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Friday, August 14, 2020

Drunk man mistakenly draped flag on Sringeri Shankaracharya statue: Cops

Controversy
Police officials said it was not a flag of the SDPI but a banner from Sringeri Jamiya Mosque which was used during Eid-Milad festival.
The investigation over the appearance of a flag on the statue of Shankaracharya in Sringeri in Chikkamagaluru district town on Thursday indicated that a 28-year-old man named Milind mistakenly draped the flag over the saint.  "...The person had consumed alcohol and under its influence and to cover himself from rain, he had taken a banner from Sringeri Jamiya Mosque, which was used during Eid-Milad festival and had placed the same over a pavilion on the statue of Shree Shankaracharya," Chikkamagaluru SP Hakay Akshay Machindra said in a statement. The statue of Shankaracharya is located at Veerappa Gowda Circle in the town. A case was registered in the Sringeri Police Station after the flag was spotted.  Initially, there was tension over the flag's appearance. BJP leaders claimed that the flag found on the statue of Shankaracharya was the party flag of the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI).  However, police officials clarified that the flag only resembled the SDPI's flag but it was a banner taken from the Jamiya Mosque in Sringeri by Milind who wanted to protect himself from the cold at night. He is a coolie worker from Chikkamagaluru. "Under the influence of alcohol, the person had brought a banner from a mosque that reflected a religion and had placed the same over a pavilion on the statue of Shree Shankaracharya," read the SP's statement. Despite the clarification, Udupi-Chikkamagaluru MP Shobha Karandlaje of the BJP continued to criticise SDPI and called for a ban on the organisation. 5. Planting SDPI flag on Sri Shankaracharya's statue in Sringeri & inciting violence. It's high time that, Govt led by Sri @BSYBJP recommends central govt to ban this terror outfit. Orgs like SDPI & PFI are threat to mankind, national security & for a harmonious society. 3/3 pic.twitter.com/qey1F2WIuc — Shobha Karandlaje (@ShobhaBJP) August 14, 2020 But police officials investigating the incident said that the person who draped the flag on the statue did not belong to a political party or organisation and that it was not done on purpose. Police officials investigating the incident said that Milind had taken the banner to cover himself since it was raining heavily and police officials said that he decided to place the banner over a pavilion on the statue of Shankaracharya. "During interrogation, the person admitted that under the influence of alcohol, he had placed a cloth belonging to one God over another God. He also revealed that as it was raining heavily, he took that banner to cover himself. After knowing that the banner relates to a God, he thought of giving it to another God and placed the banner over a pavilion on the statue of Shree Shankaracharya," the SP added. Police zeroed in on Milind after spotting him in a CCTV footage from the area. He admitted to the police of his actions.  Adi Shankaracharya is an 8th century philosopher and Sringeri, situated on the banks of the river Tunga in Chikkamagaluru district, was the location of the first mutt established by him.  
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These Bengalureans have turned their passion for baking into at-home businesses

Human Interest
From finding affordable delivery services to sourcing ingredients, the home bakers say they also face myriad challenges with their new ventures.
Chocolate brownies by Samera Kumar
The Brownie Stories/Nathaniel Dias
Desserts are an emotion to many. The rich melt-in-your-mouth goodness combined with decorative frosting renders an experience that is epicurean. And more often than not, baked goodies bring a smile to your face. With many young professionals working from home since March this year, several of them have turned to baking and selling their baked goodies on social media, including Instagram and Facebook. Bengaluru too is buzzing with home bakers offering myriad options. From the basics like cakes, cupcakes and cookies to more intricate tarts, babkas and layered desserts, the city’s bakers offer many a delectable confection.  TNM spoke to several bakers who have started small ventures, baking out of their homes and marketing their goods on social media, primarily Instagram. While home bakers rave about the satisfaction they get after receiving positive feedback from customers, the challenges they face are aplenty. Cheesecake by Suja Ranganathan of Just A Mouthful Baking to kill lockdown blues Samera Kumar, a 28-year-old creative movement specialist with a preschool in Bengaluru, was faced with the uncertainty of going back to work after the pandemic struck India. Her profession includes combining dance and yoga, which is taught to preschool children. But Samera was passionate about baking and was always the one to bake cakes, especially brownies, for special occasions for her friends and family. Photo courtesy: Nathaniel Dias “Recently, one of my friends suggested that I start selling my brownies. With the lockdown, I wasn’t sure when schools would be allowed to open and I needed a way to earn money. So when my friend suggested it, I decided to start right away,” Samera said.         View this post on Instagram                   Because life's best enjoyed with a pinch of salt! . Have your tried our dark chocolate & sea-salt brownies? . Full menu coming soon! . : @nathanieldias #brownies #fudgybrownies #chocolate #seasalt #darkchoclate #fudgy #dessert #freshlybaked #browniestack #choco #sweetooth #bangalorebakers #bakes #bangalorebrownies #bangalorefoodies #thebrowniestories A post shared by The Brownie Stories (@thebrowniestories) on Jul 22, 2020 at 9:12am PDT Thus was born The Brownie Stories, with Samera deciding to start by taking orders on Instagram. The business was up and running on May 22. Samera’s menu is small and mouth-watering. She has sea salt and dark chocolate brownies, fudgy brownies with chocolate ganache, brownies with chunks of chocolate in them and, of course, they all have add-on options. Laveena Deepak, a 25-year-old customer success manager working with a startup in the city, has always found happiness in baking. In 2013, she had briefly started a venture called Mad Batter in Chennai selling baked goods, but had to shut down after she got a job in Bengaluru. “I quit my job in Goldman Sachs and joined a startup in March this year. I was inspired by a friend Khushboo, who I had started Mad Batter with. She went to a baking academy in London and her posts on Instagram inspired me to continue doing what I loved,” Laveena said.          View this post on Instagram                   This one is for all the coffee lovers. A moist cupcake infused with coffee and topped with a bitter sweet coffee caramel Swiss meringue buttercream icing. Get your caffeine fix with these coffee cupcakes!! #coffee #coffecupcake #caffeinefix DM, call/message on the number in the bio to place your weekend orders. #cakesmadetoorder #homebakersbangalore #whiskedwithlav #bangalorecupcakes A post shared by Whisked with Lav (@whiskedwithlav) on Aug 11, 2020 at 3:08am PDT In mid-March, she started Whisked With Lav, selling cakes, cupcakes, cookies and babkas. Her Nutella and salted caramel cupcakes are every dessert lover’s dream. “My Nutella babkas were an instant hit,” she recounts. She also bakes dessert jars, and her chocolate mousse jar has become a hot-selling item. Challenges with delivery Veena Gundurao, a 50-year-old personal assistant to the CEO of Reliance Trends, started baking at home when the lockdown resulted in her working from home. In June, she created a WhatsApp group of residents in her area and another for her colleagues and began taking orders for eggless cakes. However, she only delivers within Hampinagar, where she currently resides, as customers are reluctant to pay exorbitant delivery charges. She has around 50 loyal customers already and is currently mulling expanding delivery services across the city. Veena Gundurao at a baking livestream event for her colleagues  Talking about how customers are disappointed when the items are not delivered properly, Laveena said, “For people staying far off, the product delivery doesn’t happen as you expect. I had a few orders sent via Dunzo. When the orders were delivered, the cupcakes were found to be squashed. When this happens, customers will hesitate to reorder. Finding the right mode of delivery is difficult.” She maintains that getting customers to pay for higher delivery charges is difficult as home bakers have to work with available options. “Delivery is a big challenge because it needs to be specialised. Otherwise it can spoil the cake. Most bakers are dependent on Uber or Ola as bike deliveries can end up smashing the cakes. You can send dry goods via Dunzo but not anything with icing and frosting,” said Suja Ranganathan, a 37-year-old former marketing professional who has started her own home baking venture, Just A Mouthful. The pictures matter  When Laveena began baking earlier in March, she struggled to market her goods on Instagram as her pictures were somehow not as eye-catching as she wanted. She ended up taking a course on food styling and food photography. In just a few weeks, she began witnessing a drastic increase in the number of likes and followers for her Whisked With Lav Instagram page. Rainbow babkas by Laveena Deepak “The pictures really matter. The right background, adding touches with ingredients used, all make the picture look good. Earlier it was just about clicking pictures on the dining table and uploading it. Now, I take a lot more time to think about what can go into making the pictures better,” she said. She also started uploading promotional videos of her baked goodies, which were also instant hits. Picture courtesy: Laveena Deepak Samera, on the other hand, said she had foreseen these problems before her business went live earlier in May. “My friend Nathaniel Dias, who is a photographer, helped me click pictures of the brownies. Another friend, Sooraj, who is a content writer, helped me with the content for the Instagram page. These elements are important as they add credibility and make customers want to buy the products,” Samera said. Availability of ingredients Suja, who quit her job two years ago after she faced problems during her pregnancy, decided to attend the six-week baking course at Lavonne Academy of Baking Science and Pastry Arts. As a professional home baker, she loves baking layered desserts, cheesecakes, tiramisu, and even replicates recipes from international pastry chefs. However, she laments the unavailability of certain ingredients in Bengaluru, stating that home bakers have to make do with the options available. “The availability of ingredients is a problem. Baking supply stores are limited in the city. It eats into your cost, especially if you end up paying extra for items like the fancy sprinkles, gift boxes or packaging material. Even the baking paraphernalia that are needed to make amazing desserts are hard to come by. Hopefully, this will change in a few years,” she said.
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Bengaluru reports 12161 cases in one week, number of active cases decrease

Coronavirus
Earlier this week, on Wednesday, Karnataka registered a record number of 7,883 new COVID-19 cases, out of which Bengaluru alone reported 2,802.
Frontline workers amid the coronavirus pandemic in India
Image for representation: PTI
The city of Bengaluru reported 12,161 new cases of coronavirus in a span of one week, between the evening of August 6 and August 13. In a positive development, the number of active cases in the city decreased by 160, while 138 people died and 12,183 people recovered from COVID-19. The positivity rate in the city has also slightly declined. As of August 6, 150 days since the first case was reported in Karnataka, there were 69,572 total cases, of which 33,308 were and 25,063 people had recovered, while 1,201 had died. The city had also reported 26,998 containment zones of which 13,612 had returned to normal, while 13,386 zones were active. The COVID-19 bulletin issued by the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) pegged the mortality rate at 1.73% and said that the city had a positivity rate of 17.79%, with 3,91,092 tests conducted. Compare that to the figures of the August 13 bulletin, by which time, the city had reported a total of 81,733 cases, of which 33,148 were active after 47,246 people had recovered and 1,339 had died. There were 13,448 active containment zones, while the total tally stood at 32,497. The number of tests conducted stood at 4,69,627, with a positivity rate of 17.40%. Earlier this week, on Wednesday, Karnataka registered a record number of 7,883 new COVID-19 cases, out of which Bengaluru alone reported 2,802. Karnataka Chief Minister Yediyurappa and former CM Siddaramaiah were discharged from a hospital in Bengaluru this week, after they recovered from COVID-19. Meanwhile, during the week, the BBMP also informed the media that it had decided to open up two more COVID Care Centres (CCCs) in light of the daily increase in COVID-19 cases being recorded in the city, instead of increasing the capacity of the existing CCC set up at the Bangalore International Exhibition Centre. The BIEC, which has around 1,500 beds according to authorities, has the capacity to host several thousand more beds if required.
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Karnataka govt plans film city project in Hesaraghatta near Bengaluru

Film
However, activists are objecting to the move as it is one of the last remaining grasslands near Bengaluru.
The Karnataka government plans to construct the long-pending film city project in Hesaraghatta, returning to the original location proposed by former Chief Minister Ramakrishna Hegde over 30 years ago. In January this year, the Karnataka government announced that it had dropped its plan to construct the film city in the Roerich and Devika Rani estate in Bengaluru as there were several complaints that it would amount to encroaching on an eco-sensitive zone.  The BJP government led by BS Yediyurappa now plans to construct it at a 150-acre plot in Hesaraghatta in northwest Bengaluru. The plot is part of some land belonging to the Animal Husbandry department.  The fresh proposal is also a point of contention for conservationists. "It is one of the last remaining grasslands in Bengaluru and a lake area which is home to migratory birds. If the film city is coming up near the forest area of the land, then it is a concern and it should not be constructed there. The grassland is where the water percolates and it is also in the catchment area of the Arkavati river," conservationist Joseph Hoover told TNM. In May 2020, environmental activists called for the grasslands in Hesaraghatta to be turned into a conservation reserve. The grassland is a habitat for raptors including the migratory red-necked falcon and European roller, activists said. It is also home to avian winter visitors which feed on fish and crustaceans in the adjoining Hesaraghatta Lake and wetlands. Reptiles including the red sand boa are commonly spotted here besides spotted deer, wild boars and black-naped hare are commonly spotted in the area. Joseph Hoover urged the state government to find a different area to construct the film city. The decision to revisit the proposal to construct the film city in Hesaraghatta means that the plan sticks to the original proposal, which was proposed by former Chief Minister Ramakrishna Hegde in the 1980s.  Successive Chief Ministers in the state have since mooted the plan of a 'world class film city' in Karnataka. SM Krishna proposed in 1999 that it would come up in Hesaraghatta. Siddaramaiah announced in 2017 that it would be constructed in Mysuru. The plan was shifted to Ramanagara by HD Kumaraswamy in 2018 before the BJP government took power a year later and considered constructing it in the Roerich Estate.  The proposal was shelved after concerns raised by environmentalists that even that area is an eco-sensitive zone.  Read: Activists demand Bengaluru’s Hesaraghatta grasslands be turned into conservation reserve
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Karnataka sees 6706 new COVID-19 patients, total cases cross 2 lakh

Coronavirus
A record number of 8609 COVID-19 patients were discharged in the past 24 hours, raising the total recoveries to 1,21,242.
PTI : Image for representation
The total number of COVID-19 cases in Karnataka breached the 2 lakh-mark with 6,706 new cases emerging on Thursday. 1.2 lakh patients have recovered from the virus so far, Karnataka Health Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey said. The state's COVID-19 tally presently stands at 2,03,200.  The 6706 COVID-19 cases included 1893 cases in Bengaluru. This meant that the total number of COVID-19 cases in the state capital breached the 80,000-mark to reach 81,733 cases, out of which 33,148 are active. In addition, cases were also reported in Mysuru (522), Ballari (445), Udupi (402), Davangere (328), Belagavi (288), Kalaburagi (285), Dharwad (257) and Dakshina Kannada (246). A record number of 8,609 COVID-19 patients were discharged in the past 24 hours, raising the total recoveries to 1,21,242. Meanwhile, 103 more patients succumbed to the virus, increasing the statewide death toll to 3,613. On a positive note, the total number of active cases dipped below 80,000 again. This figure has been fluctuating at the 80,000 mark. Of the 2 lakh cases, 78,337 are active while 727 are admitted to the ICUs.   The number of COVID-19 cases reported in Bengaluru continued to be just under 2,000.  All southern states continued reporting high daily virus numbers, with Andhra Pradesh leading with over 9,000 cases on Thursday.
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Bengaluru has 13448 active containment zones, total tally at 32497

Coronavirus
Bengaluru West has the highest number of active containment zones at 2,723.
A frontline worker during the coronavirus pandemic seen in a PPE kit, ready to conduct a coronavirus test
Image for representation: PTI
Bengaluru has 13,448 active containment zones, authorities of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) said in its daily COVID-19 bulletin issued on Thursday. With this, the city has reported a total of 32,497 containment zones, of which 19,049 have returned to normal. Bengaluru West has the highest number of active containment zones at 2,723, followed by Bengaluru East at 2,452 and Bengaluru South at 2,198. Through the week, it was the city's South and East zones which were reporting the most number of containment zones, but on Thursday, it was the West zone that reported the most zones. While Bommanahalli has 1,950 active containment zones, Mahadevapura has 1,355, closely followed by RR Nagara at 1,324. Yelahanka and Dasarahalli have reported less than 1,000 containment zones each at 752 and 694 respectively. Meanwhile, Karnataka's COVID-19 tally breached the 2 lakh-mark with 6,706 new infections, even as 1.2 lakh patients recovered from the virus so far, Health Commissioner Pankaj Kumar Pandey said on Thursday. The state's COVID-19 tally presently stands at 2,03,200, of which 78,337 are active and 727 are admitted to the ICUs.    A record number of 8,609 people were discharged after recovery in a 24-hour period, raising the total recoveries to 1,21,242. Bengaluru continued to record the highest number of infections on Thursday at 1,893, resulting in the city's tally breaching the 80,000-mark to reach 81,733 cases, out of which 33,148 are active. Among other places, Mysuru accounted for 522 new cases, followed by Ballari (445), Udupi (402), Davangere (328), Belagavi (288), Kalaburagi (285), Dharwad (257) and Dakshina Kannada (246). Meanwhile, 103 more patients succumbed to the virus, increasing the state's death toll to 3,613. Authorities said that most of those who died, had a history of Severe Acute Respiratory Infection (SARI) or Influenza-like illness (ILI). A total of 18,82,316 samples were tested so far, out of which 55,999 were tested on Thursday alone. Among the samples tested in the 24-hour period, 27,296 were rapid antigen tests. With IANS and PTI inputs
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Tested negative for SARS-COV-2? BBMP may still force you to get hospitalised

Coronavirus
An ordeal faced by a pregnant mother is being heard by the Karnataka HC.
PTI : Image for representation
Imagine breathing a sigh of relief for testing negative for the novel Coronavirus after getting a report issued by a designated private lab and one day later getting calls and SMS stating that you have tested positive. Raghavendra*, a resident of Koramangala in Bengaluru went through this experience as two days after the lab report reached him, he got a call from a person claiming to be a Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike official. It was only upon further enquiry that Raghavendra, who did not have any symptoms, was assured by the BBMP officials that he was indeed COVID-19 negative.  “Two days after I received the lab report, I got a call saying that I have tested positive for Coronavirus, and I have to be hospitalized. Initially I was taken aback and was wondering if there was any error in the initial report as the person said he was calling from the BBMP,” he said.  “I can only imagine if in place of me there was a gullible person who would have got admitted without thinking of verifying with the BBMP once more”, he added. Other than that, I got a call from another number claiming to be an official working in BBMP’s Jayanagar office. He asked, “Why my father, who is 79 and has tested positive for the COVID-19, is not hospitalised’. I was again shocked as even he got his results to be negative. After learning that, I told him that he must be making a mistake but he kept calling me.” Trying to get clarity on the issue, Raghavendra decided to reach out to the jurisdictional Medical Officer, Dr Rehan Shahed. Dr Shahed assured that all of Raghavendra’s family members are negative and said that there must be some error in data management by the lab.  When Raghavendra approached the private lab Cancyte, they also denied any responsibility stating there was no error on their part. TNM could not reach the concerned medical officials or the lab for a comment.  Up until now, it is not clear who called Raghavendra to “help him and his father get admitted” or how they were informed about him getting a test. Raghavendra told TNM that he has now gotten an SMS claiming that they are indeed negative after Dr Rehan assured that he will fix the issue.  However this is not the first such case where patients getting negative test results have been called by the BBMP officials themselves. In fact, the Karnataka High Court is hearing a memo as part of a case where a pregnant woman was forcibly taken by BBMP officials to Victoria Hospital even though lab results clearly confirmed she was negative.  Speaking to TNM, GR Mohan, advocate for the woman, said, “Thankfully, the woman delivered the baby and now both mother and child are safe and COVID-19 negative. We were afraid that they would contract the infection due to this unnecessary admission to a COVID-19 hospital.” The BBMP is yet to respond in that case, the advocate said.  In another incident, Kiran*, a resident of Vijayanagar in Bengaluru did not get tested but started getting calls that he has tested positive for novel Coronavirus.
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