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Friday, March 27, 2020

Civic workers risk their lives to collect waste: How to easily help them by composting

Coronavirus
Safai karamcharis or pourakarmikas risk the chance of contracting coronavirus daily. By composting at home, we can avoid contact.
Even as the coronavirus pandemic has resulted in a complete lockdown of India, there are certain essential service persons who continue to toil despite the threat of catching the virus. One such crucial role is played by pourakarmikas, safai karamcharis or the civic workers. These are the people who risk the chance of falling ill and yet continue to collect garbage from households. In order to minimise the risk of them being infected, we as responsible citizens can begin composting wet waste in our own homes and ensure that in times of a pandemic the civic workers don’t have to face such risks.  One may argue that composting requires several items that are difficult to procure in times of a lockdown. TNM brings you simple and easy ways to compost wet waste.  What are the items you need to compost at home? A bucket, a sharp object to make holes in the bucket, soil/ coconut shells, old newspapers, dried leaves that you can find on your street, cardboard and a pipe. You will also need used tiles or plastic plates. If you don’t have a pipe, you can cut a thin plastic bottle into a pipe. Most of these items are easily available in your home.  How to segregate? First, you must segregate your dry and wet waste. Wet waste includes all biodegradable waste like cooking waste (vegetable peels etc) and left over food. If you have milk packets, juice cartons etc, rinse them, dry them and then put them in your dry waste bin. Do not mix meat waste with the wet waste you use to compost. It will smell, and attract flies and maggots. You can dispose of the dry waste once in a week. Leave the dry waste bag near your gate or place where the pourakarmikas can see it and take the bags. Avoid handing it over to them directly.  How to compost? > Make a hole in two  plastic buckets, one or one-and-a-half inches above the bottom of the bucket. > Attach the pipe/cut plastic bottle to these two holes in the two buckets so they are connected with the pipe. This will drain out the leachate water.   > Make smaller holes in one of the buckets on the sides. This is the bucket that you will have to put your waste in. The holes allow for air to enter and reduce the smell.  > Put broken tiles or waste plastic plates at the bottom of the bucket with holes. Add coconut shells on top of the plates. Add two or three newspaper sheets on it. Put your wet waste on top of this. Add another layer of coconut shells/newspapers or dry leaves on top of the waste.  > Keep building these layers -- one of wet waste and one of newspapers and/or coconut shells until the bucket is full.  > Once the bucket is full, pile six or seven news paper sheets, cover it with a hardboard.  > It takes over three months for compost to form.  > This should not smell more foul than your normal wet waste bin.  Soil is ideal as filling/brown matter for people living in buildings that don’t have adequate ventilation and also for those who don’t have a backyard to compost waste. Soil absorbs the smell easily. If you don’t have soil, especially during a lockdown, dried leaves and newspapers are a good substitute.  > If your compost bin is smelling, that means your waste-to-newspaper/coconut shell/dry leaves ratio is not right. Just add more brown matter -- such as dry leaves or coconut shells -- than you already have to reduce the smell. Brown matter ensures that the wet waste breaks down properly without smelling.  > You can use the leachate water and mix it with the soil if you have potted plants at home. Dispose this daily or the area where you keep the compost bucket will smell.  > It will take three months for the compost to form. You can use this for your garden or potted plants.  > Sometimes, if your house does not have enough ventilation, the smell of compost can waft into your house. Keep the bucket in the balcony. If you cannot stand the smell, put a few red hot coals in a plate and keep it next to the bucket for 30 minutes to an hour. If you don’t have coals, then light four or five incense sticks and keep it next to the bucket.  This process may seem long and tedious but the jobs that pourakarmikas are performing are also long and tedious. It's about time we try to help them in any way we can.   
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10-month-old baby in Karnataka gets COVID-19, total cases at 62

Coronavirus
The baby was suffering from fever and severe acute respiratory illness.
Seven new cases of COVID 19 have been reported by the Karnataka government, as of March 27. This brings the total of coronavirus cases in the state to 62 and it includes three persons who died and four patients who have been discharged from hospitals.  The bulletin released by the Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department said that the state’s patient number 1, a techie working with Dell, and his wife have been discharged. Their daughter had already been discharged earlier. A ten-month-old baby boy from Bantwal taluk in Dakshina Kannada has tested positive for COVID-19. The boy had no prior history of foreign travel and the bulletin stated that the family had reportedly travelled to Kerala, but Dakshina Kannada Collector Sindhu Rupesh told TNM that this was still being investigated. The baby was suffering from fever and severe acute respiratory illness. On March 23, he was admitted to a private hospital in Mangaluru. On March 24, the baby's throat swab was taken for testing. On March 26, the test result showed that the baby was COVID-19 positive. The child is currently stable and his close relatives are quarantined, according to the Collector. The bulletin issued by the Karnataka Health and Family Welfare Department states that six primary contacts of the infant were traced, and that they are quarantined. The baby resided in Sajipanadu in Bantwal taluk of the district. Precautionary measures were taken to ensure COVID-19 does not spread to others in Sajipandu. All residents of the village are quarantined and no one can enter or leave the village, DC Sindhu Rupesh stated. Six other cases were reported in the state including the death of a 60-year-old man from Tumakuru.  Details of the other patients P57- A twenty year old male from Bengaluru has tested positive for coronavirus. He has had a history of international travel. He had gone to Colombo, Sri Lanka, and arrived in Bengaluru on 15th March 2020.  P58- A Bengaluru resident aged 25 years has tested positive for coronavirus. She has had a history of travel to London and came back to Bengaluru on 18th March 2020. P59 and P61- Two women aged 35 years old and 30-years old respectively, house helps, have tested positive for coronavirus. They are the contacts of P25, a 51 year old man who returned from London. P60- A 60 year old man, and a resident of Tumakuru District has died due to coronavirus. He had no foreign travel history, but had a history of travel to Delhi by train on 13th March 2020. 24 high risk primary contacts were traced. 13 people were isolated, hospital. 8 tested negative for coronavirus, and the remaining 3 people are healthcare professionals who took care of the deceased patient.   Read: Third COVID-19 death in Karnataka, man with no foreign travel history dies P62- A 22 year old man, from Uttara Kannada has tested positive. He had a travel history to Dubai. This is the second instance in Karnataka where a patient has tested positive with no relevant foreign travel history or known contact with an already COIVD-19 positive patient. On Thursday, a 35-year-old Mysuru pharmaceutical industry professional with no foreign travel and contact with COVID-19 patients had tested positive. The health bulletin said that he was in contact with several healthcare professionals.
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Third COVID-19 death in Karnataka, man with no foreign travel history dies

Coronavirus
This brings the total number of cases in Karnataka to 56, with 3 deaths.
A 65-year-old man from Tumakuru, who died on Friday morning, was tested positive for Coronavirus infection. According to Deputy Commissioner of Tumakuru district Rakesh Kumar, the patient travelled from Delhi to Bengaluru via train and later boarded a bus to Tumakuru. On March 14, he reached Sira and travelled home. According to the contact-tracing map created by the Tumakuru district administration, the man left from Tumakuru to New Delhi on March 5 at 2.30 pm. There were totally 13 members in the Sampark Kranti train that he boarded in the S-6 (RAC) compartment.  At 3 pm on March 7, he reached Hazrat Nizamuddin Station in New Delhi and hailed a taxi to ‘Jamiya Masjid’.  Between March 7 and 11, he stayed at a lodge close to ‘Jamiya Masjid’. On March 11 at around 9 am he boarded the Kongu Express in coach S9.  On March 14, he reached Yeshwanthpur Railway Station at around 12.30 am and took a KSRTC bus from Yeshwanthpur to Chitradurga, which stopped at Sira in Tumakuru.  In Tumakuru, residents can call the 104 helpline number or contact 0816 2252936/2237837 in case they want to report symptoms of coronavirus. “He reached Sira early morning on 14 March and since he was an aged person, he did not step out of the house a lot in the next few days. On 18 March, he developed a fever and other symptoms and visited the OPD of a private hospital nearby. Since he did not have a travel history, he was given regular treatment but it did not cure him,” DC Rakesh Kumar told the media.  On March 21, went to a private clinic and got a chest X-ray done. He was not responding to any treatment and so on March 23, he was admitted in the district hospital where he sought discharge against medical advice. DC Rakesh Kumar said that he went to another private hospital and since he had acute respiratory distress by then, he was advised to get admitted to the Tumakuru district hospital. On March 24, he was isolated in the district hospital and his samples were taken for testing. DC Rakesh Kumar said that the man was not fatigued and was walking around in the isolation ward and seemed to be fine on Thursday night. “However, we received information early this morning (Friday) that he died. It was confirmed that he died due to COVID-19 at 10.45 on Friday morning,” he added. At the time of writing, TNM could not confirm whether the patient died of comorbidities.  Until Thursday night, there were zero cases of COVID-19 patients reported in Tumakuru district. Currently, nine people are isolated in hospitals in the district while 30 samples tested have come back negative for the virus.   Earlier, two deaths linked to the coronavirus were reported in Karnataka.  A 76-year-old man died of coronavirus on March 13, in the first death linked to the coronavirus in the country. This happened in Karnataka’s Kalaburagi district, which is in the northern part of the state. Two contact cases of coronavirus were reported shortly afterwards. The deceased patient had travel history to the United Arab Emirates (UAE).  The second death in Karnataka was reported in Bengaluru after a woman from Andhra Pradesh passed away on Thursday. The 75-year-old woman died before she was diagnosed with COVID-19: in fact, the positive test came in a day after she passed away. The Karnataka government has been taking measures to stop the spread of coronavirus. A lockdown was announced in several districts with reported cases, even before the Central government announced the nationwide lockdown for 21 days. The Centre has announced a package of 15,000 crores to help fight novel coronavirus in India.   
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Karnataka’s app for contact tracing reveals home addresses of COVID-19 patients

Coronavirus
The app is technically meant for people to see if they’ve been around a COVID-19 patient in public spaces – however, the design and data in the app do something else entirely.
Representative
The Karnataka government first faced criticism for publishing the details of those under home quarantine in the state. Now, the government has gone one step further and has alarmingly, breached the privacy of those who have tested positive for coronavirus in the state. The government has published the home addresses of those who have tested positive for coronavirus, in a mobile app that is available for public download.  The app is technically meant for people to see if they’ve been around a COVID-19 patient in public spaces – however, the design and data in the app do something else entirely.  The app (TNM will not reveal its name at this point) shows COVID-19 patients’ travel history, the spots they visited, and he exact time that they were at the spot – which is all useful information if you want to check if you’ve visited the same public place as a positive person, and want to get tested for your symptoms. The app also shows nearby medical facilities like hospitals, sample collection centres and testing labs. However, the government has inexplicably also revealed people’s home addresses in the app.  On the app, by selecting the option ‘spots visited by corona patients,’ a blue dot shows your location while red markers show where all the patients have visited. On zooming in and clicking on one of the markers, a small pop up shows the date, the time and the details of the particular location that the patient has visited.  The government’s aim is to spread awareness about the location of COVID-19 patients and to ask citizens to self-report if they were present in that location at the time the patient was there. The government has defended putting out the details, stating that they have not mentioned the name of the patient anywhere and ‘personal details’ of the patient have been withheld. However, coupled with the list of quarantined patients, this app has triggered massive concerns about privacy and ostracisation of those who have been quarantined or are battling coronavirus.  Kiran Jonalagadda, the co-founder of Internet Freedom Foundation and a digital rights activist, says that publishing such details is a massive privacy violation that will only cause unnecessary panic, especially at a time when the police and authorities are coming down heavily on those seen stepping out of their homes.  “It is a serious privacy concern, it now opens people to be harassed by their neighbours, and we have seen the kind of harassment faced by patients and those who have been quarantined across the country. The second concern is that the data does not seem to be accurate. This may lead to completely innocent people being harassed because they have been accidentally marked in the data,” Kiran told TNM.  Moreover, since officials of the Karnataka health officials say that they have been in touch with residents and apartment associations already, the need for home addresses on the app has been further questioned. “What is the necessity of this information? How is someone's private address of public interest? I can understand if there was no lockdown and they wanted to contain a portion of Bengaluru, but there is no necessity of this app,” Suhrith, a lawyer, told TNM.  Earlier, many users took to Twitter to state that even though they voluntarily decided to isolate themselves, they were added to the Karnataka government’s watchlist of those in quarantine. One such user explained that this led to many of his neighbours panicking and they “created a ruckus thanks to false rumours spread over a WhatsApp group.” What a complete mess, paranoid neighbours at my passport address created a ruckus thanks to false rumours spread over a whatsapp group. I am not even self quarantined there - I don't know who to blame more, the authorities who made the details public incorrectly or the herd. FFS. — Swaroop Hegde (@SwaroopH) March 25, 2020 Speaking to TNM, Justice Srikrishna, who helped draft India’s Data Protection Bill, had pointed out that even under the privacy law, there are exceptions for extraordinary circumstances where the government can invoke public safety to make details like this public. Also read: ‘Panic, ostracisation’: Residents question why Karnataka govt published list of quarantined
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Cong leader Dinesh Gundu Rao denies reports that his daughter is positive for COVID-19

Coronavirus
Media reports had earlier suggested that one of the COVID-19 patients in Karnataka was Ameera, Dinesh Gundu Rao's daughter.
Karnataka Congress leader Dinesh Gundu Rao has denied media reports suggesting that his daughter Ameera Rao had tested positive for coronavirus (COVID-19).  "A rumour has been spread on TV channels & social media that my daughter Ameera Rao, who returned from London on 16th March has tested positive for COVID-19. This is false and even if it was true there was no shame in admitting it. Media should be responsible and not misinform," Dinesh Gundu Rao said in a tweet.  TV channels had earlier suggested that one of the COVID-19 patients in Karnataka was Ameera, Dinesh Gundu Rao's daughter.  She had returned from London 10 days ago and has been quarantined at home ever since. "As responsible parents, we have quarantined our daughter 10 days ago at the advise of our doctors and just because the stamp is outside our house, it’s not a media sensation. It means we are responsible parents and it's a responsible government,” Tabu Rao, Dinesh's wife said in a Facebook post.  Tabu added that no throat swabs or blood samples of Ameera have been taken so far and that she is healthy. She urged the media to ask her or her husband before publishing reports about them.  There have been 55 cases of coronavirus in Karnataka. Among them, four patients have a travel history of returning from London.  In the latest case, a 35-year-old man from Mysuru who has no relevant foreign travel or contact history was found to be positive for COVID-19. The man who worked in a pharmaceutical company had however been in contact with several healthcare professionals, a bulletin from the Karnataka state health department stated. “The case is isolated at a designated hospital in Mysuru. The detailed investigation is under process. Seven primary contacts have been traced and are under house quarantine,” the bulletin added.
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Who gave RSS workers permission to collect donations amid lockdown?': DK Shivakumar

Coronavirus
: Karnataka Cong chief DK Shivakumar claimed RSS workers were collecting donations and distributing food material amid the lockdown, while others were asked to stay at home.
File image
Karnataka Congress President DK Shivakumar on Thursday demanded that both state and central governments convene a meeting of opposition leaders to discuss measures for controlling the spread of COVID-19 and managing the situation. He claimed RSS workers were collecting donations and distributing food materials during the lockdown, while others were asked to stay at home. "Corona issue is not BJPs alone, it is an issue concerning both state and the country. I urge the Chief Minister to call a meeting of opposition leaders, in the same way Prime Minister should also convene an all-party meeting and take everyone into confidence," he told reporters in Bengaluru. Alleging that the situation was being wrongly utilised for propaganda in favour of a political party and philosophy, he said RSS workers were collecting donation and distributing food materials. "Who gave them the permission? While our workers are confined to home on our instruction respecting the Prime Minister's call for 21 days nation wide lockdown?" he asked. Shivakumar accused the BJP of using coronavirus situation for its political benefit through the RSS. "We too are concerned about the people and want to address their issues by helping them," he said. He said Congress too, has a strong force of workers and if they too indulge in such activity, it will be hard for the government to manage the situation. Shivakumar welcomed Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa's initiative to set up a fund for COVID-19 and requesting people to make contributions for improving medical services in the fight against coronavirus.  So far, 55 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Karnataka. With PTI inputs
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Could Obamacare save jobless Americans from coronavirus?

The law's backers say it will prove a crucial safety net during the pandemic. The Trump administration may soon agree.

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