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Monday, April 29, 2019

Three men arrested at Bengaluru airport for smuggling gold worth Rs 29 lakh in rectum

Smuggling
The gold was detected when the trio was frisked and checked with handheld metal detectors.
Customs officials on Friday arrested three men for smuggling gold worth Rs 29.3 lakh concealed in their rectum. Media reports identified the accused as Sharkhan Zahir Hussain, Mohamed Haroon and Ansari Mohammad Ibrahim.  The gold was in the form of a paste in pellets mixed with some other chemicals and insulated with tape. The accused had flown into Bengaluru from Goa on an Air India flight. The gold was detected when the trio was frisked and checked with handheld metal detectors. Officials said the six pellets recovered from the passengers contained 843 gm of gold of 97.0% purity. They also  seized gold chain and rings weighing 71 gm from the accused. Earlier in January, customs officials at the Kempegowda International Airport had caught four passengers returning to the country with a total of 700 gm of gold worth Rs 23.19 lakh. In one instance, a total of 496 gm of gold was found in the rectum of three women. According to officials, the three Tamil-origin woman flying from Colombo in a Sri Lankan Airlines flight were detained after suspicion. Later on detailed examination, it was found that the trio had collectively put gold paste covered with plastic sheaths in their rectum. The women were hoping to pass through the metal detectors as the metal was in the form of a paste but came under the radar during passenger profiling. When they grew suspicious, customs officials questioned them and later a medical examination proved their suspicion right. In another instance on the same day, a flier of Andhra Pradesh origin was caught with 200 gm of gold strapped to his body as he reached Bengaluru from Kuwait in an Emirates flight. In another incident which came to light in December 30, 2018, a total of 4.4 kg of gold worth Rs 1.45 crore concealed in private parts was seized from three persons flying in from Dubai, based on a tip-off.
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Why cultivation of Karnataka’s GI-tagged Nanjangud rasabale banana has declined

Horticulture
The rasabale is grown in just over 10 acres now in all of Nanjangud taluk, whereas until three decades ago it was the largest producer of this variety of banana.
N Mahendra on his rasabale farm
S Krishnegowda (65) and S Krishnappa (76) are having their post-breakfast tea on a narrow red oxide verandah in Devarasanahalli, a village in Nanjangud taluk in Mysore. When asked if they knew who were currently growing the Nanjangud rasabale in the village, they engage in some intense discussion. “Suri has rasabale on his farm.” “Which Suri?” “Cheluvappa’s son, Suri.” “No, no. This year he is not growing rasabale. Last year he lost half the crop.” “Mahendra? Yes, Mahendra is growing rasabale. Not too much, some half an acre or so.” S Krishnegowda and S Krishnappa in Devarasanahalli village N Mahendra is the sole Nanjangud rasabale cultivator in all of Devarasanahalli, which until three decades ago was the largest producer of this variety of banana. In all of Nanjangud taluk, the rasabale is grown in just over 10 acres now. Owing to the specific qualities that are due to the place of origin (taste, smell and pulp quality), the Nanjangud rasabale was given the Geographical Indication (GI) protection in 2005 under the Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999. It was hoped that inclusion in the GI registry would give renewed impetus to its cultivation. The slump began when water from the Kabini dam (locally referred to as the Beechanahalli dam after the village the reservoir is located in) was used for irrigation instead of the rainwater pond in the village. “That year, all the rasabale crops died. Only one farmer who had grown Yelakki bale reaped a good harvest,” recounts Krishnegowda. Since then, rasabale farmers have shifted to growing other varieties of banana like the Yelakki bale and Pach bale. What is destroying the rasabale plants? Mahendra is growing 300 rasabale plants in 15 guntas of land. Over the last 12 months, he has spent Rs 5,000 on ‘medicines’ (pesticides), Rs 8,000 on fertilisers, Rs 10,000 on agricultural labour and Rs 5,000 on drip irrigation. “On an average, one plant requires an investment of Rs 100,” he says. Nanjangud rasabale bananas Rasabale banana sells at Rs 5 or Rs 6 apiece in Nanjangud town. Each plant yields around 35 to 40 such bananas. “There is good profit if the crop is successful,” he adds. But out of the 300 plants, 60 have died without yield. He points at the rotting stem of a freshly uprooted plant and says, “All 60 were attacked by the Panama disease.” The Panama Wilt disease, a fungal infection caused by the Fuserium Wilt pathogen, has been the bane of rasabale farmers. The symptoms aggravate and start showing just before the flowering stage. The leaves turn yellow and wither, the base of the stem splits and the roots rot, destroying the plant. “The fungus spreads by contact. They survive as spores on carriers and multiply once they come into contact with a host, like the rasabale plant in this case,” says Dr Vasanth Kumar Thimakapura, an agricultural scientist. Thus, the soil-borne disease can spread through running water, farm implements and infected planting material. “When the Kabini dam was opened, fungal infection restricted to a certain area spread to wherever the water flowed. The soil of Devarasanahalli wasn’t spared either,” explains Dr Thimakapura. The pathogen stays in the soil for 30 years once it gets affected. Not just water, but tractor tyres, sickles and other farm implements also become its carriers. The ‘suckers’ or the lateral shoots of the parent plant used as planting material can further propagate the disease. The Fuserium Wilt fungus was responsible for wiping out the popular Gros Michel banana variety in the 1950s. It originated in Panama (hence the name Panama Wilt) and spread to Costa Rica, Guatemala, Colombia and Ecuador, obliterating the variety. The Pach bale or Cavendish variety is resistant to the disease and has now substituted the Gros Michel. With government help, a few success stories To encourage rasabale cultivation, the Horticulture department gives subsidies on chemicals, drip irrigation, mulching sheets and planting material, says Navyashree, a technical consultant in the Horti Clinic, Mysore. “Each year, a ‘target’ in terms of area and produce is fixed and subsidies under the Comprehensive Horticulture Development programme are given until the target is reached,” says Shivakumar, Assistant Horticultural Officer, Nanjangud. Under this scheme, Rs 99,000 gets earmarked for one hectare of GI crop. Sannappa Gowda’s rasabale cultivation is a success story. He has planted 1,200 plants in 1.5 acres of land in the neighbouring village of Mullur this crop-year, after a profitable harvest of 400 plants in the previous year. He received a subsidy of Rs 39,000 for neem oil, banana special micronutrients, manure and the cost of planting material in 2018. “The first time, 10-15 plants died in the sixth month. I was also scared like the other farmers. But it is normal for some plants to die in any variety banana crop, so I kept at it,” says Gowda. Sannappa Gowda’s rasabale plantation The government also gives subsidies for labs interested in tissue culture of the planting material, to ensure the suckers are disease free. “The suckers are only disease free and not disease resistant. And since the soil is infested, the problem is not really solved,” says Dr Thimakapura. Another problem with tissue culture of the rasabale is that its multiplication rate is very low and identifying genuine, healthy parent plants is difficult, says Dr GSK Swamy, Professor, College of Horticulture, Mysore. Crop rotation and drip irrigation have been effective in managing the disease. “Merely killing the pathogen with fungicides will not help because by the time the symptoms become apparent, the roots have been damaged, and the plant cannot survive without roots. A treatment mechanism that overcomes this damage is necessary,” says Dr Swamy. Effective management of the disease needs awareness among farmers, and research and implementation, he adds. Until the rasabale gains its lost glory, one can taste the fruit in Kempegowda Angadi, one of the only two shops that sell it. Farmers from all the villages sell their rasabale crop to these shops. Kempegowda Angadi, one of the two shops that sells the rasabale in Nanjangud town “The shop is in Nanjangud town. Walk straight on the cinema talkies road, you will find it. It is opposite the brandy shop,” direct Krishnegowda and Krishnappa helpfully. Pragati KB, a law graduate from National Law University, Jodhpur, is currently studying journalism in Chennai. After law school, she was a Teach for India fellow for two years and taught primary school children in an Urdu medium government school in Bangalore.
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Cyclone Fani effect: Bengaluru, parts of Karnataka to experience isolated rainfall

Weather
The rain might provide some relief for Bengaluru, which has been experiencing temperatures above 35ÂșC, and temperatures may dip by 1 or 2 degrees Celsius.
PTI/file photo
Bengaluru, which has been experiencing temperatures above 35 degrees Celsius over the past month will get some relief in the form of isolated rainfall as a result of Cyclone Fani, which is expected to intensify into a “very severe cyclonic storm”. The Indian Meteorological Department’s Bengaluru office has predicted partly cloudy sky with one or two spells of rain or thundershowers in the city for the next three-four days. This is expected to bring down the maximum temperatures in the city by 1-2 degrees Celsius to 33 degrees Celsius. However, these spells of rain may not be enough to make up for the rainfall deficit experienced this season. Currently, Bengaluru has a rainfall deficit of 39 per cent. Other than Bengaluru, coastal Karnataka and other parts of interior Karnataka will also receive rainfall. This forecast comes after heavy rainfall in Kodagu last week, which resulted in damage to property. More rain is expected in the coming days in the region. "Kodagu received rainfall in isolated places but we are not expecting rain today or tomorrow. Next week, we expect more rainfall in Malnad and coastal Karnataka after April 28. There is a weak trough right now but by next week, we are expecting the trough will be stronger and that will be followed by more rainfall," Sunil Gavaskar, a meteorologist working with Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC), told TNM on Thursday. Meanwhile, with the monsoon expected to arrive in Karnataka by end of May, Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy has directed Chief Secretary TM Vijaya Bhaskar and revenue officials to initiate measures to prevent floods and rain-related problems. “As the election code of conduct is still in force, it will not be possible for ministers or elected representatives to visit affected areas to monitor the review work. The Chief Minister spoke to the Chief Secretary over the phone and advised to constitute committees of officials to look into the matter and to give special attention to areas such as Kodagu and coastal Karnataka which were adversely affected by floods last year,” a note from the CM’s office said.  
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Sunday, April 28, 2019

Yeddyurappa loyalist and Umesh Yadav’s son named BJP candidates in K’taka bye-poll

Bye-elections
The bye-elections come at a time the BJP is attempting to usurp power from the coalition government.
The  BJP in Karnataka finalised their candidates for the May 19 Assembly bye-polls in two seats in north Karnataka after the Congress had already named their candidates on Saturday. The last date for filing nominations for these two seats is April 29. Counting of votes will be done on May 23, the same day the nationwide results of Lok Sabha elections will be declared. In Kundgol, the BJP has gone with SI Chikkanagowdar, a key aide of BS Yeddyurappa in the hope of succeeding late sitting minister CS Shivalli who had won from the constituency two times successively. He will face Kusumavati, wife of former Municipal Administration Minister. Shivalli, who was the former MLA of Kundgol, passed away in March 2019. The Congress is hoping to bank on the goodwill enjoyed by Shivalli in the region by fielding his wife Kusumavati. Another seat which is going for bye-polls is Chincholi in Kalaburagi district after Congress MLA Umesh Jadhav resigned from his position and had contested the Lok Sabha elections against Congress heavyweight Mallikarjun Kharge as the BJP candidate. The BJP has fielded Umesh’s son Avinash from the seat in the hope of adding their tally of 104 seats in the state Assembly. Avinash will face Subhas Rathod, the Congress candidate. Incidentally, Rathod was in the BJP until late March before joining the Congress. Both the Yadavs and Rathod belong to the same Lambani community who are influential in the region. The bye-elections come at a time that the BJP is attempting to usurp power from the coalition government in the state. The coalition government has been on shaky ground ever since four Congress leaders including Ramesh Jarkiholi skipped a crucial party legislature meeting in January. The coalition government has managed to ward off BJP's reported attempts to convince more members of the alliance to defect. Shivalli's death means that the strength of the coalition in the Assembly is now 117 which includes 79 Congress MLAs, 37 JD(S) MLAs and 1 BSP MLA.  
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Woman injured at ‘Avengers: Endgame’ screening in B’luru theatre due to rush

Accident
The woman’s friend said that the theatre doors were opened just three minutes before the film started, leading to a rush. The multiplex said it was an accident.
Representational image
A 32-year-old Bengaluru woman was injured above her lip and had to get stitches after she fell down while entering a movie hall on Saturday night to watch Avengers: Endgame. The incident occurred during the opening of Saturday night’s 10 pm show at Cinepolis Forum Shantiniketan in Whitefield. According to the woman’s friend, Khizer Ahmed Sheriff, who was with her when she fell down, the theatre doors opened just three minutes before the film started. The movie was running full house, and therefore a lot of people rushed in at the same time, leading to the incident, he said. “The show was at 10 o'clock but they opened the doors at 9.57 pm. The entire hall was dark except for the light near the stairs. Since the people in the queue noticed that the movie had started, they rushed to their seats. In that chaos, my friend was pushed and she fell face flat on the stairs. It cut her lip and she hurt her tooth,” Khizer said. Khizer further alleged that the management at Cinepolis was unhelpful. He returned to the theatre after getting medical help for his friend from Manipal Hospital to raise the issue with the staff. “Initially they were very unresponsive, but then they claimed they started the movie on time. Since they did not acknowledge their mistake, a bunch of us (customers) wrote a letter and made the manager sign an acknowledgement with the names of the complainants along with their ticket numbers,” Khizer said. While Khizer and his friends want the theatre to compensate for her medical expenses, so far he says that he has been offered 15 ticket vouchers after multiple phone calls and even a meeting at his friend’s residence. The theatre management meanwhile blamed the rush for he incident, and denied that they had not helped the woman who was injured. Yasir Sohail, the manager present on Saturday night, said, “It was a 10 o’clock show and it was Avengers and we were running housefull shows. 246 – that is the capacity of our theatre – and all of a sudden 246 customers started entering the auditorium. Although the dimmers light and the stairs light was on, she fell down because of the pressure of the crowd. After that we gave her first aid and took her to the hospital and today we went to her home to check up on how she is doing now.” He denied any wrongdoing in terms of time management stating, “We followed the Theatre Management System (an automated system) but there was a huge rush which caused the inconvenience,” he said.   
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McConnell plan to hike the smoking age could be a win for tobacco companies

Public health officials see a 'Trojan Horse' behind support for the age 21 sales limit.

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Namma Bengaluru Awards 2019: Educationist, conservationist, eco-warrior bag prizes

Awards
This is the 10th year of the Namma Bengaluru Awards.
Ashok Kamath of Akshara Foundation was presented the ‘Namma Bengalurean of the Year’ 2019 award on Saturday for his work on revamping the public education system in Bengaluru and the rest of Karnataka. This is the 10th edition of the Namma Bengaluru Awards presented by Namma Bengaluru Foundation, a non-profit founded by BJP Rajya Sabha MP Rajeev Chandrasekhar. Kamath had started the Ganitha Kalika Andolana (GKA), or Learn Math Movement, in partnership with the state Education Department to make Mathematics fun for children who otherwise fear the subject. He and his organisation have also developed an app called Building Blocks, available for android phones, and make simple math problems fun for children to grasp. Along with Kamath, the other recipients of this year’s awards were – Udaya Kumar, history and stone inscription enthusiast who won the Citizen Individual of the Year; Deputy Chief of Bureau, Times of India Rohith BR won the award for the Media Person of the Year; Ravindra Kumar N, an Assistant Conservator of Forests-rank IFS officer, who won the Government Official of the Year; Rajesh Babu and Victoria Joslin D’Souza, co-founders of Swachha Eco Solutions who won Social Entrepreneurs of the Year award; and Meghana Murthy, founder, Smitam, who was accorded the Rising Star of the Year award. The award ceremony was presided by Justice (Retd) MN Venkatachaliah. Udaya along with his fellow enthusiasts are accidental historians and have been preserving overlooked Bengaluru history hidden in inscriptions on stones and carvings. He has restored inscriptions as old as 900 AD. So far, the team has managed to save 9 of 11 critical endangered stone inscriptions and they are trying to digitally secure all inscriptions via very high resolution 3D optical scans. Rohith BR has actively reported on pressing civic, social and environmental issues, including the citizens’ fight for transparency and accountability in local governance. He also covered the environmental degradation of Bellandur and Varthur lakes in the city. Ravindra Kumar N is popular among environmentalists; the state government was faced with protests when he was transferred from Bengaluru Urban Division. He had recovered 130 acres of Turahalli forest land during his brief tenure and initiated action against 60 encroachers irrespective of their political influence. Swachha eco solutions are utilising technology in converting plastic waste into innovative durable products, which include products such as drip irrigation pipes, HDP water pipes and interlocking recyclable plastic tiles. They collect plastic waste across 54 wards in Bengaluru and recycle over 150 tonnes of plastic every month. Meghana and her colleagues, mostly volunteers, work with school children from disadvantaged backgrounds, and help them excel in studies. She also deals with subjects like the menstrual hygiene targeting school girls who are generally unaware or shy to discuss the subject. Through the #NoHesitation programme, Smitam conducted workshops for over 1,200 girls from government schools about mensuration and highlighted the consequences of improper menstrual hygiene. The theme of this year’s awards was Awakened, Aware, Active, Informed and Determined citizens can create change. Other than the awardees, NBF also felicitated individuals and organisations for their demonstrated passion and compassion. Uday Kumar, Shiva Kumar, Chetan Kumar BM and Prajwal HK, are students who were instrumental in saving the lives of two Surya Kiran pilots who crashed while training for the AERO India show in February. 'Wanted him to be OK': B'luru man who comforted Surya Kiran pilot speaks to TNM Those who were felicitated in this category include Charlie’s Animal Rescue Centre (CARE) - an animal rescue centre founded by Sudha Narayana and her associates which began as a shelter for 10 dogs and cats and is now home to 200 animals, including dogs, cats, guinea pigs, rabbits and cattle. Sangeeta Halimani, the constable from Yelahanka Police Station who breastfed and comforted a day-old baby found abandoned on the streets of the city was also recognised for this category
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