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Thursday, May 7, 2020

Karnataka reports Rs 231 cr worth sales of alcohol on third day of stores opening

Liquor
This is just over Rs 10 crore shy of the combined sales made on Monday and Tuesday.
File photo
Karnataka continued to see brisk sales of alcohol on the third day after liquor stores opened following easing of lockdown. The Karnataka government on Wednesday reported that they had made a daily total sale of Rs 231.60 crore worth of alcohol. This includes 39 lakh litres of Indian made liquor (IML), which made sales of Rs 216 crore, and 7 lakh litres of beer, which made sales of Rs 15.6 crore. This is just over Rs 10 crore shy of the combined sales made on Monday and Tuesday. The total sales for the first two days came up to Rs 242 crore, which included Rs 45 crore on Monday and Rs 197 crore on Tuesday. The Karnataka government opened up sales of alcohol on Monday, May 4, after the lockdown was eased in orange and green zones. This, after the Excise department told the government that their funds were starting to run low. Certain outlets were allowed to sell alcohol, especially MSIL (Mysore Sales International Limited) liquor outlets, which are government sanctioned liquor outlets, which contributes to the state exchequer through excise duties. The Hindu reported that more MSIL outlets are set to be sanctioned by the government to respond to the overwhelming demand from consumers. Excise Minister H Nagesh was quoted as saying that the current limit of four MSIL outlets per assembly constituency is set to increase. Besides, the previous rule of seeking permission from the local MLA in whose constituency one wishes to set up an MSIL liquor outlet, has also been withdrawn by the government, to ease the process of setting up a new liquor outlet.
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Karnataka prepares to receive nearly 11,000 stranded Indians flying in from abroad

Coronavirus
Officials said that all those who arrive will be quarantined and tested.
Man in PPE takes temperature of passenger at airport with a handheld device pointed at the forehead
File photo
The Karnataka government is preparing to receive 10,823 of the state's residents who are set to return from overseas amid the COVID-19 pandemic, an official said on Tuesday. This is more than a month after international flights were barred. Officials said that all those who come into the state will be quarantined, and that all passengers will be tested as well, on arrival and on different days of their quarantine. "The state has planned to quarantine all 10,823 passengers coming back to Karnataka. The quarantine guidelines framed as below would be applicable," said Health Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey, in a statement. According to the Government of India, a total of 10,823 Karnataka natives have been stranded abroad till April 30. This comprises 4,408 tourists, 3,074 students, 2,784 migrants and professionals, and 557 ship crew. Out of the 10,823 people, the state government is expecting 6,100 to return early as the government has decided to allow Indians stuck abroad to return. "All the passengers arriving at points of entry (airports and seaports) will be compulsorily screened for symptoms of COVID-19," said Pandey. Point of entry screening will include self-reporting verification form, thermal screening, pulse oximeter reading, briefing with instructions, categorisation, stamping for some and downloading of the health surveillance apps Aarogya Setu, Quarantine Watch and Apthamitra. Arriving passengers are also required to declare existing co-morbidities such as hypertension, diabetes, asthma or any lung disease, organ transplantations, cancer, immunosuppressants, tuberculosis, liver disease, heart disease, and other ailments. Passengers will be categorised into three groups: Category A (symptomatic on arrival), Category B (asymptomatic with co-morbidity or aged above 60 years) and Category C (rest of asymptomatic passengers). Depending on the category into which people fall, their quarantine place and time will be determined. Category A arrivals will be subjected to institutional quarantine for a fortnight, Category B one week quarantine at a hotel or hostel, followed by another week at home, and Category C home quarantine for a fortnight. Karnataka government is making elaborate arrangements and deploying healthcare, the police force, and several other departments to handle the huge influx of Kannadigas and state residents. Pandey has issued a 21-page elaborate standard operating procedure (SOP) on how to deal with the international returnees. The guidelines state that the above will also apply to international passengers who arrive to the state from different ways such as through ports, road and via rail and domestic flights. This means that even if an international passenger arrives in a different state and comes to Karnataka by road, they will be subject to quarantine and testing. Those who arrive in Karnataka from another home state, will be allowed to go to their home state provided they come under Category C. However, Category A and B will be quarantined by Karnataka officials. The Karnataka government has recently come under fire for stopping the trains of migrant workers and preventing them from leaving the state to go back to their home states, following easing of the lockdown. With inputs from agencies
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Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Remdesivir helps coronavirus patients — but at what cost?

Drugmaker Gilead is known for creating breakthrough drugs and selling them at a premium.

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Karnataka reports 20 new COVID-19 cases, 13 from Bagalkote

Coronavirus
On the positive side for the state, the number of active cases reported was lower than the number of recoveries for the third consecutive day on Wednesday.
Image for representation/PTI
Thirteen of the 20 new cases of COVID-19 which were reported in Karnataka on Wednesday were from Badami in Bagalkote district. 12 of them are contacts of the same person— patient 607— a 23-year-old woman based in Badami. Speaking to TNM, District Surveillance Officer Dr Desai confirmed she did not have a foreign travel history. “All those who have tested positive today are from the same village and they are her (P-607’s) neighbours. We are yet to ascertain how she (P-607) contracted the infection. Maybe one of the patients who tested positive today was the root patient,” he said. Dr Desai was implying that since the source of patient 607’s infection is unknown, perhaps one of her 12 contacts who tested positive today could have been an asymptomatic patient until now, who had contact with someone who did have travel history. He added, “The 23-year-old woman is now on the path of recovery in Hubballi. She had travelled with symptoms to Dharwad where she was tested and admitted to a hospital for treatment.”   The only person among those who tested positive from Bagalkote on Wednesday who is not a contact of P-607 is an 18-year-old woman. With this spurt of cases, Bagalkote now has a total of 48 cases with 30 patients still in hospitals. 17 persons have recovered, while one person has succumbed to the disease, making it the fifth most coronavirus-affected district in Karnataka. Taking into account the last five days, the district has witnessed an average compounded daily growth rate in COVID-19 cases of 9.9%. Compounded daily growth is the average growth in the number of cases over the last five days compared to the number of cases on the first of the five days. Only Davanagere had a worse growth trajectory of 34.5%. The compounded daily growth for the whole state is 3%, the State War Room report said.  With this, the total number of cases in Karnataka has gone up to 693. So far, the state has seen 29 COVID-19 related deaths and 354 persons have been discharged following recovery. Other cases reported on Wednesday were one each from Vijayapura and Kalaburagi, three from Dakshina Kannada, and two from Bengaluru Urban district. The latter is still the worst affected in the state with 155 cases, and the highest number of active cases at 74. However, on the positive side, the number of active cases in Karnataka is lower than the recoveries for the third straight day.
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Supreme Court questions Trump's rollback of birth control coverage

The justices appeared frustrated that the long-running battle hasn't been resolved.

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Delivery executive in Bengaluru tests positive for coronavirus

Coronavirus
State officials confirmed he was involved in delivering non-essential goods and has been at home since the nationwide lockdown came into effect.
A person who worked as a delivery executive with an e-commerce company is among the 20 people who have tested positive for COVID-19 in Karnataka on Wednesday. The 25-year-old patient from Bengaluru delivered non-essential items, and  has not been out to make deliveries since the lockdown came into effect on March 25.  In the health bulletin released on Wednesday, officials stated that the 25-year-old delivery executive was the contact of a 45-year-old man who tested positive for the virus on Tuesday. The elderly man had a history of influenza-like illness. Health Department officials are currently tracing people who may have come in contact with the delivery executive while he remained at home during the lockdown period.  Among the 20 cases reported in the state on Wednesday, two cases were from Bengaluru, while 13 cases were reported in Bagalkote district who were contacts of a 23-year-old woman with a history of Severe Acute Respiratory Infection (SARI) who tested positive on May 3.  Three new cases were reported from Dakshina Kannada district, which included an 11-year-old girl and a 35-year-old woman. Both are contacts of a patient who earlier tested positive for the virus. The girl and the woman are residents of Boloor in Mangaluru, district officials confirmed. One case each was reported in Vijayapura and Kalaburagi districts of Karnataka. The total number of novel coronavirus cases in the state increased to 693 with 29 deaths. 354 people have recovered from the infection. In Karnataka, the highest number of coronavirus cases have been reported in Bengaluru Urban district with 155 cases while Mysuru and Belagavi districts have reported 88 and 71 cases respectively. 
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Still waiting to go home, migrant workers in Bengaluru unaware that trains are cancelled

Coronavirus
The state government is facing criticism for creating conditions of forced labour; the workers – whose services the state and its interests clearly need – are being kept in the dark, and are living in unhygienic spaces.
PTI : Image for representation
The blue tarpaulin and tin-roofed sheds in which Tahir Ali lives in Mahadevapura, a suburb in Whitefield in Bengaluru, are hidden from view if you drive past the main road. Luxury apartment blocks tower over the settlement where migrant workers from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand reside.  On Wednesday, Tahir, 22, and a group of six workers from the settlement turned up at the Mahadevapura Police Station, clutching application forms and photocopies of their Aadhaar in their hands. “We were told to bring the application forms and give it to the police wala,” says Tahir. He is unaware that the Karnataka government decided to cancel trains meant for inter-state travel of migrant workers on Tuesday. “We have not been told anything about trains being cancelled. We were told we will get a call when the train is ready to take us,” adds Tahir.  A migrant worker at the Mahadevapura police station in Bengaluru He is not alone. Like him, thousands of migrant workers in Bengaluru hoping to return to their homes are unaware that the trains were cancelled on Tuesday. The service was stopped after Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa held a meeting with builders who demanded that workers be made to stay back, or the ‘economy would collapse’.  By then, the Indian Railways had operated eight trains from Bengaluru with 1200 passengers in each train to transport workers to three states - Bihar, Jharkhand and Odisha. In another part of Whitefield, migrant workers who turned up at the Varthur Police Station hoping to return to their homes were dispersed by the police. Visuals show police aggressively dispersing the people gathered using lathis.  However, police officials attempted to play down the incident. “There were around 20 migrant workers who came to the police station asking when trains will be arranged for them. We told them to register in the Seva Sindhu portal and tried to disperse them, and asked them to remain at their site. But at this point, someone argued with the police and we tried to make them leave,” says Praveen Babu, inspector of Varthur Police Station.  It is not just the workers who are unaware of the state government’s decision. Police inspectors in Bengaluru’s Whitefield division too were unaware of the cancellation of trains for inter-state travel of migrant workers.  “We have estimated that there are over 20,000 migrant workers who intend to return home. Most of the workers are from four states - Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and West Bengal. Whenever they want an update on the arrangement for trains, they turn up at police stations but there is no clarity on when arrangements will be made for them,” an official involved in arranging transport for migrant workers told TNM. Migrant workers in Mahadevapura, Bengaluru Officials estimated around 10,000 workers from Bihar and around 4,000 workers each from Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand, living in Whitefield, are among those who wish to return home. Contrary to earlier reports, the official says that only around 25% of migrant workers are from the construction sector. Most workers are security guards or those who work in hotels, paying guest accommodations and malls. These workers are now camped in settlements arranged by their company or the state government.  This reporter visited multiple settlements; in most places, living conditions were cramped and unhygienic.  In settlements of workers involved in the construction of the Bengaluru metro construction, over 200 people lived in a three-storey building. Others slept on bunk beds cramped into rooms with 20 or more people. “We have lived here without work for more than 40 days. Now, we simply wish to go home and be with our families,” says Gadadhar Behera, a security guard from Orissa.  Living conditions at a migrant workers' settlement near Kudlu Gate, Bengaluru Gadadhar’s words are echoed by scores of migrant workers in his settlement, and the workers’ sentiment is painfully obvious to officials. “In almost all cases, the workers are the sole breadwinners of their families and they have the moral responsibility of going back and spending time with them. The psychosis has set in that even if they die, they want to be at home,” says an official who was involved in surveying migrant workers in the Whitefield division who wished to remain anonymous.  According to the same official, the government’s decision to suspend the train service does not take into account the wishes of thousands of migrant workers who simply wish to return home.  Settlement of migrant workers in Mahadevapura, Bengaluru Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders have hailed the move to stop inter-state trains citing that it will help restart economic activities in the city.  Stoppage of inter-state trains by Sri @BSYBJP is a bold and necessary move. It will help migrant labourers who came here with hopes of a better life to restart their dreams. Also, it will kickstart economic activities full throttle. Karnataka will emerge out of this stronger! — Tejasvi Surya (@Tejasvi_Surya) May 6, 2020 However, over 500 individuals and organisations wrote to Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa condemning the state government’s decision and calling for it to be revoked. In the letter, it was stated that the cancellation of trains violates the workers’ right to movement and infringes their basic freedom, while also subjecting the workers to forced labour.  “We demand recognition of the autonomy and dignity of the migrant worker to decide their travel plans. No one should be forced either to stay back or to return to their home states. We demand that the Karnataka government abide by the Constitutional framework and immediately make the necessary arrangements to ensure that any worker wishing to return is allowed to do so at no cost, and in a safe and dignified manner,” read the letter.  “Even if work resumes, people here are unwilling to go to work. We wish to return home and be with our families,” says Tahir.   
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