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Saturday, February 29, 2020

Bengaluru gets its first clinic run by and for LGBTQIA+ community members

LGBTQIA+
Community members can avail weekly health checkups, HIV screenings and also get help for mental health issues.
For the first time in Bengaluru, members of the LGBTQIA+ community have opened up a clinic that will be run by and for community members exclusively. Located in Bhoopasandra near Hebbal, the Samarth community based clinic was inaugurated on Saturday.  The clinic is run out of a rented home in Bhoopasandra and will conduct screenings for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. The clinic will also have screenings for non-communicable diseases and will have in-house counsellors, a psychiatrist and a psychologist to provide mental health services, all of which are free of cost.  The clinic is run by members of the LGBTQIA+ community in collaboration with queer rights NGO Sangama. The clinic in Bengaluru is part of an 18-month pilot project funded by the Elton John AIDS Foundation in London along with India HIV AIDS Alliance. Currently, the clinic has one manager, three field mobilisers and a project manager, who are all members of the LGBTQIA+ community. Sangama has roped in Dr Arjun from MS Ramaiah hospital to conduct weekly health checkups for community members at the clinic. Mangala, who is a counsellor with Sangama, has been roped in to act as a counsellor for the community at the clinic.  “Many people from the LGBTQ community face stigma at hospitals, especially government hospitals. They don’t feel comfortable there. This is the first time a clinic has been started by community members for the community. Samarth is a space for more than just health checkups. We will also be conducting regular health camps for the community members across the city in each ward,” says Nisha Gulur, Project Manager for the Samarth clinic.  The health camps will be organised by the three field mobilisers. The clinic will also act as a community centre where members of the LGBTQIA+ community can partake in group meetings for people living with HIV and obtain access to referrals for a safer transition process. “We have counsellors and psychiatrists who will help with referrals for a safe transition process. This is a safe space for those who feel like they need one, especially if they are finding it difficult to communicate with their family members or if their family members are not supportive. Those from the community can come here, relax, play board games. Students who identify among the sexual minorities can come here as well,” says Rajesh, a queer rights activist with Sangama.  Struggle to find an office space For four months, members of Sangama scouted the city for an office space where they could start operations of the clinic. However, they were met with stiff resistance from property owners when they were informed that the space was for a community clinic run by the LGBTQIA+ community.  “We looked for office space in Shivajinagar, Infantry Road, Sanjaynagar and many parts of central Bengaluru but we were just not able to find it. When we told the property owners that the space is for the clinic, they just refused. They told us that hijras are into sex work and begging and that we would create nuisance. This is the mindset we came across in most places,” Nisha says.  Finally, the community members found a two bedroom house in Bhoopasandra, where the clinic has been set up. “If the pilot project becomes a success, Sangama is planning to launch Namma Clinics in Bidar, Hassan and Kolar next,” NIsha adds. 
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Karnataka’s English-medium schools in demand, but training teachers is a challenge

Education
The Karnataka government introduced English as a medium of instruction in 1000 government schools on a pilot basis last May.
Image for representation: Picxy/Raja Stills
The start of the academic year in May 2019 had been filled with optimism, recalls Mallikarjuna. “We announced that English-medium classes would be introduced for students of class 1 and there was a huge rush for applications,” says Mallikarjuna, the Principal of Government Board School at Brahmavar in Karnataka’s Udupi district.  “Since most parents wanted to enroll their children in the English-medium section, we added a second section to increase our intake to 60 students,” explains Mallikarjuna in the staff room of the school.  Pointing at a group of children playing volleyball on the grounds, Mallikarjuna says, “Now, we are facing a dilemma because we don’t have enough classrooms to have two more sections in the next academic year,” says Mallikarjuna.  Like the Government Board School in Brahmavar, a total of 1000 government schools were identified in Karnataka to introduce English as a medium of instruction in class 1 on a pilot basis. The move to introduce English as a medium of instruction in government schools was taken in 2019 by the previous HD Kumaraswamy-led coalition government which was in power in Karnataka. The project was continued without interruption despite the BJP taking power in the state in July last year.   Over the past year, the pilot project was received with enthusiasm by parents across the state. Almost 75% of the schools in which it was introduced had more than 20 students enrolled in the English-medium section, figures provided by the Department of Public Instruction revealed. The enrollment in the English-medium section outpaced the enrollment in the respective schools’ Kannada medium section. The overwhelming response for the initiative has prompted education officials in the state to review the status of the pilot project and discuss introducing English-medium schooling in an additional 1000 schools in the state in the 2020-21 academic year. Primary section of the Government Board School in Brahmavar, Udupi However, the initiative isn’t without challenges.Training teachers for English-medium instruction has proven to be an uphill task, as the need grows.Additionally, pro-Kannada activists have also expressed opposition, fearing that with dwindling enrollment in Kannada medium sections in schools, children’s knowledge of the language will fade.  HD Kumaraswamy revives plan to introduce English medium schools The idea of English medium schooling in government schools is not new in Karnataka. In 2012, the then Primary and Secondary Education Minister Vishweshwara Hegde Kageri of the BJP allowed government and aided schools in the state to change the medium of instruction to English from class 6.  But between 2013 and 2018, the idea was shelved due to then Chief Minister Siddaramaiah’s staunch opposition to the idea of English-medium schooling in government schools. However, in an Assembly debate in December 2018, HD Kumaraswamy, who was heading a coalition government in the state, painted a grim picture of the state of public education in Karnataka. He said that in 3,919 government schools, the enrolment rate was less than 10% and that almost 4,000 students had dropped out of Kannada-medium schools between 2010-11 and 2017-18. In the same period, he noted that English medium schools saw enrolment shoot up by more than 3,000 students.  The Karnataka government’s decision followed similar actions taken by the Delhi, Kerala,  Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu governments. The Department of Primary and Secondary Education in Karnataka studied the way English-medium schooling was introduced in Kerala before training teachers in the state. Among the 1000 schools in which English was introduced as a medium of instruction, a majority (624) had a student strength of between 21 and 30 students in class 1. One hundred and seventeen schools enrolled more than the stipulated 30 students including a school in Bengaluru which had more than 120 students in the English-medium section. Schools like the one in Udupi’s Brahmavar pooled in resources to add an additional classroom to accommodate 60 students in the English-medium section, which is more than the stipulated 30 students laid down by the state government. “We managed to collect books and other material from nearby schools where they were not able to fill up the stipulated 30 students,” says Mallikarjuna explaining how his school managed to get around logistical issues. The stipulated number of 30 students was decided to ensure that the student-teacher ratio remained at 30:1 as per the Right to Education Act (RTE). In case, additional students were enrolled, schools were asked to add guest teachers who would teach the students.  Stage in Government Board School, Brahmavar which was turned into a classroom Mallikarjuna says that parents enrolling children hold a strong belief that English-medium schooling can improve job prospects. In particular, the pilot project has allowed families from economically weak sections to provide English-medium schooling to their children at no cost. “We cannot afford to send our child to a private school for English-medium education so we decided to send her here,” Prabhakar Kachur, a parent told TNM. Prabhakar works at a local temple and his daughter Deepali is currently studying in class 1 at the Government Board School in Brahmavar. English training for teachers  Teachers at the school were trained to teach in English during the summer break in 2019 at the Regional Institute of English. “It was a 12-day training programme in which we were introduced to the English textbooks. We were also trained to deal with students who join class 1 without attending kindergarten by teaching with a mix of English and Kannada,” a teacher who took up the training last year says. Students in class 1 study English, Maths and Environmental Science alongside Kannada.   No teacher was recruited specifically for English-medium classes. Instead, 1600 teachers were trained in English in April and May 2019 and over 95% of them were deployed in the same school they were teaching in, according to MT Reju, Commissioner of the Department of Public Instruction and State Project Director for Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan.  However, education officials in the state admit that they are facing an uphill task training teachers in English. “It (English) remains a foreign language for many teachers and parents. The students don’t have a supportive environment to learn in English in their homes,” says MT Reju. He goes on to add that the department is planning to introduce additional learning material to help students grasp concepts in English. “They (students) need to be supported with learning material, especially since some students are from a first generation learner’s family and from backward socio-economic standard. We are trying to introduce reading cards, activity books with pictures and create a playful experience of learning in English,” says MT Reju.   However, child rights experts say that despite the initiative taken by the government, most teachers are unfamiliar with English and are unable to teach in the language. “The same teachers who were teaching earlier in Kannada were trained to teach in English but the training was too short. Either new teachers should be recruited or existing teachers should be trained for 6-8 months before they are asked to teach in a new language. A single teacher is unable to teach all subjects for students in class 1. More teachers need to be trained in teaching in English,” says Niranjan Aradhya, a professor at the National Law School of India University and the Programme Head for the Universalisation of Equitable Quality Education Programme at the institute.   The Commissioner of the Department of Public Instruction admitted that teachers in some schools did not meet the expectations of officials and will need to be retrained before the upcoming academic year. Another major criticism of the project is the view that it is adversely affecting enrolment in Kannada-medium schools in the state. Pro-Kannada activists have stood opposed to the move of introducing English as a medium of education for this reason.  ‘English at the expense of Kannada’  “We oppose the move to introduce English-medium schooling in government schools and this was even highlighted during the Kannada Sahitya Sammelana (a state literature conference) by writers like Champa (Chandrashekhar Patil). The trend may show that English-medium education is popular but this cannot be at the expense of Kannada,” Arun Javagal, a member of Banavasi Balaga, a pro-Kannada organisation says. In the Kannada Sahitya Sammelana held in 2018, Champa, Dalit poet Siddalingaiah, Kannada Sahitya Parishat President Manu Baligar, scholar M Chidananda Murthy and freedom fighter HS Doreswamy had opposed the move to introduce English-medium schooling.  “Students who study in English-medium schools in rural areas do not have an environment at home in which they can develop their language skills. They will be speaking in a regional language at home and speaking in English in school which does not complement their learning in any way,” adds Arun Javagal, However, many pro-Kannada activists have allegedly refrained from criticising the decision to introduce English-medium education in government schools. “Some popular pro-Kannada activists have enrolled their children in English medium schools so they don’t have the moral right to question this,” alleges a pro-Kannada activist who did not wish to be named. Parents of students, however, view English-medium education as an advantage. “This way, our child will be able to develop both her English and Kannada skills by studying in English and conversing in Kannada at home," says Prabhakar, a parent.  This is in spite the fact that research in India, and across the world including by UNESCO, has shown that children who are educated in their mother tongue learn better than the children who start schooling in a new language. “With the approach adopted in Karnataka, the students will neither learn in Kannada nor in English. Research from around the world shows that teaching in the mother tongue improves student learning. This is seen in countries like Germany, Finland and China but it is only in previously colonised countries where English continues to be a medium of learning,” Niranjan Aradhya adds. But despite the reservations, the state government, which is now ruled by the BJP, is currently discussing the introduction of English-medium education in an additional 1000 schools starting from the 2020-21 academic year. It is also looking to incorporate English curriculum in Kannada-medium schools in the state through the ‘Nali Kali’ system. “The idea is to ensure that in two to three years English education is imparted to all students in government schools irrespective of whether they are in Kannada or English-medium so that students from both sections are able to follow the same set of textbooks. It will be introduced as part of the ‘Nali Kali’ curriculum for students of classes 1,2 and 3,” MT Reju says. ‘‘Nali Kali’ (joyful learning) is a teaching strategy adopting creative learning practices. He goes on to add that it is too early to arrive at conclusions over English-medium education in schools in the state.  If implemented, Mallikarjuna’s tasks are only expected to increase. For the 2020-21 academic year, 49 students have shown interest in enrolling in the English-medium section in his school. “At the moment, short of a miracle, we won’t be able to accommodate all the interested applicants. We have made a request for infrastructure at our school,” says Mallikarjuna. But infrastructure is the first of many concerns facing him. “We also need to train additional teachers who can teach in English or bring in a guest teacher for the same. This will be a challenge especially for higher classes,” Mallikarjuna adds.  
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Run local trains every 10 minutes during peak hours in Bengaluru: MP Tejasvi Surya

Politics
On the issue of long-pending approval of an exclusive suburban rail project, Surya said a state delegation led by the CM will soon meet PM Modi.
To the cheer of rail activists in the city, Bengaluru South MP (Member of Parliament) Tejasvi Surya met Divisional Railway Manager Ashok Kumar Verma and urged him to operate local trains every 10 minutes during peak hours. Surya further stressed on the need to prioritize intra-city commute for Bengaluru’s office-goers during peak hours over long-distance travel from other states and urged Verma to terminate certain long-distance trains operating during peak hours in satellite stations and exclusively run trains within the city region from 6 am to 10 am and from 4 pm to 9 pm daily.  He also submitted a list of 14 long-distance trains entering the city limits during these peak hours to Verma and suggested their terminating points be shifted to satellite stations like Baiyappanahalli, Yelahanka, Doddaballapur, Hosur and Bidadi.  He argued that local trains every 10 minutes after terminating long-distance trains outside Bengaluru, would also ensure the transition of long-distance travellers into different parts of the city.  “The current rail network can lift some burden off the roads if it operates local trains during peak hours. Rail commute on peak hours should be exclusively for intra-city travel of Bengalureans to their places of work and back. The interests of Bengalureans, aggrieved over the traffic mess, should be prioritized over long-distance travel during peak hours. Until the implementation of a local train every 10 minutes, we will run the public campaign ‘Peak Hours For Locals’ to support this demand,” the MP said. Regarding the long-pending clearance for an exclusive suburban rail project from Cabinet Committee of Economic Affairs, Surya said that all MPs (Member of Parliament) of Bengaluru have together asked for the CM to lead a delegation of MPs of Bengaluru railway region which includes Hosur, Doddabellapur and other areas and MLAs (Member of Legislative Assembly) to the PM (Prime Minister) requesting for the early approval of the project. This delegation visit will take place within next two weeks, Surya said. 
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Bengaluru cops allegedly keep don Ravi Pujari's lawyer away during interrogation

Crime
Police sources said that Ravi Pujari is relaxed and cool during the multi-lingual interrogation.
By Sharon Thambala Dreaded underworld don Ravi Pujari's lawyer Dilraj has allegedly been kept out of hearing distance and as a mute spectator during interrogation by the police. "The lawyer is a mute spectator out of hearing distance from the interrogation. He is not privy to what police ask Pujari," a source told IANS. As directed by the court and requested by Pujari, Dilraj is allowed to be present near the interrogation for him to consult on legal issues, but the cops have made sure that he does not hear anything for fear of leaking information. The court has also ordered the interrogation to be video graphed, which the police are carrying out. Police sources said that Ravi Pujari is relaxed and cool during the multi-lingual interrogation. "He is cool, giving frank replies. Pujari is exhibiting confidence in whatever he is telling. Maybe confidently lying, police are not new to him," said the source. According to source, the gangster knows how to handle police, with sufficient knowledge to reveal how much he wants to, when to stop, when to talk, when to mislead and plant false information. "Pujari is being interrogated in his mother tongue Kannada, Hindi and English. He is fluent in English," the source said. However, the source denied speculation gaining currency that Pujari requested police not to send him to Mumbai fearing of being eliminated by the henchmen of dreaded underworld dons Dawood Ibrahim and Chota Rajan. "Nothing of that sort happened. It doesn't work like that. He has been captured after 25 years, and he is not a king to choose. Wherever the law takes him, he will go there," said the source. Rajan is serving a life sentence inside a high security cell in Delhi's Tihar jail. Currently, the probe is focused on Tilknagar Shabnam Developers double murder shootout case. Police are discovering information, verifying it with respect to evidence and building the case. Taking regular breaks, police are interrogating Pujari from morning till evening. Of the over 200 cases against Pujari in the southern state, 39 are in Bengaluru, 36 at Mangaluru, 11 in Udupi on the state's west coast and one each at Mysuru, Hubballi-Dharwad, Kolar and Shivamogga in Malnad. The other cases are in Mumbai (49) and in Gujarat (75) pertaining to extortion, kidnapping, ransom demand and murder threats. Pujari also extorted huge amounts from popular Bollywood stars and realtors. He was also involved in an attempt to murder case, aimed at killing a prominent lawyer of Mumbai. A four-member Karnataka police team led by Pandey brought the 52-year-old underworld don to Bengaluru from Dakar in Senegal via Paris in an Air France scheduled flight during the wee hours and kept him at an interrogation centre in the city's south-east suburb.  
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Bengaluru lawyers file bail plea for sedition-accused Kashmiri students amid protection

Law
The bail application was filed after Chief Justice of Karnataka said that contempt proceedings would be initiated against those who try to stop the lawyers from filing the bail plea.
Representation photo
After almost four days of struggle, the three lawyers from Bengaluru were finally able to file the bail applications for the three Kashmiri students who have been charged with sedition, amid police protection. This comes after the Chief Justice of Karnataka warned contempt proceedings against those who try to stop lawyers from filing the bail applications for the students. In early February, a video of the three students allegedly saying 'Pakistan Zindabad' went viral, following which they were booked. Hubli Sedition Case : Bail Application filed at Dharwad. ⁦@sugataraju⁩ ⁦@the_hindu⁩ ⁦@HindustanTimes⁩ ⁦@thewire_in⁩ ⁦@WIRED⁩ ⁦@DeccanHerald⁩ ⁦@prajavani⁩ pic.twitter.com/1b4Nox9BEu — venkatesh bubberjung (@bubberjung) February 28, 2020 On Monday, the team of three lawyers from Bengaluru had visited the Principal District and Sessions Court in Dharwad to file the vakalatnama (a document filed in court stating that the accused has accepted the legal counsel of the said lawyer and that the lawyer will be representing the accused in the case henceforth) and the bail application on behalf of the three students charged with sedition. However, they were met with stiff resistance from the Dharwad Bar Association members. Lawyers had staged a protest within the court’s premises and had demanded that the three lawyers refrain from representing the accused. The three lawyers were manhandled and their car was vandalised. The Dharwad Bar Association staged the protest as the High Court had issued an interim order against the resolution passed by the Hubballi Bar Association to not represent the students. In this backdrop, Chief Justice Abhay Sreenivas Oka, who was hearing a petition filed by Bengaluru lawyer BT Venkatesh, on Thursday directed the Dharwad Police Commissioner to collect names and details of the advocates who protest or hinder the lawyers from filing the bail application. Chief Justice Abhay Oka had also stated that contempt proceedings would be initiated against those advocates who shout slogans and try to stop the lawyers from filing the bail application. With heavy police protection, the lawyers from Bengaluru representing the three Kashmiri engineering students filed the bail application in the Dharwad court on Friday. The bail hearing is scheduled for March 2. On February 14, three engineering students from KLE Institute of Technology in Hubballi were arrested and charged with sedition after a video of them saying Pakistan Zindabad went viral the same day. On February 15, the Hubballi Bar Association passed a resolution and barred its members from representing the three Kashmiri students. Twenty-four lawyers from Bengaluru including BT Venkatesh filed a petition with the Karnataka High Court against the Hubballi Bar Association’s resolution. The High Court had reprimanded the bar association and reminded them that every accused is entitled to a fair trial.    
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Lingayat seer threatens to bring down Yediyurappa govt if BJP MLA not made minister

Politics
Srishaila Saranga mutt seer Deshikendra Swami on Friday said that BJP MLA from Gulbarga South Dattareya Patil Revoor must be made a minister.
A Lingayat seer on Friday threatened to get 10 BJP MLAs to quit if Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa does not make MLA Dattatreya Patil Revoor a minister soon. "If Yediyurappa does not make BJP's Gulbarga South MLA Dattatreya Patil Revoor a minister, I will get 10 ruling party legislators resign and reduce the government to a minority, forcing the Chief Minister to resign," said Srishaila Saranga mutt seer Deshikendra Swami at a meeting in Kalaburagi on Friday. Addressing a gathering of the Lingayat community, to which Revoor belongs, the seer said although he wanted Yediyurappa to complete the remaining 3-year term in office and the BJP to return to power after the next elections, it would be difficult for Yediyurappa to continue if Revoor is not made a minister. "Yediyurappa will be in office for the next three years if he makes Revoor minister. If not, I will ask him (latter) also to resign, as does not need to be in politics anymore because he has a house, many acres of agricultural land and is very rich," the seer told the gathering in Kannada. In his nomination to contest in the May 2018 assembly elections, Revoor (37) declared in an affidavit Rs 17-crore assets, including immovable properties. Wishing Yediyurappa to remain in office for the next three years and return as Chief Minister, the seer said if Yediyurappa is forced to quit, then the Lingayat community would not get an opportunity to have its leader as Chief Minister again for at least 30 years. Yediyurappa, whose constituency is Shikaripura in Shivamogga district, is considered the tallest Lingayat leader of the politically powerful community, which accounts for 18% of the 6.5-crore state's population. Though a dozen BJP legislators won from the erstwhile Hyderabad-Karnataka region in the May 2018 Assembly elections, only Prabhu Chauhan from the adjacent Bidar district was made minister for animal husbandry. The Saranga mutt seer’s threat comes a month after Veerashaiva Lingayat Panchamasali seer Swami Vachananda, dared Yediyurappa to make 3 of the community legislators ministers ahead of the second cabinet expansion on February 6. At a Lingayat gathering in the state's Davengere district on January 15, Vachananda told Yediyurappa to make party's Bilgi legislator Murgesh Nirani Minister, failing which the community would withdraw its support to the ruling party. Hiryur is about 300km northwest of the southern state's capital Bengaluru. Ticking off the young seer, a defiant Yediyurappa, however, threatened to walk out of the meeting if he was blackmailed for making Lingayat MLAs ministers. "You cannot threaten me saying your sub-sect (Veera Shaiva) community would not support the BJP in the next assembly or Lok Saba elections, due in 2023 and 2024," retorted Yediyurappa, reasserting his status as the community's strongman in the state. In the second cabinet expansion, only 10 newly elected legislators who defected from the Congress and the Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) were made ministers, leaving 6 posts vacant in the 34-member ministry. In the first cabinet expansion on August 20, 2019, 17 party legislators were made ministers. Nirani and others, who were present on the dais, pacified Yediyurappa to take his seat and requested the seer to avoid making political speech on such occasions. "The chief minister threatened to resign than succumb to pressures from religious or community followers," a party official told IANS.  
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Indian railways to resume operations of luxury train Golden Chariot in Karnataka

Railways
The IRCTC said the smart TVs with a variety of Wi-Fi enabled subscriptions of streaming sites, including Netflix, Amazon and Hotstar, have been installed in the train.
The Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) on Friday said it will resume its luxury train Golden Chariot on March 22 after a gap of a few years. According to railway officials, the IRCTC took over the operation, management and marketing of the special train through a recent agreement with Karnataka State Tourism Development Corporation (KSTDC), which launched the Golden Chariot train in 2008. "The Golden Chariot is again going to hit the tracks in a new look for an exciting week-long itinerary. IRCTC has planned three trips of Golden Chariot on 'Pride of Karnataka' itinerary on March 22, March 29 and April 12," said IRCTC in a statement. The six nights/seven days itinerary will commence from Yeshwantpur Railway Station in the morning and visit Bandipur National Park, Mysore, Halebidu, Chikmangalur, Hampi, Badami-Pattadakal-Aihole and Goa before returning to Bengaluru, said the statement. The IRCTC said the train has undergone a makeover befitting taste of international train travel enthusiasts. "To add to the guests' comforts, the train now boasts of several new features, including newly upholstered furniture, elegant drapery, renovated rooms and bathrooms, crockery and cutlery of reputed international brands and fresh linen," it said. The IRCTC said the smart TVs with a variety of Wi-Fi enabled subscriptions of streaming sites, including Netflix, Amazon and Hotstar, have been installed. "CCTV cameras and fire alarm system have been added for more safety," it said." Experienced chefs have created menus, presenting an eclectic mix of mouth watering international as well as domestic fare.    
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