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Monday, March 16, 2020

Hyderabad techie forges Sudha Murty’s sign in letter, held in Bengaluru

Crime
The 23-year-old app developer was booked by the Bengaluru police under various sections of the Indian Penal Code.
File photo, Sudha Murthy
A 23-year-old man has been held for forging Infosys Foundation Chairperson Sudha Murthy's signature in a recommendation letter. The letter was purportedly a recommendation from the chairperson, asking Telugu actor Vijay Devarakonda to be the ambassador for the app the techie had developed. L Saikrishna, an app developer from Hyderabad, had developed an app called 'Offer nearby'. Although the app is yet to be launched, he wanted to invite the actor to launch his app. However, despite his attempts, Saikrishna was unable to reach the actor, said reports. The techie then began looking for a different route to reach the actor. Saikrishna allegedly thought that the actor would better consider a recommendation letter from an eminent person in the Information Technology industry. He allegedly wrote the letter with a forged letterhead of the Infosys Foundation, along with the forged signature of its Chairperson, Sudha Murthy. However, the letter never reached the actor, and instead went back to the return address, which happened to be the office of the Infosys Foundation in Bengaluru. Infosys Foundation employees who received the fake letter were left confused as they never dispatched this particular letter. However, they soon realised that it was a case of forgery. Retired Lieutenant Colonel M Ramesh, one of the employees of the Infosys Foundation, has raised a complaint with the Bengaluru police with a case of forgery. The police took the case, and upon investigation, they nabbed Saikrishna himself, reported the Times of India. He has allegedly confessed to the police that he desperately wanted the actor to be the brand ambassador for the app, which led him to take the extreme step. The accused has been booked under sections of the Indian Penal Code, including section 419 (personation), 465 (forgery), 468 (forgery for purpose of cheating) and 471 (whoever fraudulently or dishonestly uses as genuine any document which he knows or has reason to believe to be a forged document).
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Thermal screening of visitors at Karnataka govt offices to curb COVID-19 spread

Coronavirus
In view of coronavirus, screening of visitors has already begun at Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa's residence at Dollar's Colony in Bengaluru.
Vidhana Soudha
Stepping up measures to curb spread of coronavirus in the state, the Karnataka government would start thermal screening of visitors at various places including the Vidhana Soudha, High Court, Secretariat, and City Civil Courts, from Tuesday. In view of coronavirus, screening of visitors has already begun at Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa's residence at Dollar's Colony in Bengaluru. A medical team has been deployed for the purpose, sources close to the CM told PTI. Medical screening of passengers arriving at the Kempegowda International Airport here is already underway. So far seven people have been tested positive in the state while one of them died due to COVID-19 in Kalaburagi. The Department of Health and Family Welfare said the procurement of equipment such as scanners would be completed by Monday. "The procurement of scanners, other supplies, deputation of staff nurses and training shall be held and completed on March 16. Monday itself on war footing basis, setting aside other works," Commissioner of Health and Family Welfare department, Pankaj Kumar Pandey said in his order to district level health officers. He also said that urban health staff nurses and trainee staff nurses from government nursing schools would be utilised for screening purpose. Ambulances would be stationed at all screening points with an easy access and fever cases shall be shifted to the nearby government hospital for preliminary clinical assessment by the duty doctor, the order said. The KarnatakaState Drugs Logistics and Warehousing Society (KSDLWS) would procure and give the thermal scanners to the district health and family welfare officers of Bengaluru Urban, Kalaburagi, Dharwad, it said. Sufficient virus filtering N95 masks, hand gloves and sanitisers would also be provided to the officers, it added.  
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CDC recommends suspending large events for 8 weeks

It is a dramatic escalation over previous recommendations.

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Fauci warns of spike in deaths ‘if we go about our daily lives and not worry’

The top U.S. infectious diseases expert says people need to hunker down “significantly more than we as a country are doing.”

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Sunday, March 15, 2020

'Everybody's got to take this seriously': Fauci warns against coronavirus indifference among young people

He is concerned that young Americans aren’t taking the pandemic seriously.

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‘Very stressed, not what we need at this time’: Brother of Google techie who has COVID-19 to TNM

Coronavirus
A viral report on Saturday said that the wife of the Bengaluru techie fled quarantine, which was refuted by the Karnataka government.
Image for representation
A viral media report said on Saturday that a woman fled coronavirus quarantine in Bengaluru after her husband was found to be positive for the virus – which the Karnataka government then said was false. By then, however, several comments were made online – ranging from calling the woman irresponsible, to calling for her to be shot. While the man, a techie with Google in Bengaluru, has tested positive for COVID-19, the results of the wife, who is in isolation in Agra, are yet to come. Meanwhile, the UP government has claimed that the woman and her family lied to them about her whereabouts. Given below is the sequence of events, according to the family. Speaking to TNM, the Google techie’s brother said that the couple left for Greece on their honeymoon on February 23, and returned to Mumbai late on March 6. According to the brother, they spent the weekend with the techie’s parents in Mumbai, and took a flight to Bengaluru on March 8, and landed at 9.45 pm. “From there, my sister-in-law was supposed to leave for Delhi. Many people are asking why she didn’t leave for Delhi directly from Mumbai. They were on their honeymoon, and the baggage was too much. The allowance for international flights is higher than domestic. They wanted to bring their luggage back to Bengaluru, so they came here. He took the luggage home and she left for Delhi,” said the techie’s brother. The brother says that the couple stayed in the airport till she had to depart, which was at 1.40 am on March 9. From there, she took a train to Agra. “On March 9, my brother went to office after a few hours of sleep, and Google was screening people. They weren’t letting anyone with a higher than usual temperature to work. He cleared the screenings. A few hours later, he complained of a headache, which he attributed to a lack of sleep and to travel, and was allowed to go home,” the brother said. The fever didn’t subside, and the brother took the techie to the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Chest Diseases on the evening of March 10 to get him tested for COVID-19. The brother said that they were allowed to go home, and were told that they would be informed if anything. “The very next evening, we got a call that they are suspecting him to be positive and they were sending an ambulance to isolation till the confirmation report can be available. On March 11, the ambulance came and around 11 pm, he was moved to a hospital isolation ward,” he said. The next day, on March 12, they received confirmation that the techie was positive. This was corroborated by Google’s statement on March 12, which asked employees to work from home for one day in order to sanitise the office. On the same day in Agra, according to the brother, the woman and her family were told to give their samples. However, he said that the hospital they were taken to was extremely unhygienic. A friend of the couple, in a Facebook post, posted pictures of the hospital’s washroom, with stagnant water. “They didn’t want to stay there and asked to be discharged until they are positive. The doctor discharged them on the condition that they will be under home isolation until the report comes, and everyone will have to wear a mask,” he said.  On March 13, the wife was moved to an isolation ward as a precautionary measure, but the family was reluctant to be taken to the same hospital. “The UP CMO (Chief Minister’s office) assured them that it would be looked into and that they would be moved to a different place. My sister-in-law was moved to a different place, but the family had to stay in the same place,” he said.  “When you go on Twitter, there are so many hate comments. They believe anything they read online and have an opinion. They are spreading things like ‘people like this are shot in China’ and all that. It's very stressful to go through that. We try to ignore it to a certain level but it still gets to you. That’s not what we need at this hour. My brother is still running a fever and has a headache, and has barely been able to sleep,” the techie’s brother says. When asked about the government’s charge that clear details were not given about the woman’s journey, he says that they have the tickets, and are willing to show them. However, the Indian Express reported that the woman is now facing an FIR, and Agra District Magistrate Prabhu Narain Singh told the newspaper that when they went to her house first, her father told them that she had left for Bengaluru on a train. “However, we put her phone on surveillance, and her location was found to be in Agra itself. I then sent a police team and she was found hiding in her house,” he said. Multiple media reports quoted Agra’s district magistrate that the father of the techie’s wife lied about the whereabouts. This, the family says, is after she was discharged from the hospital and was in home isolation. The family confirmed that the father was scared authorities would take her to the same hospital. "He was worried due to the previous day's events and the hygiene conditions in the hospital, and wanted to keep her under home isolation," the brother says. On Sunday evening, an FIR was filed against the techie’s father-in-law Sections 269 and 270 of the IPC, which pertain to negligently or maliciously acts which are likely to spread an infection. Though the viral story had factual errors, many have pointed out on social media that people coming from abroad should quarantine themselves and not put others in danger. All across India, the administration is struggling with this as they have to trace scores of people that COVID-19 patients met, at a time when they should have been in self-imposed quarantine.
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Kin of Karnataka COVID-19 victim tests positive, 7th case in state

Coronavirus
Karnataka Health Minister B Sriramulu on Sunday evening said that one more case of coronavirus has been reported in the state.
Representational image/PTI
Karnataka Health Minister B Sriramulu on Sunday evening said that one more case of coronavirus has been reported in the state. The new case is the daughter of the 76-year-old Kalaburagi man who died last week and was found to have coronavirus. A health department note said she is already admitted in the Kalaburagi District Hospital and her health condition is stable. .Earlier, officials had confirmed that three out of the four persons (wife, son, daughter and daughter-in-law) were confirmed to be negative and the fourth person’s results were awaited. As reported earlier, the 76-year-old man had returned from Saudi Arabia on February 29 after spending one month in the Arab nation. The incident had turned controversial after health department officials said that the family had shifted him outside the government hospital to a private hospital in Hyderabad against their advice. However, the statement was rejected by his family members. As reported earlier, the man was admitted to a private hospital on March 9 after he started feeling unwell from March 8 night. Later, he was taken to Care Hospital in Hyderabad which the district health officials claim was done against their advice instead of admitting him at an isolation ward in Gulbarga Institute of Medical Sciences.  Incidentally, his son speaking to TNM had stated that they had decided to shift him as they were not informed that his father would have been infected. The other five people who have tested positive in the state are all from Bengaluru. While three of them are techies working in Dell, Google and Mindtree respectively, the other two are the wife and daughter of the Dell techie. Both the Dell and Mindtree techies had gone to the United States for worked and had returned via Dubai and London respectively. The Google techie, on the other hand, had gone to Greece, Switzerland and France on a holiday with his wife.
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