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Monday, September 9, 2019

Building partially collapses in Bengaluru’s JP Nagar, all residents evacuated

Construction
Puttenahalli police are trying to trace the building owner who has been absconding since Sunday.
Youtube/News9
Panic gripped Bengaluru’s JP Nagar neighbourhood on Sunday evening as the ground floor of a building partially collapsed after developing cracks. The incident took place at Vivekananda Colony, near Puttenahalli Circle. No casualties or major injuries were reported. At around 6.30pm in the evening, the cracks reportedly grew wider and residents began to run outside. By 7pm, the ground floor had completely sunk in and left only the first two floors visible. Residents who ran outside informed the police and the Fire and Emergency services. Police evacuated all five families as a precaution, upon reaching the spot. “The building now looks like a two-floor structure. Personnel from Fire and Emergency services have taken all precautionary measures and evacuated occupants of adjacent buildings too,” DCP South, Rohini Sepat-Koch stated to the Times of India (ToI). According to reports, the 30-year-old building in JP Nagar’s 7th phase had allegedly started collapsing at around 7 in the morning on Sunday, due to cracks which developed in the building. However, residents allegedly did not pay much heed to the issue at first. Speaking to ToI, police officers stated that five families lived on the first and second floors. In addition, four shops were present on the ground floor. Puttenahalli police are trying to track down the building owner Gautam Harsha, who has been absconding. A case of negligence has been registered against him by the police. Earlier in July, in a similar case, a building in Bengaluru’s Thomas Town had sunk into the ground. The pillars of an under-construction building near Sai Adi Ambal residential building had given way. The structure then leaned onto the complex and caused an section of the parking area to collapse. As a result of the parking area collapsing, the rest of the building too sunk in. Five casualties were reported.
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Sunday, September 8, 2019

Less than 2% Ganesha idols immersed in Bengaluru this year made of Plaster of Paris

Civic
Apart from the awareness campaigns, BBMP had carried out drives seizing PoP idols from key areas in the city ahead of the festival.
File image
The high-pitched campaign against the use of Plaster of Paris (PoP) Ganesha idols ahead of this year’s Ganesh Chaturthi by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board and many NGOs seems to have paid off. According to the BBMP's latest data, less than 2 per cent of the idols that were immersed in the first few days of the festival were made of PoP.  Officials said in the six zones in the city, only 3,871 (1.44%) out of the 2,67,772 idols immersed in Bengaluru are made of PoP. Officials said that the data for two zones – Mahadevpura and Yehalanka zones – is still being collected. This trend was observed on Monday as well, the first day of the idol immersion for this year’s festivities. Only 1,654 out of 1,91,247 (0.86%) idols immersed in the whole city were made of PoP. This was comparatively lesser than the previous years – 6,000 out of 52,000 in 2018 and 12,000 out of 2,00,000 in 2017, as per the first-day figures. Vishwanath, Chief Engineer, Solid Waste Management, BBMP said, “This is the result of the continuous efforts of the KSPCB and BBMP in the last three-four years. The general public has also understood the importance of not using PoP. Since there is an awareness, obviously the demand for PoP has gone down.” Apart from the awareness campaigns, BBMP had carried out drives seizing PoP idols from key areas in the city ahead of the festival. The KSPCB had also asked the Bangalore Electricity Supply Company Ltd (BESCOM), BBMP, police department, fire and emergency services to give permission to groups or individuals to organise the rituals in public spaces provided they are using an eco-friendly Ganesha idol. Read: Ahead of Ganesh Chaturti, Bengaluru civic body seizes 179 idols made of plaster of Paris PoP idols have been banned by the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) for a while now and the ban was reinforced in 2017 when the Karnataka High Court dismissed the writ petitions against the ban and upheld the KSPCB’s decision. PoP idols are bad for the environment, as studies have shown a steep increase in the levels of heavy metals, acids, and a decrease in dissolved oxygen among other things in water bodies where the idols are immersed.     Read: Bought PoP idols for Ganesh Chaturthi in Bengaluru? You won’t be able to immerse them The fate of PoP idols All the idols seized by various authorities or recovered after immersion are handed over to Rock Crystals, a company that won the bid to run BBMP’s construction waste recycling unit. Break up of latest figures: Western Zone Idols of clay Ganesha: 94,181 Idols of POP Ganesh: 1,647 South Zone Idols of clay Ganesha: 1,21,033 Idols of POP Ganesh: 1,933 Dasarahalli Zone Idols of clay Ganesha: 4,620 Idols of P.O.P Ganesh: 48 Eastern Zone Clay Ganesha Idols: 23,037 Idols of POP Ganesha: 114 RR Nagar Zone Idols of soil Ganesha: 11,148 Idols of POP Ganesh: 00 Bommanahalli Zone Idols of soil Ganesha: 13,753 Idols of POP Ganesha: 129
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Belagavi on high alert yet again as heavy rains batter Maharashtra

Floods
District authorities have taken precautionary measures and people have been warned to stay away from rivers and streams.
File image
District authorities in northern Karnataka’s Belagavi, which was the worst hit during the recent floods, are on alert yet again. Out of the 88 dead in the state due to the floods, 24 were from Belagavi alone. The district also saw more than 28,000 houses damaged as well. The high alert in Belagavi is a result of the heavy rainfall in neighbouring Maharashtra and the discharge of excess water from the state into the downstream areas and also due to rainfall locally. The IMD has predicted heavy to heavy rainfall with likelihood of extremely heavy rainfall in the catchment of the Krishna river. There will be fairly widespread moderate rains in all of north interior Karnataka as well. At the moment, no evacuation measures have been taken by the district authorities. Revenue department officials are also ready to set up relief camp if such a situation arises, district officials said. Speaking to TNM, Belagavi SP Laxman Nimbaragi said, “The Krishna river belt is receiving about 1,70,000 cusecs of water right now. There will be flooding once the inflow crosses two lakh cusecs. Right now it depends on how much rainfall Maharashtra receives in the next 24 hours. We have already taken all precautionary measures. Everybody has been warned to stay away from rivers and streams.” He added, “Police and panchayat officials have informed all the people at the grassroot levels. SDRF, NDRF and Fire department officials are stationed in strategic locations to counter any emergency if required. Ghataprabha and Malaprabha are also in spate.” Officials at the Karnataka Disaster Monitoring Centre said that the situation is likely to continue to remain the same for the next 48 hours. “Monsoon activity will reduce from Wednesday, not only in Maharashtra but also in Karnataka. We don’t expect the situation to be as bad as it was last month. We are expecting a maximum of 3 lakh cusecs of inflow. There won’t be further damage to crops or infrastructure as during the floods we had 6.5 lakh cusecs of inflow. District officials will take a call as and when to evacuate people. Rehabilitation and restoration works might get further hampered due to this,” KSNDMC Director GS Sreenivasa Reddy told TNM.
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Karnataka to open tourism promotion centre in Kashmir: CT Ravi to TNM

Politics
Karnataka is the second Indian state to express an interest to set up such a centre in Kashmir.
Representational Image| Basharat Shah/Flickr
The Karnataka government will buy land in Jammu and Kashmir to set up a yoga and tourism promotion centre in the conflict-ridden region, senior BJP leader and Karnataka Tourism Minister CT Ravi told TNM. “We will buy land in Jammu and Kashmir and build a tourism centre for Karnataka. It will be a win-win situation for all. We will exchange culture as tourists all over the world visit there (Kashmir) and we will attract their attention and make them learn about Karnataka. Tourists who visit Jammu and Kashmir will learn about our food, our culture and our tourist attractions. We will ask for land and then we'll finalize,” Ravi told TNM. Ravi’s statements came after a Cabinet meeting was held to discuss the issue. Before Karnataka, the BJP-ruled state Maharashtra has expressed interest in setting up tourism promotion centre in the Valley.  The Karnataka Minister’s announcement comes over a month after the central government removed the special status granted to Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 and bifurcated the state into 2 Union Territories. The Union Territory of Ladakh was carved out and the rest of the state was designated as a Union Territory with a legislature. The decision came even as there was no functional Assembly in place and President’s rule was put in place in the Valley For over a month now, the Valley has been under a communication blockade. Currently, only 26,000 landlines are working in the state and there has been no mobile or internet connectivity. All major political leaders, including former CMs, of the state, except those from the BJP, have been put under indefinite detention. Though there have been media reports on incidents of violence and crises of essential commodities in the state, authorities have denied these reports as well as allegations of violence against dissenters.   Congress leaders in Karnataka and across the country have opposed the BJP-led union government’s decisions in the Valley.
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Karnataka CM BS Yediyurappa to inspect Bengaluru’s IT corridor on Sunday

Civic
This drive comes after the CM took exception to the functioning of the city’s civic body soon after taking charge.
Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa will be inspecting the civic amenities of Bengaluru’s IT corridor on Sunday. The inspection will cover peripheral areas like Hebbal, Tin Factory, Bellandur and Silk Board. These areas are marred by perennial traffic jams, bad roads and even waste management issues. During the CM’s visit, party MLAs and MPs are likely to accompany the CM along with the city mayor Gangambike Malikarjun. “I received the message that there are city rounds on Sunday. As the mayor, it is my duty to attend it and I will do so. I’m not sure what the chief minister is inspecting. We’ll get to know only by the end of the day,” the Mayor told Deccan Herald. This drive comes after the CM had taken exception to the functioning of the city’s civic body — the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike. Soon after taking charge, he had ordered a garbage-free city within two weeks’ time. He had also directed the Additional Chief Secretary of the Urban Development Department to probe into the money spent on Siddaramaiah's Nagarothana scheme. This included money spent on Indira Canteens, whitetopping works and TenderSure roads. The budget for BBMP was also withheld temporarily with a halt on all work orders. The following is the full list of CM’s itinerary of inspections  Krishna - Sankey Road(Chowdaiah Road) - Left Turn opp Rajbhavan – Right Turn to Infantry Road - Right Turn to Queens Road - Left Turn to MG Road – Right Turn to Brigade Road – Vellara Junction – Before Anepalya Junction – Right Turn to Bannerghatta Road – Continue on Underpass of Dairy Circle – Continue on Jayadeva underpass on Bannerghatta Road Near Jayadeva Hospital Junction - Continue upto IIM Bangalore via Jedimara Junction – U Turn at IIMB – Continue upto Jedimara Junction – Left Turn to ORR – Continue upto Dalmia Junction service road – Right turn to 8 th Main – Continue upto Marenahalli Road – Right Turn towards Jayadeva Hospital Junction – Continue on ORR upto Central Silk Board Junction – After Silk Board Junction on ORR Service Road (Inspection of KSRP Land Required for BMRCL near BMTC Bus Stand) – Continue in ORR upto Ibbalur junction – Left Turn to ORR – Continue in ORR cross the Devara Beesanahalli Flyover – Turn to Service Road – Left Turn to Helious Business Park (Meeting with ORRCA) – Return to ORR Junction - Continue in ORR upto Marathhalli Underpass – U Turn on ORR Near Ezone – Continue upto Kalamandir – on Service Road Take 1 st Main road – Continue upto Varthur Road and Left Turn to towards Kundalahalli junction (Inspection of Underpass Work) – Left Turn to ITPL Main Road – Continue via Graphite India Junction upto White Field Main Road –Turn Left at White Field Main Road - Continue on White Field Main Road upto Old Madras Road – KR Puram Metro Station work Inspection – Continue upto Benniganahalli Flyover – Right Turn towards ORR – Continue upto Nagavara(White Topping work) – via Manyata Tech Park - Continue in ORR upto Hebbala Junction (Inspection of BDA work and Metro proposal) – U Turn on to the Left Lane of ORR –Turn Left on the Loop of Hebbal Flyover towards Mekhri Circle – Continue upto Windsor Manor Circle and Right Turn to Krishna.  
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Saturday, September 7, 2019

'No space for rational debate': Sasikanth Senthil who quit IAS tells TNM

Resignation
Sasikanth says that the state of public affairs in India is 'genuinely worrying' and that to stand up and say something about it, he has had to leave the civil services.
S Sasikanth Senthil, a 2009 batch IAS officer who was working as the Deputy Commissioner of Karnataka's Dakshina Kannada district, resigned from the Indian Administrative Service on Friday. His resignation comes less than two weeks after Kannan Gopinathan, a Malayali IAS officer from the Union Territory Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, resigned from the service citing the clampdown in Jammu and Kashmir following the abrogation of Article 370. Speaking to TNM, Sasikanth explains that the current situation in Jammu and Kashmir is part of the reason for his decision to resign and that there is a "framework of fascism" developing in the country. Read: ‘No intention to return’: Kannan IAS, who resigned from service over J&K, is emphatic  "You can see the framework being deployed (in the country) and it is the time-tested framework deployed in many countries in history. The situation in Kashmir is part of this framework. A month-long clampdown of an entire state is unheard of in India and it tells you that something is fundamentally wrong," says Sasikanth. He clarified that his decision was not connected to an issue in his administrative work in Dakshina Kannada.  'No space for rational debate' He, however, feels that there is no space for rational debate in the country and that debates tend to become a question of one's nationalism. "One of the tenets of a fascist framework is to replace rational debate with hyper-nationalism. The moment you start a debate, the third argument invariably will be whether you are an anti-national. This brings in the question of your loyalty to the nation. If people are not shown that this is part of a larger framework, they will never understand why someone is debating. It is important for the media, free press and bureaucracy to debate this," he says.  When asked whether it is possible for bureaucrats to separate the ideology of the political party in power from their own functioning, Sasikanth replies that the differences in ideology cannot go beyond the spirit of the Constitution. "Our country is built upon values enshrined in our Constitution. It is a broad understanding that there might be differences in ideology but that cannot be beyond the spirit of the Constitution. We are supposed to implement policies within the framework of Constitutional values. When something is right according to the letter of the law but it does not stand the test of the spirit of our Constitution, then it is wrong," he says.  Sasikanth served as the Deputy Commissioner of Dakshina Kannada for almost two years, starting in October 2017. An engineer by profession, Sasikanth quit his job in a reputed company to join the civil services in 2009.  Managing communal conflict in Dakshina Kannada During his years in the civil service, Sasikanth earned a reputation for being a no-nonsense bureaucrat and was admired by his peers for his fairness in administration. He served in Shivamogga, Ballari, Chitradurga and Raichur districts before he was tasked with administrating the communally sensitive Dakshina Kannada district. In the two years since Sasikanth took over, statistics show that incidents of communal violence have decreased in the district. Sasikanth believes that it is because of the action of the district administration in cutting down the supply of funds to groups fuelling communal violence..  "We managed to cut down the funds supplied to groups engaged in communal violence. This was achieved by restricting illegal sand mining in the district since the two are linked. We also held meetings with members of different religious groups and they often respond to fairness in administration. It is when a group believes that the administration is unfair to them, a law and order problem occurs," he says.  According to the numbers, there were 42 cases and 6 incidents of communalism in Dakshina Kannada in 2017. In 2018, it came down to 3 cases and 3 incidents while 2019 has so far seen 4 cases and 3 incidents.  Earlier this year, an online sand booking and monitoring system for delivering sand (www.dksandbazaar.com) was launched by the district administration. Sasikanth is also credited with hosting the first Mangaluru River Festival in January 2019 to promote the riverbank as an eco-friendly tourist attraction. He adds that the next step for Mangaluru would be to achieve zero waste management and the plan to achieve this will be implemented in the next six months.  But 10 years after entering the civil services, he says that he finds the state of public affairs 'genuinely worrying' and that for him to stand up and say something about it, he has had to leave the civil services. "The pattern is very clear to me and I will be working outside of the bureaucracy to inform the common public about this with clarity. But, there is no question of joining politics since I belong in the academic field," he adds.  Read: 'Building blocks of democracy compromised': Dakshina Kannada DC quits IAS
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Motorists can show docs in Digilocker during traffic checks: B'luru cops' U-turn

Traffic
The clarification comes after reports suggested that traffic police officials would fine motorists Rs 2,000 if they are not carrying a hard copy of their vehicle insurance.
Bengaluru Traffic Police officials clarified that motorists in the city can show documents stored on Digilocker, the national Digital Locker System, during traffic police checks. The clarification comes after reports suggested that traffic police officials would fine motorists  Rs 2,000 if they are not carrying a hard copy of their vehicle insurance. The Traffic Police's official Twitter account caused the confusion while replying to queries of multiple users of the social media platform on Thursday. "It is here by clarified that The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) has issued an advisory to states to accept driving licence, Registration certificate or other documents in 'electronic form' presented through Digilocker or mParivahan platform as valid under the Motor Vehicle Act 1988 and treat them at par with the certificates issued by the transport authorities,” a statement by Bengaluru Traffic Police said. Earlier on Thursday, the traffic police department replying to multiple queries through the official Twitter account said that while soft copies of documents will be accepted during traffic police checks, the original hard copies of the driving licence and insurance will be required in case of any violation committed by the rider or if the vehicle is seized. "In digilock DL, RC and Emession certificate is accepted (sic). It can be showed, but in case of any violation committed by driver/rider or if vehicle seized original (hard copy) DL is required", Bengaluru Traffic Police's official Twitter account stated. Insurance must be in hard copy only (original), In digilock DL, RC & Emission certificate is accepted. but in case of any violation committed by driver/rider or if vehicle seized original (hard copy) DL is required BengaluruTrafficPolice (@blrcitytraffic) September 6, 2019 However, an amended provision in the Central Motor Vehicles Rules, 1989 states that, "Citizens can produce the transport related documents such as registration, insurance, fitness and permit, the driving licence, certificate for pollution under check and any other relevant documents, if required, in physical or electronic form on demand by any police officer in uniform or any other officer authorized by the State Government in this behalf." Traffic police officials booked 2,978 cases against offenders and collected a fine of Rs 30.1 lakh within the first 37 hours of the new traffic rules being implemented in the city. Traffic police stated that along with vehicle insurance, motorists need to carry driving licence, registration certificate, and emission certificate. The higher traffic fine amounts have been fixed as per the Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019. The new rules were implemented starting September 2 in Karnataka since September 1 was a Sunday. A Bengaluru resident had to cough up a fine of Rs 17,000 for multiple traffic offences on Tuesday evening, which is the highest fine amount paid in the city since the higher fares kicked in. The motorist was caught driving without a helmet and without carrying a license. Moreover, he was found to be in an inebriated condition.
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