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Thursday, February 6, 2020

India's first batch of Kamov choppers to be rolled out from Karnataka by 2025

Defence
The first batch of helicopters will come out of our production facility at Tumakuru in Karnataka
The first batch of Kamov military helicopters, to be manufactured in India under an Indo-Russia joint venture, is expected to be rolled out by 2025, a top official overseeing the project said on Thursday. In October 2016, India and Russia finalised a broad agreement for the joint venture between Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) and two Russian defence majors for production of the helicopters in India. The first batch of helicopters will come out of our production facility at Tumkur in Karnataka by 2025 if everything goes as per plan, Indo-Russian Helicopters Ltd CEO NM Srinath said. Under the joint venture, 200 Kamov 226T helicopters will be produced. Of these, 60 will be supplied to India in fly-away condition while 140 choppers will be manufactured in India under a USD 1 billion deal. India is procuring the Kamov choppers to replace its ageing Cheetah and Chetak helicopters. The Kamov Ka-226T helicopter has 72 per cent Russian components and 28 per cent from various western countries. Srinath said the helicopters to be produced in India will have around 70 per cent Indian-origin components out of the 72 per cent Russian indigenisation. Overall, he said, the percentage of the Indian-origin component in the chopper will be around 40 per cent. The joint venture has already sent a detailed proposal to the government on the production of the helicopters, including proposed percentage of the indigenous component. A final decision on the order will have to be cleared by the Defence Acquisition Council, the highest decision-making body of the Defence ministry on procurement. The government approved the technical configuration for the twin-engine multi-role helicopter, which is known for its superior manoeuvring capabilities in mountainous areas. The Kamov helicopters will be supplied to the Indian Air Force and the Army. Both the forces have been pressing for early conclusion of the deal so they can replace their ageing fleet within the next three to four years The joint venture has already finalised an agreement specifying work-schedule and techno-commercial issues.   
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Bengaluru cops nab techie who allegedly killed her mother, and fled to Port Blair

Crime
Amrutha Chandrashekar allegedly killed her mother and slashed her brother's neck with a knife.
The Bengaluru police arrested a 33-year-old techie Amrutha Chandrashekar on Wednesday for allegedly killing her mother and for attempting to kill her brother. Amrutha and her boyfriend were arrested in Port Blair in Andaman and Nicobar Islands, where they were hiding after they fled Bengaluru on Saturday morning. They were brought to Bengaluru for questioning. Her boyfriend Srishar Rao was also arrested for abetment. The KR Puram police received a call from Amrutha’s brother Harish on Saturday morning when he dialled 100 for help. Harish informed the police that his sister has slashed his neck with a knife and also killed his mother. At around 4 am on Saturday, Harish woke up from his sleep when he heard Amrutha rummaging through his cupboard. When he questioned her as to why she was up so early, Amrutha allegedly informed him that she was packing for a trip to Hyderabad. Amrutha had decided to visit Hyderabad along with her mother Nirmala and Harish on Sunday morning. “She left the room and Harish went back to sleep. Twenty to 25 minutes later, she came back into the room and slashed his throat with a knife while he was still sleeping. Harish jumped out of the bed. Amrutha informed him that she had already killed their mother and she would kill Harish by hitting him with an iron rod. He was able to defend himself. She immediately left the house along with Sridhar, who was there to pick her up,” the KR Puram police said. Police say that they gathered the CCTV footage outside the house, which showed Amrutha and Harish speeding off in a two-wheeler. The police tracked them down to Kempegowda International Airport. Up on questioning the officials at the KIAL, the police learned that the two suspects had boarded a flight to Port Blair. “She had taken a loan of Rs 15 lakh from a private money lender. She was unable to repay the money. She was scared that her family would find out and had initially planned to take them to Hyderabad on Sunday as the money lender had threatened to show up at her doorstep on Sunday. She says she is struggling with mental health issues. We are trying to understand what drove her to kill them and she says that the debt she had incurred had made her worrisome. She says she had decided to kill her family members as she could not bear to face them,” the KR Puram police added.
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Bidar case: Bengaluru lawyers protest at DGP office, want sedition charges dropped

Protest
A delegation of lawyers and child rights activists met DG and IGP Praveen Sood and submitted a letter detailing their queries and demands.
Lawyers, child rights activists and residents of Bengaluru showed up outside the Director-General and Inspector General of Police Praveen Sood’s office on Thursday and held a silent protest condemning the police interrogation of minors in the Bidar school play case. The protesters held up several posters questioning the legality of the way the students, aged between 9 and 12, were interrogated at the Shaheen Primary and High School in Bidar. The students were questioned after a play against the Citizenship Amendment Act and NRC was staged at the school on January 21. Based on a complaint filed by an ABVP activist, the police had registered a sedition case against the school administration and the mother of an 11-year-old student who took part in the play. The mother and a school teacher have been arrested. Condemning this, Mujahid Ahsan, a parent at the protest, said that the interrogation amounts to police excess.  “I am the father of a nine-year-old girl. The children in that school in Bidar have been put through hell with the police repeatedly questioning them. We want the police to answer questions about why they did this and why they did not exercise restraint as they did in the school belonging to Kalladka Prabhakar Bhat,” he said. A delegation of lawyers and child rights activists met DG and IGP Praveen Sood and submitted a letter detailing their queries and demands.  A delegation of lawyers and activists met @Copsview and demanded that the sedition case be withdrawn against the school and mother of a child in Bidar. They questioned violation of JJ Act by police and also the indiscriminate usage of sedition to clamp down on free speech. pic.twitter.com/5b0VtxvmdY — Theja Ram (@thejaram92) February 6, 2020 “The interrogation of children some as young as nine years old about the play that they enacted goes against one of the closely held tenets of a democratic order, which is that children should be able to access the right to education without fear and favour. By the police intruding into the school and repeatedly questioning children they are violating the child’s right to dignity, non-discrimination and equality,” the letter submitted to Praveen Sood states.   The members of the delegation said that invocation of sedition charges in the context of a school play marks a new low in our democracy. They demanded that the sedition case be withdrawn against the school and the mother. DG and IGP Praveen Sood told the lawyers and activists that though he would not defend the actions of Bidar police, the interrogation of children took place before he took charge as the DG and IGP. “He assured us that the children would no longer be interrogated and that what had occurred in the school was not an interrogation. He stated that it was only a police interaction and the police were only speaking and asking questions,” Maitree, a lawyer with Alternative Law Forum said. Praveen Sood assured the delegation that the police would be sympathetic to the accused in the case and would not oppose the bail application in court.  “He also agreed to our demand that the police need certain guidelines which have to be followed in terms of when a sedition can and cannot be registered. He also agreed that these guidelines must be in compliance of the Kedar Nath judgment of 1962,” Vinay Sreenivasa, a lawyer who was a part of the delegation, said. The delegation also demanded that a probe must be conducted regarding the behaviour of the police officer who was involved in the case. "Praveen Sood did not give us any assurances in this regard but he said that legal opinion would be sought before proceeding further," Vinay said.     
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Kodava cuisine on Gordon Ramsay's ‘Uncharted’: Chef films in Kodagu

Television
Gordon Ramsay filmed sequences of cooking dishes from the Kodava cuisine from 29 January to 31 January at the Tamara Coorg, a luxury resort in Kodagu.
Michelin star chef, restaureteur and television host Gordon Gordon Ramsay is no stranger to travelling to remote corners of the world to explore food. He has now landed in Kodagu, the hilly district in Karnataka to film an episode of the second season of his National Geographic show Uncharted. Gordon Ramsay filmed sequences of cooking dishes from the Kodava cuisine from 29 January to 31 January at the Tamara Coorg, a luxury resort in Kodagu. Suresh Babu, general manager of Tamara Coorg said, “We were thrilled to have had the opportunity to host Chef Ramsay at our property."  Prior to his visit to Kodagu, Gordon Ramsay filmed sequences for the show in the coastal town of Kannur in Kerala. He reportedly spent a day filming sequences in beach locations in Kannur at the Malabar Beach Resort. This is the first time the celebrity chef is filming for the series in India. The episode will explore the nuances of the cuisine prevalent in the Malabar region of India.  In the first season of the National Geographic show Uncharted aired in 2019, Gordon Ramsay travelled to remote locations around the world including the Sacred Valley of the Incas in Peru, South Island of New Zealand, Hana Coast of Maui, along the Mekong River in Laos, mountain areas in Morocco and Alaska. The first season of the show consisted of six episodes.  The British chef, whose restaurants have been awarded 16 Michelin stars in total, travels to these remote locations to engross himself in the local cuisine and cook a special dish from the cuisine to be served to local chefs and residents.  During his visit to Kodagu, Gordon Ramsay interacted with chefs at Tamara Coorg and also planted a sapling in the resort after accompanying the staff members on a tour of the place.
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What If Everything You Think You Know About Politics Is Wrong?

Rachel Bitecofer’s radical new theory predicted the midterms spot-on. So who’s going to win 2020?

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How Karnataka govt's slashed healthcare budgets are affecting state's sex workers

Health
The sex worker community suffered a huge setback when the state government slashed funding in 2015 for the programme supporting their healthcare.
Image for representation
Ramya* was forced down on the bed with a knife held to her throat. She was forced to comply with having sex with her client without a condom. Fear of death drove her to compromise her health to ensure that she lived to see another day. Ramya, a 26-year-old sex worker in Bengaluru, has faced the horrors of abuse and the apathy of her clients towards her physical, mental and sexual health on multiple occasions. Like many sex workers in India, Ramya too contracted HIV when she was trafficked and pushed into sex work at the age of 15. Clients demanding to have unprotected sex with sex workers and resorting to violence, and in many cases leading to murder, is widespread. Sex workers depend on the state government for help with their healthcare. So, the community suffered a huge setback when the state government slashed funding in 2015 for the programme supporting their healthcare. Fund crunch The Karnataka State AIDS Prevention Society (KSAPS) recorded that there are 86,417 female sex workers and 27,963 men-who-have-sex-with-men in Karnataka. KSAPS operates on funds from the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO), UNICEF, and the Karnataka government. With Karnataka standing fifth in the country in terms of prevalence of HIV, KSAPS officials say that the fund crunch has hampered the society’s initiatives to tackle the health issues of sex workers. With grants from NACO being reduced and the state government not allocating funds for the programme, the attention towards the healthcare of this marginalised group has diminished over the years. “Before 2015, we had funding from international NGOs like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. That funding was also withdrawn. The only funds are coming from the Centre and that is not enough,” a KSAPS official said. Data from the Karnataka government reveals that the only funding that the sex worker community received was in the 2016-17 and 2017-18 fiscals. These funds were not allocated for the health initiative but for the Chetana scheme, which provides rehabilitation for trafficked sex workers. The state government, under the Chetana scheme, provides loans of Rs 25,000 and an additional grant of Rs 25,000 for those sex workers who have been rescued from human trafficking rackets. “As per the recommendations of the Dr Jayamala Committee that was constituted to study the conditions of sex workers in Karnataka, the amount being given has been increased from Rs 20,000 to Rs 50,000 for rehabilitation and economic benefit of sex workers,” the Karnataka budget documents state. However, sex workers claim that as they are already in a cycle of debt, it is not possible for all of them to avail the scheme. “Our income is not standard. Whatever income we get, it goes into paying bills, looking after our children, which a lot of sex workers have, and also paying off debts we have incurred for the various health problems we have to deal with on a daily basis. Most of us are deep in debt and taking on a Rs 25,000 loan is not an option. When sex workers say we are stuck in it forever, we don’t mean it lightly,” said Janani*, a 42-year-old sex worker in Bengaluru. “We have very little funding. The state government has stopped allocating funds for the KSAPS programme. The only funds we get is from the central government via NACO, which in turn is funded by the World Bank,” a senior official with KSAPS said. In 2015, KSAPS provided funding for 126 targeted interventions in the sex worker community to provide healthcare facilities. This mostly included antiretroviral (ART) treatment and counselling by ensuring that NGOs hired peer educators to create awareness and provide support to sex workers whenever required. In 2020, KSAPS has provided funds to 74 targeted interventions including the Sex Workers Collective and NGOs. Pushpa, who heads the Sex Workers Collective and is a member of a co-operative of sex workers in Bengaluru known as Swathi Jyothi, says that many NGOs working with KSAPS have not been paid their dues since 2012. “Although in the beginning of each year, KSAPS provides funds to kickstart the health programme for that particular year, a lot of bills remain outstanding. Our organisation alone has to get back close to Rs 9.5 crore in outstanding bills from the state government,” she says. KSAPS officials say that in 2014-15, the society received a fund of Rs 117 crore while the following financial year, the funds were cut down to Rs 77.31 crore. “Ever since, the funds have been cut down drastically. We have been receiving anywhere between Rs 77 to Rs 85 crore per annum for the initiatives,” the senior official said. KSAPS officials say that the remuneration, NGOs are able to provide to peer educators and caregivers, has gone down because of the funding and the society itself had to reduce floating tenders to more NGOs to take up the work. “In 2015, we didn’t have money to pay the annual rent of Rs 57 lakh per annum. We had to move our office to the CV Raman General Hospital. Since the funds were low, we engaged with a lesser number of NGOs. Some of them pulled out because of outstanding bills,” the official said. The fallout Dr Sylvia Karpagam, a public health expert who has worked with the sex worker community in Karnataka, notes that the slashing of funds has resulted in the narrowing of the programme’s reach, not to the population of sex workers but in terms of its effectiveness. “The fund crunch has led to many targeted interventions in districts other than Bengaluru losing a lot of funding. Earlier each district had multiple NGOs working towards the health of sex workers. Now each district has only one NGO working towards monitoring their health,” she noted. Pushpa said that the fund crunch has led KSAPS to cut down on expenses in terms of hiring peer educators. “Peer educators are hired by NGOs to ensure that the sex workers are made aware of the various health facilities available to them. And to counsel them in terms of usage of condoms and to help them in case they need caregivers. Peer educators are paid Rs 7,500 per month now. Caregivers are paid Rs 1,500, this is very less for the work they are supposed to do,” she said. Dr Sylvia says that the lack of focus on the healthcare of sex workers has a lot of adverse impact in their ability to reach out for help when required. “When ART is administered, sex workers generally suffer from bouts of vomiting or become weak; melasma is another side-effect. These women do not have anyone to look after them and the state-funded peer counsellors and caregivers via NGOs go a long way in helping them. This is adversely affecting their health now, many of them hesitate to take the treatment as there is no one to look after them,” she said. Stigma and health Janani, who contracted HIV in 2009, said that one of the primary deterrents for sex workers while seeking medical aid, especially in districts outside of Bengaluru, is the lack of confidentiality. Janani was a sex worker in Karnataka’s Vijayapura before she came to Bengaluru three years ago. “The doctors or attenders at the public health centres would mostly identify us loudly. They would say, ‘oh you’re back. You have HIV right, so wait in the corner’. Everyone in the PHC knew I have HIV. There was talk in the area I lived in and the landlord forced me to move out. I never went back for treatment. Not until I moved to Bengaluru,” Janani said. Like Janani, Ramya too said she has faced stigma at hospitals in Bengaluru. Ramya said she was very apprehensive about seeking medical help when she was new to the city (in 2015) because of the stigma. “The way people look at us even at the clinics, both private and government ones, is very bad. In some places like Bowring and Victoria Hospital the doctors are sensitive, but in PHCs it is not the same. They call us soole (translates to whore in English) and sometimes the attenders even make fun of us and say crass things when social workers are not with us. That used to make me refrain from going to get ART medicines initially. Even today, I am wary of PHCs and always pray that the next time I go into one, no one will care that I am a sex worker,” Ramya said. Mental toll Prathana, a Psychological Consultant with Alternative Story who has counselled sex workers, says that sex workers generally suffer from depression or anxiety, and in many situations PTSD, because of the work they do and the dangers they are exposed to. “The context in which sex work occurs is important to consider for their mental health. The agency and control an individual has over their circumstances also has a huge role to play in their mental health. When they are targeted and subjected to stigma, it affects their sense of safety and self-esteem as it imposes a sense of helplessness. The current legal system and its functioning then has an impact on this sense of agency, as women don’t always feel protected by the law or those working with it,” Prarthana noted. According to a study published by the Indian Journal of Psychiatry, 71% of sex workers in India suffer from depression and of these, 30% have experienced major depressive episodes. It also found that 21% of sex workers in India suffer from PTSD. The study said 98% tried to find other jobs but were unable to do so. The study found that 78% of sex workers consume drugs and this usage was attributed to self-medication, to help mask some of the negative feelings associated with sex work, including distress and anxiety. Prarthana says that the feeling of helplessness leads most sex workers to resign themselves to their situation, which stops them from seeking psychological help. “The first thing they as is – ‘how will this help me? I’m going to go back to what I am doing as I have no choice.’ This feeling of helplessness also leads to most of them developing suicidal tendencies. When their agency is taken away and they feel like they cannot even protect themselves from physical harm, they feel stuck. Hence they are prone to suicidal tendencies as they believe that ending their lives is the only option,” she said. She maintained that most sex workers who have suffered abuse, both physical and sexual, require therapy and that convincing them to part take in motivational therapy is the best way to deal with their mental health issues. *Name changed
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Karnataka cabinet expansion: 10 turncoat MLAs take oath as ministers

Politics
While 10 ministers were inducted into the cabinet, former Congress rebel Mahesh Kumathalli has been left out.
The 10 turncoats MLAs of Congress and JD(S), who defected to the BJP last year, took oath as ministers at the Raj Bhavan on Thursday. Karnataka Governor Vaju Bhai Vala administered the oaths to the 10 MLAs, who have been made ministers of BS Yediyurappa’s cabinet. The 10 new ministers include Ramesh Jarkiholi (Gokak), Byrathi Basavaraj (KR Puram), BC Patil (Hirekerur), ST Somashekhar (Yeshwantpur), Anand B Singh (Vijayanagar), Shivram Hebbar (Yellapur), K Sudhakar (Chikkaballapur), Narayana Gowda (Krishnarajapet) Shrimant Patil (Kagwad) and K Gopalaiah (Mahalakshmi Layout).  After a huge political drama that unfolded over the last three weeks, the ministers were finally sworn in.  Next hurdle, portfolio allocation According to some BJP insiders, the next hurdle is the portfolio allocation. While 10 ministers were inducted in the cabinet, former Congress rebel Mahesh Kumatahalli has been left out. Sources said that Ramesh Jarkiholi, who kick-started the rebellion in the Congress-JD(S) coalition, has demanded the Water Resources portfolio. Jarkiholi's bitter rivalry with Congress heavyweight DK Shivakumar has led him to demand the portfolio, BJP insiders said.  During the Congress-JD(S) coalition's regime, Shivakumar was the Water Resources Minister, and now, Jarkiholi is vying for the same post. Jarkiholi started the rebellion in the Congress due to his rivalry with DK Shivakumar. Jarkiholi, who is a strongman, had spoken openly against Shivakumar and accused him of trying to control the party in Belagavi, which has been Jarkiholi's fiefdom.  BJP insiders also said that Jarkiholi, Byrathi Basavaraj, ST Somashekar, Narayana Gowda, K Sudhakar and BC Patil would be handed out some of the important portfolios as a “reward for their defections”.  While Byrathi Basavaraj, ST Somashekar and MTB Nagaraj are vying for the Bengaluru Development Ministry, this portfolio would be allocated only after the state Legislative Council elections slated to take place in July. Nagaraj is expected to be made an MLC then. Sudhakar is believed to have demanded the Medical Education portfolio, while Narayana Gowda is vying for the Horticulture or Agriculture ministry, sources said. In July 2019, 17 Congress and JD(S) MLAs had resigned from their posts, thereby bringing down the coalition government. It has taken over six months for the former rebels to finally achieve their goal: bagging cabinet berths.  After the bye-polls were held on December 5, 2019, 11 of the turncoats became MLAs. However, Mahesh Kumatahalli, the MLA from Athani, was kept out of the cabinet. BJP sources said that Kumatahalli was not made a minister as he is from the same constituency as Deputy CM Laxman Savadi, the man who was caught watching porn in the Assembly. Another reason, sources cited, was that his induction would make the cabinet heavy with leaders from Belagavi district alone. BJP sources had told TNM that Mahesh Kumatahalli would be offered a plum post as the director of a state-run corporation.  Meanwhile, rebellion is brewing within the BJP as party loyalists, who were also aspiring for ministerial berths, do not want the turncoats to get plum posts. "A decision will be made soon but some of the rebels will get important ministries as they were promised," a source close to Yediyurappa told TNM.     
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