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Sunday, May 12, 2019

Mangaluru woman murdered, body parts found in two different places

Crime
Two days before the body was discovered, the family of the deceased, Shreemathi Shetty, had filed a missing complaint.
A case of gruesome murder has emerged from Mangaluru. The body of a middle-aged woman, stuffed in a gunny bag, was found in two different areas in Mangaluru on Sunday. While the head and the limbs of the body were found on the roadside of the highway between Nantoor and KPT, the torso was found in Nandigudda in the district. The officials from Kadri and Pandeshwar police station discovered the body after being alerted by passersby. The police officials from both the stations arrived at the two spots as soon as they were alerted about the discovery of the body parts. "The parts of the body were discovered in two different places, around 9 am. On the highway, one bag of body parts was found near the MRPL Petrol Bunk by a group of fruit vendors and the other bag was found near the burial ground in Nandigudda. The parts of the body have been sent to a hospital and we are investigating the case," said an official from Pandeshwar police station. The deceased has been identified as Shreemathi Shetty, a resident of Amar Alva Road in the district. The family of Shreemathi was informed about the murder and were asked to visit the hospital where the body was taken to. Incidentally, two days before the body was discovered, her family had filed a missing complaint at Pandeshwar police station, stating that Shreemathi had not returned home since Friday.  After a preliminary inquiry, the police officials stated that this could be a case of murder committed for personal reasons. Three teams of police personnel have been formed to trace the murderers and a detailed investigation will be carried out. "We have registered an FIR but are yet to ascertain where the crime has taken place. We will be transferring the case to the relevant police station when the spot, where the crime was committed, has been established," said a police official from Kadri police station. According to the police, Shreemathi is divorced and her husband is in judicial custody over a case of theft registered in Mangaluru South police station.
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Pakistani couple caught in Bengaluru with fake Aadhaar IDs deported

Crime
Kashif Shamsuddin, his wife Kirhon Ghulam Ali and Sameera, a woman married to an Indian man, were arrested in 2017.
Photograph via The Quint
A couple from Pakistan, convicted in 2017 of illegally entering India and holding fake documents while living in Bengaluru, was deported from the country on Saturday. As per sources in Bengaluru police and the Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO), Kashif Shamsuddin and his wife Kirhon Ghulam Ali were handed over to Pakistani authorities at the Wagah-Attari border on Sunday. “They have been deported on Saturday,” confirmed a senior officer from Bengaluru police. The couple hailed from Chakragot in Karachi and were arrested in May 2017 in Bengaluru along with Sameera, another Pakistani national, who had entered India with them. Sameera is currently in jail in Bengaluru. She is married to Mohammad Shihab, a native of Kerala who was working in Qatar. The couple got married against the family’s wishes some time in 2015 and has a child. Police officials stated that the trio was residing in India with fake documents, including Aadhaar cards. Officials are yet to decide on deporting Sameera and her child. Since the mother is an illegal immigrant, the child will not be given Indian citizenship. According to the Citizenship Act of 1955, “A person born in India on or after 3 December 2004 is considered citizen of India by birth, if both the parents are citizens of India or one of whose parents is a citizen of India and the other is not an illegal migrant at the time of his birth”. As per Quint, Shihab brought Sameera into the country via Nepal after her father placed her on house arrest. The three nationals from Pakistan first came to Nepal from Qatar via Muscat in Oman. They reached Patna in Bihar after crossing the Indo-Nepal border from Kathmandu. Sameera was arrested along with Kashif and Kirhon in May 2017 from Bengaluru’s Kumaraswamy Layout. They were charged with illegally entering the country and creating fake identity cards. They were sentenced to 21 months and 12 months in prison for the two cases respectively.
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Passengers on Bengaluru-Delhi SpiceJet flight stranded at Nagpur for 10 hours

Flight
Image for representation
A SpiceJet flight (SG-8720) traveling from Bengaluru with 152 passengers onboard landed at Nagpur at around 1:30 am on Saturday after developing technical issues. Passengers of the Bengaluru-Delhi SpiceJet flight were left stranded for over ten hours on Saturday after their aircraft landed in Nagpur. The Delhi-bound flight was diverted to Nagpur at 12:30 am after officials reportedly spotted a problem with the fuel tank gate of the aircraft. The passengers of the flight were then asked to wait at the Nagpur airport. “We were told an aircraft is coming from Mumbai with engineers. Then the airline officials said one aircraft is coming from Bangalore. But none came,” Surabhi Saraogi, a passenger told Indian Express.   Passengers also said that they were made to stay inside the aircraft till 5:30 am as Spicejet did not operate from Nagpur. “We were kept inside the flight till 5.30 am and later we were allowed to go outside the plane at Nagpur. All the passengers were later served with tea and poha in the morning,” another passenger told Hindustan Times. Eventually, a flight was brought in from New Delhi to Nagpur to take the stranded passengers from Nagpur to Delhi at 1:30 pm. The original flight was supposed to land in New Delhi at 12:45 am. “An alternate aircraft was sent to Nagpur. It is clarified that the aircraft made a normal landing, and not an emergency landing in Nagpur,” the airline said in a statement. Another SpiceJet aircraft was forced to make an unscheduled stop on Saturday. The Mumbai to Chennai flight (SG-611) had to turn back and return to Mumbai airport after it developed technical issues in the morning.  The plane took off for Chennai after the issue was fixed. .  
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Saturday, May 11, 2019

Bengaluru residents oppose move to turn community ground to police station

Civic Issue
A recent survey has found only 3% land in Bengaluru consists of open spaces when WHO recommends that it be at least 10%.
Pic courtesy: Arun Prasad
Residents of south Bengaluru’s Girinagar held a demonstration on Friday to protect the only open space they have in the vicinity – a community ground – against the state government’s decision to use it to set up a new police station. The 120 sq feet area, commonly referred to as the ‘Volleyball ground’, is near Vivekananda Park in Phase 1 of Girinagar. It is marked as a civic amenity site in the BDA layout plan. It is presently used as a playground, as a space to set up small exhibitions, and even a place to learn driving. During school hours, it is also used by a private school as a playground as it doesn’t have one of its own. “Now all of a sudden, it is being converted to police station; without any prior intimations too. We strongly feel that this area should be reserved for the playground,” said Suresh R, one of the activists who took part in Friday’s protests. Basavangudi MLA Ravi Subramanya and Girinagar councillor AV Nandini Vijaya Vittal has also lent support to the protestors. Responding to the agitation, Bengaluru City Police Commissioner T Suneel Kumar has asked the construction work to be put on hold. Currently the Girinagar Police Station is running out of a cramped two-storey residential building. Disappearing open spaces in Bengaluru The development comes at a time when the ‘Garden City’ has been seeing rapid loss of green and open spaces. A report by the Indian Institute of Science in 2017 said that 78% of Bengaluru's land surface is currently paved; and if this trend continues, the number will likely increase to a massive 94% by the end of the decade. More strikingly, a survey by Janaagraha, a Bengaluru-based non-profit organisation,found that only 3% of the total area in the city is parks or open grounds.   The WHO suggests that 15% of a city should be made up of open spaces. This means that Bengaluru falls short of the prescribed requirement of 10 sq metres of open space per capita recommended by the Urban and Regional Development Plan Formulation and Implementation (2015) guidelines of the Ministry of Urban Development.
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How cultivating chia seeds is helping Mysuru farmers boost agricultural income

Agriculture
Farmers who grew traditional crops like tobacco, millets, etc., said that their life has been transformed after growing chia.
All images by Hiren Kumar Bose / Kurubur Shantakumar, flanked by his farmer friends in a field of chia
“Earlier we worked like slaves in our own farms,” said Madappa of Bidarahallihundi village in Heggadadevana Kote taluka of Mysuru, standing in his chia farm, adjusting the green shawl – a must-have clothing accessory of most Kannada farmers – thrown over his white shirt. “But now we are like kings.” As the climatic conditions of Mysuru district favored crops like rice, sorghum, ragi, pulses, sugarcane and tobacco, farmers here have been growing them for generations. Farmers of Mysuru, known for the pomp and gaiety of its traditional 10-day-long Dasara festival, are writing a new chapter, growing this popular crop that retails for Rs 100-odd for 100gm in metros. Farmers who grew traditional crops like tobacco, millets, etc., said that their life has been transformed after growing chia. Hundreds of chia seed growers in villages of Mysuru district have enhanced their agricultural income without any government intervention. New crop Among Mysuru’s horticulture crops are Nanjangud Rasabale banana, Mysuru betel leaves, Mysuru mallige (jasmine) and Erengere brinjal, which are however vanishing due to the state’s indifference and the changing preference of the consumer. In recent years, it’s the chia seeds that have brought the district into the limelight. Chia seeds have been available in health and lifestyle stores in the country’s metros, having been imported from Mexico. It was the team of Ram Rajasekharan, former director of Mysuru-based Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI) and his colleagues, biochemist Malathi Srinivasan and plant breeder R. V. Sreedhar that introduced chia as a crop among Indian farmers. A chia farm in one of the villages of Mysuru district, where the acreage under chia cultivation is increasing Growing it in the 38-acre Bengaluru campus of CFTRI, researchers began work on chia seeds in 2012. Through pure line selection, CFTRI developed a pure line with blue flower and white seeds, and a high yielding line of white flower and white seeds and have tested them through five generations. In October 2014, CFTRI organised an all India farmers’ empowerment program, where hundreds of farmers who had come from different parts of the country were gifted 100gm pouches of chia seeds along with information on agronomical practices to be followed. Bumper return Unconvinced by the claims of the researchers, some of the farmers discarded the seed pouches; but a handful of Mysuru farmers planted them. Farmer Madappa (62) sowed chia in a quarter-of-an-acre while in the rest of his 15 acres he continued with tobacco, sugarcane, cotton and millet. After three-and-a-half months, he harvested 80 kg of chia seeds and gifted it back to CFTRI. “What I have been earning from chia is in no way comparable to what I get from all the other crops put together,” Madappa told VillageSquare.in. “I grow chia in about five acres. I harvest nearly four quintal per acre and receive between Rs 150 and Rs 200 per kg. In off-season it’s nearly Rs 300 per kg.” On an average, farmers harvest about 8-10 quintals of ragi (finger millet) per acre with cultivation costs ranging between Rs 10,000 and Rs 15,000. The cultivation costs of chia is a couple of hundred whereas the yields are 3 quintals an acre for the white variety and about 5 quintals for the black variety. While ragi fetches around Rs 2,500 per quintal, white chia brings Rs 22,500. Nutritional value A plant of South American origin, chia (Salvia hispanica), a popular nutraceutical, is a rich source of Omega-3 fatty acids and is gaining popularity across the world because of its nutrition value. Chia seeds contain slightly fewer calories compared to flax. It has more fibre and contains 1.5 – 2 times more of the bone-strengthening minerals calcium and phosphorus, as well as slightly more iron. Farmers like Madappa of Bidarahallihundi village find returns from chia cultivation much more than that from other crops Elaborating on chia’s importance in our diets, Rajasekharan said that unlike flax seeds, it does not contain anti-nutrients like cyanogenic glycosides. “Secondly, since 2000, India has been witnessing increased use of sunflower oil, which has resulted in a drastic imbalance of the essential fatty acids with more intake of omega-6 fatty acids,” he told VillageSquare.in. “We encountered stiff opposition from the public at large and the research community for introducing an alien crop, and not promoting traditional millets,” recollected Rajasekharan. “These are the people who don’t know that millets originally came from Ethiopia. Low upkeep, high return “It’s a crop that hardly needs any inputs or fertiliser; cattle and wild animals do not prefer them,” Kurubur Shantakumar (58), founder of Raithamitra Farmer Produce Company (FPC) and one who has been growing chia in three acres in Bidarahallihundi village, told VillageSquare.in. Most farms in the district are on the periphery of forests or what is known as the Mysuru Forest Division. Though not a part of an elephant corridor or migratory route, it witnesses incidences of human-elephant conflict as herds destroy crops. The farmers said that chia farms have not been affected. A plant that prefers shorter light periods, chia is sown after June-July or in October-November. Chia would be harvested by March, as being practiced by the Mysuru farmers for the past five years. What began as an experiment with a handful of farmers has increased to chia being grown in over 300 acres involving 200 cultivators. Assisted by CFTRI, chia growers formed the Raithamitra FPC in 2014 and presently have 1,200 members. It promotes cultivation of chia, with a buyback offer. From vegetables and food grains to fruits, Raithamitra buys produce from farmers and sells them to entrepreneurs. Having recently launched chia seeds for supermarkets, it plans to launch chia oil, which is likely to retail for Rs 6,000 for 100gm. Reverse migration Almost all the villages have about 250 families. Every village has a high school. For further studies, children travel to nearby towns, commuting in state transport buses. On completion of studies, they seek jobs in towns, unwilling to work the family-run farms. With chia promising handsome returns, elders hope that the youth would return to farming. That is exactly what Puneeth Kumar Jain of Hullahalli village in Nanjanguda taluk did. Having worked for an electronics firm for a couple of months, the 21-year-old diploma holder has returned to his village to take up farming. Speaking to VillageSquare.in he said, “Why should I work for someone else when I can be my own master and employ others too?’’ Puneeth’s family owns a 10-acre farm plot and traditionally grows tobacco, ragi and sugarcane. The success stories of chia farmers have motivated him too. He has set aside two acres for growing chia and plans to increase its acreage in the coming years. Hiren Kumar Bose is a journalist based in Thane, Maharashtra. He doubles up as a weekend farmer. Views are personal. The original article can be found here.
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Relief from air pollution in Bengaluru? BBMP to employ 17 new mechanical sweepers

Air pollution
Road dust contributes to 20% of the air pollution in the city, according to civic officials.
Facebook/BBMP Mayor
There might be slight improvement to Bengaluru’s deteriorating air quality in the coming days as the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike will induct 17 new mechanical sweepers to its current inventory of nine. A total of 26 mechanical sweepers will cover a majority of the city’s arterial roads with each servicing a 50 km stretch. Mechanical sweepers have mechanised brushes at the bottom with a vacuum suction system. This system can suck in five cubic metres of dust in a single instance. “They (the machines) will take another 15 days to be delivered. These machines will be distributed among 24 Assistant Executive Engineers (AEE) for major roads, and they will have the responsibility of keeping the road clear of any dust, silt in the 50 km stretch that's in their jurisdiction. So these AEEs will have to make sure that there are no potholes or inundation in these roads, because then the machines won’t work. The AEEs will also be given one garbage compactor, and adequate manpower to clear any solid waste in the same area,” BBMP Commissioner N Manjunath Prasad told TNM. While the BBMP had asked for funds from the state government for 34 additional sweepers in December 2018, it has been granted funds for 17 of them. These 17 mechanical sweepers will be inducted on a rental basis. BBMP officials said that this will also help in minimise waterlogging in the city’s roads. According to Karnataka State Pollution Control Board officials, road dust is the second biggest contributor to air pollution in the city after vehicular emissions. Nagappa Basappa, Scientific Officer at the KSPCB, said, “Road dust  contributes to 20% of the air pollution in the city. Mechanical sweepers will help us dealing with it. It is part of the 44-point action plan agreed upon by nine state government departments including the KSPCB.” The development comes after many civic groups in the city have been asking for such mechanical cleaners. Zibi Jamal, a member of Whitefield Rising, a city civic group, said, “This road dust is an unrecognised danger. This dust gets ground with every passing vehicle resulting in PM 2.5 pollution which directly shaves years off our life. On a more immediate front, it steadily encroaches the road in an already strained city.” “A third of the road is often taken up by the road dust, often causing skidding and accidents for two-wheelers. A mechanised cleaner is a necessity that will replace the back-breaking manual labour with a superior outcome,” Zibi added. She also called for timely payment to the contractors by the civic body to ensure smooth service. While experts and activists welcome the move, they urge authorities to look into mitigating other sources of dust in the city too. Aishwarya Sudhir, Air Quality and Health Programme Lead - Bengaluru, Health & Environment Alliance (HEAL), said, “Road dust and dust from construction are two of the key sources responsible for air pollution in the city. With rapid expansion and road work underway for various projects across Bengaluru, massive amount of dust is being generated. Be it the elevated corridor in Koramangala or the Metro work on the Marenahalli road, one can not help but choke as they pass through these junctions. It is critical to learn and adopt from best practices followed by other cities across the world as the metro construction work is here for the long haul. Road and construction dust contribute to particulate matter heavily, resulting in dangerous air pollution levels.”  
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Bengaluru startup launches plastics recycling initiative with The Body Shop

Plastic Waste
Hasiru Dala Innovations is aggregating PET plastic at its centre, sourcing it from its network of wastepicker entrepreneurs, Dry Waste Collection Centres, and scrap dealers at a fair price.
Hasiru Dala Innovations, a Bengaluru based waste management startup that works on creating better livelihoods for wastepickers, has launched a Fair Trade Plastics Recycling initiative in association with The Body Shop, the global personal care brand, and Plastics for Change, a Canadian company.    On May 9th, The Body Shop launched its highest selling hair care product (one sold every 4 seconds), with 100% recycled PET plastic packaging out of which 15% will be from PET plastic bottle waste sourced under its Community Fair Trade initiative from Hasiru Dala Innovations. Hasiru Dala Innovations is aggregating PET plastic at its centre, sourcing it from its network of wastepicker entrepreneurs, Dry Waste Collection Centres, and scrap dealers at a fair price. Its Aggregation Centre, which further sorts and bales the PET plastic to The Body Shop’s stringent standards, has been audited by the World Fair Trade Organization for compliance with its standards on fair trade. The Plastics for Change mobile app ensures traceability and transparency in the supply chain.  The Body Shop, Plastics for Change and Hasiru Dala Innovations started working on this initiative over two years ago going through the process of testing quality of waste, logistics and capacity as well as onboarding the supply chain to meet expectations, before going ahead with this international launch. The Body Shop has brought in their deep expertise and experience in putting in place the processes and standards required for their Community Fair Trade initiative, an over 30-year-old program they run across the world.   Apart from a global brand importing waste to be recycled for their packaging from India, the initiative is unique in its attempt to restructure the market dynamics of plastic waste. The Body Shop has approached it from a perspective of how to reduce the cost of consumption of its products from a sustainability perspective by using 100% recycled packaging and also support the improvement of lives of wastepickers in India.  In addition, with its long term contract at a fixed price, the three partners are experimenting with restructuring the supply chain and buffering it from the vicissitudes of volatile oil prices.    As part of this launch, a 4 meter high 3D installation of Hasiru Dala’s Innovation’s wastepicker from Bengaluru is being set up in London's busy Borough food market created with the plastic collected and exported by Hasiru Dala Innovations. The installation puts the human face to the plastic solution and reminds us of the role of informal waste sector in being the first line of defence on the burgeoning plastic pollution crisis.  “We are constantly innovating on business models through partnerships with different stakeholders to bring responsible waste management to bear on creating a truly circular economy.  We hope that more global brands will follow the lead taken by The Body Shop in making their products more sustainable through plastic recycling with ethically sourced plastic waste.   Unlike other business models, Hasiru Dala Innovations aims to integrate rather than disintermediate the first mile of waste recovery, namely the wastepickers and scrap dealers into the circular economy’s international supply chain,” said Shekar Prabhakar, co-founder and Managing Director, Hasiru Dala Innovations.   Hasiru Dala Innovations has so far exported 64 metric tons of PET plastic waste to The Body Shop’s recycler in Netherlands for cycling it to food grade PET, which in India would have been down-cycled to polyester yarn.    “As a company, we’ve always had the conviction to stand up for our principles when it comes to helping empower people, especially women, while protecting our planet. Our new partnership with Plastics for Change and our other partners will not only support waste pickers but also champion plastic as a valuable renewable resource when used responsibly,” said Lee Mann, Global Community Trade Manager for The Body Shop.
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