Ads

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Karnataka reports 257 new cases of coronavirus, most are from Udupi

Coronavirus
This brings the total reported cases in the state to 4,320.
PTI in Bengaluru
The Karnataka State Health Department reported 257 new cases of coronavirus on Thursday, according to the latest bulletin. This brings the total number of cases in the state to 4,320, of which 2,651 are active. The maximum number of cases were reported in the district of Udupi in Coastal Karnataka. Udupi has reported 92 cases, all of whom are returnees from Maharashtra. In total, 155 cases in Karnataka on Thursday are of those who returned to the state – 149 from Maharashtra alone. The second highest number of cases in the state have been reported in Raichur district, with 88 people testing positive from the district. Of them, 30 people were contacts of Patient-2612, a 22-year-old man who returned to Raichuru from Maharashtra on May 29. Another 17 people were the contacts of P-2608, a 59-year-old woman who also returned from Maharashtra on May 29. Nine new cases have been reported in Bengaluru Urban district. Mandya and Hassan saw 15 new positive cases each, Davangere saw 13, and Belagavi saw 12 cases. Other districts reported cases in the single digits. Four new COVID-19 deaths were included in the bulletin released on Thursday. This includes a 44-year-old man from Gadag who was admitted with complaints of fever, cough, and urinary tract infection. He was initially admitted to the Gadag district hospital, but his condition deteriorated and was shifted to the Hubbali-Dharwad district hospital, where he passed away on June 2. An 83-year-old woman from Davangere, after being taken to the hospital on complaints of chest pain. She was a secondary contact. She died due to metabolic acidosis and renal failure on May 31. Two of the deaths have been reported in Bengaluru Urban district, who died on June 3. The first, a 65-year-old patient, was diagnosed with SARI. She passed away due to acute respiratory distress syndrome. The other patient, a 60-year-old woman, was also a SARI patient. She also had a history of hypertension and had diabetes. The patient had fever and vomiting, and passed away on the same day that she was brought to hospital. The state saw 106 new discharges on Thursday, bringing the total discharges in the state to 1,610. Fifty-two people have been discharged from Mandya district, while 20 have been discharged from Udupi. The state currently has 37,733 people under active observation for being contacts of positive patients. Out of this 21,838 people are primary contacts, while 15,895 people are secondary contacts.
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/2AA3eq7
via IFTTT

Bengaluru stops random testing, to focus on returnees from outside state

coronavirus
BBMP officials had started random testing in two containment zones of Hogasandra and Padarayanapura, which was later spread across the city.
bengaluru stops random testing
In a positive development, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BMMP) officials on Thursday said that they have stopped random testing in the city to check for community spread of the novel coronavirus disease. BBMP officials say they have managed to contain the spread in the areas where there was an outbreak. The focus for the city administration has now shifted to the people who are entering Bengaluru from outside Karnataka. Data provided by the BBMP COVID-19 War Room incidentally states that 45-plus% of all active cases in the city are among returning travellers. “We have stopped random testing across Bengaluru including in containment zones. As of now, we expect that we have contained the infection in all places and our primary concern is now on inter-state and international travellers especially those coming from Maharashtra,” BBMP Special Commissioner Dr Lokesh M in-charge of COVID-19 surveillance told TNM. “Even the DJ Halli area which had seen a recent spurt of cases is also not a matter of worry as we believe we have contained the infection by isolating the contacts. Only 19-20 persons out of the 100-odd of the primary contacts we had put in quarantine tested positive,” he explained further that so far random testing in multiple areas have come across as negative, which is an encouraging sign. It may be recalled that BBMP officials had started random testing in two containment zones of Hogasandra and Padarayanapura in the last week of April. Later, when multiple random test samples had come back positive, health officials had said that they would carry out mass testing in the Padarayanapura ward in mid-May. Bengaluru Urban, till Thursday evening, has a total of 428 COVID-19 cases, out of which 151 persons are still getting treated, while 263 persons have recovered. 13 persons have succumbed to the disease and their comorbidities. With a total of 39,581 tests done, the city has a positivity rate of 1%. And a total of 1334 persons (primary and secondary contacts) are still under quarantine. Among these 417 cases, 71 are those who have been put in institutional quarantine due to their travel histories. Among these 71 patients, 65 are still active cases, making 45% of all active cases in Bengaluru those who recently travelled to Karnataka from other states or other countries. Health officials say regular containment zone management will continue as usual in 40 containment zones spread across the city. Dr Lokesh further said that out-of-state returnees are being screened by the state health department and are undergoing pool testing and institutional quarantine as per symptoms. “Protocol related to this is the prerogative of the state health department and here we (BBMP or Bengaluru Urban district administration) have little decision to make,” he said. He added, “All the people who are put in quarantine are mostly tested either individually or through pooled tests, and in some way, one person is missed or someone comes in our fever clinics, that is the only matter of concern for now.” Similarly, Dr Prakash, District Health Officer, Bengaluru Urban, also said, “Most cases in the recent days are coming among interstate travellers from Maharashtra and Delhi, so we cannot say that the relaxations of the lockdown are responsible for the rise in cases. Otherwise, the contacts who are turning up positive are already in quarantine, so there is no chance of disease. So people with travel history is the main issue.”
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/3dEissQ
via IFTTT

Posters declaring Pumpwell flyover in Mangaluru as 'Veer Savarkar flyover' appear again

Controversy
This comes just days after the controversy over naming a flyover in Bengaluru after VD Savarkar.
A poster proclaiming the Pumpwell flyover in Mangaluru as ‘Veer Savarkar flyover’ appeared on Thursday, just days after the controversy over naming a flyover in Bengaluru after VD Savarkar. A similar poster in Mangaluru had appeared earlier this week, and police officials stated that it was removed on Wednesday. However, the vinyl poster made an appearance once again on Thursday.  Next to the poster, graffiti with the words ‘Bajrang Dal’ was found painted in orange colour on the parapet of the flyover walls in Pumpwell and Thokottu.  Speaking to The News Minute, Vishwa Hindu Parishad's divisional secretary Sharan Pumpwell said that the banner ‘may have been’ put up by one of their activists. "Even if someone has put up, there is nothing wrong with it, Veer Savarkar is a freedom fighter. The pumpwell flyover must be named after him," he said.  Mangaluru's lone Congress MLA UT Khader reacted to the incident and said if there were to be any changes to the name of the flyover, it should be named after Jain guru Mahaveera. “It seems that those who named the flyover after VD Savarkar do not have knowledge about history. The huge kalasha (shrine) which was at Pumpwell Circle was installed in the presence of Dharmasthala Dharmadhikari D Veerendra Heggade. Naming the flyover after Savarkar, is an insult to Mahaveera who always has propagated peace and harmony,” he told the media. The shrine was displaced during the construction of the flyover. Khader also urged the police to identify the miscreants who put up the banner and graffiti and take action against them. The flyover naming controversy was triggered after the state government’s decision to rename Yelahanka flyover after Savarkar was met with opposition in Bengaluru. The inauguration ceremony scheduled for May 28 was eventually postponed after required approvals were not readied in time by the civic body – Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP).  Read: Decision to name Bengaluru flyover after Savarkar put on hold amid opposition outcry According to UT Khader, outfits who wanted to make a statement, dragged Mangaluru’s Pumpwell flyover inaugurated five months ago into the ‘naming controversy’. The flyover in Pumpwell, which was commissioned in 2009, was inaugurated on January 31 2020, more than ten years later. During the decade from 2010 to 2020, the flyover was a source of conflict between the Congress and the BJP in Mangaluru.  Read: After delay of over 10 years, Pumpwell flyover inaugurated in Mangaluru Meanwhile, local residents near Thokkottu flyover reported another banner naming the flyover as ‘Rani Abbakka’ flyover. Similarly a banner renaming the Central Maidan or Nehru Maidan as ‘Koti Chennaya Central Maidan’ were also found on the grounds on Wednesday. Story by Story Infinity (Subs and Scribes Media Ventures LLP.)
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/306kcXD
via IFTTT

Haryana govt uses Karnataka’s contact tracing app to fight COVID-19

Coronavirus
Officials in Karnataka said they have shared the Contact Tracing App and Quarantine Watch app’s source code and trained their counterparts in Haryana.
The Haryana government is using Karnataka government’s contact tracing software for its surveillance measures to contain the spread of COVID-19. Officials said Karnataka’s performance in the COVID-19 pandemic management is partially attributable to the efficiency of this robust pan-state tracing/ tracking system. The knowledge transfer process had taken place in the last week of May. “Haryana Government has taken Contact Tracing App and Quarantine Watch App of Karnataka State War Room. We have shared the source code and given full guidance, trained their tech group for use of these two mobile apps and web solutions at Haryana,” Munish Moudgil, In-charge State War Room, Karnataka, said. Senior IAS officer Moudgil has been previously lauded for his efforts to employ digital means to bring in transparency and efficiency in governance including digitising land records in the state.  He added, “This tracing systems were built in-house by the State War Room. Our development team has about 4-5 developers, 2-3 testers, 2 database persons. In addition, there are persons who work in the help desk to guide and support field activities.” Officials said the need for such a system is important as contacts of an infected person and further their secondary contacts could be scattered all over Karnataka. For example, Moudgil explained,  “A patient in Bengaluru may inform a person in Bidar whom he had contact with. Then Bidar team has to be immediately informed to follow up. This Bidar contact may tell another person whom he met and who is resident of Mangaluru. Then the  Mangaluru team has to follow up. Everyone of the contacts have to be traced and quarantined within a day.”  He added, “With this unified system, a contact of a patient entered in Bengaluru, instantaneously flows to Contact Tracing app of Bidar team member if contact address is of Bidar. The local Bidar team goes immediately and hand stamps the contact and quarantines him.” The system which is based on a mobile application is used by 3000-plus officials involved in the state for this contact tracing exercise. He further said that district Bhoomi and Atalji Janasnehi Kendra (database of revenue departments) consultants are technically handholding the field teams spread across the state. The entire operation is overlooked by four KAS (Karnataka Administrative Service) officers in the state.
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/2A1IpUj
via IFTTT

The struggles of Bengaluru's Darshinis during lockdown – and the long road to recovery

Food and Beverage
Even if customers trickle back in gradually, thereby increasing the cash flow, it will take months for most establishments to recover.
Courtesy Prajwal Bhat
Walk into one of Bengaluru’s numerous Darshinis on any normal day, and you’ll be greeted by an unmistakable symphony of sounds and smell. The sizzle of dosa batter frying in ghee on the tava, the aroma of filter kaapi freshly poured into steel tumblers, the clatter of plates carrying bisi bele baath, kesari baath, rava idlis, and more to scores of hungry diners. It’s where bowls of bonda soup threaten to spill on every table and where the vada-sambar combo is at its Karnataka best. These establishments, shuttered during the nationwide lockdown, are now struggling to get back into business. Metal tables have been propped up like barricades to prevent customers from entering. It was once thought nearly impossible to enjoy a Darshini breakfast without the atmosphere that each one brings. But now, while diners are all allowed to place their orders at the location, they must wait at a distance to pick it up and leave. Sri Ganesh Fast food located right opposite the St Joseph’s College on Langford road is usually buzzing with students and office goers. Now however, it wears a deserted look. The establishment is reeling under losses, and the owner says he is mulling shutting down his nearly 20-year-old eatery. “We began parcel service earlier this month, but we don’t have many customers. Our customers are mostly office goers. But they all have gone back to their native places. Those who order food are bachelors and those who live alone,” Krishna says. For Krishna, it’s been trouble after trouble since demonetisation, which was followed by GST; and the pandemic has been the biggest blow, he says. “I am yet to pay my staff for the last two months. Any money we make goes in buying rations and feeding my staff who have nowhere else to go.” Krishna adds. He also does not have enough savings; and with nearly zero cash flow, he is struggling to pay the rent for his establishment and has been negotiating with his landlord to get some relief. A long road to normalcy With the government allowing restaurants to open for customers from June 8, scores of Darshinis scattered across the city are hoping that their fortunes will reverse. However, it is not going to be easy to get back to normalcy. Even if customers trickle back in gradually, thereby increasing the cash flow, it will take months for most establishments to recover from the financial blow delivered by the pandemic. Foody’s, a popular landmark hotel on Double Road near the Shanthinagar Bus Stand, has seen only 15% of its normal sales in April and May. Abhinav Shankar, the owner of Foody’s, says that he has exhausted all his cash reserves, and is looking to get a loan under the government’s scheme of unsecured loans for small businesses. “I have usually never defaulted on my electricity bill because it is a commercial connection and they will cut the connection within two days of non-payment. For the first time, I paid my bill three weeks late, and the BESCOM (Bengaluru Electricity Supply Company) gave me a grace period, with no late fee,” Abinav says. “My landlady has not given me concession on rent but has only given me a time extension. The biggest expense is my suppliers, whose bills have been pending since February. Now, I have spoken to my bank to begin processing a loan to clear this due, under the government scheme. My suppliers have been patient, because they understand, but they too have their own expenses to meet.” Abhinav says.  He estimates that a loan of Rs 5 lakh will keep him afloat for two months, until things begin picking up again. Another small Darshini owner, Manjunath, who owns the Sri Dhanalakshmi Upahara on Hennur Main Road, feels that business will be dull for a few more months. “We have been open throughout the shutdown, giving parcels to people, and offering tea and coffee to police officials and others on the job. But I am afraid of what will come. Things will not get better for at least the next year. All we have to do is brace ourselves.” When asked if he was planning to take aid from the government, which was being offered in the form of loans, Manjunath believes that those are false promises. “Do these things really materialise? Did the Rs 5,000 promised for drivers from the government reach a single person? We really are on our own.” For larger eateries such as Foody’s, one major issue is also that almost 50% of the staff have gone back home, which may become a challenge at the time of reopening. Cost of takeaways While many of the Darshinis kept operations running by offering only parcels through the lockdown, it hasn’t brought them any relief. Manjunath and Krishna say that parcelling has added to their costs.  The Darshinis, like other restaurants, are not allowed to pack in plastic bags, and complain they have to pay more for stiff brown paper. “Even plastic bags to hold sambar are not allowed. What else should we do? We are hesitant to raise prices because of the already low demand,” says Manjunath. Krishna also points out that other than being costly, parcels were adding to the waste around them: “If you go out, you’ll see the roads are littered with parcel waste. How many days can you go on like this? This is unsustainable.” Krishna also notes that it was less wasteful to eat off a plate, and that his staff always wash vessels with a disinfectant. “But we are being forced to create so much waste,” he says. Read: Taxi, auto drivers conduct ‘funeral rites’ for Karnataka govt’s compensation promise Sourcing raw materials Another blow to restaurant owners is the closure of the major wholesale vegetable market in the centre of the city, the KR Puram and Kalasipalya markets. These markets are from where eateries source vegetables in large quantities at wholesale prices. Krishna says they will now have to go almost to Hosur (on the Karnataka-Tamil Nadu border) to go buy wholesale vegetables, thus increasing the cost of raw materials. Manjunath echoes the sentiment. “We have paid Rs 40 for a bundle of coriander. Peas, an important ingredient for us, is simply not available. Rava, which costs Rs 20 usually, I have paid Rs 40 a kilo. Sourcing sugar too, was a huge challenge, as no one in the wholesale market had it. All the mills are shut. I literally had to go searching for sugar and I somehow bought a 50-kilo sack under the shutters.” And yet, across the board, restaurant owners have decided to keep their prices the same, despite having to deal with a lot of variables. They are also planning to offer the entire menu as before, including the more expensive dishes, prepared with ghee. The Chinese items, which are prepared by a separate cook, will also be offered as usual. Seating and cleanliness Abhinav says that his eatery will reduce the seating by 50% to cope with the staff shortage and also maintain the distancing norms. Manjunath says that he would not look at allowing seated customers until everything is normal again, “perhaps in the next 12 months.” He feels like a takeaway service, giving out parcels, would be a better option in the near future, to reduce the risk of infection. “To sit here and interact with so many people on a daily basis, I get frightened. This is my livelihood. It’s better not to take the risk for others to come in contact in the hotel,” he adds. Besides this, the establishments are taking care to ask their employees regularly if they feel sick and are checking their temperature. As COVID-19 is not a food-borne disease, but that which spreads through contact, surfaces are being cleaned with disinfectants on an hourly basis, including floors and kitchen surfaces. Staff are also being educated about the virus, and being equipped with gloves, masks, and caps. Will things get better? Even though the government has said that hotels would begin operations from the second week of June with dine-in service, none of the hotel owners see things picking up anytime soon.  Abhinav says, “It’ll take a couple more months for things to become normal. I see that offices around here are beginning to go back to work, and I am hopeful.” However, Krishna has a completely different view. He believes that things wouldn’t get better until the next elections. “I think it will take another four years for things to get better. First it was demonetisation, and when we just began coping, we got hit by GST. And now, this virus. We don’t know what the next blow will be.” For a large population in Bengaluru, Darshinis are their first and most affordable choice for a meal. These owners say that even a fraction of the Darshinis closing down across the city would create a huge hassle for lakhs of people. They are hoping that the government will intervene to help them tide through the tough times.
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/2AB9OfR
via IFTTT

BJP mulls Tejaswini Ananth Kumar for Rajya Sabha, Sudha Murthy’s name pops up too

Politics
Congress meanwhile, is looking at forming a coalition with the JD(S) to secure two seats for the alliance.
Sudha Murthy and Tejaswini Ananth Kumar
As Rajya Sabha elections for candidates from Karnataka are slated to be held on June 19, the Congress and JD(S) are mulling an alliance in order to secure two seats in the upper house of the Parliament. The Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee President DK Shivakumar, who is close to the JD(S) first family, is likely to help the JD(S) elect a representative to the upper house. In exchange, the Congress will support the JD(S) in the Karnataka Legislative Council Elections, which are slated to be held on June 25.  The JD(S) does not plan for its supremo HD Deve Gowda to be nominated. Instead, party leader Muddahanume Gowda, who gave up his Lok Sabha ticket in Tumakuru for Deve Gowda, is likely to be fielded.  The Congress, too has several aspirants for the lone seat but the party is likely to field Mallikarjun Kharge, who has experience in Delhi’s politics and has served as Leader of Opposition for the Congress in the Lok Sabha. Other Congress leaders who are retiring from Rajya Sabha, including BK Hariprasad and MV Rajeev Gowda, along with former MPs Veerappa Moily and KH Muniyappa, are also aspiring to be re-elected.  The BJP, which can elect two representatives to the upper house of the Parliament is still mulling over names. BJP sources say Tejaswini Ananth Kumar, wife of former Union Minister Ananth Kumar, who missed out on the Bengaluru South ticket to incumbent MP Tejasvi Surya, is a front runner. The party is also mulling over holding talks with Sudha Murthy, chairperson of Infosys Foundation and wife of Infosys co-founder Narayana Murthy, regarding nominating her to the upper house.  The recent dissent in the BJP erupted largely due to BJP MLA from Hukkeri Umesh Katti demanding that his brother Ramesh Katti be elected to the Upper House. Umesh, who is a close confidante of Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa and also a senior leader, was kept out of the cabinet. However, his detractor, Prabhakar Kore, who is close to the high command, is also trying to retain his seat in the Rajya Sabha and get re-elected.  Even during the Lok Sabha elections, the party had fielded Annasaheb Jolle from Chikkodi instead of Ramesh Katti, who was an aspirant for the ticket back then. “Though Sudha Murthy’s name is doing the rounds, it is unlikely as Tejaswini Ananth Kumar is a stronger candidate and she is acquainted with the way the party functions,” a BJP leader said.  The Legislative Council elections The BJP has 117 seats in the Assembly and the Congress and JD(S) have 68 and 34 seats respectively. To elect a candidate, one requires 44 votes. The BJP can elect two members, while the Congress can elect only one and the JD(S) cannot elect anyone, as it is short by 10 votes. If an alliance is formed, Congress hopes to bank on extra 24 votes and bag one more seat for the alliance. Seven seats in the Karnataka Legislative Council will be vacant on June 30 and the Election Commission is expected to announce the dates for election soon. The BJP can elect four members while the Congress and JD(S) can elect two and one members respectively. By helping the Congress in winning three MLC seats, the JD(S) hopes to gain support for electing its candidate to Rajya Sabha, sources added.   
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/2Ua7Gm9
via IFTTT

'Check for COVID-19 stamps’: Karnataka government issues order to hotels, malls

In the event of a violation, the Chief Secretary said the police should be informed at 100.
All shops, offices, malls and other commercial establishments in Karnataka have been asked to be vigilant and not allow COVID-stamped people to enter their premises before the completion of the prescribed quarantine time. "They should not allow those with a quarantine stamp to enter before the end of their quarantine period or till they get a current COVID negative test report," according to an order issued by Chief Secretary TM Vijay Bhaskar. Vijay Bhaskar has also issued an order to all religious places, hotels and others to first check for a quarantine stamp on all their customers or visitors before they enter the premises. "All shops, commercial establishments, offices, factories, malls, religious places, hotels and etc., are required to check for a quarantine stamp on all their customers or visitors before they enter the premises," he said. Each stamp also notes the date till when a person is quarantined. In the event of a violation, the Chief Secretary said the police should be informed at 100. Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa had earlier warned that those who violate quarantine rules will face legal consequences. The order issued also highlighted the role of general public, resident welfare associations and commercial establishments in fighting the pandemic. "General public and resident welfare associations are advised to report any violation of the quarantine in their neighbourhood to the police at telephone number 100," said the chief secretary. General public, commercial establishments and resident welfare associations have been empowered to report quarantine violations at a time when many activities are set to reopen from June 8 as part of Unlock - 1, after more than two months of lockdown. TNM had earlier reported how resident welfare associations were imposing bizarre rules during the lockdown. Read: ‘Walk in one direction, no newspapers’: Apartments continue to impose bizarre rules On Wednesday, Karnataka reported 267 COVID-19 cases taking the number of cases in the state to 4063. While 1514 people infected by the virus have recovered, 53 people have died in the state. There are currently 2494 cases active in the state. With inputs from IANS  
Body 2: 


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/3gQ0DsB
via IFTTT