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Thursday, August 6, 2020

Bengaluru reports 1484 new COVID-19 cases, 3083 patients recovered

Coronavirus
In Karnataka, while 5,407 persons were discharged following recovery, 74,958 patients are currently undergoing treatment for coronavirus.
Healthcare professional speaks to member of the public at a help desk in the railway station
Bengaluru reported 1,848 new COVID-19 cases on Wednesday. With a total of 3,083 people discharged following their recovery, the total number of active cases in the city stands at 30,960. The city reported 28 new deaths. With this, the total number of deaths related to COVID-19 went up to 1,163 in Bengaluru.Statewide daily cases rose by 5,619. While 5,407 persons were discharged following recovery, 73,958 patients are currently undergoing treatment for coronavirus in the state. Other districts reported more than 100 cases on Wednesday: Ballari (631), Belagavi (293), Mysuru (261), Davanagere (224), Dharwad (199), Kalaburagi (197), Udupi (173), Koppal (154), Dakshina Kannada (149), Bagalkote (149), Hassan (137), Chikkaballapura (129), Uttara Kannada (125), Mandya (123) and Bengaluru Rural (110). A total of 100 new deaths were reported in Karnataka in 24 hours. With this, the COVID-19 death toll in the state rose to 2,804. Among the deaths, 11 patients did not have illnesses, including severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) or influenza-like illness (ILI) patients. A total of 29 victims were below the age of 60 years. Twenty-five patients who died due to COVID-19 did not have any comorbidity. Most of the deceased patients had hypertension, diabetes and chronic kidney diseases. Among the active patients undergoing treatment in the state, a total of 620 persons are being treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). Among these, 337 are from Bengaluru while Dharwad has 39 patients in ICU. Kalaburagi and Hassan (21 each) have more than 20 patients undergoing treatment in ICU. The media bulletin on Wednesday evening said that a total of 38,095 tests were conducted in 24 hours, of which 17,607 were tested through RT-PCR (Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction), CB-NAAT and TrueNat test kits while 20,488 antigen tests were conducted.
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Wednesday, August 5, 2020

The story of Bengaluru’s first streetlight which lit up the city 115 years ago

History
The who's who of Bengaluru at the time had gathered to usher in a new era.
Streetlight_Bengaluru
Photographs provided by Mansoor Ali
The time was 6.30 pm and it was the first week of August in 1905. The who's who of Bengaluru at the time had gathered near the Delhi Gate (close to present day Victoria Hospital). JW Mears, the electrical adviser to the government of India, Colonel PH Benson (after whom Benson Town is named) and Dewan PN Krishnamurthi, the then dewan of Mysore, were among those present.  The occasion was the installation of the first streetlight in Bengaluru, replacing the kerosene lamps which dotted the city's centre and introducing electric streetlights for the first time in southern India.  According to Meera Iyer, author of ‘Discovering Bengaluru: History. Neighbourhoods. Walks’, the oldest and still functioning hydroelectric plant was established near Darjeeling in 1896 and it was the Cauvery Falls Power Scheme that was the next project to get the nod. The idea came from Major ACJ de Lotbiniere who worked for the Mysore kingdom. A hydroelectric power station was set up in Shivanasamudra near Mysuru in 1902 and the power scheme began powering the mining operations in Kolar Gold Fields, 150 km away.  At the time it was built, it was India's second hydroelectric power project after the one set up near Darjeeling.  The dewan of Mysore then decided to harness the power from Shivanasamudra to provide electricity to Bengaluru, which still used kerosene lamps that needed to be cleaned regularly to remove the collection of black soot.  After a redrawing of the plans at the last minute, the city was ready to be electrified for the first time in August 1905. Meera Iyer, quoting the Daily Post newspaper's archived copy in the state archives in Mysuru, says that the inauguration took place on August 3. Even though several reports suggest that the inauguration took place on August 5, a  newspaper clipping shows an article titled 'Electric lighting for the city' published on August 4 depicting the events of the inauguration which took place a day prior. “There was a ceremony with a tent erected to celebrate the occasion. Residents who came from the Cantonment area celebrated the occasion but it was not until a few years later that they got electric lights in their streets. But this day in 1905 was the start of the electric age,” says Meera, speaking to TNM. Photograph of Russel Market Gajanana Sharma, a former employee of the Karnataka Power Transmission Corporation Limited who penned the book ‘Belakayitu Karnataka’, says that the street light came up close to where Victoria Hospital is currently located. “The substation was set up close to Delhi Gate near Victoria Hospital. It was the area of the fort at the time and the KR Market as we know it now was not there,” Gajanana tells TNM. He says that the urban legend that it was ‘Asia's first streetlight’ is not true.  It was Sir John Hewett, a member of the Viceroy's council who was in Mysore at the time on matters related to the Commerce and Industries Department, who threw the switch on, lighting up 104 lamps outside the substation near Victoria Hospital. There is now no trace of the transformer house near Delhi Gate where Hewett turned the switch on, but there is a Karnataka Power Corporation transformer a few hundred metres from the old fort.  The power station itself was moved to Anand Rao Circle in the 1920s before a slew of changes took place in the city. Even a century later, power problems persist in the city but the electric age dawned 115 years ago with flick of a switch. 
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Bengaluru gets mobile COVID-19 lab for RT-PCR testing

Coronavirus
Developed by the Indian Institute of Science, this lab has the capacity to conduct 9,000 tests per month.
Mobiling testing clinic
Karnataka Medical Education Minister Dr Sudhakar on Wednesday inaugurated a first of its kind and reportedly the country’s only Indian Council of Medical Research or ICMR-approved mobile RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) mobile lab in Bengaluru. The Mobile Infection Testing and Reporting (MITR) has been developed by the Indian Institute of Science (IISc). This lab will be capable of conducting 9,000 tests per month, officials said.  “This is a unique lab that has all safety features and is capable of producing 100% accurate results within four hours,” Dr Sudhakar said while inaugurating it. IISc has developed this laboratory and handed it over to the Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Science. The mobile lab can also be utilised for molecular diagnostic testing and can be deployed in coronavirus hotspots quickly. Apart from COVID-19, the lab can be utilised for testing H1N1 (swine flu), HCV (Hepatitis C), TB (tuberculosis), HPV (human papillomavirus) and HIV (Human immunodeficiency virus ), the minister said. Among the available technologies to test coronavirus, RT-PCR is the most trustworthy method of testing. Currently, the other mode of testing extensively put in use in Karnataka is the antigen test, which will show if an individual is currently infected.  While the antigen tests are much cheaper and can give results within 30 minutes as opposed to eight hours taken in RT-PCR kits, their efficacy is thought to be only 50%. The efficacy of the RT-PCR test is more than 75%, according to a section of experts. The antigen tests also do not need to be used within a laboratory environment nor do they pose a biosafety hazard. Earlier, speaking to TNM, Dr CN Manjunath, state nodal officer for COVID-19 testing, had said that antigen tests were mostly used to test healthcare workers, persons who have high person-to-person contact or symptomatic patients.  Due to the lower efficacy of these tests, negative results for symptomatic patients on antigen tests have to be confirmed by RT-PCR tests.
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Lockdown aggravates lack of access to justice in Bengaluru

Justice
Lawyers tell TNM that for many, justice has gone further out of reach during the pandemic.
Group of policemen stand around in arailway station while a train leaves the station. They are all wearing khaki, holding lathis, and wearing white face masks
PTI
“Recently, I tried to get a dowry harassment complaint registered at a police station in Bengaluru, within the territorial jurisdiction,” says Mudassir Husain, a lawyer with Precinct Legal. What followed is not unheard of in police stations across India – however, the intensity of the situation was worse than usual. “The inspector was reluctant to even read the complaint and directed me to the women's police station. At the women's police station, they refused to take the complaint and asked me to go back to the previous police station. Finally, I had to ask the local MLA to call up the inspector of the police station to accept the complaint,” Mudassir says. “It was a frustrating experience where despite having jurisdiction, police stations refused to consider the complaint,” he adds. Unfortunately, this has become a common experience of people trying to access justice in Bengaluru during the pandemic – especially when it comes to violence against women. On the one hand, police are reluctant to take on cases and file FIRs. On the other hand, access to courts has reduced for people in the city, and so has access to state redressal mechanisms. “People have been waiting years for their court dates, but not everything is available now. While the vegetable shops are open, the courts are closed. Isn’t justice an essential service as well?” asks advocate Manoranjini. ‘Police refuse to take cases’ Mamatha Yajaman, a women’s rights activist says, “Lots of cases (relating to women) have happened during the lockdown. In April there was a big case, where the woman was facing domestic violence in her marital home. But there was no mobility due to the lockdown. She couldn’t go to the police, and when the police were called, they said that there is no vehicle, please come by yourself. This happened during the peak of the lockdown, and there was no way to move around.” Mamatha notes that the problem was mainly seen at the lower rungs of the justice system that interacts with the general public. "The police were not accepting a complaint against an abusive husband. Instead, they were trying to counsel the woman to take the man back when she was not interested and wanted to leave him due to the various atrocities he had committed against her and her family. When we insisted and put pressure on the police, the constable gave a tip to the accused and he absconded. So we face these kinds of problems," she says. “What we have noticed is that IPS officials at the higher levels are usually helpful to the public. But their subordinates are the ones who give a lot of trouble, there needs to be a lot of progress in the system and government,” she says, and that there should be a lot more support from the government on this issue. “The system was just not giving any proper structural support, like a nodal officer, who could oversee cases that were atrocities against women, though this was the need of the hour and many women’s organisations were raising the issue. But they have not set up any system like this. Meanwhile, the Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) for the Bengaluru Command Centre Isha Pant said during an online meeting, “We admit that with the lockdown and coronavirus, we have been very busy, as police were involved in managing check posts and making sure people stay at home. The crime cell had been put on the back burner…But I have held a meeting and discussed that we cannot afford to refuse cases, and we have taken steps to take cases.” The Bengaluru Central DCP Chetan Singh Rathore tells TNM that though there were difficulties, the department is trying its best to be accommodating. “Though some police stations had to be closed due to COVID-19, a pandal has been set up outside the police station so that complaints can continue to be taken.” ‘Emergency cases only’ India is known for being a place where ‘the wheels of justice turn slowly’, and the common legal maxim of ‘justice delayed is justice denied’ does not come into the picture, with people going to courts for decades on end while the courts continue to give extension after extension. Courts have closed ever since the lockdown, and the courts are hearing cases on a basis of ‘emergency only,’ there is no saying when the old cases will be heard. “The family courts are not functioning, because they are not ‘urgent’. But this concept is wrong. The court is not taking into consideration the suffering of women in distress,” Mamatha notes. However, even so, there is no legal definition of the term ‘emergency cases’ which has been established, lawyers say. “It all comes down to the discretion of the registrar, to whom we apply to. When it comes to life and death, isn’t it an emergency?” Vasanth Aditya, a lawyer, policy analyst and researcher in Bengaluru asks. Vasanth tells TNM that there should be a better system of access to justice. Vasanth says he has been working on an emergency medical-related case, but it has not been taken up by the courts. “It is a medical negligence case wherein the patient underwent a minor ten-minute surgery, but due to an anesthesian’s error, slipped into coma for months. The hospital has slapped a bill of Rs 29 lakh, when their monthly household income is Rs 10,000. Now, they are asking him to either take the patient out of the ICU or pay the hospital bill. We are not able to get a hearing for the case, which has been going on since February.” Robin Christopher, a criminal lawyer, says that his clients are stuck in jail because of the lack of hearings. “My client has been in jail for eleven years, waiting for the court to deliver justice. Now the case has come to the evidence stage, but it is not being heard due to the various challenges of getting witnesses to come and testify in the courtroom, since the court itself has been closed.” Nature of justice system changed Robin also says that the very nature of access to justice has been changed with only virtual hearings being conducted. “Video conferencing was used only in very extreme cases, for example, when the person was in a different country and could not possibly have made it to the courtroom and give testimony.” However, now that has changed, he says and has caused unique problems in the pursuit of justice. “For example, in a criminal hearing, I can’t sit and discuss the proceedings with the client during the hearing, and I cannot clarify what charges are being heard against him. Since the mic is open to everyone, the client is in the jail, and everyone can hear everyone else,” Robin adds. Robin says even in online hearings, there are gaps where people just don’t know how to use the technology, or there are people who have connectivity issues so they can’t even hear what is being said against them. Vasanth notes that India has always been very poor compared to global rankings, when it comes to delivery of justice because there is no transparency. “We are in the 160th position of transparency of justice. The lockdown has worsened this. People have been waiting for months and years for their cases to come up, and yet there is no system in place for court hearings — we are a technological city and yet a place like Singapore has an automated system for court hearings. In Bengaluru, we have to send an email, and there is no acknowledgement of it. So we have no idea what is happening. It is a gross failure which is systematic,” he concludes.
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Poll: Voters much more likely to trust family, Fauci than Trump on vaccine

Forty-three percent of voters say they'd take a vaccine based on the advice of Anthony Fauci.

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BJP MP Tejasvi Surya says Hindus should control state power in India for 'dharma'

Politics
The BJP MP from Bengaluru said Hindus should control state power, citing the building of the Ram temple in Ayodhya as a gain under Hindu rule.
Tejasvi Surya
File image
Tejasvi Surya has a record of making problematic and controversial statements. On Wednesday, the BJP MP from Bengaluru South went a step further. In an openly Hindu supremacist remark, Tejasvi Surya said that the state power should be controlled by Hindus in India. Implying that currently, India is being controlled by Hindu power, the MP said that this ‘regaining’ of Hindu power is what has made the construction of Ram temple possible in Ayodhya.  Taking to Twitter, Tejasvi Surya said, “Dear Hindus, Most important lesson is that control of State power by Hindus is absolutely essential for sustenance of Dharma. When we didn’t control State, we lost our temple. When we regained, we rebuilt. The 282 in 2014 & 303 in 2019 to Sri @narendramodi made today possible!” (sic) The Indian Union, as per the Constitution is secular, unlike countries that have a state religion – like Pakistan and Bangladesh. An elected legislator openly declaring that Hindu power controls India today is extremely problematic, say critics. Further, the building of the Ram temple was made possible by a Supreme Court order on the Ayodhya dispute – so is Tejasvi Surya openly suggesting that the Supreme Court is controlled by Hindus in power, they ask. Tejasvi’s tweet has got more than 8,000 retweets and more than 34,000 likes at the time of writing. Bengaluru-based lawyer and activist Leo Saldhana who took note of the tweet called on the President to suspend Surya as an MP. Surya’s words are against the oath he took to protect the idea of India as mentioned in the Constitution, Leo said. @rashtrapatibhvn @VPSecretariat Please note that @Tejasvi_Surya with this tweet has broken his oath to protect the idea of India as per the oath he took on the sacred Indian Constitution. As per the oath you took to protect India’s Constitution you must suspend this man as MP. — Leo Saldanha (@leofsaldanha) August 5, 2020 Speaking with TNM, Leo Saldhana said, "The Constitution speaks for syncretism, because of which we can be whoever we are in our private lives and respect each other in public life. Surya's tweet appears to contradict this foundational Constitutional ethos.”  Saldhana suggested as a private individual Surya could have said this but it is not acceptable that he is using his political office and power to promote bigotry and sectarianism. Former Lokayukta and retired Supreme Court judge Justice Santosh Hegde also criticised the statement by Tejasvi Surya. “When we have introduced the word ‘secular’ in our Constitution, it can never be the policy of the government to propagate one religion. Nor should we say that the policy of one religion be the policy of the government. When these lines get blurred, it is a very sad state of affairs.” But just like on Twitter, Tejasvi Surya has supporters on the ground as well, who believe that Tejasvi’s remarks are the opposite of ‘apologia’. Laxmy Iyengar, a senior advocate, is of the opinion that there is nothing wrong with Tejasvi’s tweet and said Hindus need not be apologetic for following their religion. “The key word here is 'dharma'. What is conveyed is that to adhere to the path of righteousness and achieve what is promised, a massive majority is required. It is the consensus arrived at post judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court that paved the way for the building of the temple at the earliest.”
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Karnataka High Court restrains Centre from publishing EIA 2020 notification

Court
The High Court observed that the Union government is yet to give wide publicity in regional languages to the draft EIA 2020.
Union Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change Prakash Javadekar wears a mask during the release of a book and poster on the eve of International Tiger Day 2020
Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar
In a setback to the Union government, the Karnataka High Court restrained it from publishing the final draft notification of the Environmental Impact Assessment 2020. The court noted that the draft gazette notification has not been publicised in local languages yet. The court restrained the government from finalising the draft till wide publicity is given in regional languages, especially in Kannada, and till reasonable opportunity has been given to citizens to submit their objections. The court was hearing a petition filed by the United Conservation Movement to stay the draft Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) notification. EIA 2020 proposes to fast track environmental clearances that will allow industrial and infrastructural projects to begin construction activities in and around forest areas.  A bench headed by Chief Justice Abhay Oka and Justice AS Kinagi noted that there is no wide publicity for the notification amid the pandemic. The Central Government counsel Shiva Kumar told the court that the official gazette draft notification can be published only in Hindi and English. “We are following up with State Environment Impact Assessment Authorities for publishing in local languages,” the counsel told the court, according to LiveLaw.  The court has also clarified that it will be open for the central government to take all permissible steps on the basis of impugned draft notification. The case will next come up for hearing on September 7.  The court had earlier pulled up the Union government for not providing widespread publicity to the draft. It had directed the government to reconsider the last date for filing objections. The current last date is August 11, 2020.  The EIA 2020 draft had caused massive outrage on social media since it allegedly attempts to dilute environmental norms in favour of big corporations. Environmental experts and NGOs have also slammed the Centre for not following the Delhi High Court’s order to make the draft available in 22 official languages of the country.  Major conflict points like reduction in the time for public consultations, post-facto environmental clearance in which developmental projects can begin without prior EC have triggered opposition. A lot of celebrities have also come out and asked people to send in their comments to the Union government. Also read: Why environmentalists are urging comments against draft EIA TNM Explainer: Why are activists and experts against the draft EIA 2020?
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