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Monday, May 25, 2020

Karnataka reports 93 new coronavirus cases on May 25, two more deaths

Coronavirus
The government bulletin said that 69 of the new cases are people who returned from Maharashtra.
Migrant workers line up to leave with their luggage in Mumbai
Courtesy: PTI in Mumbai
Karnataka has once again reported a spike in cases, bringing the total number of COVID-19 cases reported in the state to 2182. With 93 new cases reported on Monday, the total number of active cases are currently at 1,431 while the discharged COVID patients who recovered are now numbering 705. The state has reported two new deaths due to COVID, bringing the total deaths in the state attributed to coronavirus to 44. In addition, 2 deaths of COVID positive patients have been reported due to non-COVID reasons, as the patients passed away due to suicide. The details of the deaths are: P-1686 was a 55 year old woman from Bengaluru Rural district, who was admitted in hospital on May 19 reporting symptoms of- SARI (Severe acute respiratory infection). She reportedly died of Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) on May 24. P-2175 was a 43 year old woman who was a resident of Dakshina Kannada district. The patient was known to have had liver cirrhosis, and died on the day he was admitted, May 23. However, the lab report only confirmed that this was a COVID-related death on May 25. Of the 93 new cases,73 are interstate passengers and a majority of these passengers are from Maharashtra. According to the information provided in the bulletin, 69 of the new cases are from Maharashtra. 4 people had international travel history, one person had travel history to Delhi, 2 people had travel history to Tamil Nadu, and 1 person had travel history to Uttar Pradesh. The rest of the cases have originated as follows: 14 patients in the state have been reported as contacts of previous positive cases. Out of this, one case in Dharwad has been reported as a 2 month old baby boy from Dharwad. One person from Dakshina Kannada and another from Tumakuru the contact is still under tracing. One patient has been reported as a SARI (Severe acute respiratory infection) patient, and another as an ILI (Influenza like illness) patient.
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After public outcry, BMTC revises bus fares, allows ticketing

Transport
BMTC had earlier introduced a rule that only pass holders would bee allowed to commute in its buses.
bmtc bus lane bangalore at a traffic stop on ring road
The Bengaluru Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) has decided to introduce a revised fare rate after it received severe flak for allowing only pass holders to ride in its buses. When the BMTC began operating its buses last week, instead of selling tickets, BMTC had imposed a pass-only rule. Each daily pass would cost Rs 70 for daily passes and the weekly pass was priced at Rs 300. This new method was introduced so that passengers won’t have to come into contact with conductors while exchanging tickets and cash. However, the decision was faced with flak as many who are poor could not afford to buy passes. The BMTC in a press release stated that the fares will be almost the same as before, except the change that the fares will be rounded up to the closest multiple of five, to “minimise cash handling as collection and return of small change will be avoided.” This is also being done in a bid to ensure there is not too much contact with bus conductors and passengers. The new fares have been restructured into 6 fare slabs from the existing 16 slabs. Up to 2 km, the price is Rs 5 per ticket. For distances between 3 and 4 km, the price is Rs 10, between 5 and 6km it is Rs 15, between 7 and 14 km it is Rs 20, between 15 and 40 km, the price is Rs 25, and for those travelling over 40 km, the ticket price is Rs 30 per ticket. The BMTC is also undertaking a digital ticketing or QR code-based system for people to buy tickets without contact by paying online. BMTC says that the system has been implemented in 750 buses so far, and will be expanded to all buses within the next fortnight. At the same time, for those who are interested, the monthly, weekly and daily passes will be issued as per existing rates and procedures. BMTC also noted that to board the bus, passengers need to pay exact change for buying tickets in order to minimise contact. Passengers also need to compulsorily wear facemasks and maintain personal hygiene while travelling in buses. As before, BMTC noted that only seating passengers will be allowed, and no standing passengers will be allowed, in order to reduce contact. The operation of buses will also be extended to its full capacity of 3500 buses, as against the 2000 buses which were being operated earlier. BMTC had resumed services in Bengaluru from April 19 onwards, after the lockdown was eased. Read: Bengaluru’s BMTC to rethink ‘only pass’ policy The Bengaluru Bus Prayanaikara Vedike (BBPV), a citizen’s body for bus commuters, said that they “welcome BMTC's move to reintroduce daily tickets for bus commute.” This will provide immediate relief to large sections of commuters excluded or burdened by the high cost of daily commute due to Rs 70 day pass being the only option for daily travel. However, they reserved their criticism saying that, “These revised fares however do not address the issues of urban poor during the COVID crisis as they are left with little money and are staring at greater economic distress. To address this concern, we ask the state government to support BMTC to enable a further reduction in fares. The fare structure proposed by BBPV (5 Rs for upto 10 kms, 10 Rs for upto 20 kms and 15 Rs for trips above 20 kms) may be more appropriate for a time like this.” BBPV also asked the government to issue passes for people from the poorest communities so that they may commute to work at ease. “BMTC is providing free passes to construction workers. If a lower fare structure is not possible, we strongly urge the state govt and BMTC to come up with a mechanism to extend the free passes to other vulnerable sections such as domestic workers, street vendors, garment workers and others.”
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Did Rs 50 crore spent to rejuvenate Bellandur go down the drain? NGO writes to NGT

Environment
Bangalore Environment Trust had publicly opposed the NGT-approved plan of diverting inflow to the lake and desilt it.
Sewage frothin in one end of Bellandur lake
varun_krishnan_twitter
A Bengaluru-based environment NGO (non-governmental organisation) has written to the National Green Tribunal citing violation of its orders by the authorities with regards to sewage flowing into the infamous Bellandur lake. And by this they have suggested that Rs 50 crore spent by the authorities to build diversion channels to empty the lake as part of the NGT-approved rejuvenation process has also gone to waste. The NGO – Bangalore Environment Trust (BET) – had publicly opposed the NGT-approved plan of diverting inflow to the lake and desilt it, in February. They instead suggested that Bellandur is at the receiving end of the pollution so authorities should ensure that polluted water does not enter the lake, before doing this one time cleaning of the lake as per the current plan. Map prepared by BET BET now in an email to the NGT detailed their findings through photographs and maps. In their email, they said their investigations have uncovered raw sewage flowing directly into the lake in large quantities from one of the pipes from BWSSB's (Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board ) KC (Koramangala-Challaghatta) Valley STP (Sewage Treatment Plants) Project which is located to the north of the lake. BET pointed out that while the Monitoring Committee Report released by the NGT on May 13 said sewage water is diverted through the diversion channels and no water enters into the lakes, BET found the reality to be different. READ| Bellandur lake cleaning: Experts divided over desilting, diverting polluted water They asked the court to order urgent corrective action in this regard. The NGO also asked the NGT to take note of the violations and penalise the authorities.  Speaking to TNM, Nirmala Gowda, one of the members of BET said, “We now stand vindicated. We don’t know if this is an engineering mistake as they could not estimate what is the height of the highest flow we would get during rain. We observed that naturally as the water flows through Bellandur and flows out, it itself cleans the water partially through natural processes. We have seen water flowing out of Bellandur lake was cleaner than the water entering the lake.” She added, “So they have now spent around Rs 50 crore in diversion but they could not figure out how they can prevent flooding in the diversion channels if it rains. Also one thing that the lockdown has shown is that the major part of the polluted water problem is the untreated industrial sewage. So there is complete failure on the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board’s part to put a check on industrial effluents entering the water body.” She suggested that even in the sewage systems there are issues with the STPs managed by the BWSSB not functioning adequately. Other than this she pointed out other lapses by multiple government agencies like the KSPCB, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike, Bangalore Development Authority.   Read: Bellandur lake deweeded, dewatered but Bengaluru agency behind schedule to desilt
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Without funds amid lockdown, residents at Bengaluru’s destitute homes are suffering

Coronavirus
With private donors rolling back funds, those running destitute homes are not able to procure medicines for the poor.
The coronavirus pandemic and the economic fallout of the lockdown has driven private donors for destitute homes in Bengaluru to roll back on funding. Run purely on charity, several destitute homes, including old age homes, those catering to HIV-positive persons, have been struggling to buy medicines for the impoverished persons they help.  The Impact India Network, which helps run shelters, old age homes and aid to the urban poor in slums is one such NGO, which is suffering from a shortage of medicines. Impact India Network runs several shelters for the poor in Bengaluru. They have four shelters in Majestic, one each KR Market, Woodshed Road, Bannerghatta and in Yelahanka, which house around 700 people in total.  With the pandemic hitting hard the finances of its donors, the monthly supply of medicines for the aged at their shelters is hard to come by.  Shortage of funds “A lot of people have pulled back on funding because of the coronavirus pandemic. NGOs depend on private funding and people have stopped funding because they are also suffering because of the pandemic. Many destitute homes have stopped taking in the poor as they don’t have resources. These homes house patients with diabetes, high blood pressure, persons with mental health issues. Since they are poor, they cannot pay for their medicines and we are struggling for it,” said Anitha, a member of Impact India Network.  Anitha says that the organisation needs at least Rs 4-5 lakh per month, to be able to source medicines for the aged who live in their shelter homes. “We have funding from the Azim Premji Foundation now. We used to manage earlier as we got additional funds from private donors. That has stopped coming now as people are losing their jobs or have suffered a pay cut,” she added.  Difficult to procure medicines The management of destitute homes says that although procuring medicines was difficult prior to the lockdown, it has aggravated their issue and there is a severe shortage in basic medicines too. Pamela, who is a member of the AIR Humanitarian Homes in Bengaluru, says that there are three branches, in Bannerghatta, Chandapura and Hennur. The organisation caters to 400 people at any given point of time. Due to the pandemic, they stopped taking in people due to fear of spread and also because of the massive fund crunch.  Apollo Hospitals has been their biggest donors and although they have been providing basic medicines for fever, cough, cold and blood pressure, the volunteers are struggling to manage without enough supply of adult diapers, materials for dressing wounds, and also the medicines for people with mental health issues.  After the state government turned Victoria and Bowring Hospitals into COVID-19 ones, Pamela says that access to affordable healthcare has also taken a backseat. “We get a lot of cases of the homeless with issues that need amputation, some have severe gangrene and these wounds have to be dressed daily. Before the lockdown, Victoria was the go-to hospital. Now we need more money to take them to private hospitals,” she said.  Pamela maintains that the three shelter homes used to have people donating medicines directly rather than donating funds. “There were people who would want to contribute and we would get the prescription given by doctors who are treating these people and source medicines directly from donors. Now it's only Apollo Hospitals. We need funds for those with mental health issues,” she added.  Poor with mental health issues bear the brunt AIR Humanitarian Homes houses several destitute patients with mental health issues like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Sourcing medicines for these patients has become doubly hard, she said.  “These are the patients that the police drop off at our homes. They have no home and nowhere to go. When we took them to NIMHANS a couple of years ago, they were diagnosed with mental health issues. We need some sort of help either from the government or from private individuals, to help those in need, and the people at our homes all have no money and nowhere else to go,” she added.  Smaller homes face threat of shutting down In addition, several smaller destitute homes, located in the city’s periphery, are also struggling to cope with the lack of funds that those who run these homes have taken loans to handle the situation.  “We are deep in debt. Our old age home, Ashiyana Old Age Home, is located near Devanahalli. Every time we have a person come in, we have to take them to hospitals. We get a lot of amputation cases. Before the lockdown, donors would come and meet those living in the homes, spend time with them and also handover the medicines they would have bought. Some donors stopped sending monthly payments as they say they are also short on funds. I have taken many loans to help run this place,” said Farooq, founder of Ashiyana Old Age Home.  Farooq said that he requires anywhere between Rs 20,000 to Rs 1 lakh per month to run the old age home for the destitute as funding largely depends on the type of illnesses that the persons seeking help require.  “Sometimes, it may be just paracetamol. Sometimes, patients have to be admitted to private hospitals. The prices for medicines for various illnesses vary and without cash flow, we will not be able to remain open for more than six months,” he said. With the shortage of funds, Mansoor Chetla says that the quality of care at various shelter homes is also dropping.  “Auto Raja (a gangster-turned philanthropist) runs a destitute home with over 1,000 people at any given point of time. With no diapers, dressing and basic supplies to maintain hygiene, those running the home say that because of this, the chances of infection are high. With proper resources, they can do a good job, like how they were doing before the lockdown. It would really help those in need, especially the aged if either the government or people came forward to help,” he added.   
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Stranded in Delhi for 2 months, 5-year-old flies to Bengaluru to meet mother

Lockdown
The boy's mother said that Vihaan had gone to Delhi to visit his grandparents just before the lockdown and had been stranded there ever since.
Twitter/ANI
As flights resumed on Monday morning across several parts of India, one of the first few passengers to land at Bengaluru airport was five-year-old Vihaan Sharma, who came by flight all alone after being stranded in Delhi for over two months.  Wearing a yellow jacket, gloves and a mask, the boy was photographed at the arrivals gate of Bengaluru’s Kempegowda International Airport on Monday morning holding a placard that read ‘Special category’. His mother, Manjeesh Sharma, had come to the airport to pick him up. She told mediapersons present there that Vihaan had gone to Delhi to visit his grandparents just some days before the lockdown and had been stranded there ever since. One of the 1st few passengers who arrived at the @BLRAirport from #Delhi, the 5 y.o. travelled alone and will be home quarantined as mandated by @DHFWKA pic.twitter.com/yVi7ISGtQT — Stacy Pereira (@StacyPereira89) May 25, 2020 The mother and son had an emotional reunion at the airport. Vihaan is reportedly asymptomatic. "Welcome home, Vihaan! (Sharma) Bengaluru airport is constantly working towards enabling the safe return of all our passengers," tweeted an official of the Kempegowda International Airport on his return. Welcome home, Vihaan! #BLRairport is constantly working towards enabling the safe return of all our passengers. https://t.co/WJghN5wsKw — BLR Airport (@BLRAirport) May 25, 2020 At the airport, about 60 departures and 54 arrivals were reported on Monday morning, officials told PTI. Restrictions on the number of flights by some states, some of them mandating institutional quarantine, had led to the cancellation of several arrivals and outbound flights. As per the state government standard operating procedures, those passengers who have travelled from high COVID-19 prevalence states were shifted to hotels for seven days of institutional quarantine by Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation (BMTC) buses, specially arranged for the purpose. The Karnataka government has said people coming from high COVID-19 prevalence states — Maharashtra, Gujarat, Delhi, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh — will have to go for institutional quarantine for seven days, and charges to be borne by the passengers. After their COVID test comes out negative (swab should be taken between 5-7 day after their arrival) using 'pool testing', they should be sent for home quarantine for another seven days, sources said. Those coming from other low prevalence states have been asked to follow 14 days of home quarantine. Home quarantine is allowed for pregnant women, children below 10 years, senior citizens 80 years and above and terminally ill patients along with one attendant after their test result is negative. In special cases where businessmen are coming for urgent work, they are permitted without the necessity of quarantine if they bring the negative test report of COVID-19 from ICMR approved Laboratory and it should not be more than two days older from the date of travel. In case they don't have such certificate, they have to undergo COVID-19 test and stay in paid institution quarantine till the test result comes out. In an effort to protect passengers and staff from the risk of COVID-19 transmission, Bangalore International Airport Limited (BIAL) that operates the city airport has introduced a Parking-to-Boarding 'contactless' journey. (With agency inputs)
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Muslim men rescue man from Netravati river, their attempt portrayed as communal violence

Controversy
Hours after the incident occurred and visuals of the rescue were shared widely, the story took a communal turn when a tweet purportedly by BJP MP Shobha Karandlaje was shared, accusing the men who attempted the rescue
In a heroic rescue attempt, a group of men in Dakshina Kannada district of Karnataka jumped off the Panemangaluru bridge into the Netravati River to rescue Nishanth, a 28-year-old resident of Kalladka. Nishanth had jumped in the river in an attempt to kill himself.  The men – Mohammad, Arif, Shameer, Thouseef, Zaheed and Mukhtar – from Bantwal taluk of the district were successful in bringing Nishant out of the water alive but he succumbed in the government hospital in Bantwal on Sunday.  However, hours after the incident occurred and visuals of the rescue act were shared widely, the story took a communal turn when a screenshot of a tweet, purportedly by BJP's Shobha Karandlaje, Udupi-Chikkamagaluru MP, got shared widely. The tweet accused the men who tried to save Nishanth, of murdering him. The MP has now said that she never posted the tweet. “Received an information that Jihadis had allegedly murdered Hindu organisation’s Nishanth from Kalladka. I have already asked Amit Shah to initiate action against Jihadis,” read the tweet which was shared widely. This was condemned by Congress leader and Mangaluru MLA UT Khader, who urged Shobha Karandlaje to issue a clarification. Despite this, the screenshot and other communal messages were circulated a lot in the coastal districts.  Responding to Khader, Shobha Karandlaje stated that she had not tweeted about the incident and that an edited tweet was being projected as a tweet from her account.  Mohammed (35) is a fisherman in the area and has been responding to rescue calls for over 20 years now. He says that this is the fifth such incident near his hometown since the lockdown was put in place over the coronavirus outbreak. "I was told that a man arrived on his scooter at the bridge and jumped off. I immediately left my home and rushed to the bridge to try and rescue him," says Mohammed.  Speaking to TNM, Mohammed, said that he did not think of religion or of the fear of coronavirus before jumping into the river. "I just wanted to save his life. I got a call saying that someone has jumped into the river and I immediately came to the bridge and jumped into the river to try and rescue him," Mohammed tells TNM.  Last year, Mohammed was involved in several rescue attempts including the search for VG Siddartha, the founder of Coffee Day enterprises, who took his life by jumping into the Nethravati river.  "We never stop to think who might be in trouble. Life is precious and we try to save people from situations like this," adds Mohammed.  Police officials in Dakshina Kannada are investigating the tweet which tried to portray the incident as one of communal violence. "We have received two sets of explanations. One that says that she (Shobha Karandlaje) posted the tweet and another which states that it was edited to make it seem like she was introducing a communal angle to the incident. We have asked both groups to send us written complaints and we will be investigating them," Dakshina Kannada SP BM Laxmi Prasad told TNM.  Shobha Karandlaje has been called out previously for publishing fake news on her social media accounts. In 2017, Shobha Karandlaje was in trouble with police in Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka when she claimed that Paresh Mesta, a young Hindu man, was mutilated and that boiling oil was poured over his head, and his head was split with a weapon. The claim was made after Paresh's dead body was discovered in Honnavara in Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka; however Shobha's claims were refuted point-by-point in a detailed note issued by Kasturba Hospital in Manipal where the post mortem was conducted. Read: BJP MP Shobha Karandlaje booked by cops for 'spreading communal hatred thru tweets'   In 2019, Shobha had claimed that Shivu Uppar, a man from Belagavi district of Karnataka was killed for protecting cows from smugglers. Police later refuted this statement and said that Shivu had taken his own life.  Recently in April, the MP took to social media to claim that some people from Belagavi district, who were quarantined after they attended the Tablighi Jamaat congregation, were misbehaving and spitting at health workers. This claim was denied by Belagavi Deputy Commissioner SB Bommanahalli, who stated that people quarantined in the district had not misbehaved with health workers. However, this time around, police are ascertaining if Shobha actually tweeted the fake news or whether miscreants used it as an opportunity to spread communal hatred. 
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Retd K’taka judge says denying bail to Amulya after 3 months is 'denial of justice’

Court
She has been jail for three months and this is not a murder trial says the judge.
Amulya Leona protest in an anti CAA rally
The bail application for Bengaluru-based student Amulya Leona who was arrested three months ago for saying 'Pakistan Zindabad' thrice on stage has been dismissed by the Karnataka High Court with a direction that the petitioner may approach a sessions court. Amulya’s advocate withdrew the bail petition due to the directions given by Justice K Natarajan. However the HC gave liberty to the petitioner to approach the court after exhausting remedies at the sessions court. For Amulya's legal team, this has come as setback as they had first approached the sessions court and turned to the HC only when the petition did not make any progress in the lower court. Retired Karnataka HC judge, Justice MF Saldanha has called this a "denial of justice”. "Naturally, if the sessions court was not hearing it, and if you or I are arrested then we cannot sit in jail indefinitely. If you apply for bail and the court says 'I am busy' and the bail application is not heard, then that itself is a denial of justice unless there is a valid reason," Justice (retired) MF Saldanha said. He said as a judge he also does not support the idea of bypassing courts but he can understand if someone is doing it out of desperation. He said, “She has been jail for three months and this is not a murder trial or one of those trials where a bail cannot be given. In this case, I don't see why she has to sit in jail as one can't be presumed to be guilty.” He also added that he believed the High Court judge should have asked the sessions court to hear the petition soon. “When a person comes for bail, it's a question of deprivation of liberty. Somehow or the other, the court should hear the matter. If the application is repeatedly not heard, and based on these facts if I was the High Court judge, then I would have asked the sessions court why this case was not heard. So the right remedy is to direct the sessions court saying 'hear the girl's plea and give a decision'.” The retired judge said even the lockdown is not a good reason for not hearing her case. "If the lockdown is a reason, I won't say that is a non-issue given it has also affected the court's functioning but at the same time we have to have some balance. I can't tell you there is a lockdown and that's why markets are closed and therefore, you can starve. That is not the answer. Something has to be done," he added. The Karnataka state government had also cited this particular reason in its detailed submission to the HC where they opposed her bail. Relying on a Supreme Court judgement passed in light of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic which said that under trial prisoners facing trial with an imprisonment up to 7 years or less shall be tried only by the concerned Jurisdictional District and Session Court during the lockdown period, the state government had prayed that the bail petition be dismissed. It may also be recalled that among other reasons the state government in its submission has termed Amulya as an influential person. Commenting on this, the former HC judge said that these are usual replies by the government in criminal cases but “it's not the right thing to do and these reasons have to be substantiated”. The part of the state government’s petition had said, “The Petitioner being an influential person may threaten and influence the witnesses and hamper the case of the prosecution.  The petitioner fleeing from justice is also not ruled out." It may be recalled Amulya was arrested on February 20 as she was about to speak at an anti-CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act rally in Bengaluru where AIMIM leader Asaduddin Owaisi was the chief guest. She was booked for sedition, promoting enmity between different groups and imputations and other sections of the Indian Penal Code. Since then she has remained in jail for the last three months.
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