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Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Karnataka cabinet expansion: Lingayat community leaders snag lion's share of ministries

Politics
Of the party's 105 legislators, 37 are Lingayats, constituting 39 per cent of its lawmakers.
Karnataka's dominant caste Lingayats got a lion's share of the cabinet posts in the state's BJP government, with 8 of the 18 legislators belonging to the powerful community in the southern state, a party official said on Tuesday. "Of the 18 cabinet ministers, including Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa, 8 of them are Lingayats, accounting for 44 per cent of the ministry," party's state spokesman G Madhusudana told IANS after 17 of its legislators were inducted in the over 3-week-old ministry earlier in the day. After the Lingayats, another equally powerful community - Vokkaligas -- got 3 ministers, followed by 2 each from the Scheduled Castes (SCs) and the Scheduled Tribes (STs) and one each from Brahmins, Kurbas and Idigas. Lingayats account for 17 per cent of the 6.5-crore of the state's population. Of the party's 105 legislators, 37 are Lingayats, constituting 39 per cent of its lawmakers. The 8 Lingayat ministers are Yediyurappa, Jagadish Shettar, Laxman Savadi, V Somanna, Basavaraj Bommai, JC Madhu Swamy, CC Patil and Jolle Shashikala Annasaheb, the lone woman in the ministry. The Vokkaligas are CN Ashwath Narayan, R Ashoka and CT Ravi. The two SCs (Dalits) are Govind Karjol and Nagesh from Mulbagal reserved assembly seat in the backward Kolar district, about 100 km east of Bengaluru. The two STs are B Sreeramulu and Prabhu Chauhan. Suresh Kumar is the lone Brahmin, while KS Eshwarappa is a Kurba (shepherd community) and KS Poojari is an Idiga (toddy tappers community). Four ministers - Narayan, Ashoka, Somanna and Kumar are from Bengaluru, which has 28 assembly seats. Of the 28 seats in the city, Congress won 14, BJP 11 and Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) 3. Of the 17 ministers, 4 are first timers -- Ashwath Narayan, Prabhu Chauhan, Madhu Swamy and Jolle.
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Pacer Vinay Kumar bids adieu to Karnataka after 15-yr stint, set to play for Puducherry

Cricket
He will be fondly remembered by Karnataka cricket fans as the man who led the state side to consecutive Ranji Trophy wins in 2013-14 and 2014-15.
Former Indian pace bowler and Karnataka cricketer R Vinay Kumar is set to move to Puducherry as player after 15 years of playing for the Karnataka Ranji cricket team.  "With a heavy heart I have taken this decision to say goodbye to Karnataka cricket. My 15 years of journey has been wonderful, memorable and unforgettable. I want to thank each and every one who all have been part of my journey. Our KSCA management, all my seniors, my teammates, coaches, support staff, media members and the people of Karnataka who all have showered me with their love & support from the day one," Vinay said in a tweet. Thank you all pic.twitter.com/TnobfrqKor — Vinay Kumar R (@Vinay_Kumar_R) August 20, 2019 He further added that it was time for him to move on and allow new talent to come through from the state. He will be fondly remembered by Karnataka cricket fans as the man who led the state side to consecutive  Ranji Trophy wins in 2013-14 and 2014-15. He also lifted the Vijay Hazare Trophy and the Irani Cup with Karnataka.  Vinay, who hails from Davangere, made his first class debut for Karnataka in 2004 and went on to make 106 appearances for the side, second only to former Indian cricketer Sunil Joshi. He ends his first-class cricket career with Karnataka picking up 459 wickets from 130 matches overall. He was the highest wicket-taking seamer in Ranji Trophy until he was overtaken by Pankaj Singh this year. Karnataka players showed their support to their former captain on social media and wished him luck for his new challenge.  Congratulations @Vinay_Kumar_R on an absolutely brilliant career with @RanjiKarnataka Wishing you all the best with your journey ahead. pic.twitter.com/8Z5LEQMlU1 — Karun Nair (@karun126) August 20, 2019 Congratulations on your success with the @RanjiKarnataka team @Vinay_Kumar_R. Will surely miss you in the Karnataka colors! Here's wishing you all the luck for your stint in Puducherry! Thank you for all your guidance & support. You have been such an inspiration. pic.twitter.com/FLRcydNJjg — Mayank Agarwal (@mayankcricket) August 20, 2019 Vinay struggled in the recent Ranji Trophy campaign, picking up just 14 wickets. Players like Prateek Jain, Abhimanyu Mithun, Ronit More, and Prasidh Krishna are in contention to replace him. Vinay was also replaced as the captain of the team by Manish Pandey during the last campaign. But the pacer indicated that he would return to Karnataka and serve the state's cricket association in the future.   
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K’taka among 3 disaster-hit states to get additional relief of Rs 4432 cr from Centre

Apart from Karnataka which saw a drought in 2018, funds were also announced for Odisha for Cyclone Fani and Himachal Pradesh which saw hailstorm and avalanches.
A high- level committee headed by Union Home Minister Amit Shah has approved an additional central assistance to 3 states which experienced natural disasters in 2018. A total of Rs 4432.10 crore has been approved for Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh and Odisha, according to a press release by the Ministry of Home Affairs.  For Karnataka, which experienced drought last year, Rs 1029.39 crore has been approved by the committee. Further, Rs 3338.22 crore was allocated to Odisha for the devastating cyclone Fani which hit the state in April 2019 and Rs 64.49 crore was announced for Himachal Pradesh, which saw landslides and avalanches. An amount of Rs 668 crore was released in advance from the SDRF to other disaster hit states such as Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal, the press release announced.  “This additional assistance is over and above the funds released by the Centre to the states in the State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF) already placed at the disposal of the States. During 2018-19, the Centre had released Rs 9568 crore to all states and during 2019-20, till date the centre has released Rs 6104 to 24 states from SDRF,” the MHA Press release confirmed. The committee also decided to immediately constitute and dispatch Inter Ministerial Central Teams (IMCTs) to assess the damage caused to 11 states, including Kerala, which witnessed heavy rains and floods in 2019. Although at present the IMCT visits a disaster hit state only after receiving a memorandum for relief from the state, the committee decided that the IMCTs will henceforth visit and assess the damage in the state in the immediate aftermath of the disaster and again following relief operations to decide on the funds to be allocated. In December 2018, Rs 3048.39 crore was announced to Kerala which witnessed the worst floods in a century that year. Although the Kerala government had sought Rs 4700 crore as compensation from the centre for the floods, the committee headed by former Home Minister Rajnath Singh had only approved Rs 3048 crore. The central assistance was above the interim relief of Rs 600 crore that the centre had granted in the immediate aftermath of the Kerala floods.  
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Nalin Kumar Kateel appointed as Karnataka BJP President, replaces BS Yediyurappa

Politics
Nalin replaces outgoing state BJP President Yediyurappa who completed his three-year term.
Dakshina Kannada MP Nalin Kumar Kateel was appointed as the new BJP state President for Karnataka on Tuesday.  Nalin replaces outgoing President BS Yediyurappa who completed his three-year term. The appointment was announced in a memo issued by Arun Singh, National General Secretary of the BJP. "BJP National President Amit Shah has appointed Nalin Kumar Kateel, MP as State President of BJP Karnataka. This appointment comes into immediate effect," the memo states. The appointment comes months after Nalin won the Lok Sabha election from the Dakshina Kannada constituency despite criticism against him for lack of developmental works in Mangaluru and over the merger of Vijaya Bank with the Bank of Baroda. Vijaya Bank was started by a group of farmers in Mangaluru in 1931. He defeated Congress leader Mithun Rai by a margin of 2,74,621 votes. Close to the results of the election, Nalin was reprimanded by the BJP for comments supporting Mahatma Gandhi's assassin Nathuram Godse. "Godse killed one, Kasab killed 72, Rajiv Gandhi killed 17,000. You judge who is more cruel in this?", Nalin tweeted. The tweet has since been deleted. He later tendered an apology on the social media platform. Nalin was among three BJP leaders asked to explain their comments by Amit Shah alongside Sadhvi Pragya Thakur and Anantkumar Hegde. The appointment of Nalin comes on the day the BJP announced a list of 17 cabinet ministers. In the list, no MLA from any of the three coastal districts - Dakshina Kannada, Udupi, Uttara Kannada - were picked, while the lone representative of the region was MLC Kota Srinivas Poojary. Nalin's appointment is seen as a way of appeasing the party workers in Dakshina Kannada, aggrieved at the lack of ministers from the region. 
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Tuesday, August 20, 2019

IMA ponzi scam: CBI to take over case, Karnataka govt tells High Court

Crime
The High Court has asked now asked the CBI to file a status report by September 12.
The Karnataka government led by Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa has decided to transfer the probe into the multi crore IMA Jewels halal Ponzi scheme case to the CBI. This revelation was made by the state government counsel during a proceeding involving the case in the Karnataka High Court on Tuesday. This development was preceded by the CM’s decision to transfer the probe of the recent phone-tapping scandal to the same central agency. One of the petitions demanding swift relief for the victims had asked the court to direct the government to handover the case to CBI. Reacting to the state government’s submission, the High Court has asked the CBI to file a status report by September 12. The HC has also asked the government to appoint a permanent competent authority under the Karnataka Protection of Interest of Depositors in Financial Establishments (KPID) Act to recover the money lost by the unsuspecting victims.   Until now, the Special Investigation Team formed by former CM HD Kumaraswamy had been probing the case and have arrested more than 20 accused including the prime accused and IMA MD Mansoor Khan.  Read: Ponzi Schemes: What they are and how not to fall for one Incidentally, the Enforcement Directorate, another central investigation body which was also probing the case and shared Mansoor Khan’s custody, had questioned the involvement of the police. Even the SIT had conducted searches at the office of Inspector General of Police, Criminal Investigation Department and Economic Offences and even the office of former Inspector General of Police of Anti-Corruption Bureau Hemanth Nimbalkar. Other than Mansoor Khan, former Bengaluru Urban Deputy Commissioner Vijay Shankar (IAS), Assistant Commissioner of the Revenue Department LC Nagaraj, BDA Executive Engineer Kumar, city corporator Syed Mujahid, one religious preacher and village accountant Manjunath among others, have also been arrested. The SIT had also issued notices to former ministers Zameer Ahmed Khan and Roshan Baig as their names cropped up in the case. Baig was named in the first audiotape released by IMA founder and Managing Director Mansoor Khan, after the latter went absconding. In that tape, Khan had alleged that the senior Congress MLA had not returned Rs 400 crore loan he had taken from him. While initially Baig claimed that he did not know Mansoor Khan, outgoing Revenue Minister RV Deshpande said Baig had accompanied Mansoor Khan to his chamber. Zameer, in his 2018 Assembly elections affidavit, had listed purchasing a property worth Rs 5 crore from Mansoor Khan. He maintained that was the only connection he had with Mansoor Khan.
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Do plants talk? Bengaluru’s ‘tree doctor’ is recording plant sounds to find out

Environment
Vijay believes his project could not only boost conservation efforts but could also change public perception about plant life.
Cartoons, mythology and fantasy fiction are full of references of plants and trees that don’t just stand pretty and provide shade, but actually talk to protagonists, and even provide words of wisdom. But we all know that is fiction… or is it? Turns out, plants may be communicating, not just in the way we think they are. And this is exactly what Bengaluru-based environment activist and ‘tree doctor’ Vijay Nishanth is on a mission to find out. For a couple of months now, Vijay has been working on recording plant sounds using machines that use MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) technology which converts the electromagnetic waves on a plant’s leaves’ surface into musical notes. Called Vrukshadhwani, Vijay along with his team, aims to record the sounds of 100 species of flora. Once studied, this could open many doors – not only making conservation efforts more effective, but also to learn more about the environment, such as soil conditions and weather, Vijay tells TNM, radiating excitement. And while that may be a lot to grasp, Vijay breaks down what he’s trying to do. Recording plant sounds Vijay is the founder of Project Vruksha Foundation that is mapping Bengaluru’s trees through a scientific tree census and has catalogued over 8,000 trees already. He has been studying the works of Cleve Backster, who in the 1960s found that plants “feel pain” and “understand affection” among other things; neuroscientist Greg Gage who showed that electrical signals that control the human body are also present in plants though they do not have neurons; and plant neurobiologist Stefano Mancuso. Closer home, Vijay has been looking at the work of polymath Jagdish Chandra Bose, a physicist, biologist, and botanist, among other things, who studied how plants responded to more than external stimuli (such as growing quicker when exposed to pleasant music), that they could “feel”, and were “alive”. “Scientists have been studying how plants communicate for a while, especially abroad,” Vijay points out. “But here, the pool of information among public is mostly about planting and conservation. It was hard for people to even believe that what I was trying to do was even possible.” To bridge that gap, Vijay bought a machine called MIDI Sprout, which records plant sounds after you attach two of its probes to the leaves of the plant. The probes measure the current passing across them as well as tiny fluctuations in conductivity, and these signals are then converted into sound. This Independence Day, Vijay, along with his friend, musician Ajit Padmanabh, used this instrument to record the sounds of 10 plant species at Ajit’s music studio. For Ajit, who describes himself as a “lover of sounds”, this was a fascinating experience. “We thought we’d try to see if there were any patterns in the sounds that the different species produced,” Ajit tells TNM, admitting that it is too early to say if there were any patterns. “However, I witnessed one plant produce sounds like the Santoor instrument. And another produced a low bass-like sound. That was really amazing,” he observes. Vijay observes that a plant’s sounds changed depending on the stimuli too. For instance, when a plant is touched, the sound changes. Similarly, a change is recorded if the plants are placed in a different environment too.   #Re Live on vrukshadhwani... #plantsound Plant sound recording at Blank point at 11 with Ajit Padmanaban and @world void web #Share Posted by Vijay Nishanth on Wednesday, August 14, 2019 Application of the findings Vijay says that once they record the sounds of 100 species of plants, there is a whole lot that could be done with it. “For starters, it could boost conservation efforts. If people understand that plants are not passively, but actively alive, it could change public perception about plant life,” Vijay says. Related to Vijay’s hypothesis is the concept of ‘plant blindness’, a term coined by botanists Elizabeth Schussler of the Ruth Patrick Science Educator Center in Aiken, South Carolina, and James Wandersee from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, over two decades ago. The duo theorised that plant blindness results in “chronic inability to recognize the importance of plants in the biosphere and in human affairs.” This has implications for conservation too – when plants in one’s environment are unacknowledged and under-appreciated, it leads to lesser interest in conserving plant life, compared to, say, animal life. Apart from enabling people to really see plants, studying plant sounds could also help us understand how they communicate – with the environment, with each other, or with us, Vijay says. There has been research into biocommunication in some European countries already, but in India, it is lagging behind, he adds. Furthermore, this could help us understand putting plant life to fascinating uses. Vijay gives the example of a development by MIT, where in 2017, they were able to engineer plants to emit light. “Imagine walking down a street lit up not by streetlights, but by trees,” Vijay says, excitedly. This could then incentivise afforestation efforts in urban areas too. Ajit adds that the ability to record and decipher plant sounds could potentially mean that plant music can be another way for people to connect with plant life. “In fact, in my upcoming album ‘Voider Perspectives’, I will have one song that will be entirely made up of these plant sounds. The plant will be the artist,” he says. Vijay says that he is looking to collaborate with scientists and institutes to map trees and plants, and also record plant sounds. “We are also looking for funding options. This will take a few years, but it’s crucial work, and it will bring people closer to the environment,” he asserts.  
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Telemedicine could keep older patients out of the hospital. So why hasn’t it taken off?



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