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Sunday, February 9, 2020

Coronavirus: 138 persons under observation in Karnataka

Coronavirus
Though no coronavirus-positive case has been reported from Karnataka, four persons are under observation in a state hospital while others are under home-isolation.
The Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Services Department has kept 138 persons across the state under observation in the wake of novel coronavirus (nCov) scare, a health official said on Saturday. "We are observing 138 people across the state, including in Bengaluru," the department's Communicable Diseases Wing Joint Director Prakash Kumar told IANS. Though no coronavirus-positive case has been reported from Karnataka so far, four persons have been admitted in a state hospital under medical observation, Kumar confirmed. Of the 104 samples sent for testing from the state, 85 have, so far, been declared negative. As many as 130 persons in the state were kept under home-isolation observation. Four Karnataka districts bordering Kerala — Kodagu, Mangluru, Chamarajanagar and Mysuru — continue to be under surveillance after three positive coronavirus cases were reported in Kerala. On Saturday, it was reported that three persons from Udupi were isolated at the Ajjarkad Government Hospital. Two of them had travelled to China while the other had returned to Udupi from Japan.  From January 20 till Saturday, 14,153 passengers underwent thermal screening at the Kempegowda International Airport, including three who had a history of visiting China’s Wuhan, the epicenter of the nCoV outbreak.  The '104 Arogya Sahayavani' call centre, which people can call for guidance on coronavirus, has clocked 1,792 calls so far. "In case people with recent travel history to China and other affected countries develop any symptoms, they are requested to call 104 or health authorities and provide all necessary details in order to take necessary measures and are requested to be quarantined at home," reiterated the department. Three confirmed cases of coronavirus were earlier reported in Kerala and over 722 deaths were confirmed around the world, mostly in mainland China. 
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Speeding car kills traffic cop conducting vehicle check on Bengaluru Airport road

Accident
Dhananjay K's colleague, constable Uma Maheshwar is severely injured after a car rammed into the duo on the International Airport Road.
In a tragic accident, a speeding car knocked down a traffic police constable and left another constable severely injured on the Bengaluru International Airport Road in Bengaluru. The deceased has been identified as Dhananjay K, who worked at the Chikkajala Traffic Police Station. He, along with his colleague Uma Maheshwar, were part of the interceptor vehicle team, fining speeding vehicles on the airport road near the toll gate.' At 5.30 pm on Saturday, the duo were standing on the side of the road when a Hyundai Grand i10, driven by Kushal Raj, lost control and rammed into the traffic police officials after brushing a car parked on the road, the Deccan Herald reported. Another tragic loss of life on line of duty,Traffic Head constable Dhananjaya died and Constable Uma Maheshwara severely injured after a speeding car hits them on International Airport Flyover while checking over speeding vehicles, a family devastated, I have no words to console. — Bhaskar Rao IPS (@deepolice12) February 8, 2020 Due to the impact of the accident, the constables were thrown towards a metal railing on the side of the road, a traffic police official said. Dhananjay was declared dead when he was taken to a nearby government hospital while Uma's condition is serious, the Times of India reported. Kushal Raj was allegedly not under the influence of alcohol and was driving at a high speed since he was late for his flight. He is a textile merchant from Basavanagudi in the city.  The two traffic constables were stopping vehicles and fining them for speeding. Witnesses stated that the duo had no time to move away from the path of the errant vehicle. Chikkajala traffic police officials detained Kushal after the accident and are questioning him. He has been booked for negligent driving causing death.    
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Bengaluru techie feared dead after coracle ride turns fatal

Death
The incident took place around 2.30 am on Friday when the techie, Sachin Machaiah, and his friend decided to take a ride in a coracle.
Kalkere Lake: Photo via Facebook : Save Kalkere Lake
An unauthorised coracle ride in a lake in Bengaluru turned fatal for a software engineer, who is believed to have drowned in the lake, police officials said. The engineer's body is yet to be found.  The incident took place on Friday when Sachin Machaiah (30), a resident of Electronics City, allegedly entered Kalkere Lake near Ramamurthy Nagar in eastern Bengaluru along with a former colleague and friend, Ullas Shamraj, who lives nearby. The duo decided to go on a coracle ride after attending a party near Kodigehalli Gate.  Police officials said that they entered the lake around 2:30 am, dipped oars in the water and started pedaling. But when they were in the middle of the lake, the oars allegedly slipped from their hands and attempts to row the coracle with their hands failed. The coracle eventually capsized, the Deccan Herald reported. According to reports, Sachin did not know how to swim. Ullas, meanwhile, reportedly swam to the tank bund and called emergency helplines. Rescue workers tried to search for Sachin but to no avail. A search for Sachin's body started on Saturday morning but he is yet to be found.  Sachin worked in a company out of Manyata Tech Park. He was a native of Virajpet in Kodagu district.  Rajesh Dindi, a security guard who works at the lake, said that the duo picked up the coracle that is used to clean the lake. Rajesh went on his rounds to the opposite end of the lake at midnight and only realised about the duo's coracle ride at 3 am when Ullas came to the tank bund crying for help, The New Indian Express reported.  Ullas and Sachin were reportedly close friends and would hang out often. Ullas lived near the lake and knew the various entrances that would lead to the lake. He also knew about the coracle.   Since the incident, Ullas is reportedly in shock and is yet to record his statement with the police. 
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Saturday, February 8, 2020

Why employers are flirting with the public option

Workplace insurance, U.S. health care's "third rail" since World War II, may be closer to combustion than Washington thinks.

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Karnataka BJP asks people to keep documents ready for NPR, contradicts Centre position

NPR
The Karnataka BJP, whose tweet was accompanied by a video of Muslim women holding voter ID cards, was called out for targeting the community and other anti-CAA protesters.
BJP Karnataka/Twitter
It was a tweet aimed at those protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA, the National Population Register (NPR) and the National Register of Citizens (NRC) particularly the Muslim community. On Saturday, the Twitter handle of the Karnataka unit of the BJP tweeted, "Kaagaz Nahi Dikayenge Hum!!! Keep the documents safe, you will need to show them again during NPR exercise.”  The tweet was accompanied by a video of a line of Muslim women holding out their voter ID cards. Widespread protests against CAA, NPR and NRC in the country have all called for a civil disobedience movement. Protesters across the country shouted the slogan “Hum kaagaz nahi dikayenge” (we will not show documents) marking the call for civil disobedience when officials coming knocking on doors during the NPR exercise that is slated for April to September. Taking a dig at the slogan, the Karnataka BJP said that people would have to show ID proof during NPR exercise. "Kaagaz Nahi Dikayenge Hum" ! ! ! Keep the documents safe, you will need to show them again during #NPR exercise.#DelhiPolls2020 pic.twitter.com/bEojjeKlwI — BJP Karnataka (@BJP4Karnataka) February 8, 2020 The Karnataka BJP’s tweet contradicts the Narendra Modi-led Union government’s stated position on the issue. In a series of tweets on January 1, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs had stated, “no individual will be required to submit any document to any authority or enumerator visiting his/her household for NPR survey. Information provided by the individual would be accepted and recorded accordingly.” The clarification came in the wake of a story by The Hindu that the trial NPR form seeking the “place of birth of father and mother” had received the Centre’s nod for the nationwide rollout. Following story has appeared in @the_hindu. The line taken by the story is incorrect, without taking into account the factual position for conducting NPR. Following is an explanatory thread on the same:https://t.co/jYh5VTReid 1/4 — Spokesperson, Ministry of Home Affairs (@PIBHomeAffairs) January 1, 2020 It also comes over a month after Union Home Minister Amit Shah stated that NPR and the proposed nationwide NRC have no link. On December 24, amid large-scale protests in the country, Amit Shah had said that the NRC and NPR are not linked and that people of the country did not have to show identity documents for the NPR exercise. “The NRC and NPR are not at all linked. They are two different things. Data collected under NPR cannot be used for NRC… Every person living in the country has the option of sending details of the documents on the app during NPR exercise but there is no need to furnish supporting documents,” Amit Shah had said in an interview. Soon after the Karnataka BJP tweet on Saturday, several people called out the party and its position on the issue. “CM BS Yediyurappa, id the Karnataka BJP’s official handle admitting that Indian Muslims will be targeted through the NPR? PM Narendra Modi says that Indian Muslims are not the target and anyone claiming that is lying. Is Karnataka BJP spreading lies and fear?” questioned Tara Krishnaswamy, co-founder of Political Shakti, a collective pushing for representation of women in politics. CM @BSYBJP Is the @BJP4Karnataka official handle admitting that Indian Muslims will be targeted through the NPR? PM @narendramodi says that Indian Muslims are not the target and anyone claiming that is lying. Is @BJP4Karnataka spreading lies and fear? https://t.co/VdDN2ZdArI — Tara (@tarauk) February 8, 2020 “Also, the most contradictory to their own party president's repeated promise that NPR won't ask for documents. Well we now know what they are thinking,” tweeted Rohini Mohan, a journalist, who has covered the issue of NRC widely. The BJP has made several controversial statements regarding NRC over the last few weeks. On January 31, the Karnataka BJP tweeted a picture of Sharjeel Imam, a JNU student who was arrested on charges of sedition, alongside a picture of the youth who shot a protester outside Jamia Milia Islamia. The BJP had labelled it “action” and “reaction”. The tweet was later deleted. The BJP, however, put up another tweet with the same images, but revised the caption to read ‘action by govt’ and ‘reaction by anti-nationals’.    
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What of NRC's effect on Adivadis, other marginalized? B’luru panel discusses citizenship

CAA
The discussion that included panelists like historian Ramachandra Guha discussed CAA, the politics of inclusion and exclusion, and navigating the intersections of our various identities.
On Friday evening in Bengaluru, when many would be making their way to their favourite watering holes in the city, around 150 people made their way to the Indian Institute of Agricultural Technologists on Queens Road. They quickly filled up the hall designated for a panel discussion on a very topical issue – Citizenship, Identity, and Migration -- organised by the Network of Women in Media, India (NWMI) during their 15th national conference.  The panelists included historian Ramchandra Guha; feminist activist and filmmaker formerly with women’s rights organisation Vimochana, Madhu Bhushan; a scholarship student of communications at Mount Carmel, Teresa Braggs; and St Joseph’s professor who also writes on caste, Vijeta Kumar, among others. The panel also had Malini Bhattacherjee, a professor at Azim Premji University, who was the sole person on the dais supporting CAA. The following conversation – moderated by journalist Rohini Mohan of NWMI – saw a vibrant discussion on the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the politics of inclusion and exclusion, and navigating the intersections of our various identities. The CAA Unsurprisingly, the CAA -- which seeks to provide citizenship to Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jains and Parsis who fled Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan to India due to religious persecution — was at the heart of the discussion. Calling it discriminatory, Ramchandra Guha alleged the Act was premised on the fact that only Islamic countries persecute and everyone except Muslims are persecuted. Ravi Kumar, a professor at National Law School University of India, Bengaluru and a lawyer, was also one of the panelists. He argued that the BJP-led Centre had chosen only these three neighbouring states as they are the most ‘polarising’. Both he and Guha questioned why Sri Lanka was left out of the ambit of the Act, even though Lankan Tamils made up the biggest refugee group in India. He also spoke about the National Population Register (NPR) and the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and called them “illegitimate”. “Section 18 of the Citizenship Act allows the government to make rules to carry out the purposes of the Act. The government has proposed to club the Census exercise with the NPR this year. However, the Census Act does not allow for the clubbing of any other activity with it. Further, Census is an enumeration, and not identification – unlike NPR. And given that the Constitution says that religion must not be a basis for conferring or taking away any rights (including citizenship), the CAA is not permissible under the Constitution. By extension, the NPR and NRC do not qualify as legitimate rules to carry out the purposes of the Citizenship Act. They are illegitimate,” Ravi said. The impact on marginalized communities A strong criticism against NRC has been that it will impact the marginalized the most. Madhu, who works with a nomadic community in Karnataka called the ‘Hakkibikkis’, explained that the community claimed citizenship by naming themselves after the space they were born in – like ‘Depot’ (for he was born near a rice depot). “Think of the impact an NRC would have on communities like these. What happens to people who don’t have access to documents or no concept of documents? Over 50% of denotified tribes have no documents, and even more have no addresses and own no land. Where do they go?” Madhu questioned. Ravi further questioned what happens to tribes that worship nature and do not recognise the religions on the basis of which CAA will grant Indian citizenship. Teresa also pointed out that transgender persons are also likely to be affected by the NRC due to lack of or hurdles in getting proper documentation. Panelists said that the timing of the Act is no coincidence. Ramchandra Guha alleged that the BJP is driven by a sense of vindication and hatred towards Muslims. “Look at the trajectory. There was the abrogation of Article 370, which downgraded India’s only Muslim majority state of Jammu and Kashmir to a union territory. Then there was the Ayodhya verdict. And then, the CAA.” The personal and political Looking at citizenship from a personal and philosophical angle, Madhu said that citizenship was also about a sense of belonging, which is the idea at the centre of ‘swaraj’ (self-rule). Quoting Hannah Arendt, a German-American political theorist, Madhu said, “In that context, a stateless person is not just expelled from a state, but expelled from humanity.” Vijeta Kumar drew from her own experience as a Dalit. “My father, who is quite right wing as well, loves the country so much that every day, he strives to remove the marks of his Dalit identity from his body. Even then, the country rejects him. The question of citizenship is ironic for us in this context.” Teresa Braggs, meanwhile, addressed the rhetoric against students being involved in the protests – that they should be studying instead. She said that for many youngsters like her, the sense of identity and Indian-ness has been in the process of forming. “We are protesting because we are emotionally and intellectually invested in the future of this country.” Teresa added that this was also to challenge the ideas and narratives that the government has encouraged – that of the tukde tukde gang, urban naxals, and anti-nationals – to alienate and identify those who dissent. “Who we are is students who do their homework in the candlelight at a protest… or the queer Muslim student who came on stage asking everyone to be quiet because her mother on the phone thought she was back in her accommodation,” Teresa said. The achievement of this movement Many of the panelists said that the biggest achievement of the anti-CAA, NRC movement was that it had united Indians, and brought them out to the streets on a scale that has been the biggest since the Indian freedom struggle. 22-year-old Teresa, who has been at the forefront of many Bengaluru protests, said that while they were still trying to figure out their identities, “The Hindutva-vaadis have made sure that we know what we don’t identify with.”
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Ancient idol of goddess found on roadside in Udupi: Historians say it's a rare find

History
Although the ASI is yet to date the figurine, historians say that it may be from the 6th century.
The next time you run over a strange object on the side of the road, take a second look as it could be historically significant. One such idol has been spotted in Karnataka’s Udupi. On the side of the road in Belakur in Udupi district, an old figurine made of granite was stuck on the pavement of a road. People ran their vehicles over it every day but a few days ago, the pictures of the idolbegan circulating on WhatsApp. It turned out that the is a historically significant one. It is of the fertility goddess Lajja Gauri, who is worshipped even to this day, in several parts of Karnataka. Shivakant Bajpai from the Archeological Survey of India, saw the images being circulated, and found out where exactly it was situated. He told the local media that he is working towards excavating the rare idol, and has requested the local authorities including the SP and Deputy Commissioner of Udupi to take charge of the idol. The ASI has not yet dated the idol. However, initial estimates suggest that the idol is from the 6th century. Further studies will give more information on the idol. “Lajja Gauri is usually not a principal deity in a temple. They usually have it as a sculpture in a temple. Lajja Gauri is known to be worshipped in the tantric tradition, however, for fertility. It has a distinct ethnographic feature of a nude woman sitting in a squat position with the knees apart,” says Remya VP, an expert in temple architecture in Karnataka, who works in the Karnataka Central University, Gulbarga. Remya adds that the goddess is usually worshipped in North Karnataka, and that “it’s a little surprising that they found it in South Karnataka.” Remya says that it doesn't look like the statue belongs in Belakur. "My observation from the photographs is that the artefact does not seem to belong to the spot it was found in. Rather, it looks like it happened to be on the spot out of context. The sculpture must have been part of a structure, like a temple. But it might have had ended up there accidentally, possibly during transportation or something,” she says. She adds that unless we know the original location of the idol, it is hard to conclude whether the cult of the goddess was present in coastal Karnataka. "The priority should be on locating the original context of the sculpture, but it's certainly very rare find," she adds. As it was found in Belakur, in Udupi, Rangaraj NS, an Ancient Historian who worked in Mysore University, says that the place is a historically significant. “Belakur is important because it was the seat of the Alapur kingdom. This kingdom was only in South Canara, and archeologists have excavated it in the past. There, they have found many sati stones in a single place, so in my opinion it is not that surprising to find the Lajja Gauri statue there, as these practices are all linked.”
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