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Sunday, May 5, 2019

Mangaluru dog lovers, a new cafe welcomes humans and their four-legged friends alike

Human Interest
K9 Resto Café also has a grooming centre, massage parlour and a day-care facility for animals.
Mangaluru's first ‘dog cafe’ has opened its doors in the city and is ready to cater to animal lovers and their four-legged friends. Known as ‘K9 Resto Cafe,’ the restaurant opened in mid-April and serves Indian, Chinese, Continental food as well as short eats. Situated in Sharbat Katte near Yeyyadi, K9-Resto Café is split into two-floors and has an exclusive basement section for people and their pets. In fact, the restaurant has a special kitchen dedicated to preparing food for dogs. "Dogs have more love to give than humans and they definitely deserve a place of their own," said Karthik Shetty, owner of K9 Resto Café.  A former airline employee, Karthik said that he was inspired by other dog cafes in cities he had visited. “I just wanted to combine my passion for opening a cafe with my love of dogs. Mangaluru has a lot of pet lovers and dog enthusiasts and a cafe like this is just what it needs. As an animal lover myself, I know that a lot of animal lovers want to spend quality time with their beloved pets beyond the four walls of their home,” he said. Besides offering a variety of food menu, K9 Resto Café also has facilities for animals, such as a grooming centre, massage parlour and a day-care facility that has offers a monthly subscription service.  Most pet owners can't take their pets to restaurants and are often forced to leave them at home or in someone else’s care. “Dog owners can drop off their pet dogs and collect them by the end of the day. There are various monthly packages available for the owners to choose from,” Karthik said.   Caring for three dogs himself, Karthik added that it's a great spot for animal lovers to meet and discover like-minded people who share similar interests. The venture, he says, also aims to help people overcome their fear of dogs. ‎"A lot of people may have had bad experiences with dogs in the past. We want to change that. Some of our visitors also come here, so that they can regain their confidence or discover the joy and comfort that animals bring with them," Karthik said. The cafe already has nine in-house dogs of various breeds, including a Husky, a St. Bernard, a Labrador, a Retriever, a Cocker Spaniel, a Chow Chow, a Pug and a German Shepherd. These are trained dogs and they also interact with the pets that come along with the customers. But it was only after meticulous planning that the dogs were brought to Mangaluru over a year ago so that they could acclimatise to the weather. “Special breeds like Huskies require a cool environment throughout and hence are provided with air-conditioning, fans in the café, wherever they move around in the vicinity," Karthik said. Karthik has even stylised and decorated the interiors to reflect the cafes love of dogs with a spray-painted mural.  Content provided by http://bit.ly/2DX7vnh and Scribes Media Ventures LLP).
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Saturday, May 4, 2019

Did Indian navy ship cause Udupi fishing boat to capsize? Cong-JD(S) MP candidate asks

Missing
INS Kochi reported damage on its ship around the same time that the fishing boat from Udupi went missing.
Udupi-Chikkamagaluru Congress-JD(S) MP candidate Pramod Madhwaraj has alleged that the Suvarna Tribhuja, a fishing boat from Udupi that went missing in December 2018, capsized after it was hit by an Indian navy ship.  The wreckage of the missing fishing boat was found by the Indian Navy on Friday, more than five months after it went missing off the coast of Goa on December 16, 2018.  Speaking at a press conference in Udupi, Pramod stated that the INS Kochi was damaged around the same time off the coast of Maharashtra. "INS Kochi has been damaged at a height of 6.5 feet and this is something that the Indian Navy has accepted. So why did the Navy not investigate whether the INS Kochi was damaged because it hit the fishing boat? Why has there been no report clarifying this when the case of the missing fishermen from Udupi has become a national issue?" asked Pramod.  He stated that the Indian Navy had informed the Udupi police on January 22 that INS Kochi was damaged. "The Navy told the police that INS Kochi was damaged in Maharashtra while the fishing boat went missing off the coast of Goa, and there is a geographical distance between Goa and Maharashtra," stated Pramod.  Read: 7 Karnataka fishermen still missing as Indian Navy finds wreckage of Udupi boat   He asked the Indian Navy to conduct an enquiry for "covering up" the incident and also demanded compensation for the families of seven fishermen who were on-board the fishing boat. "We had written a letter to CM Kumaraswamy and the Defence Minister that we have proof that INS Kochi has caused problems and hence, fishermen families should be given compensation of Rs. 25 lakh. I have also asked for a judicial enquiry in the Supreme Court about the issue," added Pramod.  He further alleged that the conspiracy to cover up the issue was directly linked to Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.  I stand by my allegation that INS Kochi has hit our missing boat on 13 December in maharastra sea killing 7 fishermen . The damage caused to the naval ship is shown in pic . I demand judicial enquiry headed by retired Supreme Court judge into the delay in exposing this murder. pic.twitter.com/9vldt8C1Rw — Pramod Madhwaraj (@PMadhwaraj) May 3, 2019 Udupi MLA and BJP leader Raghupati Bhat also urged that an enquiry should be conducted to confirm whether the capsized fishing boat was hit by INS Kochi.  “Our aim is to get maximum compensation for the families of the seven fishermen. If a naval ship had hit the boat, then the Navy would have to pay the compensation. We will take a fishermen’s delegation to Union Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman soon," he told The Hindu.  However, he asked his counterpart Pramod to furnish proof that INS Kochi had caused the fishing boat to capsize.  ಮೀನುಗಾರರನ್ನು ನೌಕಾಸೇನೆ ಕೊಲೆಮಾಡಿದೆ ಎಂದು ನಿರಾಧಾರವಾಗಿ ಆರೋಪಿಸಿದ ಮೈತ್ರಿ ಅಭ್ಯರ್ಥಿ @PMadhwaraj ಕೂಡಲೇ ಸಾಕ್ಷಿ ಸಮೇತ ಸ್ಪಷ್ಟನೆ ನೀಡಬೇಕು. ಇಲ್ಲವಾದಲ್ಲಿ ಕೂಡಲೇ ಸೇನೆಯ ಬಳಿ ಬೇಷರತ್ ಕ್ಷಮೆಯಾಚಿಸಬೇಕು. ದೇಶದ್ರೋಹದ ಪರಮಾವಧಿ! — Chowkidar MLA Raghupathi Bhat BJP (@RaghupathiBhat) May 4, 2019 The fishing boat with seven fishermen on-board last made contact with six other boats from Udupi, which were fishing in the same area, on December 16 at around 1 am. Read: 25 days and counting: Families of 7 Udupi fishermen live in hope of finding them The boat and the fishermen on it were unreachable after this point. Six fishermen – Damodar (40) from Malpe, Lakshman (45), Sathish (35), Ravi (27), Harish (28), and Ramesh (30) from Bhatkal - were on-board the boat along with the boat-owner Chandrashekhar. The fishermen are still missing although authorities have stated that their chances of survival are slim.  Thousands of fishermen held a protest in Udupi in January, demanding that authorities intensify the search for the missing boat. 
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Kodagu police arrest one for alleged misbehavior against actor Harshika Poonacha

Crime
While the police has arrested one man, the other is absconding.
The Kodagu police has arrested one person and is on the lookout for another who allegedly misbehaved with actor Harshika Poonacha at an engagement function in Madikeri on Thursday. Harshika lodged a complaint against Bansy Nanaiah and Bipin Devaiah at the Madikeri Rural police station following an altercation, which also involved fellow actor and cousin Bhuvan Ponanna, who was attending the engagement function as well. The engagement was held at a resort in Neerukolli in Madikeri.   Harshika is an actor who appears primarily in Kannada films. She began her acting career at the age of 15 and rose to fame with the 2008 Kannada film PUC. She has also acted in Telugu, Malayalam, Konkani and Kodava films in the past. Bansy and Bipin allegedly had an argument with Harshika when the latter asked them not to talk to her. Bhuvan, who was with Harshika, later got into a fight with the duo in which he was injured. He was treated at the district hospital before he left for Bengaluru along with Harshika. "We received a complaint from Bhuvan after the incident that Bipin and Bansy had misbehaved with Harshika at the engagement function on Thursday. We have arrested one person and are on the lookout for the other. The duo which has been accused are brothers and are relatives of the actor," a police official at Madikeri Rural police station said. The police arrested Bansy Nanaiah on Friday and are looking to arrest Bipin, who is currently absconding. The police has registered a case under section 354 (assault or criminal force to woman with intent to outrage her modesty), 324 (voluntarily causing hurt by dangerous weapons or means) and 326 (voluntarily causing grievous hurt by dangerous weapons or means) of the IPC against the two persons.  
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Drought-hit farmers in Kolar grow crops with treated wastewater, but is there a risk?

Agriculture
Activists say that the government is supplying poorly treated wastewater of Bengaluru to Kolar and the groundwater there is at a high risk of contamination due to this.
All images by Nidhi Jamwal
Kolar in Karnataka is one of the 24 districts in the country identified as eternally drought-prone. Being in a semi-arid zone with no perennial river, the district faces recurring droughts. This year, as Karnataka faces an extreme drought, all the blocks in Kolar district have been declared drought-hit. But, Manjula Amma, a farmer living near Laxmisagar tank in Kolar isn’t worried about the drought. “The water table in our village is high and my 75-year-old well is brimming with water. I have dug drainage channels in my agricultural field to drain out excess water,” she said, tending her potato crop. Somnath, a neighbour of Manjula Amma, is confident of growing four crops in a drought year. “Till a year ago, I used to grow only one crop of ragi (finger millet). But, this year I have already grown potato, paddy, and vegetables like brinjal, chili, beans and carrot. And, I will raise an additional rabi (winter) crop too,” said Somnath, who owns two acres. The reason the fields of farmers like Somnath and Manjula Amma are lush green in an extreme drought year is the treated wastewater of Bengaluru city stored about 55km away in the Laxmisagar tank. It has raised groundwater level in neighbouring villages where dug wells have come to life and are being used for irrigation. Legal battle “People in Kolar face acute water scarcity. Rather than meeting their needs, the government is supplying them poorly treated wastewater of Bengaluru,” said Prince Isac. He is an advocate representing Anjaneya Reddy of Chikkaballapur, who has filed a special leave petition in the Supreme Court of India (SC) against pumping of Bengaluru’s wastewater to Kolar. Reddy had initially approached the Karnataka High Court in June 2018, which, in its interim order last July restrained further pumping of Bengaluru’s wastewater. But, two months later, it modified the interim order and permitted resumption of wastewater pumping. This prompted Reddy to approach the apex court. “Groundwater, the only source of drinking water for the people of Kolar, is at a high risk of contamination from Bengaluru’s wastewater,” Reddy told VillageSquare.in. In January this year, the apex court restrained the state government from pumping city’s treated wastewater into Kolar’s tanks for groundwater recharge. But, on April 5, it lifted the stay imposed on the Karnataka government to pump Bengaluru’s treated wastewater from sewage treatment plants (STPs) into the irrigation tanks of Kolar, including the Laxmisagar tank. “The apex court has vacated the stay only on the basis of an assurance from the BWSSB (Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board) that the latter will supply properly treated wastewater for irrigation in drought-prone Kolar and Chikkaballapur districts. This is unbelievable,” said Isac. From STPs to irrigation tanks In 2014, the Karnataka government envisaged two projects – Koramangala-Challaghatta Valley, or KC Valley project, and Hebbal and Nagavara Valley or HN Valley project – to supply treated wastewater from Bengaluru to irrigation tanks in neighbouring districts of Kolar, Chikkaballapur and Bangalore Rural. The KC Valley project proposes to supply 400 million litres per day (mld) of Bengaluru’s treated wastewater (post secondary treatment in STPs) to 126 minor irrigation tanks in Kolar and Chikkaballapur districts to recharge the groundwater. The HN Valley project envisages pumping of another 210 mld of secondary treated wastewater from Nagavara, Hennur and Horamavu STPs of Bengaluru to Amani Gopal Krishna Kere and onwards to fill 65 tanks in Bangalore Rural, Bangalore Urban and Chikkaballapur districts. Efforts to reuse According to Dipankar Saha, former additional director, Central Pollution Control Board, wastewater is a displaced resource and every effort must be made to reuse it after proper treatment. “Use of treated wastewater in agriculture should be promoted, provided there is no mixing of industrial waste, and STPs meet the prescribed standards, which are stringent enough to address the risk of contamination,” Saha told VillageSquare.in. But Isac claimed that the Bellandur STP, which started pumping about 10 mld of treated wastewater to Laxmisagar tank in June 2018, was supplying partially treated wastewater. “Bengaluru’s wastewater has industrial and other hazardous wastes mixed with it. Mere secondary treatment of wastewater is not enough,” Isac told VillageSquare.in. He said that they will accept only tertiary treated wastewater. The September 2018 report of Energy & Wetlands Research Group, Centre for Ecological Sciences at Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru (IISc) reported higher heavy metal content in samples collected from STPs of KC Valley and lakes of Kolar (Laxmisagar, Narsapur). Also, the tested water samples had high nutrients, such as ortho-phosphate, nitrate and organic content, it said. Treatment standards Saha said that the secondary wastewater treatment standards prescribed for STPs in India are very stringent, and if followed, such treated wastewater can be safely used for agriculture. “We are investing money worth thousands of crores of rupees in setting up treatment plants. We should meet the prescribed standards and reuse wastewater in agriculture,” he said. “We have the science and technology to reuse treated wastewater in agriculture. And, there are enough indications that such projects should be undertaken,” said a professor at IISc, refusing to comment any further as the matter is in the courts. Officials of BWSSB and the Minor Irrigation and Ground Water Development Department were unavailable for comment. River to the rescue As per the South Asia Drought Monitor of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Gandhi Nagar, as of 29 March 2019, almost 42% of the country is facing drought. Karnataka is facing acute drought, as 156 of its 176 blocks have been declared drought-hit. Venkatesh, a farmer owning 6.5 acres of land in Kutaganahalli village on the outskirts of Bengaluru, reminisced his failed attempts in finding water for irrigation. “In the last few years, I have spent over Rs 50 lakh in digging 26 bore wells, some till a depth of 1,000 feet, but found no water,” Venkatesh told VillageSquare.in. “I was about to sell my land when I got the idea of lifting water from Dakshina Pinakini river that passes through Bengaluru.” Dakshina Pinakini originates in the Nandi Hills in Chikkaballapur district and flows through Karnataka and Tamil Nadu to join the Bay of Bengal. A large part of Bengaluru’s wastewater flows into it through Bellandur and Varthur lakes and other water channels. Three years ago, Venkatesh laid a 6km long pipeline, and attached a 15 HP pump, to lift water from Dakshina Pinakini. He brings the water to a pond in his farmland, which has raised the groundwater table in the surrounding area. Venkatesh has enough water to irrigate his field all through the year using a sprinkler system. He grows potato, tomato, chili and capsicum. Farmers in Vijapura near Bengaluru have developed a system of rotation of wastewater for irrigating their mulberry fields, mulberry leaves being used to feed silk worms. Potential According to S. Vishwanath, advisor with Bengaluru-based Biome Environmental Trust, which conducts research on water and sanitation, if the World Health Organization’s Guidelines for the safe use of wastewater, excreta and grey water are followed, Bengaluru’s treated wastewater has the potential to irrigate 24,000 hectares of land using drip irrigation system, reduce fertilizer use by 60%, drought-proof the land, enhance shallow aquifer levels, enhance biodiversity and enable pisciculture. Jakkur Lake in Bengaluru, which is an integrated wetlands system, shows the way forward. Treated wastewater from a nearby 10mld STP, along with some untreated wastewater passes through constructed wetlands of macrophytes and algae. An April 2014 report of Centre for Ecological Studies, IISc reads: “The major nutrient removal and polishing is done by the manmade wetland and the (Jakkur) Lake. The integration of sewage treatment plant with wetlands (consisting of reed bed and algal pond) has helped in sustained treatment of water for reuse.” It is reported that wastewater irrigates between 1.5% and 6.6% of farmland worldwide. Class I and Class II cities in India generate 75,020 mld of wastewater, reports Sewage Treatment Market in India 2018. Can this water be treated properly and used in agriculture, as climate change is expected to make monsoons more erratic? “In an era of climate change, seawater and urban wastewater, to an extent, can be called climate-proof water. Vast areas of our cities and towns can be irrigated by such waters,” Vishwanath told VillageSquare.in. Such areas can be declared as Special Agriculture Zones and supplied with wastewater after eliminating industrial effluents and heavy metals. Nidhi Jamwal is environment editor with Gaon Connection. Views are personal. The original article appeared in VillageSquare and can be found here. 
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A Bengaluru woman’s machine may solve the issue of sanitary waste disposal in India

Waste management
Nisha has gotten a patent for her machine and is in talks with three state governments to install her pollution free incinerators in solid waste management units.
In 2017, Bengaluru-based Nisha Nazre’s Zuci Fem Care Private Limited had built a pollution free incinerator to dispose of sanitary pads. Two years later, Nisha has gotten a patent for her machine and is already in talks with state governments of Karnataka, Telangana, Punjab and Haryana to install these machines in solid waste management units in a big way. The incinerator has now been installed in two places – one unit in Telangana and two units in Karnataka – in government facilities. And while Nisha is running the pilot projects, she is waiting for the general elections to get over to get the final permissions from the state governments to install the machines on a larger scale in the states. What is special about the Zuci Fem Care incinerators is that it incinerates sanitary pads without releasing poisonous gases like carbon monoxide, and dioxins into the atmosphere. Nisha explains that box heaters, which are generally used to dispose of sanitary pads by burning them, are essentially boxes that have heating coils in them. “Using a box heater and burning a pad in the open have the same effect. There is no filter for the harmful chemicals that are released into the atmosphere,” she says. The problems and challenges in the disposal of sanitary waste are one of the biggest reasons why activists have been pushing for reusable and biodegradable menstruation products. However, the scope of the same is limited due to many reasons such as availability of clean water, stigma, maintenance and notions such as menstrual blood is untouchable and impure. For reasons like these, Nisha says that it’s important to dispose of sanitary waste responsibly and sustainably as disposable pads are the most popular menstrual hygiene products in use. This is easier said than done, though. When you throw away a sanitary pad, it either ends up in a landfill where it takes hundreds of years to degrade due to the plastic components in it. Or, it has to be burnt, which releases toxic chemicals. Further, to completely burn a pad, it would need to be heated for 4-5 minutes at a temperature of 800 degrees Celsius. This is where the Zuci Fem Care incinerator is different. “It can heat up to the temperature of 600 degrees Celsius in three minutes. And the smoke is treated so that toxins are not released into the air. Odour is also treated and so is the water. The machine uses 40 litres of water, which has to be changed every five months. It is treated and reused by the machine till then. The sludge and ash that is created go into separate compartments too, and are not just released into the environment,” Nisha explains. The incinerator has two chambers. In the primary chamber, used sanitary pads are put and get burnt. In the secondary chamber, the gases are filtered and neutralised. The water in the machine is used as a medium to filter the gases. There are two models available – one for Rs 1,45,000 and another for Rs 1,66,000. The price varies according to the capacity of the machines, Nisha shares. In one hour, the machine can incinerate up to 200 sanitary napkins, and the electricity consumption amounts to less than 50 paise per pad, Nisha adds. In one go, 50 sanitary pads can be incinerated in the machine. While she awaits the go-ahead from the state governments, Nisha has big plans for the incinerator. “Once the elections are over, I will approach many other state governments too. I want to take this across India, install it in government as well as private facilities, so sanitary waste can be disposed off safely, sustainably and locally,” Nisha says. Apart from the patent, Ambala-based Microtek, which handles technical support for the incinerators, also has certifications for quality control by CCPL (Care Control Private Limited) and TNV UK. Apart from these, Nisha is also in the R&D stage of incinerators that can dispose of adult and baby diapers.
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Kodagu clamps down on commercialisation, 693 applications to convert land rejected

Environment
The decision to stop conversion of agricultural land for commercial use was taken by the state government after the devastating floods and landslides in the district last year.
After the devastating floods and landslides in Kodagu last year, authorities in the hilly district have woken up to the rampant deforestation and conversion of green spaces for commercial projects. In November 2018, the Karnataka government decided to halt conversion of agricultural land for commercial purposes until strict guidelines for land use in the district are framed.  In the last five months, the district administration has rejected 693 applications to convert land for commercial use. "Based on the directive issued by the state government, we have not accepted 693 applications to convert land for commercial use in the last five months. We have informed the applicants that we can consider the applications after the state government forms strict guidelines for land use," Kodagu Deputy Commissioner Annies Kanmani told TNM.  The state government had issued the order after multiple agencies including the Geographical Survey of India (GSI) which visited 85 landslide-affected sites in Kodagu, recommended that developmental activities in the district at the expense of green cover was one of the main reasons for the devastation caused last year. Over the last 10 years, about 2,800 acres of coffee plantations and paddy fields in Kodagu have been converted for commercial use. No action has yet been taken on land converted prior to the floods and landslides.  Rebuilding work at Hemmethalu, Kodagu The decision to put a halt to the conversion was welcomed by activists and residents in Kodagu. "We definitely need this to stop the rapid urbanisation of Kodagu. This is long overdue and we are against the conversion of land for commercial use," said Col. Cheppudira Muthanna, President of the Coorg Wildlife Society.  The hilly district received over 200 mm rainfall on three consecutive days in August 2018, according to the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC). The heavy rainfall was the highest received by the district in 118 years and it displaced almost 7000 people who were housed in 55 relief camps set up by the district authorities. The landslides also took the lives of 18 people.  Relief camp in Sampaje, Kodagu However, the district administration has recommended that permission could be granted for conversion of land for building individual houses. "We had given a recommendation that individual houses wherever it is not a vulnerable area and is a stable area and if it is 15-20 cents, the permission can be given," said Annies. "While we are totally against commercial conversion of land, we do not want that to affect genuine cases where people want to construct a house or a labour line," added Col. Muthanna.   On Friday, several officials including Rajkumar Khatri, Principal Secretary of the Revenue Department (Disaster Management) visited the rehabilitation homes constructed at Karnangeri in Madikeri taluk for 427 families affected by the landslides. The officials have also taken measures to prepare themselves ahead of the monsoon season this year.  A control room has been set up at the Deputy Commissioner's office while National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) teams and GSI officials along with district officials have taken precautionary measures with relation to setting up relief camps in the district.  Photographs by Dhruv Khanna
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Bonded labour is a reality in Bengaluru, but convictions rates are abysmally low

Crime
In many cases of bonded labour, an FIR is not registered and the other cases almost never reach the court.
Over a week ago, 32-year-old Jyothi, her 15-day-old son and two of her daughters were rescued from bonded labour in Bengaluru. Jyothi’s family had to run from pillar to post just to file a complaint with the local police and finally, on Monday, they met with Deputy Commissioner of Police Rahul Kumar and submitted a complaint. The DCP directed the jurisdictional KG Halli Police to register an FIR. However, when Jyothi went to the police station to file a complaint, the building contractor Jaysilla, who is accused of enslaving Jyothi and her family members was also present at the station. “The police mediated a settlement between Jyothi and Jaysilla. Both parties agreed that a case would not be registered and that Jaysilla would not threaten or bother Jyothi. The social worker Habeebullah, who rescued them has promised to keep an eye on Jaysilla,” said Kalimullah, a social worker, who had taken Jyothi to Bowring Hospital, on April 26, the night she was assaulted by Jaysilla’s goons. Read: Chased and assaulted by goons at night, victims of bonded labour rescued in Bengaluru Why FIRs are rarely registered in bonded labour cases Sources in the KG Halli Police station say that the Inspector convinced Jyothi that going through legal procedures would be tedious and that it would be better for her to settle the case outside of court. Speaking to TNM, Shantanu Dutta, Spokesperson for the National Coalition to Eradicate Bonded Labour and Human Trafficking says that in many cases of bonded labour, an FIR is not registered and the other cases almost never reach the court. “The FIR is not filed for a variety of reasons. Firstly, it may be because the police officials see bonded labour cases as those of labour violations. They are not made aware of how to investigate such cases as they do not know what the law says. Secondly, in most cases, the person enslaving the victims have connections and they persuade the police to mediate and settle the matter, like in Jyothi’s case,” he said. Another reason, Shantanu maintains is that the victims constantly migrate and the police do not want to go into the trouble of tracking them down during the trial. “The police also convince the victims that going through the trial would take years and that it would drain them financially to pay for the legal proceedings,” he said. Conviction rate in bonded labour cases is drastically low Speaking to TNM, Balan, a public prosecutor practicing in Karnataka for 30 years says that police officers are not trained properly and lack knowledge about the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act 1976. He says that the police do not follow required procedures to gather evidence, which leads to acquittals. In most cases of bonded labour, where FIRs are registered, another issue causes the trial to fall flat – inaccurate chargesheets. Balan says that the police rarely inform the Labour Department or the Deputy Commissioners of the concerned districts and obtain a release certificate. “The DC has to give a release certificate and this document is evidence that the victims were in fact victims of bonded labour. The DC has to conduct a preliminary probe before issuing the RC. Most chargesheets do not have this document,” Shantanu says. Another impediment to convictions in cases of bonded labour, he says are the inordinate delays in the legal proceedings.  “The chargesheet is filed may be six months or a year after the rescue happens. The police do not look into the trafficking element and track down all the people involved in the nexus of bonded labour. They only arrest the person who enslaved the victims and more often than not, the accused get bail. They do not trace call records or try to connect the dots or procure evidence as to how the victims ended up in such a situation. Lack of evidence always give the accused reasonable doubt and hence leads to acquittals,” he added.    
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