while in the city,” he adds.  As for complaints against attackers and their arrests, Dawn says that his intention is not to put them behind bars but to report such cases.  “Most of these people, who are violent towards innocent animals for no reasons, need help. They have a problem and they need counselling. By reporting these cases I am only attempting to bring this to light and it is in no way an attempt to incarcerate or punish these people. They need to be counselled and brought back,” he says. 
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Disappointment among K’taka Cong leaders after JD(S) gets Tumakuru, coastal seats

Lok Sabha 2019
Deputy Chief Minister Parameshwara was disappointed that the party had given away Tumakuru to JD(S), said Congress MLA Somashekar.
The seat sharing finalised between alliance partners Congress and JD(S) for the Lok Sabha polls in Karnataka has come as a surprise not only to several leaders within the coalition, but also its rival – the BJP. Allotting seats such as those in the coastal regional and Tumakuru have left several leaders and party workers. On Thursday, Yeshwanthpur Congress MLA ST Somashekar told the media that Deputy Chief Minister Dr G Parameshwara was sorely disappointed when the party gave away the Tumakuru segment to the JD(S). “I spoke to Parameshwara over the phone and he told me that he did not know why the party leaders targeted him. He said he was disappointed by Siddaramaiah’s decision in retaining the Mysuru-Kodagu segment but giving away Tumakuru, which is his (Parameshwara’s) home turf. He also told me that the party leaders do not value his opinions,” ST Somashekar said. Congress insiders say that things may change after Rahul Gandhi’s meeting with Deve Gowda on Friday. Party insiders say after Deve Gowda’s ultimatum of not contesting polls if he is not offered the Mysuru-Kodagu district has given rise to doubts about the seats allotted to the JD(S). JD(S) has been allotted eight out of the 28 seats in the state as part of the poll pact. The constituencies are Uttara Kannada, Udupi-Chikamagaluru, Hassan, Mandya, Shivamogga, Tumakuru, Vijayapura and Bangalore North. “Everyone is surprised. But the reason why Parameshwara expressed his disappointment is because he is hoping Rahul Gandhi will trade Tumakuru with Mysuru-Kodagu,” a Congress source said. Speaking to TNM, MA Gafoor, Congress leader from Udupi said that no one expected the party to offer the tickets in the coastal region to JD(S). “Nobody expected this decision. We have grassroot level organisations. We have presence in Gram Panchayats, Zilla Panchayats, Municipality, Town Panchayats, and more importantly, there is a history of the Congress fighting from Udupi and Chikkamagaluru. Whether it is the fishermen community, farmer community, women or the youth, the areca nut farmers of Chikkamagaluru, the people fighting for railway network, the Congress has stood with them and fought for their rights. Whether the Congress wins or loses, it is a different issue but the party has come through this with the people. People have in turn expressed confidence in Congress,” he said. He also stated that leaders in Udupi have written to KPCC, AICC General Secretary KC Venugopal, former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and JD(S) supremo HD Deve Gowda, asking for this decision to be reversed and instead offer the ticket to a Congress candidate.  “If the decision does not change and JD(S) does field the candidate from Udupi, we will tell our karyakartas to work with the party to keep the discipline of the party but we want our feelings to be known and the party should understand our feelings too. We have to let them know about this because we are answerable to our karyakartas,” he added. Party insiders say that JD(S) has a small presence in two districts in Udupi “In the two districts, JD(S) has significance. That is where Bhojaraj is well known. But everywhere else, they have negligible presence. Congress workers will have to do all the work to put up a fight,” a Congress leader said. BJP leaders also say that they were shocked at the coalition's decision as they had been campaigning against the Congress leaders all along. "We did not expect it to happen. We have to see whether the decision will be revoked and even if JD(S) will field candidates, we have to see who it is in order to assess whether there is any actual threat," a BJP source said.   //  
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Prominent Lingayat leader Mathe Mahadevi passes away

Death
The 73-year-old religious leader was admitted to the hospital on March 9 and was suffering from a respiratory ailment.
Mathe Mahadevi, a prominent Lingayat leader and seer of the Basava Dharma Peetha in Bagalkot in Karnataka, passed away on  Thursday.  She was being treated at Manipal Hospital in Bengaluru and hospital authorities confirmed to TNM that she passed away at 4:45 pm.  The 73-year-old religious leader was admitted to the hospital on March 9 and was suffering from a respiratory ailment. She was also suffering from a kidney ailment. She had come to the hospital with a similar problem five months ago and had made a recovery.  Her mortal remains will be kept for public viewing at Basava Mantap in Bengaluru’s Rajajinagar. It will then be taken to Kudalasangama for public viewing. Her last rites will be conducted on Friday afternoon at Kudalasangama. Born on March 13, 1946, Mathe Mahadevi had a Masters Degree in Arts before she began her tutelage of the Lingayat faith under renowned Lingayat Seer, Gurulingananda. In 1970 she was installed as a jagadguru, and became the first woman to be offered that rank in a Lingayat mutt.  She was one of the most influential leaders of the Lingayat community. She had travelled across the state to take influential mutts and their leaders into confidence for the separation from Hinduism.
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With Congress retaining Mysuru-Kodagu, Deve Gowda threatens not to contest

Lok Sabha 2019
According to sources, Congress President Rahul Gandhi is scheduled to meet Deve Gowda on Friday to discuss the embattled segment.
The Congress-JD(S) alliance partners on Thursday announced that the JD(S) would contest from eight segments - Uttara Kannada, Udupi-Chikkamagaluru, Shivamogga, Tumakuru, Hassan, Mandya, Bengaluru North and Vijayapura. The party, which was hoping to get the Mysuru-Kodagu segment, was sorely disappointed when the list was finalised.  Now, JD(S) supremo HD Deve Gowda is driving a hard bargain and demanding that the Congress offer the Mysuru-Kodagu segment to the JD(S). "Deve Gowda has decided that he will not contest elections if the Mysuru-Kodagu segment is not given to the JD(S). The party leaders and workers wanted him to contest from this segment but Siddaramaiah has blocked that," a JD(S) source said.  During the screening committee meeting held on Thursday, the Congress decided to let go of one of its strongholds, Tumakuru, to the JD(S). Party insiders say that Congress President Rahul Gandhi is scheduled to meet Deve Gowda on Friday, where they will discuss the issue of the Mysuru-Kodagu segment.  "Rahul Gandhi may let go of Mysuru, especially if Deve Gowda says he will not contest elections at all. Deve Gowda also will not campaign for the Congress candidates in Bengaluru Rural and other Old Mysuru regions like Kolar and Chikkaballapura. This would mean that the JD(S) party workers across the state may work against the Congress if Deve Gowda does not contest," the JD(S) source added.  During the 2018 Karnataka Assembly Elections, JD(S) leader GT Devegowda defeated former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah from the Chamundeshwari segment and emerged as the giant slayer. The embarrassment Siddaramaiah suffered has led him to hold on to the Mysuru segment and not give up his home turf to his arch rival, the JD(S).  Once a member of the JD(S), Siddaramaiah had quit the party and joined Congress after a bitter feud with HD Deve Gowda in 2006. "Siddaramaiah will never give up Mysuru to the JD(S), especially if Deve Gowda has to contest. He would not be OK with campaigning for the JD(S) in his home district, especially when his whole campaign strategy in the past was against the JD(S). If the high command forces him to give it up, there will be a rebellion in the party," a Congress source said.     
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