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Tuesday, April 9, 2019

‘JD(S) leader said he will morph my photos’: Sumalatha Ambareesh alleges

Lok Sabha 2019
Sumalatha Ambareesh, the independent candidate from Mandya, alleged that JD(S) leaders in Mandya were also trying to lure her close associates.
Sumalatha Ambareesh, the independent candidate from the Mandya Lok Sabha constituency on Tuesday accused a top JD(S) leader of morphing her images and trying to intimidate her.   Speaking to TNM at Srirangapattana’s Kalenahalli, Sumalatha alleged, “I don’t know if I should speak about it now but a top JD(S) leader contacted me. He told me that he would morph my photographs to make them look like illicit pictures. He said he could morph my pictures to make it look like anything he wished to and that he was ready to do it. I would not be surprised if you see morphed pictures and videos of me in the future.”   Sumalatha also stated that she would not be hindered by such threats and that she would face whatever came her way. “I have not done anything wrong so I have nothing to fear,” she added.   Sumalatha Ambareesh is the wife of former Congress MP and legendary actor Ambareesh. She is contesting as an independent and is up against Nikhil Kumaraswamy, son of Karnataka Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy and the JD(S)-Congress candidate from Mandya.    She also accused the JD(S) leaders in Mandya of trying to lure her close associates into the party and alleged that two of her aides, who work for her social media team were offered bribes by the JD(S) leaders.   “The leaders have contacted two people on my social media team and offered them money to make defamatory statements about me. In addition, the JD(S) leaders offered them Rs 15 lakh. They are also being pressured to go to Dubai until the dust settles. These are the ways the JD(S) leaders are targeting me,” she alleged.   Sumalatha also claimed that the family members of her associates informed her about the JD(S) leaders holding talks with them and said that they were under a lot of pressure.   Reacting to Sumalatha’s statement, Mandya district in-charge Minister CS Puttaraju said that the JD(S) has not reached such a pathetic condition that its leaders would morph Sumalatha’s pictures to gain votes.   “We are not in a pathetic condition that we have to resort to such tactics. If Sumalatha has not done anything wrong then why is she so scared? I don’t know why she is so depressed. The people of Mandya will make their decision clear on April 18 and we will win,” Puttaraju added.
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Nikhil Yellidyappa?: PR stunt from 2016 haunts HDK’s son’s political debut

Lok Sabha 2019
A badly managed audio launch ‘moment’ has turned JD(S) Mandya candidate Nikhil Kumaraswamy into a running gag ahead of the General Elections.
In 2016, Nikhil Kumaraswamy made his debut in the Kannada film industry with the film Jaguar. During the audio launch of the film, his father and current Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy was on stage – and the father and son were part of a PR stunt that is, well, embarrassing to watch to say the least. “Nikhil yellu kanthane illa, yellidyappa? Nikhil, yellidyappa?” Kumaraswamy asks. (“Nikhil I can’t see you anywhere, where are you? Nikhil, where are you?”). And in a badly staged and poorly timed reply, Nikhil says from among the audience, “Ille idhini, Appa. Nimmanna, nam thathanna pranakkintha hechagi preethiso janagal madhya idhini, Appa.” (“I’m here, father. I’m with the people who love you and grandpa more than their lives.”) Unfortunately for Nikhil, the embarrassing moment from three years ago has come back to haunt him as he makes another debut – this time, in politics. The JD(S)’s Mandya candidate is the running gag in Karnataka this election season, with critics and everyday trolls alike jumping on the ‘Nikhil Yellidyappa?’ joke. Someone seems to have had some fun adding ‘Nikhil Yellidyappa’ as a location on Google Maps. One Twitter user tweeted what looks like a screen recording of the ‘location’. The location doesn’t exist on maps right now, however. Now you can ask @googlemaps #NikhilEllidiyappa https://t.co/znOmYHLBEt pic.twitter.com/g9UJqGsPwl — Susham Shetty (@Sushyam) April 7, 2019         View this post on Instagram                       A post shared by ನಮ್ಮ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ಮಿಮ್ಸ್ (@nammakarnatakamemes) on Apr 7, 2019 at 5:21am PDT In an attempt at comedy, meanwhile, a BJP supporter in what could be a foreign location stages a white man crossing the road, and explaining how ‘NY’ stands for ‘Nikhil Yelllidyappa’, instead of ‘New York’. Nikhil also made it to an RCB fan’s poster.         View this post on Instagram                   @pavan_jd #nkm #nammakarnatakamemes #nikhilyellidiyappa #rcb A post shared by ನಮ್ಮ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ಮಿಮ್ಸ್ (@nammakarnatakamemes) on Apr 5, 2019 at 10:25pm PDT Translation: "Where are you Nikhil? I am in between the people who believe Ee sala cup namde!" One meme maker meanwhile decided to answer the ‘Nikhil Yellidyappa?’ question with a dig on dynastic politics.         View this post on Instagram                       A post shared by Troll Goggayya (@troll_goggayya) on Apr 4, 2019 at 6:51pm PDT Several other memes and jokes however are vulgar and problematic, some even communal. One Yakshagana skit in Dakshina Kannada in March was Islamophobic in its parody of the moment. The videos and memes have also caught the eye of filmmakers who are lining up to register films by the name 'Nikhil Yellidyappa'.  Karnataka Film Chamber of Commerce (KFCC) however is holding off on accepting the applications until the elections are over. “This is mostly from not-so-well-known filmmakers looking to cash in on the craze created around the phrase. We are not accepting any requests currently. Later the title committee will take a call if they want to give permission for a film with this title," Harish, KFCC secretary told The New Indian Express. The trend comes in the midst of a high-voltage campaign by Nikhil in the Mandya constituency against actor Sumalatha Ambareesh. He has also set up a social media team in Mandya to counter the negative publicity on Facebook and WhatsApp.
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Acute water scarcity in Karnataka: Tankers supplying drinking water in 26 districts

Water
A total of 996 villages and 244 wards are getting drinking water supply through tankers.
Representational Image
Another summer is here and Karnataka has been hit by a water crisis yet again. Starting from the capital city of Bengaluru to the traditionally arid northwestern part of Hyderabad-Karnataka region, the water crisis is alarming throughout the entire state. According to the State Emergency Operation Centre, a total of 996 villages in 26 districts are being supplied drinking water through tankers as a relief measure.  This is in addition to 815 villages which are getting drinking water supply from 1000 private bore wells hired by district authorities.     Among the worst hit districts are Tumakuru, Vijayapura, Chitradurga and Chikkaballapura having more than 100 villages. While Tumakuru is the worst hit with 142 villages serviced by these tankers, Chitradurga and Vijayapura have 112 villages each. Bengaluru Urban district has 18 villages while Bengaluru Rural has another 82 villages needing this emergency service. District No of villages Tumakuru 142 Chitradurga 112 Vijayapura 112 Chikkaballapura 108 Bengaluru Rural 82 Chikkamagaluru 66 For urban areas, a total of 244 wards are supplied water through 180 tankers. Even here, Tumakauru is the worst affected with 46 wards along with Kolar having the same number of affected wards. Bengaluru Urban is among the worst hit with 25 wards receiving water through tankers. while Bijapur has 10 wards and Koppal 13 wards.  And the situation is unlikely to change for the better as the monsoon which is set to arrive in June is also expected to be below normal. The state of Karnataka has already suffered three successive drought years. For the entire 2018, while 21 taluks got excess rainfall across the state, 73 taluks had deficient rainfall and two taluks had scanty rainfall. The rest 80 taluks had normal rainfall. Karnataka State Disaster Monitoring Centre’s Managing Director Srinivas Reddy said, “As far as places which are serviced by the Irrigation Department or urban local bodies are concerned, for now there is no such shortage as we have water in our reservoirs. But the remaining 60% of the state is dependent mostly on groundwater and they are facing problems. So even for Bengaluru, the problem is mainly in the newly added 110 villages which do not have Cauvery water supply. ” “In places where there is a crisis, the Revenue Department is making arrangements to ensure supply of drinking water through tankers using funds kept for state disaster relief,” he added.  As of Tuesday, the water levels of the state reservoirs are much below their full capacities, and nearly at the same level as that of last year. Tanks managed by the minor irrigation department are also running short of water. A majority of the districts have more than 50% dry tanks.  
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Will Congress' young pick Mithun Rai help reverse BJP’s fortunes in Dakshina Kannada?

Lok Sabha 2019
The Congress leader faces two-time MP and experienced campaigner Nalin Kumar Kateel.
In Shirthadi, a village in the forested area of Moodbidri in Dakshina Kannada district of Karnataka, the residents of the village patiently wait for the arrival of Congress candidate Mithun Rai for a roadshow. Mithun, 27, is the surprise young candidate picked by the Congress party in its bid to end the continued dominance of the BJP in the coastal district. He is popular in and around Moodbidri and in the southern parts of Mangaluru, and has launched an aggressive campaign to wrest the Dakshina Kannada seat away from the BJP, which has won the last seven Lok Sabha elections held in the district. The saffron party has fielded two-time MP Nalin Kumar Kateel and Mithun is hoping to capitalise on the BJP leader’s perceived misgivings - the failure of completing developmental works including Pumpwell and Thokottu flyovers, and the development of National Highway 169 running from Mangaluru to Bengaluru. Protest by Congress leaders in Mangaluru over incomplete works on National Highway 169 Criticism over incomplete development works Speaking on the sidelines of his roadshow in Shirthadi, Mithun says, “The honourable MP has been here for the past 10 years. He has not raised a single question regarding development, employment, communal harmony, social justice and about the overall development of the district. The works on Pumpwell, Thokottu flyovers and National Highway 169 are yet to be completed. We should ask him what is completed.” The Congress has also criticised Nalin and the BJP for failing to prevent the merger of Vijaya Bank, a bank built by a group of farmers in Mangaluru in 1931. It was merged with the Bank of Baroda on April 1, a day that Congress workers and leaders in the district marked as a ‘Black Day’. Campaigning in Puthige, around 15 km away from Shirthadi, Nalin appears to be calm in the face of the stinging criticism levelled by the Congress. “It is common in politics that when development is done, there will be criticism and this is all politically motivated. The reason for delay in Pumpwell flyover is partly due to the state government as well. There are other reasons but when there are elections, the opposition parties will use it to their advantage. The decision to merge Vijaya Bank was taken under UPA rule and we are hopeful of saving the name,” he says speaking to TNM. The decision to merge Vijaya Bank was taken under the leadership of Finance Minister Chidambaram during the UPA's rule however the merger went through only on April 1. The Congress is now pointing towards the profitable nature of the bank as the reason to stop the merger. Nalin Kumar Kateel campaigning in Puthige, Dakshina Kannada Nalin, an experienced campaigner, also reiterates that the people of the district will once again vote in favour of the ‘Modi model’ of development. “The development of national highway, port, airport, jetty for fishermen, coast guard training center, a plastic park, coconut park have been taken up in my tenure. The developmental works are still starting and when they are completed, the people of this district can clearly see the work done. For this, we need another five years,” adds Nalin. Many residents in the district however have grown impatient with the slow progress of developmental works. “The construction works of the jetty have taken years to complete and have been marked by delays by both the central and state governments. To improve the economy of Mangaluru, more facilities should be made for the fishermen community,” says Nandakishore HK, a boatmaker from Mangaluru. Answering the cycle of communal violence Mithun further chose to focus on the topic of communal unrest in Mangaluru. “Ours is a secular party. We follow all religions which means I worship my Hindu religion and respect other religions. This is the motto everyone should follow,” he says. Mithun Rai campaigning in Shirthadi In contrast, Nalin, who has spoken about the murders of BJP workers in Parliament, points out that communal violence has reduced ever since the district largely voted for BJP MLAs in the 2018 Karnataka Assembly elections. Nalin raised the issue of political murders in Karnataka in a January 2018 Parliament session, days after Deepak Rao, a BJP volunteer, was murdered in the district allegedly by four Muslim men. “There were Congress MLAs in Dakshina Kannada district in the last five years and in this time, there were murders of Hindus, Muslims and Christians. But in the last year, 7 BJP MLAs were elected here and there have been no violent incidents that are communal in nature,” Nalin says before adding, “We have also made a request to establish a branch of the National Investigative Agency in Mangaluru to ensure the safety of people.” Nalin Kumar Kateel poses with his supporters According to data compiled by activist Suresh Bhat Bakarabail of the Karnataka Komu Sauharda Vedike (Karnataka Forum for Communal Harmony), there were 741 communal incidents in Dakshina Kannada from 2013 to 2018 including 228 incidents in 2015. The numbers however have reduced to 108 since the start of 2018. “The number of incidents have reduced since the state elections last year and both the BJP and the Congress are claiming that it is due to their efforts,” explains Suresh, who has compiled data on communal incidents in Dakshina Kannada and Udupi dating back to 2010. The number of incidents usually spike in the time of elections but that has not been the case this time around. Suresh and other residents of the district remain hopeful that this election will be free of violence, and that the focus stays on the candidates and their vision for the district.
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With only memories of a glorious past, Kolar voters eye polls with disinterest

Lok Sabha 2019
Seven-time MP Muniyappa KH of the Congress is pitted against the BJP’s S Muniswamy, a corporator from Bengaluru, an unknown in the constituency.
All photos courtesy: Basav Biradar
There are a total of 16,12,227 electors in the entire Kolar constituency. As per the 2011 census, the scheduled caste population in Kolar district is 30.3% of the total population – highest in the state. Hence, Kolar is one of the five parliamentary constituencies reserved for Scheduled Castes in Karnataka. As per the Karnataka Chief Electoral Officer’s website, Kolar Gold Fields (K.G.F) is the smallest assembly constituency under the Kolar parliamentary constituency with 1,90,239 electors, of which 2,399 are voters aged between 18 and 19. Once known as ‘Little England’, KGF now wears the deserted look of a ghost town. Last week, as I drove into KGF, a big hoarding announcing the polling date of April 18 hoisted next to the cyanide salt dumps – a significant reminder of the glorious mining past – welcomed me. As I passed the Oorgaum station, I noticed the large number of parked two wheelers; many working class people commute daily to Bengaluru city for work. Ever since the nationalised mining company BGML (Bharat Gold Mines Limited) closed all the mines in 2001, jobs have been hard to come by in the town. BEML, the other major employer, has also slowed down operations and has not been recruiting for many years. Thanks to the British who brought in many workers from the then Madras Presidency to work in the mines, KGF boasts of a largely Tamil speaking population. Rusting mining equipment peep from behind the shut gates of the many mines as a stark metaphor for the miseries of the miners who are yet to receive 50% of their promised VRS package. The BGML workers unions have not given up and due to their continued efforts, the final verdict of the Supreme Court in 2013 was in their favour, approving the proposal to float a global tender. But the government is yet to implement the judgement, forcing the union representatives to take the matter to the court again. I was told that the next hearing is scheduled in three months’ time. The candidates The union representatives I met sounded very positive about the future. But what about political support, I asked. Since it is election time, are they putting any pressure on the candidates? The response wasn’t enthusiastic. Although KH Muniyappa, the sitting Member of Parliament from Kolar (he was elected to the Lok Sabha for the seventh time in 2014), has worked closely with the members of the 18 BGML unions in the past, he seems to be backing the Karnataka state’s plan to utilise the 12,000 odd acres of real estate and has raised the request in the 16th Lok Sabha to hand over the land to the state government. This hasn’t gone down well with the BGML employee unions (at least the ones I spoke to). While the ex-employees are still hopeful of a profitable closure, the rest of the town, including the politicians, seem to have moved on from the mining story. It is hardly an election issue. The vendors in the old market of Robertsonpet seem to think that there is no option but to vote for Muniyappa. On the surface, it is the truth. While the Congress and JD(S) were pitted against each other in a closely fought election in 2014, this time both the parties are fighting as a coalition and the BJP’s candidate S Muniswamy, a corporator from Bengaluru, is unknown in the constituency. One vendor says Muniyappa has the money power to create a last-minute swing. A lady disagrees, proclaiming that the Modi wave will sweep Kolar too. This was the first time since morning that I heard someone mention Prime Minister Modi. At lunch, I tried to talk to the manager of the 60-year-old Hotel Janardhan, but he seems least interested in the elections. Several others too express the same lack of excitement about the elections. They probably don’t think a change in their fortunes is around the corner. The people in this town seem as desolate as the place. Stuck in a time warp As one ex-miner put it, when nothing much has happened in 28 years of loyally supporting one candidate, what can happen now? He also reminisced of a time gone by, while flashing his Communist party membership card, when the workers’ movement was better organised and leaders such as CM Arumugham, Comrade Suryanarayana Rao and others were active. He and many others like him seem to be stuck in a time warp, while their children have embraced the new capitalist order, and have left the town to become software engineers, finance professionals, and such. The many Ambedkar statues spread over the town hint of a political past ruled by Dalit leaders and trade unions such as CITU. The Republican Party of India (RPI), a party with roots in the Scheduled Castes Federation (SCF), is still active and won the Assembly election as recently as 2008. Driving past the erstwhile mining offices, the old colonial houses (now occupied by ex-miners), playgrounds, schools, bakeries, churches, clubs and hospitals, I got the sense that time had stopped in KGF since 1956 – the year John Taylor & Sons handed over the operations to the state of Mysore and left for England. Poll issues Apart from employment, water and housing seem to be the other main issues across the Kolar constituency. One pet peeve seems to be that despite being so close to Bengaluru, the district hasn’t developed as much as it could have. I also visited the KGF water works, located a few kilometres away in Bethamangala and built in 1904. The facility is still up and running, but the receding water levels in the tank are alarming and need urgent attention. A lot will depend on the monsoon this year. The facility, although initially set up to supply water only to KGF mines and residents, now supplies to Bethamangala and BEML too. Again, the filtration system and the technology seem unchanged since 1904. Out of the eight assembly constituencies in Kolar, Mulbagal, KGF and Bangarapet are reserved for Scheduled Castes. In the 2014 elections, while Muniyappa bagged the maximum votes in Srinivasapur, Mulbagal, Kolar and Malur, the runner-up Kolar Kesava of the JD(S) won in Sidlaghatta and Chintamani by a high margin, and EM Narayanswamy of the BJP emerged triumphant in KGF and Bangarapet. The soft-spoken but shrewd ex-union minister for state, Muniyappa, has been expressing confidence of his chances this time too, despite a number of disagreements with some Congress leaders. There have also been reports of the JD(S) not providing support to his candidature. Muniyappa’s margin of victory in 2014 was a decent 47,850 votes. The BJP has turned a new leaf in its approach to the Kolar constituency by ignoring Dalit leaders like Narayanaswamy, DS Veeraiah and placing confidence in the Kadugodi (a Bengaluru suburb) corporator S Muniswamy. Will the fatigue of the miners fighting for justice, the anti-incumbency factor, Modi wave, and BJP’s fresh face defeat Muniyappa’s claim to the seat for the eighth consecutive time? Basav Biradar is a heritage enthusiast and an occasional commentator on politics. Views expressed are the author's own.
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Lok Sabha 2019: BJP likely to bag more seats in Karnataka, pre-poll surveys suggest

Lok Sabha 2019
While Times Now-VMR and IndiaTV-CNX have given the BJP 16 seats, Republic TV-CVoter has given them 15 seats out of the total 28.
In Karnataka, the BJP is once again set to remain as the party winning the most number of Lok Sabha seats despite facing a united opposition, according to multiple pre-poll opinion surveys aired on Monday night. These surveys are the last opinion polls published ahead of the Lok Sabha polls set to be held in seven phases across the country, from April 11 to May 19.  While the Times Now-VMR and IndiaTV-CNX pre-poll surveys have both predicted that BJP will win 16 seats, the Republic TV-CVoter has given the saffron party 15 seats out of the total 28. In all these surveys, the remaining 12-13 seats have been given to the JD(S)-Congress alliance.  The Republic TV-C Voter survey predicts that the JD(S)-Congress alliance will win a higher vote-share of 46.8% as opposed to the NDA's 43.6%, as a result of the pre-poll arrangement and at the same time, other candidates are predicted to gain 9.6% of the votes. On a similar note, the Times Now-VMR poll has also interestingly predicted that the vote-share of candidates other than of the three major parties, will increase from 4.3% to 10.57%.  In 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the BJP had won 17 seats, and the Congress and JD(S) had won nine and two seats respectively, without having any pre-poll alliance in place.  But this time, the Congress-JD(S) is putting a united front against the saffron party. The Congress will contest 21 seats and partner JD(S) will contest in seven seats. While the BJP is going alone in 27 seats, it has lent support to independent candidate Sumalatha Ambareesh in Mandya, a traditional stronghold of the JD(S). Karnataka will go to polls in two phases of 14 seats each on April 18 and April 23.  The seats that go for polls in the first phase are Udupi-Chikkamagaluru, Hassan, Dakshina Kannada, Chitradurga, Tumakuru, Mandya, Mysuru-Kodagu, Chamarajanagara, Bengaluru Central, Bengaluru North, Bengaluru Rural, Bengaluru South, Chikkaballapura and Kolar.  The other 14 seats— Chikkodi, Belagavi, Bagalkote, Bijapur, Gulbarga, Raichur, Bidar, Koppal, Ballari, Haveri, Dharwad, Uttara Kannada, Davangere and Shivamogga will go to polls on April 23. Two out of the three surveys have predicted a simple majority for the BJP-led NDA. The India TV-CNX polls have predicted 295 seats for the NDA, 23 seats more than the halfway mark. while the Times Now-VMR has given 279. Meanwhile, the Republic TV-C Voter has predicted 267 seats for the NDA.  
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