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Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Bengaluru, you can now ‘Adopt-a-Street’ to contribute to keeping your area clean

Civic issues
Adopt-a-Street, an initiative by BBMP in collaboration with The Ugly Indian, is sensitising citizens about waste collection and taking responsibility for their streets.
A mossy sidewalk full of rocks, dirt, waste and unruly vegetation, unsurprisingly, turns into a site for people to dump more waste. And not too long ago, one such sidewalk existed in 8th cross road of ST Bed Layout in Koramangala, Bengaluru. Not anymore though – the area was cleaned up and beautified on September 15 under the ‘Adopt-a-Street' campaign. An ongoing initiative by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) in collaboration with citizen collective The Ugly Indian (TUI), it encourages people, organisations and corporates to take responsibility and clean up their own neighbourhood.  In ST Bed Layout for instance, over 40 residents and 15 pourakarmikas cleaned up the street under guidance of BBMP and TUI. Adopt-a-Street ACTION today! Over 40 ST Bed residents + 15 BBMP staff cleaned 8th Cross ST Bed Koramangala, Blr today, protected 40 trees and fixed one HUGE chronic open garbage dump. All from 9-11am. A fun, productive morning. WELL DONE!@Randeep_Dev @BBMPCOMM #AdoptaStreetBBMP pic.twitter.com/OQOJZHsQ1s — theugly indian (@theuglyindian) September 15, 2019 What’s Adopt-a-Street? A TUI representative said that the idea behind Adopt-a-Street was to shift the discourse from 'Citizens vs BBMP' to citizens supplementing the BBMP in its work. Started in August, TUI has already worked with residents in Indiranagar, Richmond Town and Sadashivnagar Park. But it was only on September 14 that Randeep D, Additional Commissioner of BBMP, formally asked for residents to apply to participate in the initiative on Twitter. If you are interested in being a part of #AdoptAStreetBBMP initiative, pls email at adoptastreetbbmp@gmail.com in the prescribed application format and you will hear from us. @BBMPCOMM @BBMP_MAYOR @theuglyindian pic.twitter.com/sIxgKoZkrp — Randeep D (@Randeep_Dev) September 14, 2019 “Bengaluru belongs to all of us. We hope that more groups and organisations come forward and start participating in this initiative,” Randeep tells TNM. The activities to be undertaken under Adopt-a-Street, in collaboration with relevant BBMP departments, are: a) Regular clean-up drives including removal of illegal flexes and banners; elimination and transformation of ‘Garbage Vulnerable Points’, and supporting an additional daily shift for cleaning the street with own staff. b) Planting saplings and shrubs on the footpath and median, and protecting the existing flora. c) Making the street more walkable by undertaking minor repairs, removing minor obstructions, preventing waterlogging. d) Supporting street furniture like waste bins, benches, with prior approval from requisite departments. A unifying experience ST Bed Residents reported that they were thrilled to be taking part in this collective exercise. Geeta, a resident who coordinated the drive on September 15, says that she came across the campaign on Twitter. “We informed the other residents, and they came in big numbers. We had senior citizens, children, and adults all of whom were keen on joining in. On the day of the clean-up, within 20 minutes we had gathered 10 to 15 kgs of garbage by just picking up the litter.” “I was so enthusiastic and thrilled about the clean-up,” recounts Vikram, a photographer and ST Bed resident. “There were these fairly large rocks. I ordinarily wouldn’t have lifted them, but I was just so driven to clean up the street that I felt like Superman, and did it anyway.” Kalyani, who helped Geeta organise the clean-up, adds that one of the intangible benefits of this initiative has been in bringing people together. Nitin, president of locality's Mantri Classic apartment complex, agreed. “Inevitably this initiative brought us all together. All of us met, and in doing this together, got familiar with each other. Now, the moment you enter ST bed you feel like home.” Empathy for pourakarmikas The exercise not only sensitised people to waste collection, but also towards the labour that pourakarmikas put in to keep the streets clean. “When I was cleaning the site, the stench and the dirt, I almost puked,” Vikram admits. “I used walk past the pourakarmikas without a second glance. Now, I recognize them, greet them, and am on a first name basis with a few of them.” Another takeaway for residents was how an unclean site encourages more dumping, and accumulates of garbage. “When a passer-by sees this garbage thrown by residents, he/she doesn’t think twice before adding to it. This goes on, and eventually piles up and it becomes a habit,” Nitin points out. “We love this place, we all want to make this beautiful,” he adds. Pourakarmikas too appreciated Adopt-a-Street. Anjali, a pourakarmika who participated in the clean-up in ST Bed, says, “It was very satisfactory, and a huge help to us. The residents came together and worked side by side with us. They didn’t shy away from touching the garbage.” “They think about us now, they have some knowledge about our jobs now. Helping each other was empowering,” Anjali adds. However, she maintains that it will truly be helpful only if such initiatives are regular. “Only if this happens every week will the neighbourhood benefit.”
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Several Zomato delivery execs in Bengaluru suspended after protest on pay structure

FoodTech
Other than being debarred from the app, some delivery executives allege that their payments, which are made on a weekly basis, have been withheld.
Pixcy.com
A section of Zomato delivery partners in Bengaluru who took part in protests starting since Friday over the new payment structure say that they have been barred from accessing the app. These delivery executives allege that the few of those whom the company has identified as organisers of the protest are being targeted, and their accounts have been suspended. Read: Scores of Zomato delivery executives logout, protest against reduction of incentives Arun, one of the organisers of the protests in Bengaluru's Electronic City zone said, "I do not have access to the app now. Don't know when I have been debarred. I am not sure when exactly this happened since I last logged in on Friday. Now other than screenshots, I have very little proof of the kind of work I have done as they are not letting me log into the app." Arun further complained, "We are not called employees and do not enjoy any such benefits. We are called partners, but then why does the company change the rates without consulting us?" When contacted, a Zomato spokesperson confirmed to TNM that some accounts were suspended. "Certain delivery partners (0.1% of the Bangalore fleet), who were found instigating and hindering services for other partners pursuing their deliveries, have been momentarily suspended. We are in discussion with all our delivery partners in the city and regret the inconvenience caused to our users,” the spokesperson said. At least 6,000 delivery executives across Bengaluru and Mumbai— two of the major food delivery markets have partially or fully logged out of the app protesting the recent unilateral move by the company. They say that the new fares will significantly affect their quality of life. However, no delivery executives from Mumbai have reported suspension of accounts yet. In Bengaluru, Arun is not alone. Those leading protests in the 20 odd localities in Bengaluru have also faced the same fate. Sunil Suresh, another such delivery executive from Sahakarnagar in Bengaluru has also lost access to the app. "The company has blocked around 10 such executives from every locality,” he claims. The executives say that they do not know who their team leader or the manager is. They also do not have any explanation from the company on why they no longer have access to the company. Other than being debarred from the app, delivery executives allege their payments which are made on a weekly basis has been withheld. Not the first case Kaveri Medappa, a research scholar based in Bengaluru studying the working conditions of these app-based workers says that experiences are largely similar amongst platform-dependent on-demand workers. These companies start eating into workers' incomes to increase revenue once they have consolidated their market shares to some extent. “There have been many accounts from workers who have felt targeted by these platforms for having raised questions with them. Their IDs are suddenly blocked for no reason and they have to spend hours and sometimes days to have it sorted; some have witnessed a drastic reduction in the number of deliveries allotted to them soon after they raise a complaint or express disagreements over pay or orders. So, you see that algorithms are used to control, monitor and discipline workers,” she says. She added, “Workers often express feeling cheated regarding work conditions, which have an adverse effect on earnings.  In countries like Spain and UK, food delivery workers are fighting legal battles to have platforms recognise them as employees and are rejecting the label of "partners". In Spain, the workers have won the case for now.” Need for collectivisation Pointing at the recent legislation passed by the US state of California, which makes it difficult to classify workers as "independent contractors", the All India Democratic Youth Organisation (AIDYO) has called for these workers to unionise. “These delivery partners are assumed to be ‘freelancers’. But they are not independent at all. Companies dodge themselves from providing minimum facilities that any employee can possess. They are pushed to long working hours and gruelling work conditions. There are strict control and supervision over the hours and location of their work and there is no job security. Along with that, there are regular variations in pay-out, delivery charges and incentives. AIDYO wishes to organize these delivery agents to fight for their rights,” Vinay Sarathy,  vice-president, AIDYO, Bangalore Chapter, said. With inputs from Shilpa S Ranipeta
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IIM-Bangalore faculty and students write to PM, seek fresh probe into Jharkhand lynching

Controversy
The letter was circulated on September 12 in the B-school campus through an e-mail by a professor with a covering note that "as an academic community, it is important that we stand up to the impunity with which the state has abrogated its constitutional d
A section of faculty and students of the state-run Indian Institute of Management-Bangalore (IIM-B) urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to order a fresh inquiry into the death of 24-year-old Tabrez Ansari on June 22 due to alleged mob lynching on June 17 in Jharkhand's Kharsawan district village.   "We the faculty, staff and students of IIM-B express shock and dismay over how the Jharkhand police has handled the lynching of Ansari. We urge you to act swiftly by directing the Jharkhand government to institute a fresh probe," said the letter, a copy of which IANS has accessed through a source.   According to IIM-B Associate Professor Deepak Malghan, 16 faculty, 85 students and non-teaching staff of the business school signed the letter, seeking Modi's intervention, as "it was the constitutional duty of the state to protect the life and liberty of all its citizens". The letter was circulated on September 12 in the B-school campus through an e-mail by a professor with a covering note that "as an academic community, it is important that we stand up to the impunity with which the state has abrogated its constitutional duty." The Jharkhand police decision to convert the murder case under section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) into a culpable homicide not amounting to murder under section 304 of the IPC prompted the academic community to make the appeal to Modi. The heinous crime took place around midnight on June 17 at Kadamdia village, 15km from Seraikela town in Kharsawan district and 150km from Jharkhand capital Ranchi. Ansari succumbed to death on June 22 in judicial custody from the serious injuries sustained in the lynching, nearly two months after he married on April 27. He was working as a welder at Pune in western Maharashtra. According to the first information report, filed on July 29 by local police, the 11 accused who were arrested are from the neighbouring Dhatkidih village. A video grab of the lynching, aired on news channels, showed Ansari thrashed with iron rods while tied to a pole and forced to chant "Jai Shri Rama and "Jai Hanuman" over an alleged theft.  Ansari's widow Shahista Parvez also sought a judicial inquiry into the unnatural death as he could not get timely medical treatment to his injuries.
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People in Belagavi auction footwear in name of PM, as protest over lack of flood relief

Protests
Belagavi was the most affected district in Karanataka in the recent floods.
File Image of Belagavi Floods
Miffed by the apathy of the central government, a group of flood-affected people in Karnataka’s Belagavi district held a unique protest in the last two days. Outside the deputy commissioner's office, they held a mock auction of old footwear and started selling them in the name of politicians, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The protests were organised by Kannada activists and social organisations that said they will send Rs 69 collected as part of the auction to the government as a mark of protest over the lack of relief materials and funds during and after the floods in the district. Belagavi was the worst affected district in the state among the 22 other districts that were affected. According to Nolan Pinto of India Today, a shoe, which represented the PM, was auctioned at a starting price of Rs 1. It was later bought by a local farmer group for Rs 5.  “We named the old footwear after our elected representatives, including Deputy Chief Ministers Laxman Savadi and Govind Karajol, who hail from North Karnataka. We will send the money raised from the auction to the government as it claims to have no funds for us. It has failed to announce compensation for the flood victims although Belagavi alone contributes taxes of up to Rs 6,000 crore every year,”  farmers’ leader Chunappa Pujeri was quoted by Deccan Chronicle. Others who were targetted were Members of Parliament Pralhad Joshi, Suresh Angadi, former minister Ananthakumar Hegde and MP Shobha Karandlaje. Speaking on the same issue earlier on Sunday, Ashok Chandargi, president of the Kannada Organisations Action Committee in Belagavi, said, “We have elected 25 BJP MPs from the state. Why didn’t none of them try to sort the issue out? The CM even went to Delhi, and even then no funds have been released. Why is this happening?” He urged the union government to at last provide some interim relief in the form of 50% of the estimated losses incurred due to the floods. He had also suggested that people will die of starvation as there has already been one such death in the district. The floods killed 82 people and caused a loss of Rs 30,000 crore. This includes damage to a total of 2.3 lakh houses and displaced 7 lakh people from their houses.
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Cops rescue son, driver of Bengaluru businessman from abductors after dramatic shootout

Crime
The duo had been held captive for nearly a month. The mastermind of the abduction is presently absconding.
Almost a month after they were kidnapped, police in Bengaluru on Tuesday morning rescued a teenager and his driver under dramatic circumstances following a shootout. Three of the accused have been arrested and are currently in hospital nursing injuries. According to police, the duo— Hemanth and the driver Keshav Reddy, were kept in a Bengaluru house by their abductors and were supposed to be released as the teenager’s father Siddaraj had agreed to pay the  ransom. MM Siddaraju is a businessman who owns nine two-wheeler showrooms across Bengaluru. “The abductors initially demanded Siddaraju pay a ransom of Rs 3 crore. After rounds of negotiations, they whittled it down to Rs 1.7 crore,” The Times of India quoted KV Sharath Chandra, inspector general of police (central range), as saying. At the same time, police had laid a trap for the kidnappers to catch hold of them after the two were returned. The accused have been identified as construction workers— Prashant C, Naveen M and Tangabala. While Prashant and Naveen hail from Ullal in coastal Karnataka, Tangabala is from Tamil Nadu’s Villupuram district. “Prashant and Tangabala held daggers at the necks of Hemanth and Keshav and threatened to kill them if cops took one step ahead,” Ravi D Channannanavar, superintendent of police (Bengaluru Rural), said in a statement. “They instructed Siddaraju to bring the money in a bag and throw it on a stretch near NICE Road and Kanakapura Road junction around 3am on Tuesday. A police team followed Siddaraju and hid in bushes. A biker arrived and picked up the bag when cops swooped down on him. But the man stabbed Anekal sub-inspector Hemanth Kumar, prompting the latter to shoot him in the right hand with his service revolver in self-defence. The suspect was caught and identified as Naveen,” the IGP added. Police said that the operation involved 35 policemen including three DySPs in nine teams. Another suspect Satish, who is the alleged mastermind and an employee in one of the showrooms owned by Siddaraju, is absconding. Hemanth and Keshav Reddy were kidnapped on August 26 when the former had left the house for college in the car owned by the family and driven by Keshav. The family approached the police after the two did not return home as usual in the evening and both their phones were switched off. Soon after, they received a ransom call and the date of handing over the money was decided over the next few days after negotiations.
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Tuesday, September 17, 2019

In 20 yrs, I’ve never experienced this: K’taka Dalit MP who was blocked from village

Caste
Chitradurga MP A Narayanaswamy was travelling with officials from Biocon Foundation and Narayana Hrudayalaya when he was stopped from entering the village.
When BJP's Chitradurga MP A Narayanaswamy planned to travel to Gollarahatti village in Pavagada taluk of Tumakuru district on Monday, he was intent on highlighting the issues people were facing in the village to officials from Biocon Foundation and Narayana Health. "We had visited many government schools and hospitals in Pavagada and the plan was to urge these two companies to invest in developing infrastructure and facilities in this area," says Narayanaswamy. Even though Gollarahatti is in Tumakuru district, it falls under Chitradurga Lok Sabha constituency. But just as the MP's convoy, which included representatives from Biocon and Narayana Hrudayalaya, entered the road leading to the temple in Gollarahatti village, they were stopped by the residents of the village. The MP, who belongs to the Madiga community, was shunned in Gollarahatti (settlement of Golla community). The Madiga community is a Dalit artisan group classified as a Scheduled Caste. "I was adamant that they (residents) should stop this practice but they insisted that the priests in the village did not allow any previous MLAs or MPs from my community to enter the village. Even though some people agreed to allow me to enter the village, I left the area because I did not want to cause a fight among the people", says Narayanaswamy. What transpired in Gollarahatti on Sunday is the kind of caste-based discrimination that has been taking place in the village for generations. Narayanaswamy, a former Social Welfare Minister and a three-time MLA from Anekal in Bengaluru, says this is the first time he has faced such kind of discrimination in his political career. "I have worked for over 20 years and I have never experienced this. I do not see people through the lens of caste. Neither do I have it in my mind that I am from a particular caste. I won't try to forcefully go to the village again because I want the people of the village to understand this is wrong and welcome people from my community there," he says. He was seeking funds from corporates like Biocon Foundation and Narayana Health under Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programmes to initiate infrastructure works in the village. Pavagada taluk in Tumakuru district in Karnataka is an arid, drought-prone area. People in the area are also grappling with fluorosis, a chronic condition which occurs when there has been an excess intake of fluoride. This causes skeletal deformities and yellowing of teeth. Narayanaswamy is keen on working towards changing the mindset of people living in the village to accept him as a political leader. "I might have been saddened by the incident but we should not consider it a setback. The discussion this has sparked is an important one and we should ask people to stop this practice," he adds.
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Hotel association writes to Bengaluru top cop alleging cheating by OYO

Hospitality
The association claims in the recent months, 100 member hotels have logged out of OYO and said the pattern is similar across the state.
A hoteliers’ collective in Bengaluru has written a complaint to City Police Commissioner Bhaskar Rao to probe hotel chain OYO Hotels and Homes. The letter alleging cheating was sent after some members of the Bruhat Bengaluru Hotels Association met Additional Commissioner of Police, East S Murugan on September 12 on the same issue. Speaking to TNM, the association president PC Rao said, “There are many issues with OYO. Many of our association members have moved out of their service but still, we have not got our payments. In some cases, there are delayed payments and in some cases, there have been no payments at all.” He added, “While there is an agreement of not renting out rooms less than Rs 1,000 for a day with many hotels, they have not honoured it and neither have they compensated the hotel owners. Since there are many cases we wanted the Commissioner to probe.”  The association claims in the recent months, 100 member hotels have logged out of OYO and said the pattern is similar across the state.  However, OYO claims no formal complaint was made. “While vested interest groups are creating unnecessary public uproar to sensationalize the matter, real OYO asset owners that are facing issues, if any, are reaching out to find solutions and get back to running the business. They are focused on finding ways to improve customer experience and thereby their occupancy and profitability,” a company spokesperson said. OYO further added, “As always, we continue to engage with our asset owners, as for vested interest groups such as this, we would like to request them to focus on driving the next wave of growth in the hospitality industry, by having a long term view of situations as against sensationalizing matters to defame a brand that has been built over the years with the hard work of thousands of young OYOpreneurs, asset owners and millions of customers. We urge them to focus on creating great living experiences for millions of middle-income people across India, and in the process support the Government’s mission to drive tourism in the country and also create additional job opportunities for young hospitality enthusiasts in the country.” This development incidentally comes after Whitefield police had booked OYO CEO and founder Ritesh Agarwal and others for cheating and criminal breach of trust following a complaint by a city-based hotelier. In his complaint, Natarajan, owner of Rajguru Shelter Hotels alleged that the company violated an agreement of taking only 20% commission from each reservation and in the process cheated him to the tune of Rs 1 crore.  The agreement between Rajguru Shelter Hotels and OYO was drawn in February 2017. Read: Bengaluru police book OYO CEO Ritesh Agarwal for allegedly cheating hotelier That time OYO has denied the allegations and said that this was an exaggerated commercial dispute.  Earlier too, there has been friction between OYO and individual hotel owners for allegedly arm twisting them. In July, TNM had reported how many hotel operators felt the company is hurting their businesses. “OYO has been cheating the hotel owners by using various gimmicks and arm-twisting tactics, which has resulted in huge losses for hotel owners and has disrupted the hotel industry and market,” Pradeep Shetty, a committee member of the Hotel and Restaurant Association of Western India (HRAWI), had told TNM then.  Read: Why many hotel owners across India are agitated with Oyo's business model
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