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Friday, November 1, 2019

Bengaluru civic body promises to fill around 15,000 potholes in 10 days

Civic Issues
Although roads have turned into slush pits, the BBMP had not started repair works citing heavy rains.
Photos by Kheerthan Karunakar
Now that the rain is gone and the sun is out, Bengaluru’s civic body -- the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) can no longer blame the weather for bad roads. The BBMP, which started filling up potholes on Friday, expects to finish the work by November 10. BBMP sources say that although a proper survey of potholes was not conducted, the civic body’s engineers have estimated that there could be around 15,000 potholes in the city.  The rains, which ravaged Bengaluru’s roads, turned these stretches into slush pits, causing immense inconvenience to pedestrians and motorists. Despite numerous complaints and outrage from citizens activists, the BBMP had made no forays into fixing the roads. Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa on Wednesday announced that work would be taken up on war footing and the BBMP began repair works on Friday.   “The roads are being cut into geometric shapes to pour concrete into it,” says Joint Commissioner of Yelahanka Zone, Veerabhadraswamy. He expects that asphalting will commence on Saturday in his zone. In many cases, the roads are in such a bad condition that the entire layer of asphalt has disappeared. It is even impossible to walk through it, let alone ride a two wheeler, without danger of incurring an injury.  A resident of Horamavu, Kheerthan Karunakar, said, “It is almost like the government is preparing us for off-roading competitions when we see the condition of the roads in our area. It is high time that the concerned authorities work towards making all local roads navigable.” David Paul, a member of the Horamavu Resident Welfare Association says that the commuters are helpless and have been facing the issue of bad roads since the last 16 years. “We’re really feeling helpless about the state of the roads in our locality. The roads here have never been good for the past 16 years that we have lived here. In one of the localities, the residents themselves took up road work, but the roads were promptly dug up by the BWSSB and are yet to be repaired. There is so much of dust that rises up from these damaged roads. People, including the old and children find it hard to use these roads," he said.  Rakesh Malhotra, a member of a citizen activist group called Hennur Taskers, says that the roads in the locality too are in an extremely bad condition. He says that the stretch between from Shell petrol pump near Lingarajapuram to Kannur is terrible. “The pothole filling assignment is completely useless. Crores of people’s public money has been used to fill up roads with a formula that cannot sustain another monsoon, and we are fed up with fighting with the authorities year after year. Even after fixing a road, they come back and dig it up once again,” he said. The BBMP was to carry out road repair works in September this year. However, BBMP Chief Engineer for Road Widening, Somashekar told TNM that the civic body conducted a survey of bad roads only in October and cited heavy rains as an impediment.  “It is impossible to fill potholes during the rains. Even if we do, the asphalt will not stay. That is why we waited for the rain to stop. There was a small delay in conducting the survey but it was completed in October and the survey was not done in all the zones. We have started the repairs now,” he said.   BBMP Commissioner BH Anil Kumar told TNM that there was no need for a survey as the work is being carried out ward-wise. “As and when they find potholes in each ward, contractors have been told to fill it up,” BH Anil Kumar added.  The city’s zonal commissioners said that they expect to meet the November 10 deadline, set by the BBMP to fill all the potholes in the city. The BBMP had also issued a warning to the contractors, who have been tasked with filling potholes, stating that they would be blacklisted if they failed to meet the deadline. The BBMP has also warned of suspending engineers-in-charge if the work is not completed by November 10. However, civic activists in the city are furious with the lack of proper redressal to the chronic problem of potholes. “Can you count the number of leaves in the tree?” asks Mr MN Sreehari, a traffic expert. Sreehari says that the BBMP figures are skewed as it does not count the interior roads that have been damaged.  “The BBMP will give a bogus figures for the number of potholes. That too is only for the major roads. What about the interior roads? In many cases there is no existence of a road at all. There is no final solution. The problem will come again as the rains come. As the Supreme Court rightly said, the BBMP must be dissolved as they are so incompetent,” he added.    
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Bengaluru suburban rail services to airport likely to start before 2020

Transport
Bengaluru MPs Tejasvi Surya and PC Mohan have met the Rail Minister and Niti Aayog chief in recent days seeking approval for a special purpose vehicle (SPV).
A suburban rail route to the Bengaluru airport is on the anvil and services are expected to start before 2020, as earlier promised.  The services will start with two trains that will run from Majestic and gradually more trains will be added to the airport, Divisional Railway Manager Ashok Kumar Verma announced during a meeting with Lok Sabha MP Tejasvi Surya and a group of activists on Thursday. Railway officials in Bengaluru said that work on the station halt at Trumpet Flyover near the Kempegowda International Airport has already started on October 30 and should be ready by December 2019. While the train will not reach the airport terminal, the Kempegowda International Airport operator will run a shuttle bus service to cater to the suburban rail users. Bengaluru South MP Tejasvi Surya said, “It takes more than 2 or 2.5 hours for anyone in the city to reach the Airport due to the saturated traffic situation in Bengaluru today. This will benefit at least half a million people of Bengaluru.” He added, “The KIAL will also run feeder services for last-mile connectivity from the Devanahalli Halt to the airport as and when the trains are scheduled to arrive. Similarly, they will provide drop services to the Devanahalli Halt as per the arrivals of the trains.” Other important announcements made by the officials include work on quadrupling of tracks between Cantonment and Whitefield that will begin from the second week of November, and tender for building a new terminal for suburban rail. Read: Bengaluru MPs seek more trains for suburban rail, feasibility study to be undertaken Bengaluru Central MP PC Mohan again met Railway Minister Piyush Goyal and Minister of State for Railways Suresh Angadi on Thursday to expedite the formation of the long-pending special purpose vehicle (SPV) for the suburban rail project. This comes after Tejasvi Surya had also met NITI Aayog Chairman Amitabh Kant on the issue on Wednesday. These meetings come ahead of a meeting by the Extended Railway Board on November 4, which has to approve the project specifics after which the Union Cabinet will clear the project.       G M T Y     Detect languageAfrikaansAlbanianAmharicArabicArmenianAzerbaijaniBasqueBelarusianBengaliBosnianBulgarianCatalanCebuanoChichewaChinese (Simplified)Chinese (Traditional)CorsicanCroatianCzechDanishDutchEnglishEsperantoEstonianFilipinoFinnishFrenchFrisianGalicianGeorgianGermanGreekGujaratiHaitian CreoleHausaHawaiianHebrewHindiHmongHungarianIcelandicIgboIndonesianIrishItalianJapaneseJavaneseKannadaKazakhKhmerKoreanKurdishKyrgyzLaoLatinLatvianLithuanianLuxembourgishMacedonianMalagasyMalayMalayalamMalteseMaoriMarathiMongolianMyanmar (Burmese)NepaliNorwegianPashtoPersianPolishPortuguesePunjabiRomanianRussianSamoanScots GaelicSerbianSesothoShonaSindhiSinhalaSlovakSlovenianSomaliSpanishSundaneseSwahiliSwedishTajikTamilTeluguThaiTurkishUkrainianUrduUzbekVietnameseWelshXhosaYiddishYorubaZulu   AfrikaansAlbanianAmharicArabicArmenianAzerbaijaniBasqueBelarusianBengaliBosnianBulgarianCatalanCebuanoChichewaChinese (Simplified)Chinese (Traditional)CorsicanCroatianCzechDanishDutchEnglishEsperantoEstonianFilipinoFinnishFrenchFrisianGalicianGeorgianGermanGreekGujaratiHaitian CreoleHausaHawaiianHebrewHindiHmongHungarianIcelandicIgboIndonesianIrishItalianJapaneseJavaneseKannadaKazakhKhmerKoreanKurdishKyrgyzLaoLatinLatvianLithuanianLuxembourgishMacedonianMalagasyMalayMalayalamMalteseMaoriMarathiMongolianMyanmar (Burmese)NepaliNorwegianPashtoPersianPolishPortuguesePunjabiRomanianRussianSamoanScots GaelicSerbianSesothoShonaSindhiSinhalaSlovakSlovenianSomaliSpanishSundaneseSwahiliSwedishTajikTamilTeluguThaiTurkishUkrainianUrduUzbekVietnameseWelshXhosaYiddishYorubaZulu                     Text-to-speech function is limited to 200 characters     Options : History : Feedback : Donate Close  
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Fact-finding report on Kashmir counters union govt's ‘normalcy’ narrative

Kashmir
The 160-page report also highlighted a government ad that urged shops to remain open despite a lack of public transportation.
PTI photo of Oct 18 in Srinagar
“The worst of the Indian state has always been played out in Kashmir, and the events preceding and following (abrogation of) Article 370 are only a more horrific testament to that,” note the authors of the latest fact-finding report titled, ‘Imprisoned Resistance: 5th August and its Aftermath’. The report was released in Bengaluru and Delhi on Thursday by five of the 11 member-team which prepared the report following their week-long (October 26-November 4) visit to the conflict-ridden state. Thursday was also incidentally the day that the reorganisation of the state (now two separate Union Territories). ‘No normalcy’ is the new normal The 160-page long report counters the government narrative of normalcy returning in the state by narrating multiple instances of deserted market places, courts, empty schools and colleges, lower mental health patients, lack of public transport, restriction to free movement, continuation of arbitrary detentions in addition to the excesses committed by the forces already reported in national and international media. To elucidate their point, the authors cited one newspaper advertisement in multiple publications in Valley urging businesses to run “as usual” as reported by few media houses. “Closed shops, no public transport?” read the government ads on the front pages of Kashmir’s newspapers on October 11, 2019. The report also claims images of traffic flow in Srinagar shown in certain media was done by creating roadblocks to artificially create traffic jams and then recorded by drone cameras. This report was compiled by Aarti Mundkur (Advocate, Bengaluru), Amit Sen (Psychiatrist, New Delhi), Clifton D’ Rozario (Advocate and All India People’s Forum, Bengaluru), Gautam Mody (New Trade Union Initiative, New Delhi), Lara Jesani (Advocate, Mumbai and People’s Union for Civil Liberties), Mihir Desai (Senior Advocate, Mumbai and People’s Union for Civil Liberties), Nagari Babaiah (People’s Democratic Forum, Bengaluru), Ramdas Rao (All India People’s Forum, Bengaluru), Saranga Ugalmugle (Advocate, Mumbai/Goa) Swathi Seshadri (Independent Researcher, Bengaluru) and Veena Gowda (Advocate, Mumbai and People’s Union for Civil Liberties). The speakers noted that while this is not the first time that an abuse of human rights and excesses by the armed forces in Kashmir has been reported, the new normal since the first week of August is unprecedented. While the Narendra Modi-government has championed itself on making Kashmir an “integral part of India” with this move, the report says it had an effect of “proverbial last straw that erodes whatever hope that may have existed of a peaceful and just resolution of the people’s demands for democracy.”   Clifton told TNM, “We had searched for 'normalcy' or essence of democracy in all the areas that we could travel. And on the day when we returned, another team (of activists) were sent back. We were also asked in many places from where we have come. If the security forces did not see a Kashmiri face, they were fine with us moving around. So for a local there, in terms of mobility, you are constantly under surveillance and asked 'where are you going?'.” Another member of the team, Swathi, said, “There were somewhat given liberty as they might have looked like tourists with backpacks and they had divided themselves into groups of 2-3. But all the time, there was always a fear that we might be sent back.”   Violence As otherwise reported in the media, this team also noted extreme and traumatic forms of physical, sexual and emotional abuse unleashed on the Kashmiri people. These including illegal detentions of minors and instances of torture with loudspeakers on, for the surrounding community to hear the victim scream and deaths due to pellets. The report also mentions under reported issues such as businesses including media houses shutting down or downsizing, destruction of property and excesses during night raids on entire villages in reply to isolated incidents of stone pelters. Peculiar accounts recorded in the report state — “People said that sometimes plain clothed army officers impersonating as mujahideens by sporting beards and long hair would knock on a door in the village and forcibly enter and demand for food. Usually this is done during the day. Such visits would be followed by night raids conducted by the army, which would allege that the family had entertained mujahideens and pick up young men, harass the family members and raid the house using that excuse.” Medical report showing pellet injuries of 17-year-old Asrar who died after authorities claimed he was hit by a stone Mental health The report also documented the deterioration of mental health services in Srinagar and smaller towns in the face of shutdown. “Amongst other incidents, people told us that youngsters are experiencing symptoms of heart attacks. The doctor who they accessed with great difficulty, informed them that it was an anxiety attack and that 70% of young boys and girls who visited him were suffering from depression. A young girl told us how she woke up in the morning shivering despite wearing a sweater and a blanket,” the report said. Resistance The report talks about the voluntary hartals that people resorted to even though gradually the lockdown is being eased and the clampdown on communication have been reduced after a blanket blackout. “All commercial establishments are voluntarily closed except for two hours in the morning and in the evening. This is part of their resistance against what they term a ‘military occupation’, and they are confident to continue with it indefinitely, since they have been trained all these years to adjust to such a situation,” the report reads. This continues as mainstay businesses like apple farming and tourism suffer. Even those employed in the industrial area outside Srinagar lost their jobs including those in the Rangreti Industrial Park. Anchar in Shoura where locals dug up roads to and put in road blocks to disallow the armed forces from entering the area. Basis of the report The report was prepared based on the team’s visit to Bemina, Tengpora, Galwanpora, Anchar, Illahi Bagh areas in Srinagar and multiple villages in districts of Pulwama, Shopian, Kulgam, Baramulla. Other than meeting residents, they also visited various courts and interacted with lawyers, and High Court judges including the Chief Justice and the State Human Rights Commission (including meeting with Justice (Rtd.) Bilal Nazki, Chairperson)  Juvenile Justice Board (JJB) and Child Welfare Committee (CWC). They also met with psychiatrists, medical health professionals, therapists, counsellors and social workers who are providing mental health services. In addition to their own findings, the authors have also summarised the history of Article 370, political developments over the years with respect to Jammu and Kashmir with mention of history of unmarked graves and systematic disappearances. Four-point recommendation by the authors 1. Recognise that a dispute exists between people of Jammu and Kashmir and the Indian government. 2. Repeal the Jammu & Kashmir Public Safety Act 1978 and the Armed Forces (Jammu & Kashmir) Special Powers Act 1990. 3. Withdraw all army and para-military forces from civilian areas of Jammu and Kashmir. 4. Open a transparent unconditional dialogue with the people of Jammu and Kashmir and their representatives so as to address peoples’ aspirations to determine and define their own destinies through democratic means and to find a political solution that respects the democratic will of the people in accordance with human rights and international law.
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Karnataka govt launches new emergency helpline number ‘112’

Helpline
Emergency helpline numbers like 100 for police, 101 for fire brigade, 108 for ambulance and 1091 for women helpline, will continue to be functional for a while but will be discontinued soon and replaced by 112.
Karnataka now has an integrated emergency helpline number, 112, which will allow residents of the state to call for police, fire and emergency, and ambulance services.  The Emergency Response Support System (ERSS), which is already in place in 17 states in the country, will be implemented in Karnataka in the next few days.  "A single number - 112 - will integrate all other helpline numbers with it. This will be helpful for preventing crimes and during emergencies. It can be used for any emergency including police, fire, ambulance, traffic issues, disasters," Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa said speaking after the launch of the service at the Communication, Logistic and Modernisation wing of the police department.  This means that the different emergency numbers for services like 100 for police, 101 for fire brigade, 108 for ambulance and 1091 for women helpline, will now be integrated into one emergency number - 112. The concept is based on the 911 universal emergency number launched in the United States of America and was first launched in Himachal Pradesh in November 2018 before implementing it in other states.  Upon calling the number, an operator will note down the complaint and assign the caller to the concerned department in their district.  112 will be an alternative helpline number until it is fully implemented and established in the state. The other helpline numbers - 100, 101, 108 and 1090 - will be functional for now but it will be discontinued in the future, officials of the Communication, Logistic and Modernisation wing of the police department confirmed.  This also means that the 'Namma 100' helpline, which is an integrated helpline number in cities of Karnataka including Bengaluru, Mysuru, Hubbali, Dharwad, Kalaburagi and Manguluru, will be integrated into 112.  Currently, the 112 helpline number is fielding calls from only landline numbers across the state. It will be fielding calls from mobile numbers in the next two days, officials said.  A mobile-app '112 India' launched in May this year by the Union Government allows users to send a distress signal using a 'shout' feature in case of an emergency. This will now be integrated with the helpline in Karnataka. 
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Bengaluru civic body postpones launch of bus priority lane to Nov 15, cites heavy rain

Transport
Trial run for the bus priority lane along the Outer Ring Road between Tin Factory and Silk Board junction, will begin on November 1.
Commuters braving the traffic along Outer Ring Road in Bengaluru will have to wait another fortnight for the bus priority lane operations to begin. The bus priority lane was supposed to roll out on November 1. However, the city’s civic body – Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) is pushing the launch date to November 15 citing rains. Bengaluru Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) Managing Director C Shikha told the media that due to heavy rains, the BBMP has not been able to complete infrastructure construction for the bus priority lane on time, The Hindu reported. The BMTC, along with BBMP said trial runs for the bus priority lane between Silk Board and Tin Factor would, however, be begin on Friday. Director Shikha said that the trial runs will continue till November 15. BBMP Commissioner BH Anil Kumar on Thursday said in a tweet that the trial run will be inaugurated on November 1. “The BBMP has created bus lanes to ease traffic congestion. Bus lanes have been marked out on ORR. I request the public to use BMTC buses and help ease congestion,” he said. Bus Priority Lane is a project launched by BBMP, BMTC, the Traffic Police and the Directorate of Urban Land Transport. Bus lanes are planned in the hope that buses which act as a mass transport system, get priority access over private transport especially two-wheelers and in the process motivate people to ditch their own vehicles. This in turn is expected to reduce overall congestion in the city.  The pilot project was set to begin on Friday and the chosen route was Outer Ring Road between Tin Factory in KR Puram and Silk Board junction. The move for bus priority lanes also comes at a time when the daily ridership of BMTC has steadily fallen over the years, from 51.3 lakh in 2014-15 to 36 lakh in 2018-19. At the same time, the length of cancelled routes increased almost 200% over four years, from 241.6 lakh km in 2013-14 to 717.9 lakh km in 2017-18. Sources in the Traffic Police Department told TNM that only vehicles with more than three passengers will be allowed in these lanes and violators will be penalised for violating lane discipline.  Incidentally, a decade ago, a similar plan was proposed by authorities between Central Silk Board and Hebbal, but the project never took off. Since then, citizen groups have demanded that these bus-only lanes be created wherever practically feasible along with other incentives for public transport. BMTC has deployed 50 people to make sure that buses stay in the designated lane. The BMTC has also installed 70 cameras on buses to help identify motorists who violate rules and use the lane designated for buses only. This footage will be submitted to the Traffic Police, who will initiate action against violators, Times of India reported.    
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Murdered Alliance Uni ex-VC allegedly had financial tiff with Chancellor Sudhir

Crime
Former Vice Chancellor Ayyappa Dore had allegedly loaned Chancellor Sudhir Angur Rs 9 crore in 2017.
Over a fortnight after the Bengaluru police arrested Alliance University Chancellor Sudhir Angur for the murder of former Vice Chancellor Ayyappa Dore, investigators say that Sudhir and Ayyappa had allegedly argued over a financial dispute a few days before the murder.  Ayyappa Dore was hacked to death on the night of October 15 by five armed assailants at RT Nagar's HMT grounds when he was out for a walk late at night.  Speaking to TNM, DCP North, N Shashikumar, says that Ayyappa Dore had allegedly loaned Rs 9 crore to Sudhir Angur in 2017 and had on October 9 demanded that he repay the money within 24 hours.  On the morning of October 9, Ayyappa Dore had allegedly called Sudhir Angur and had asked him to repay the amount. "Sudhir Angur had repaid Rs 4.5 crore and Ayyappa Dore asked for the rest of the money within 24 hours. The deceased's wife Pavana says that he threatened to side with Madhukar Angur if the money was not repaid within 24 hours," DCP Shashikumar says.  Investigating officers say that Sudhir Angur had allegedly deployed another accused Suraj Singh to stalk Ayyappa Dore six months ago. Suraj Singh was in charge of managing the legal team at Alliance University and was Sudhir Angur's point man.  "There was a legal dispute between Sudhir and his brother Madhukar regarding the ownership of the college. Ayyappa Dore was an influential person and Sudhir suspected that Ayyappa was betraying him. He had instructed Suraj to follow him around six months before the murder. Sudhir suspected that Ayyappa had made a deal with Madhukar on the side to oust him from the post of Chancellor," DCP Shashikumar adds.  RT Nagar Police, who questioned Pavana, have learnt that Madhukar Angur had allegedly promised to offer Ayyappa Dore 50% share in Alliance Business Pvt Ltd if he changed loyalties.  "Since Suraj Singh had been stalking Ayyappa Dore, he informed Sudhir about the deal with Madhukar. Sudhir Angur confessed that on October 10, he instructed Suraj to kill Ayyappa Dore," the police says.  Suraj allegedly hired the other arrested accused Sunil Rao, Fayaz, Kantharaj, Ganesh and Vinay to kill Ayyappa Dore. The assailants used five machetes and two knives to hack Ayyappa to death on the night of October 15.  "Everything was planned well in advance. While Suraj, Suni, Fayaz, Kantharaj and Ganesh hacked up Ayyappa, Vinay allegedly stood guard outside HMT grounds. Vinay's brother-in-law Arun Kumar was also arrested last week for allegedly harbouring him. Fayaz's sister Rizwana and Suraj's girlfriend Salma were also arrested for abatement and harbouring accused persons.  Investigating officers are currently probing the Board of Directors of Alliance Business Pvt Ltd after Ayyappa Dore's wife Pavana allegedly accused them of being in on the murder plot. "We are looking into the directors and a few lawyers also," DCP Shashikumar adds.     
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White House aide: Time to abandon Pelosi drug plan, alter Senate bill

Joe Grogan said White House is not opposed to the inflation caps, but added they “were never part of our proposal.”

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