Ads

Saturday, September 26, 2020

ED gets 5-day custody of actors Ragini Dwivedi, Sanjjana Galrani and two others

Crime
The ED told the Bengaluru Special Court for NDPS cases that there were huge amounts of proceeds of crime in money laundering activities.
Ragini Dwivedi and Sanjana Galrani
A special court here has granted the Enforcement Directorate five days custody of Kannada film actresses Ragini Dwivedi and Sanjjanaa Galrani and three others, who were arrested in a drugs case. Dwivedi, Galrani, Rahul Thonse, party organiser Viren Khanna and B K Ravishankar, whose custody ED has sought, are accused of not only consuming drugs but also supplying them in parties through the drug peddlers. In its submission to the NDPS (Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Special Court, the ED said the preliminary inquiry of the money laundering investigation revealed a huge amount of proceeds of crime in money laundering activities. "If such proceeds of crime involved in money laundering are not attached or confiscated immediately, the objects of the Act shall be defeated," the ED said in its submission. The ED said to unearth or trace the properties, which are acquired by the accused "by way of extortion, killing, dealing of drugs etc, recording written statements from the accused person is essential to know the details of properties purchased and investments made out of the proceeds of crime." Meanwhile, a Nigerian drug peddler Ossy, who was reportedly supplying drugs to bigwigs involved in the drugs case, has been arrested, a Central crime branch official said. According to police, he is allegedly an associate of Simon, another Nigerian drug peddler already arrested. Police seized some synthetic drugs from his possession, the police said. The police have arrested 15 people in connection with the case while many others are at large.  


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

Cancel Bangalore Turf Club license, turn it into green space: K'taka govt committee

Politics
The Public Accounts Committee submitted a report to the Legislature on Friday and asked the government to turn the club into a green space like Cubbon Park.
Bangalore Turf Club
The Public Accounts Committee of the Karnataka legislature in its report tabled in the assembly on Friday recommended to the government cancellation of licence given to the Bangalore Turf Club (BTC), and the premises be developed as a lung space like Cubbon Park and Lal Bagh. Headed by senior Congress legislator H K Patil the 21-member committee, consisting of both MLAs and MLCs, asked the government to seek an early hearing to clear the cases pending in the Supreme Court regarding the turf club, after consulting the Advocate General and legal experts. It also directed authorities to ensure the payment of dues pending as rent by the BTC. To recover Rs 36.68 crore rent dues, the finance department has filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court, it said. The department has calculated the dues to be paid by the turf club till 2018-19 only and it has now been recommended including the year 2019-20 and necessary action should be taken to recover the same with interest. The committee noted that despite the department having the complete authority to cancel the licence given to Bangalore Turf Club as it has violated Mysore Race Course Licensing Act-1952 and Rules, no action has been taken yet. The committee in its report has asked the department officials to bring the violations to the notice of the Chief Minister and take necessary action to cancel the licence immediately. It also noted that discussions have been on since 1968 on shifting the Bangalore Turf Club outside the city limits and no project has been executed in this regard. Considering increasing population and traffic in the city, it has been recommended to the government to think about developing the turf club land along the lines of Lal Bagh and Cubbon Park. This will ensure environmental equilibrium, curb pollution and improve green cover, it added.


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

‘Haadu Santoshakke’: The anthem SPB gave Kannadigas

SPB
SPB once said, “If I have a next life, I would like to be born as a Kannadiga and In Karnataka."
SP Balasubramanyam
The Karnataka Legislative Assembly, while mourning the demise of SP Balasubrahmanyam on Friday, recalled what the singer had said in 2015 in Moodabidri while accepting Alva’s Virasat award: ‘“If I have a next life, I would like to be born as a Kannadiga and in Karnataka.” SPB had a long association with Karnataka and its people, with a plethora of songs, from peppy numbers to soulful melodies. SPB’s rendition picturised on yesteryear stars like Vishnuvardhan and Shankar Nag often resulted in magic, with the songs going on to become cult numbers. With Vishnuvardhan, SPB had a special bond; he sang ‘Haavina Dwesha’ in the former’s debut movie Naagarahaavu and also ‘Chamundi Taayi’ in his last movie Aptharakshaka. Several other melodies like ‘Noorondu Nenapu’ and ‘Ee Bhoomi Bannada Buguri’ marked the duo’s charming association. With Shankar Nag, SPB teamed up for many cult songs like ‘Geetanjali’ from CBI Shankar to the energetic ‘Bandalo Bandalo Kanchana’ from Sangliana. His song ‘Haadu Santoshakke’ from the 1981 film Geetha, starring Shankar Nag, became a popular anthem in Bengaluru. The city’s IPL team Royal Challengers Bangalore would often play the song in a packed Chinnaswamy Stadium while fans of Bengaluru FC broke out into chants of ‘Haadu Santoshakke’ during home games at the Kanteerava Stadium. “Thank you, SPB. Thank you for the song that united us all. Forever in your debt. Wherever you are, haadu santoshakke,” the official social media account of West Block Blues, the Bengaluru FC fan group tweeted. ಸಂತೋಷಕ್ಕೆ ಹಾಡು ಸಂತೋಷಕ್ಕೆ... Thank you, SPB. Thank you for the song that united us all. Forever in your debt. Wherever you are, ಹಾಡು ಸಂತೋಷಕ್ಕೆ ❤️#SPBalasubrahmanyam #HaaduSanthoshakke pic.twitter.com/SD3GNR9YQ3 — West Block Blues (@WestBlockBlues) September 25, 2020 Here is how @chetrisunil11 Captain of @bengalurufc and @IndianFootball paid a tribute to his fans. A true sport ...was a joy shaking a leg with him. Full link here https://t.co/mdm7pWZKGJ pic.twitter.com/xeADPx2Bax — Smitha Dixit (@RjSmitha) February 19, 2018 His songs along with KS Chitra in the film Amruthavarshini, starring Ramesh Aravind are also fondly remembered by Kannada cinema lovers. Songs like ‘Ee Sundara’ and ‘Bhale Bhale Chandadha’ were widely praised at the time of the film’s release and continue to remain timeless classics over 20 years later. SPB lent his voice to generations of actors from Ravi Chandran and Ananth Nag to Upendra. His last song in Kannada was for Mayabazar 2016, a Puneeth Rajkumar production which had its theatrical release on February 28, 2020. SPB sang ‘Loka Mayabazaru’ in this film. Remembering the legend after his demise, veteran Kannada music composer Hamsalekha spoke of how SPB sang many of his compositions including ‘Mother India’ in just one take. Hamsalekha also said that he never asked for any corrections to his singing in the hundreds of songs he sang and was always keen to help upcoming singers with his valuable tips.    


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/2S3I34U
via IFTTT

Trump’s drug card plan sows confusion – even within administration

Top Trump deputies say they can put the plan in place using existing powers. But critics see it as a brazen election year ploy.

from Health Care https://ift.tt/2G1GDFJ
via IFTTT

U.S. coronavirus case count passes 7 million

The figure, based on a tracker maintained by Johns Hopkins University, comes just days after the U.S. surpassed 200,000 deaths.

from Health Care https://ift.tt/341SpYK
via IFTTT

Friday, September 25, 2020

Farmer, Dalit groups protest in Bengaluru ahead of Karnataka bandh on Monday

Protest
Protests were brought to a halt when the police detained protesters as the crowd started swelling in Bengaluru’s Mysore Bank Circle on Friday.
Farmers holidng protest on Friday
Farmers protesting on Thursday
Slogans against the BJP-ruled state and Union governments, for being against farmers and Dalits, rang in the air in Bengaluru’s Mysore Bank Circle. An otherwise busy junction, the traffic at Mysore Bank Circle was almost brought to a standstill on Friday morning as various farmers’ groups, along with Dalit,labour unions and AAP activists, gathered in protest against the contentious Farm Bills passed in the Parliament and the land reforms ordinances tabled in the Karnataka Assembly.  A large posse of police prevented the protesters from taking out a march, restricting their protest to the junction itself. About three separate groups sat at the same spot for the same cause. These protests were a precursor to the statewide bandh called by the same groups in demand of a complete rollback of these contentious bills. The demonstrations on Friday were brought to a halt after more than an hour when the police started detaining peaceful protesters and took them away in buses. The state government has tabled the Karnataka Land reforms (Amendment) Ordinance 2020, Karnataka Agricultural Produce Marketing (Regulation and Development) (Amendment) Ordinance, 2020 and Industrial Disputes and certain other laws (Amendment) ordinance 2020. At the same time, the Union government on Sunday had passed the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Bill, the Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Bill, 2020 and the Farmers’ (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Bill, 2020 under controversial circumstances. “We are asking the President of India not to give his assent to these bills. These bills are blatantly anti-farmer as they are going to take away the semblance of some protected marketplace that still exists in this country. In 2012, the same Prime Minister, as the Chief Minister of Gujarat had asked for the MSP (minimum support price) to become a legal entitlement for all farmers in the country. So we are asking the PM now if he’s that confident about these laws being good for farmers, why is he shying away from scrutiny or don’t give a statutory promise of  MSP instead of these laws,” Kavitha Kuruganti, national co-convenor of the Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA), told TNM. She alleged that there are anti-farmer provisions embedded in all the three laws and that is the reason the government did not want scrutiny from the Select Committee or the Standing Committee.  “Marginalised farmers, who are highly vulnerable and have very small volumes to trade, are being asked to pit themselves against big corporates in the marketplace. The government is saying that prompt payment is the only possible injustice that can happen. In actuality, exploitation of farmers starts from price discovery to getting cheated by middlemen while weighing their produce. Moreover, these laws prohibit farmers from seeking justice in civil courts in case of a dispute. Both the APMC (Agricultural Produce Market Committee) Byepass Bill and the contract farming bill have provisions that bar the civil courts from hearing these disputes, which might arise due to defaults by corporates,” she added. GT Ramaswamy, vice-president of Karnataka Rajya Raitha Sangha (a farmers’ movement), said not only are the Bills anti farmers and Dalits but are also against the general public who have to go to work for their daily food. According to Ramaswamy, these laws will wipe out all small farm and marginal farmers and they will be forced to resort to the job market. “This is because now the ceiling on farmland ownership for individuals and companies are being diluted and the restrictions on high-income groups to purchase farmland is being done away with,” he said.  While the government says that with the proposed change in the the APMC Bill, farmers can sell their produce anywhere, in reality, small farmers have so many problems with logistics that he cannot even think of going outside his own village to sell his produce, he said.   “Now you tell me, they are saying that corporates will come and give cheques to farmers, but will the government keep them in check if the cheques bounce?” he asked. He added, “If these farm laws are so good, why are both the state and Union government so afraid to debate the Bills with the Opposition or consult with farmers like us. Without the Essential Commodities Act, how will the government prevent artificial scarcity and price rises for the general public? So these laws are not only anti-farmer but also every working-class person.”


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

Death of spot-billed pelicans at Karnataka reserve worries officials, bird lovers

Wildlife
In the last four years, about 100 spot-billed pelicans have died at the Kokkarebellur Community Reserve, which is famous for sightings of the bird.
A man can be seen feeding a spot-billed pelican. The man, wearing white outfit, can be seen holding the beak up and feeding it.
Spot-billed pelicans are set to arrive for nesting in Kokkarebellur Community Reserve in the Maddur taluk of Mandya beginning October, but forest officials and bird lovers are on the edge due to the deaths of about 100 pelicans reported in the last four years. Though the primary cause of the deaths of the pelicans is yet to be determined, lab tests and studies are underway to find the source. A few years ago, these birds used to arrive in December. In the last couple of years, spot-billed pelicans began arriving in Kokkarebellur, which is famous for sightings of the bird, at the end of October. These birds typically start to breed from December and stay in the region till June/July with their offspring. However, the period from December to February/March is vulnerable for these birds as the majority of deaths were reported in these months. As many as 59 died in the 2017-2018 season, 17 in the 2018-2019 season and 12 in the 2019-2020 season. Aksheeta Mahapatra, a wildlife researcher from the Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, is working with the Karnataka Forest Department to study the cause of these deaths. She noted that lab tests and necropsy have revealed that a roundworm infestation may have led to the spot-billed pelicans’ deaths. However, while these worms are commonly found in living beings, they are not usually lethal. Spot-billed pelicans infested by worms treated at Kokkarebellur To that end, Aksheeta notes that the roundworm infestation is likely the secondary cause of the deaths, while the primary cause of deaths is still not known. “There is something else that is triggering their immune system and making it weak, and as a result, the roundworms are multiplying. Infested birds are unable to eat and drink anything and die after falling from trees,” she said. What has baffled forest officials and researchers is that spot-billed pelicans also nest in other parts of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, but the deaths have been centred in Kokkarebellur. There have also been some deaths reported in Kukkarahalli and Lingambudhi lakes in Mysuru city. In Kokkarebellur, herons, egrets and painted storks are among the other birds that share space with spot-billed pelicans, but deaths have been reported only in pelicans. Contaminated water bodies in the vicinity of Kokkarebellur, particularly in River Shimsha, a tributary of the Cauvery, flowing half a kilometre from the community reserve, is said to be one of the causes for the pelican deaths. Villagers allege that untreated sewage from Maddur and Shivapura as well as from nearby sugar factories are also discharged into the water bodies. Untreated sewage water and industrial effluents have contaminated River Shimsa A forest staffer explained that spot-billed pelicans gulp some amount of water while catching fish in the water bodies. As contaminated water enters their stomachs, they could get worm infestations. However, another staffer said that pelicans leave Kokkarebellur after July and return only in October, leading to the theory that the birds may be contracting the infestation elsewhere before coming to Kokkarebellur and succumbing to illness. Ardent bird lover Linge Gowda, a well-known face in Kokkarebellur, has rescued hundreds of chicks that fall from nests either due to sibling competition, strong winds or other reasons. Chicks have been raised at the rescue centre since 1994. But Linge Gowda is now concerned at the mass deaths around the adult birds, something he has not witnessed in his lifetime. He is also worried about the fact that the deaths have all occurred in the last four years. The number of spot-billed pelicans visiting Kokkarebellur has decreased as well. A source monitoring the number of birds said that earlier about 500 to 600 pairs of birds used to arrive to nest, but in the last couple of years only about 250 pairs arrived for nesting. However, the number of painted storks has remained the same, with the reserve reporting about 1,000 pairs each year. Linge Gowda pointed out that the number of trees for pelicans to nest has dwindled in recent years as well. It has been one of the main reasons that the pelicans are not coming in the numbers that they used to years ago, he said. Forest officials, however, remain hopeful and say that the number of deaths of the spot-billed pelicans have fallen significantly in the last two years. They have also begun to plant saplings in the reserve. Lokesh, a staffer at the Forest Department posted at Kokkarebellur, said two pelicans were rescued during the early stages of infestation this year. After treatment, both recovered, one in January and the other in September. If the infection is found early, it improves the chance of recovery, he said. That has often not been the case because they only learn about a bird’s sickness when it falls from the trees, and it is too late at that point. A spot-billed pelican rescued in Kokkarebellur after falling from a tree Satish, a veterinarian who has conducted necropsy on the carcasses of the pelicans, said that it is impossible to disinfect the water bodies in surrounding villages since some of them are huge. He hoped that the pelicans would develop resistance to worm infestation naturally instead. Deputy Conservator of Forests, Mysuru Wildlife Division, Alexander said though preventive measures are low, the Forest Department is working to minimise the deaths. Among the steps being initiated, Alexander explained, fishlings have been added to nearby tanks so that pelicans can feed in close proximity and avoid contaminated water bodies. Girisha is a freelancer who writes on wildlife and the environment.


from Karnataka https://ift.tt/3j5VFIX
via IFTTT