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Saturday, September 14, 2019

To address malnutrition, flavoured milk to be served to students in Karnataka

Education
Adamya Chetana Trust that is part of initiative has provided mid-day meals to schools in Karnataka since 2003 and is run by Tejaswini Ananth Kumar, wife of late BJP MP Ananth Kumar.
Around 3 lakh students in Karnataka's government and government-aided schools will now receive a flavoured milk-based health drink twice a week in a bid to address malnutrition in the state. This is after the Sri Sathya Sai Annapoorna Trust along with Adamya Chetana Trust introduced the 'Sai Sure Multivitamin Micronutrition Powder', which will be mixed with milk provided to students up to Class 10. The flavoured milk will be given twice a week under the Ksheera Bhagya scheme. Ksheera Bhagya is the government programme under which milk is provided to students studying in government-aided schools and Anganwadi centres. It was started in 2013 by the Siddaramaiah-led Congress government The latest initiative was launched at the Adamya Chetana in Gavipuram, Guttahalli in Bengaluru by state Education Minister Suresh Kumar on Thursday.  Thejaswini Ananth Kumar with S Suresh Kumar The mix is being introduced to the diet of 2 lakh students and the people behind the initiative say it is aimed at addressing malnutrition. "Children come to school on an empty stomach and wait for mid-day meals. They can't study well unless breakfast is provided and since many parents need to go early for work, children do not have breakfast. Our volunteers' goal was to attend to the needs of those children," explains Anand Kumar, General Secretary of Sri Sathya Sai Annapoorna Trust.  The trust approached the Adamya Chetana Trust after implementing the mix in a pilot test earlier this year. Both organisations have now received the permission from the Karnataka government to launch the initiative to introduce the mix in the diet of over 3 lakh school children. Adamya Chetana has provided mid-day meals to schools in Karnataka since 2003. It is run by Tejaswini Ananth Kumar, wife of late BJP MP Ananth Kumar. The approval for the implementation was given by the BJP government which came to power in Karnataka in July. Adamya Chethana has provided mid-day meals in Karnataka's government schools since 2003.  The mix comes in two flavours - almond and chocolate - and has been created for the age group of 3-16 years. The scheme was earlier introduced in several parts of Chikkaballapura, Bengaluru Rural, Mandya, Vijayapura, Dakshina Kannada and Uttara Kannada districts.  Over 98,000 students have been introduced to the mix which will be integrated with the Ksheera Bhagya scheme and extended to more areas like Tumakuru, Doddaballapura, and Devanahalli in the state. This will mean that around 3 lakh students in the state will be introduced to the mix.   The initiative is partly being financed by individual volunteers with the Sri Satya Sai Annapoorna Trust. "We are relying on contributions from individuals who are in corporate companies. We have also tied up with CSR initiatives in corporate companies," says Anand. He added that the typical cost of the mix will be Rs 2 per child per day.  The mix has been approved by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) and is already in use in 15 other states. "We have seen children coming on time and higher attendance due to this. This can only improve academic performance," Anand adds. The trust also prepares cooked breakfast in over 200 schools in the state in and around Bengaluru.  The initiative comes at a time worrying levels of malnutrition and anaemia were reported in Karnataka. The percentage of women aged 15 – 49 who are anemic in Karnataka is 44.8% and of children aged 6 -59 months is 60.9% according to a release by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. 
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NLSIU Bengaluru students demand that V-C be appointed at the earliest

Education
Students allege the present ad-hoc administration was deliberately delaying the process of appointment of Vice Chancellor.
Facebook/NLSUI
Students of the premier National Law School of India University (NLSIU) in Bengaluru are up in arms against the current ad-hoc university administration for delaying the appointment of a full-time Vice-Chancellor (V-C).  Students say although the successor has been chosen by an appropriate body, there has been an unnecessary delay of over two months and attempts are allegedly being made to restart the process. The position fell vacant when the previous Vice Chancellor R Venkata Rao completed his term of 10 years on July 31. Meanwhile, a professor, MK Ramesh took charge as full additional V-C. The students allege that he should have been appointed as interim V-C. The Student Bar Association (SBA) alleges that the Registrar, OV Nandimath (also a professor) is acting with malafide intention to delay the process further. Nandimath was one of 16 applicants for the V-C post. Earlier this year, a three-member High-Level Committee consisting of MP Singh (distinguished Jurist), KK Venugopal (Attorney General for India) and senior advocate Arvind Datar had been set up by the Chief Justice of India, acting as the Chancellor of the University, to recommend a suitable candidate to succeed Venkata Rao. This High-Level Committee had shortlisted three candidates, in a stated order of preference, and found Sudhir Krishnaswamy to be the most suitable of the three. But no affirmative action has taken place since then. The student body's primary bone of contention is that there is a clear conflict of interest in Registrar Nandimath being an applicant for the post of V-C himself, as he is the person carrying out the procedural formalities for the appointment of V-C. In an elaborate statement, the SBA of the National Law School of India University (NLSIU) has detailed their viewpoint. “The ad-hoc manner of functioning witnessed over the last six weeks does not bode well for any institution, much less for a prestigious institution such as NLSIU,” their statement says. It adds, “We are made to understand that the causes of the delay are the misleading and dilatory nature of communications from the present Registrar of NLSIU, Prof. (Dr.) O.V. Nandimath, who is the Ex-Officio Secretary to the Executive Council (EC). We have reasons to believe that he is needlessly obstructing the appointment of the next Vice-Chancellor. The requests made by the student body for making the communications between him and the Hon’ble Chief Justice of India public have gone unanswered. The student body has lost all faith in his ability to act in an impartial manner in this matter. The Registrar should recuse himself from this process owing to his obstructionist behaviour and evident conflict of interest, having been one of the 16 applicants for the position of Vice-Chancellor.” Despite repeated attempts made by TNM, the Registrar could not be reached for comment. The current additional V-C’s office told TNM that he is out of station and could not be reached either.  Anti-student steps Students allege the present administration has been passing anti-student resolutions and sometimes without even issuing circulars. A second-year student of BA-LLB said, “Recently we were told that the academic block will be shut at 10 pm when it was open 24x7 for all these years. Even the library is open till 3 am. Now suddenly without any official notice, they have asked the guards to shut the gates.” He added, “Additionally, they (current admin) have tried to reduce the budgets of institutionally-run student bodies. These bodies organise seminars and conferences for which this institution prides itself on. Until now, facilities like accommodation for judges and other legal luminaries were borne by the University. But now they are charging exorbitantly for these accommodations, which would mean all our funds are exhausted in one event only.” Students said that these student committees would have budgets to the tune of Rs 30,000- Rs 70,000 and with these new rules, they would be forced to curtail the number of events from seven or eight in a year to just one or two.
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Banking exams in regional languages also: Centre changes rule after outrage

Language
Despite assurances from the Centre that recruitment exams will be conducted in regional languages, the candidates were shocked to find only English and Hindi as language options.
The Institute of Banking Personnel Selection (IBPS)’s recruitment test for Officer grade 1 and Office Assistant can now be given in English and in the regional languages of the applicants. This was stated by the Ministry of Finance through a tweet late on Friday night, after massive outrage by pro-Kannada groups over the compulsion of giving IBPS exams either in English or in Hindi. Earlier on Thursday, the IBPS issued a notification containing the details of the examination. One crucial detail stood out glaringly – those writing the exam would have to give a mandatory English and Hindi proficiency test. This has angered several pro-Kannada activists and politicians in the state with former Chief Ministers Siddaramaiah and HD Kumaraswamy lashing out against the BJP government both in the centre and the state. In a run up to the Lok Sabha elections, BJP’s Nirmala Sitharaman, the current Minister of Finance, had promised to ensure that the IBPS exams will be conducted in 13 regional languages. On July 4 this year, Nirmala Sitharaman also announced in Parliament that recruitment exams for Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) would be held in 13 regional languages, including Kannada. Bengaluru South MP Tejasvi Surya, too, had raised the issue in the Lok Sabha and had led a team of Karnataka MPs to impress upon Nirmala Sitharaman and a memorandum was submitted to her. Tejaswi Surya spoke about this in the Parliament after the then Chief Minister Kumaraswamy had said, “RRBs have been constituted to sub-serve the banking needs of the local people, with efficiency, by interacting with the customers in the local language. This will not only lead to better service but also provide employment opportunities to local people.” However, when the IBPS released the notification on Friday, it had no changes with respect to the language policy. Lashing out against the BJP, former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, accused the centre of cheating Kannadigas. “Central government has again cheated the people of Karnataka. They are taking the identity of Kannadigas for a ride. Does the promise of Nirmala Sitharaman and Tejasvi Surya mean nothing? This breach of trust is a spectacle for moral spinelessness and political ineptitude,” Siddaramaiah said. The Karnataka Congress too opposed the centre’s move and said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has ignored the demands of Kannadigas. “Kannadiga demand of restoration of domicile clause prior to 2014 in IBPS exams are repeatedly ignored by Narendra Modi. Nirmala Sitharaman’s promise in Parliament to conduct exam in Kannada has also been dishonoured. The recent notification has humiliated Kannadigas. We demand justice to Kannadigas,” Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee President Dinesh Gundu Rao said. In 2014, the BJP government had issued a notification stating that IBPS exams can be conducted only in Hindi and English languages. Prior to this notification, the exam could also be conducted in regional languages. However, the latest recruitment advertisement mandates a Hindi and English proficiency test. Taking exception to the central government’s move former Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy too lashed out against the move to conduct IBPS exams only in two languages. “The central government has perpetually ignored the demands of Kannadigas regarding IBPS exams. In addition, the centre has taken back the domicile right of Kannadigas. The centre is heaping one wound upon another. Kannadigas are being given step-motherly treatment,” Kumaraswamy said. The Congress and the Janata Dal (Secular) had made the IPBS recruitment test an election issue and had accused the BJP of depriving Kannadigas the chance of getting banking jobs. During the Cong-JD(S) coalition government's rule, Kumaraswamy had also urged Nirmala Sitharaman in New Delhi to review the language proficiency policy. Speaking to the media on Friday, BJP MP Pralhad Joshi said that he would take up the issue with the centre. "I will hold talks with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and push for a change in the policy," Pralhad Joshi said.    
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Five of a family killed after car overturns, catches fire on Bengaluru-Tirupati highway

Accident
The car was being driven by a person working with TTD, his wife and two kids died in the tragedy.
In a gruesome accident, five members of a family were killed after the car they were travelling in hit a divider, overturned and fell off the road in Chittoor district of Andhra Pradesh on Saturday. The incident took place at Mamadugu village in Chittoor district on the national highway connecting Bengaluru and Tirupati at around 10 am.  The five victims included three children and two women. According to police officials, the car was being driven by Vishnu, who works as  junior assistant at the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam. He was travelling from Tirupati to Bengaluru along with his family. In a tragic fire accident in Chittoor, five persons including two children were charred to death in the car. The lone survivor is battling for life. Police say that rash driving by the survivor caused the accident. pic.twitter.com/QtdZHq8zYx — Bala (@naartthigan) September 14, 2019 While Vishnu managed to escape, his wife, sister, two children and niece were burnt to death in the fire.The deceased were identified as Jahnavi, Kala, Bhanuteja, Pavan Ram and Sai Ashrita. Chittoor Superintendent of Police Venkata Appala Naidu, told TNM that preliminary investigation reveals that the accident was caused due to negligence of the driver. "Prima facie evidence reveals that the car must have been driven at a high speed, and the vehicle must have slid against the divider causing sparks due to friction and stoked a fire." The SP added, "The district transport officials are also arriving for a joint investigation to find out the reason for the accident."  While all the five occupants were charred to death, the driver Vishnu managed to break open the car's window and escape, the SP said. Vishnu is critical after sustaining burn injuries and was shifted to a nearby hospital in Chittoor. Officials are contemplating shifting him to a hospital in Tirupati for treatment.     
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One killed, 4 injured in K'taka's Hubballi after violence at Ganapati processions

Crime
21-year-old Basavaraj Shivur, a student of KLE Nursing Institute in Hubballi, had gone to take part in the Ganapati idol immersion procession where he was stabbed.
A Ganapati procession turned violent in Karnataka's Hubballi as a 21-year-old youth was stabbed on Friday. 21-year-old Basavaraj Shivur was rushed to the KIMS Hospital in Hubballi where he succumbed to his injuries late on Friday night.  Basavaraj, a resident of Hanagal in Haveri district, was a student of KLE Nursing Institute in Hubballi. He had gone to take part in the Ganapati idol immersion procession, where he was stabbed.  According to Deccan Herald, Basavaraj and three of his classmates were dancing near the Sangolli Rayanna Circle when a stranger stabbed him.   Basavaraj’s classmate Sunil Hadapad filed a complaint with the Old Hubballi Police Station and said that Basavaraj and the stranger had fought briefly before he was stabbed.  Speaking to TNM, Hubballi Police say that there were five cases of violence in the city during Ganapati idol immersion processions. Four people were allegedly assaulted during a fight that broke out at Chennamma Circle during a procession. All the cases of violence were stabbing incidents while one person has succumbed to injuries.   At Durgadabail near Harsh Complex, thousands of people had gathered for the immersion procession. Police say that the people were pushing and shoving each other when a huge fight broke out. "A man named Anil who lives in Bankapur Chowk was stabbed on his arm. Two others were stabbed on their heads, stomach and hands. They are currently undergoing treatment at KIMS," the police added.  Hubballi DCP for Law and Order Nagesh, says that a special team has been formed to nab the suspects. "We tried to gather the CCTV footage of the area but due to power cut at the time, the cameras were not working. We are trying to figure out who started the mayhem at Harsh Complex. We suspect that it was one gang which started the violence," DCP Nagesh added.
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Health groups backed dark money campaign to sink 'surprise' billing fix



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Friday, September 13, 2019

At the mercy of police: Why delayed enforcement of rules is hurting K’taka street vendors

Labour and Employment
Street vendors say they’re forced to bribe officials, and take loans from moneylenders at very high interest rates, because the government hasn’t done its job on time.
Representation Photo
At the corner of Old Kasai Road in Bengaluru’s KR Market, 31-year-old Seethamma* perches on her stool as she carefully arranges apples in an artistic display. “Rs 100 for one kilo!” Seethamma calls out to pedestrians. “You know, people love to bargain. That’s why I hike up the price so I know I’ll get a decent profit,” Seethamma says. Every morning, Seethamma sets up her fruit stall at KR Market and has a target of making Rs 500 per day. “I have to pay the daily loan amount to the money lender. I have to pay the police. If I don’t make these payments, I will get evicted and there is no way I will be able to buy ration for my family every month,” Seethamma adds. Seethamma is the sole breadwinner for a family of seven. Her husband left home in 2012 and never returned. Seethamma’s meagre earnings supports her three children and her in-laws. Just like Seethamma, around 25,000 street vendors in Bengaluru are struggling to make ends meet. With no concrete rules that provide protection to street vendors, these workers in the informal sector have become victims to the whims of the civic authorities and the police. The threat of eviction Mani is a 47-year-old street vendor in Bengaluru’s Vijaynagar. For over two decades, Mani has sold betel leaves and flowers to customers in the same spot along Vijaynagar Service Road. On the morning of July 17, the tarpaulin sheet on top of Mani’s stall came crashing down on him even as he was sitting inside his stall. When Mani rushed out to see what was happening, he saw an earth mover mowing down all the stalls set up by numerous street vendors along the service road Mani saw the BBMP officials, with notice in hand, telling the street vendors that they were being evicted for encroaching on the road. “This is not the first time BBMP officials or the traffic police have evicted us. I have seen this happen countless times in the last two decades. Either someone has filed a case against street vendors in the court, or the police or BBMP officials want more bribes from us. This never ends,” Mani says. One of the primary reasons why these vendors face the threat of eviction is due to the state government’s delay in formulating rules that govern the way street vending operations must be carried out in the state. In 2014, the union government had enacted The Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act. The union had instructed the respective state governments to formulate rules and notify the same in state gazettes by October 2014. The act aims at providing social security to street vendors and to prevent them from being forced to pay bribes in order to sustain their livelihoods. According to the Centre for Civil Society, only 19 states in India have implemented the rules so far – and even this was done way after the October 2014 deadline. Arunachal Pradesh, Telangana and Nagaland are yet to even notify rules, while Karnataka on June 12, 2019, notified the Karnataka Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Rules, which were formulated in 2016. But though, the rules have been notified in Karnataka, they are yet to be implemented, leaving street vendors in a lurch. The threat of police action Hafiullah*’s food stall located in Indiranagar is a sensory delight. Famous for his kebabs and rolls, his stall is generally packed with customers every evening. He invests Rs 2,000 per day to buy supplies for his food stall and expects to make a profit of Rs 500 – Rs 800. However, Hafiullah takes home only between Rs 250 and Rs 550, despite turning a reasonable profit daily. The reason, he alleges, is the bribe he has to pay the police in order to not get evicted. “I have to pay Rs 20 to the beat constable, Rs 30 to the cop who arrives in the Cheetah (bike patrol police), Rs 50 to the sub-inspector inspector and Rs 50 to the police inspector. On a really good day, I make a profit of Rs 800.. Of that, I have to pay Rs 150 to the police,” Hafiullah says. Hafiullah makes a profit of Rs 16,000 per month. In addition to the daily hafta he says he has to pay, Hafiullah claims that he also has to pay a monthly bribe to the police. “I have to pay a monthly hafta of Rs 1,000 to the police inspector. The daily hafta adds up to anywhere between Rs 4,500-Rs 5,000 per month. I have to pay an additional Rs 1,000. I end up making only Rs 9,000-Rs 10,000 per month. If I did not have to pay bribes, I would have saved close to a third of my earnings. If the rules meant to protect us are implemented, then police and officials cannot evict us on a whim. There will be procedures to follow and we will finally be able to tell the police that we don't want to pay bribes,” Hafiullah laments. Just like him several street vendors in the area say they face the same problem. In larger markets, street vendors claim that they have to pay bribes to both police and BBMP to avoid getting evicted. “Generally, those selling food in markets end up paying more hafta than those selling fruits and vegetables. We end up spending anywhere between Rs 5,000 and Rs 6,500 per month just paying off the police,” Annamma*, a food vendor in KR Market, says. The Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act lists the conditions under which evictions can take place, and also states that street vendors must be allotted spaces by the state governments to carry out their business. “Since these rules have not been implemented, these vendors are vulnerable to the whims of the police and BBMP,” says Vinay Sreenivasa, a member of Alternative Law Forum and also a member of the committee that drafted the street vending rules for Karnataka. Meter baddi Due to the lack of adequate income, street vendors end up borrowing money for initial investments at the beginning of every month. They then pay off the loans at extremely high rates of interest on a daily basis. Meena* is a vegetable vendor and owns a push cart. Every day, she travels across Jayanagar to sell the vegetables. She borrows Rs 10,000 per month from a local moneylender who charges a 15% interest on the principal amount. “If I ask for Rs 10,000, the money lender withholds Rs 1,500, which is the interest and lends me Rs 8,500 at the beginning of every month. Every day, I have to pay him Rs 100 and I have to do this for 100 days. Therefore, I would have paid him back Rs 10,000. But every month I have to take loan and currently I have over Rs 40,000 to repay. We have to pay the police and the loans. I am barely left with anything to run a household,” Meena says. Just like Meena, almost all street vendors in the city pay back loans on a daily basis and are stuck cycles of debt. In order to ease their financial situation, the state government, in November 2018, rolled out the Badavara Bandhu scheme. It aimed at providing interest-free loans to street vendors up to Rs 10,000. However, the street vendors have not been able to avail this scheme as they do not have licenses issued by the BBMP. According to Roopa Nayak, Co-operative Inspector in charge of the Badavara Bandhu Scheme in the Cooperation Department, only 2,500 licensed street vendors have availed this scheme in Bengaluru since November 2018. “We are unable to provide the loans as the BBMP has not issued ID cards and licenses to these vendors,” she says. The delay in implementation The draft rules under the central act were formulated by a committee set up by the Karnataka government in 2016. Despite the draft rules being framed, the state government delayed notifying the same in the official gazette for three more years. With the rules finally being notified, the vendors say that the government is delaying implementing the rules. In 2016, the Bengaluru District Street Vendors’ Organised Union (Bengaluru Jilla Beedhi Vyapari Sanghatanegala Okkuta) filed a PIL in the Karnataka High Court, against unnecessary evictions of street vendors. They had also demanded that the rules be implemented as early as possible. After several reprimands by the High Court, the state government enlisted the help of the National Urban Livelihood Mission to carry out a survey of street vendors. In 2018, NULM identified 24,861 street vendors within BBMP limits. According to the union act, these vendors cannot be issued licenses or ID cards unless the BBMP forms designated town vending committees in each of the eight zones in the city. 40% of the members of these committees have to be representatives of street vendors. These representatives must be elected by state-identified street vendors. “An interim town vending committee must be formed and the BBMP has not yet done this. This interim committee must oversee the election of the street vending representatives and also issue ID cards to all identified street vendors. Although, they have notified that an interim committee has been formed, no one knows who is in it,” Vinay Sreenivasa says. Speaking to TNM, BBMP Special Commissioner Randeep says that the Department of Skill Development Entrepreneurship and Livelihood has given the BBMP three-months’ time to appoint the zonal town vending committees after holding a consultation session with the street vendors. “We have to first issue ID cards to the street vendors and the interim committee will do that by the end of September. We will hold a meeting with the interim town vending committee to decide on a schedule,” Randeep says. The BBMP Chief Accounts Officer Janardhan tells TNM that once the zonal town vending committee has been formed, the Joint Commissioners, the BBMP will begin the task of identifying designated zones for these vendors to set up their stalls. “We will consult the street vendors first and then the committees will finalise on designated street vending zones in each of the eight BBMP zones. Currently, street vendors violate norms and have set up stalls on footpaths, which is an impediment to pedestrians. With designated street vending zones, they can have their own space, legally to carry on with business,” Janaradhan adds. All pictures are for representation only
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