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Thursday, October 15, 2020

KSRTC bags award for setting up mobile fever clinics, women’s toilet in buses

COVID-19
Shivayogi Kalasad, the MD of KSRTC, received the award under the 'CSR for Social Development' category at a virtual ceremony held in Mumbai.
Chief minister BS Yediyurappa had flagged off the mobile fever clinic on May 11
The mobile fever clinic and the 'Sthree toilet' initiatives of the government-run Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) have won the national award under the 'CSR for Social Development' category amid the coronavirus pandemic, an official said on Wednesday. "As our staff is committed to be corona warriors in the pandemic situation, I dedicate the national public undertakings award to it, especially to those who lost their life to the infection," Shivayogi Kalasad, Managing Director, KSRTC, said on the occasion. Kalasad received the award at a virtual ceremony held in Mumbai earlier on Wednesday. "The award is the result of our diligent work although the corporation is going through a difficult situation due to Covid-induced restrictions on movement of people to maintain social distancing and contain the virus spread," said Kalasad in a statement. Chief minister BS Yediyurappa had flagged off the mobile fever clinic on May 11 in the tech hub of Bengaluru to aid the state's efforts in its fight against COVID-19. The makeshift clinic was set up in an old bus remodelled to collect and test swab samples for COVID-19 or other diseases. "The award will encourage our employees to work more towards social commitment," Kalasad noted. The 'sthree toilets', rolled out in the city on August 27, were built by converting the transporter's old buses which had been withdrawn from service. Operated on solar power, the toilet-bus has been stationed at the central bus stand in the city centre (Majestic area). They have Indian and western toilets, sensor lights and diaper changing areas for babies. The facility was paid for by the Bangalore International Airport Limited (BIAL) as part of their corporate social responsibility (CSR). BIAL is the company that manages the day-to-day operations of the Kempegowda International Airport.


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Bengaluru reports 4574 new COVID-19 cases, city now has 65k active cases

Coronavirus
Of the 925 patients in intensive care units (ICUs) across Karnataka, 351 are in Bengaluru.
A frontline worker during the coronavirus pandemic seen in a PPE kit, ready to conduct a coronavirus test
Image for representation: PTI
Bengaluru registered 4,574 new COVID-19 patients, taking its total tally to 2,93,405, out of which 65,045 are active patients. With 3,291 people discharged in a 24-hour period, the tally of the recovered persons rose to 2,24,942. In its daily bulletin, the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) said that 27 people succumbed to the virus on Tuesday, taking the city's death toll to 3,451 till date. Of the 925 patients in the intensive care units (ICUs) across Karnataka, 351 are in Bengaluru, followed by Dharwad with 87, Ballari with 75, Hassan with 50, Chamarajanagar with 40 and Kalaburagi with 38. Meanwhile, Karnataka's COVID-19 tally increased to 7,35,371, with 9,265 new cases in the last 24 hours, raising the number of active cases to 1,13,987. "With 8,662 discharged during the last 24 hours, 6,11,167 recovered from the coronavirus across the state, while 75 succumbed to the infection, taking the death toll to 10,198 till date," said the state health bulletin on Wednesday night. Of the tests conducted on Tuesday, 39,111 were through the rapid antigen detection and 74,660 were through RT-PCR. "The state's positivity rate declined to 8.14%, while case fatality rate stood at 0.81%," the bulletin added. In a related development, the Karnataka government decided to allocate five acres in the Gandhi Krishi Vigyana Kendra campus of the University of Agricultural Sciences in Bengaluru for setting up a National Institute of Virology (NIV) lab, state Health Minister K Sudhakar said on Wednesday. He said that the Union government had decided to set up new NIV laboratories around the country and Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa wrote a letter to the Union government to set it up in Bengaluru among southern states. "..as a result of this, the Union government has given us the green signal to proceed ahead with the project," he said. According to Sudhakar, the process to hand over the land will be completed soon, following which construction will begin. With IANS inputs


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Railways to run 22 festival-special trains to and from Karnataka: Full list

Travel
The 22 special trains are part of the 392 trains that will run across India from October 20 to December 3 for Dasara, Diwali and Chhath Puja festivals.
Passengers making way out of the station
Representational image
The South Western Railway (SWR) zone will operate 22 special trains to and from Karnataka from October 23 to 27 ahead of the upcoming festivals like Dasara, Diwali and Chhath puja, an official said on Wednesday. "The 22 special trains or 11 pairs are part of the 392 (196 pairs) train that will run across the country from October 20 to December 3 for Dasara, Diwali and Chhath Puja festivals to enable people to travel to their native places or where they want to celebrate with families and friends," a zonal official told IANS. With regular service suspended since the COVID-19 induced lockdown on March 25 to contain the virus spread, thousands of people have been unable to travel in the absence of passenger trains across the country. "Travel by all festival trains will be on the reservation system. Hand sanitisation, thermal screening, physical distancing, wearing face shield or masks and other health protocol will have to be followed," said the official in a statement. List of special trains > Weekly superfast express from Yesvantpur in Bengaluru to Korba in Chhattisgarh from October 23 to November 27 on Friday and from Korba to Yesvantpur from October 25 to November 29 on Sunday.  > Bi-weekly express from Mysuru to Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh from October 20 to November 26 on Tuesday and Thursday and from Varanasi to Mysuru from October 22 to November 28 on Thursday and Saturday.  > Weekly express from Yesvantpur to Ahmedabad in Gujarat from October 25 to November 29 on Sunday and from Ahmedabad to Yesvantpur from October 27 to December 1 on Tuesday.  > Weekly express from Bengaluru City to Gandhidham in Gujarat from October 24 to November 28 on Saturday and from Gandhidham to Bengaluru City from October 27 to December 1 on Tuesday. > Daily express from Hubballi to Lokmanya Tilak terminus in Mumbai from October 22 to November 30 and from Mumbai to Hubballi from October 23 to December 1.  > Daily express from Dharwad to Mysuru from October 20 to November 30 and from Mysuru to Dharwad from October 21 to December 1.  > Weekly superfast express from Vasco-Da-Gama in Goa to Patna in Bihar from October 21 to November 25 on Wednesday and from Patna to Vasco from October 24 to December 3 on Saturday.  > Bi-weekly express from Bengaluru city to Jodhpur in Rajasthan from October 24 to December 3 on Thursday and Saturday and from Jodhpur to Bengaluru from October 21 to November 30 on Monday and Wednesday.  > Daily express from Hubballi to Secunderabad from October 20 to November 30 and from Secunderabad to Hubballi from October 21 to December 1.  > Bi-weekly express from Mysuru to Ajmer in Rajasthan from October 20 to November 26 on Tuesday and Thursday and from Ajmer to Mysuru from October 23 to November 29 on Friday and Sunday  > Weekly express from Hubballi to Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh from October 23 to November 27 on Friday and from Varanasi to Hubballi from October 25 to November 29 on Sunday. 


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Bengaluru riots: NIA questions MLAs Rizwan Arshad, Zameer Ahmed Khan

DJ Halli Riots
Three people were killed on Aug 11 as police resorted to firing to contain the escalating violence.
Collage of Zameer HAamed Khan and Rizwan Arshad
The National Investigation Agency (NIA), the country’s premier counter terrorism probe body questioned two Bengaluru Congress legislators, Rizwan Arshad and former minister Zameer Ahmed Khan on Tuesday for hours in connection with the recent east Bengaluru riots. Both the MLAs (members of legislative assembly) had rushed to the spot to pacify the crowds.  The Hindu quoted an NIA official as saying that it was part of a routine process of questioning witnesses and they were questioned as they tried to pacify the mob before the violence escalated.  The Times of India quoted a source as saying that Zameer was asked additional questions relating to what exactly triggered the mob to escalate violence and how quickly the mob gathered. As part of the probe, the NIA is also questioning former Mayor Sampath Raj and former corporator Abdul Rkhib Zakir of the Congress. Both of them have been charge-sheeted in another case in connection with the riots by the Central Crime Branch of  Bengaluru City Police. As widely reported, the mob violence on August 11 had started outside DJ Halli police station and later spread to areas within the neighbouring KG Halli Police Station limits. The mob had gathered over a provocative and communally-charged social media post by Naveen, the nephew of local MLA Akhanda Srinivas Murthy. The MLA’s house was set on fire and the DJ Halli police station was partially gutted. Many vehicles were burnt, along with other damage to property. Three persons were killed as police resorted to firing to contain the escalating violence.  Following that, police had made more than 400 arrests including members  of the Congress and the SDPI among them. A fourth person had died while in custody due to pre-existing health conditions. The NIA had taken over the probe in two cases where the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act [UAPA] was slapped against the protesters after a litigation in the Karnataka High Court. 


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In Sira and RR Nagar bye-polls, its a proxy battle between DKS, R Ashoka and HDK

Politics
The three Vokkaliga leaders are indulging in a game of one-upmanship to prove their mettle to their respective parties.
Collage of R Ashoka DK Shivakumar and HD Kumaraswamy
The Karnataka Assembly bye-elections are scheduled to take place on November 3 in Bengaluru’s Raja Rajeshwari Nagar (RR Nagar) and Tumakuru’s Sira, have turned into a turf war among three Vokkaliga leaders from the Congress, BJP and JD(S), to prove their mettle, while the candidates themselves have taken a back seat. The poll war in RR Nagar is between Karnataka Revenue Minister R Ashoka and  the DK brothers --- Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee President  DK Shivakumar and his brother, Bengaluru Rural Congress MP DK Suresh. In Sira, Shivakumar its a proxy pll battle between DK Shivakumar and former Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy. One of the most prominent Vokkaliga leaders in Karnataka, Kumaraswamy has gone hammer and tongs against   Shivakumar following speculations  that the JD(S) Vokkaliga MLAs are trying to bond with the Congress.  In both constituencies, the Vokkaligas are the dominant  community, notwithstanding the fact that the contest is between the leaders, who are driving the poll campaign. The political stakes are high for the BJP and Congress in RR Nagar, an urban segment where the BJP will have to seek votes for its candidate Muniratna Naidu, who defected from the Congress to the BJP in 2019. Munirathna is also the candidate, who the BJP had heavily criticised for alleged electoral malpractices during the 2018 Assembly elections.  The poll battle in RR Nagar Polling in RR Nagar had to be deferred in 2018 and was held later following the seizure of  9,567 photo voter identity cards in an apartment in Jalahalli. The former BJP candidate for the RR Nagar segment, Munraju Gowda, had filed a complaint and an FIR was registered against   Muniratna too.  In the rescheduled poll, Muniratna won by a margin of 41,162 votes, which the BJP  candidate Tulasi Muniraju Gowda had contested. The rivalry between the two grew exponentially, after Muniratna joined the BJP. Muniraju Gowda had filed a petition in the Karnataka High Court and the Supreme court challenging Muniratna's victory, which was dismissed by the SC on Tuesday, paving the way for Munirathna to bag the ticket for the bye-polls.  “It is Shivakumar and Suresh (RR Nagar is an assembly segment of Bengaluru  Rural constituency) versus me in  RR Nagar.  I have deployed an army of  five ministers, six MLAs, 80 former BBMP (Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike) corporators and 750 party workers in the constituency. I was an MLA  thrice from RR Nagar (when it was a part of Uttarahalli constituency before the delimitations of constituencies in 2008) and I know the technique of winning from here. This is a question of prestige and  challenge to me,'' Ashoka, who is in charge of  RR Nagar told  TNM. Former  Home Minister and senior Congress  MLA  from BTM Layout Ramalinga Reddy, who has been tasked with handling the campaign for the RR Nagar's segment, said that the contest would be not about rivalry but about issues that the Congress is highlighting, especially the lapses in managing COVID-19 by the Union government and the state government.  “There are 20% of voters who are neutral and if they decide to vote on issues, then they can bring about a change,” he added. Candidates and their fortunes  In RR Nagar the Congress has fielded a new face, 31-year-old H Kusuma Ravi, wife of late bureaucrat DK Ravi. Before announcing a candidature, Shivakumar had indicated that it would be a “surprise” nominee. The BJP's delay in announcing the  candidature of Muniratna was due to the case filed against him by Muniraju Gowda. “Muniraju Gowda can spoil the chances for  Muniratna as their political rivalry continues even now,'' BJP sources said. The BJP had won the RR nagar segment in 2008 and in the subsequent elections held in 2013 and 2018, Muniratna Naidu won the polls. Congress sources said that despite his turncoat politics, Muniratna holds sway over the constituency. “Many former corporators and Congress  party cadres went with Muniratna when he defected. Being an urban constituency, the caste   factor does not matter as  Muniratna is from the OBC community, while our candidate is a Vokkaliga,'' Congress sources maintained.  The JD(S) has given the ticket to former corporator V Krishnamurthy, who holds several properties in the city and is a resident of Jnana Bharati. The party fielded GH Ramachandra, a Vokkaliga in 2018, who bagged the third place.  Even as it's a show of strength between Shivakumar and Ashoka in RR Nagar. However, the fact that Muniratna has nurtured the constituency in his individual capacity cannot be discounted. Poll observers claim that in the event of a victory for the BJP here, the credit should  go to Muniratna, who in his erstwhile party -- the Congress -- had  curbed the growth of BJP in the constituency. Of the total 4.60 lakh voters, Vokkaligas comprise 80,000, minorities comprise 35,000, Lingayats 25,000 and the Dalit, Adivasi and OBC votes make up the rest. Even as Ramalinga Reddy and former minister Krishna Byregowda are doing their best for the Congress to retain the seat, the onus is on Shivakumar's electoral management skills and a challenge to show for his new post as the KPCC President. To match the BJP’s strength, the Congress has  appointed   leaders  booth-wise to woo voters.  The bye-polls in Sira he Congress had a head start by announcing former minister TB Jayachandra as the candidate, who has had long innings in the constituency. Sira  has been represented  either  by  the Congress or the JD(S) all these years with the BJP  being unable to make any inroads. In 2018 the seat was won by the late JD(S) leaders B Sathyanarayana. His death due to COVID-19 necessitated the bye-poll. The JD(S) has chosen Sathyanarayana's wife Ammajamma, a  political greenhorn as its candidate, and is banking on the sympathy card. The BJP, unsuccessfully trying to rope in Sathyanarayana's family into its fold, is fielding  former Congress MP CP Mudalagiriyappa's son  CM Rajesh Gowda, a doctor by profession, as its candidate. Being  a rural constituency where caste matters, all the three candidates are from the Kunchitiga Vokkaliga community, a sub-sect, whose people reside primarily in Tumakuru and Chitradurga districts.  Even as the Congress or JD(S) candidate is expected to win, the BJP is hoping for a swing like the bye-poll in KR Pete, where JD(S) turncoat Narayanagowda had won from the BJP, resulting in the party opening its electoral account in Mandya.  The Congress charged former Deputy CM Dr G Parameshwara and former party MLA  KN Rajanna to oversee the Sira bye-elections.  The rivalry between Jayachandra and Rajanna  resulted Jayachardra’s defeat in the 2018 polls as both leaders sabotaged each other. To drive home this point, Shivakumar at  a meeting held to chalk out the poll strategy for Sira and RR Nagar, told the gathering that Jayachandra's candidature was finalised with Rajanna's consent.  Parameshwara  told TNM  that  Jayachandra is more experienced  than the two other candidates contesting the bye-polls in Sira. “We will win no matter what the BJP does as we are in an advantageous position,” he maintained. The Congress is expecting a turnaround of the votes from the Madiga community, who are believed to have voted for the BJP in the 2018 Assembly elections and the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.  “They were hoping the BJP would implement the AJ Sadashiva Commission report  submitted in 2012 which recommended  sub dividing the 15% reservation for the Scheduled Castes. But nothing has been done so far,”  sources said. In 2013, a committee headed by Justice AJ Sadashiva submitted a report to the Karnataka government after it was asked to probe whether the benefits of reservations were disbursed equitably among all subsects in the Dalit community. The committee had suggested that the Dalit community be divided into four and that an internal reservation must be implemented to ensure that benefits rech these sub-sects based on the population.  Of the total 2.15 lakh voters in Sira, the Dalit and Adivasi communities stand second followed by the Golla community, the minorities and the Yadavas and Kurubas. Unlike the Assembly bye-elections held in December 2019, where  it was a question of  Yediyurappa having to prove his mettle and retain power, the two bye-polls to be held on November 3, are not  going to impact him directly. However, it will alter the political  standing of the three Vokkaliga leaders  fighting out the proxy poll battle.  


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Wednesday, October 14, 2020

At the mercy of pvt hospitals, Bengaluru’s COVID-19 patients are being overcharged

Coronavirus
Despite the Karnataka government fixing a tariff for the treatment of COVID-19, at least 44 hospitals in Bengaluru have been found overcharging patients.
Doctors, COVID-19 patients at hopsital
PTI/Representation Photo
In September this year, Ajay*, a 46-year-old resident of Bengaluru, who previously worked as an office boy at a private company, tested positive for the coronavirus. Having difficulty in breathing, he approached a private hospital in Shivajinagar for a bed. The hospital allegedly told him that as there was a shortage of COVID-19 beds in Bengaluru, he would be charged Rs 30,000 per day for an oxygen bed - over double the amount fixed by the state government for a High Dependency Unit.  In a government order dated June 23, the Karnataka government fixed tariffs for the treatment of COVID-19 patients in private hospitals. The state set a package rate ceiling for COVID-19 patients referred by public health authorities to private hospitals. According to the June notification, private hospitals can charge Rs 5,200 per day for a general bed, Rs 7,000 for a High Dependency Unit (HDU), Rs 8,500 for an ICU bed and Rs 10,000 for a ventilator bed. This price applies to those who are referred by the government and the money is paid by the Suvarna Arogya Suraksha Trust and not the patients themselves. The state also capped tariffs for those like Ajay approaching private hospitals on their own and paying in cash. While a general ward is Rs 10,000 per day, a HDU is fixed at Rs 12,000, ICU without a ventilator at Rs 15,000 and ICU with a ventilator at Rs 25,000 per day. The package rate includes PPEs and food.   When asked whether he knew about the price caps set for private hospitals, he said, “Yes, we knew. What could we have done? Everywhere on the news they are saying no beds. If I had let this one go, I didn’t know if I would get treatment.”   Read: COVID-19 patients in Bengaluru struggle for ICU, ventilator beds as cases surge Ajay’s wife sold two gold bangles for Rs 70,000 and used the cash to pay for his admission at the hospital. The total bill for Ajay’s eight days in hospital amounted to Rs 2.4 lakh. The couple had no option but to borrow from a money lender to pay the bill since he had no insurance.  “I don’t know how to repay the loan. The government is helping private hospitals and not poor people like us,” he said, while adding, “My wife sold the last of her jewellery. We are now struggling for two meals. I have been looking for a job but no one is hiring me,” said Ajay, who was laid off from his job before he was diagnosed with COVID-19.  Ajay has now contacted the Suvarna Arogya Surkasha Trust (SAST), a government insurance trust for treating COVID-19, to get a refund. “I hope I get the money back. If I do, then I can repay the loan,” he added.  44 hospitals found overcharging  Most patients or their families are unaware of the nitty-gritties about the types of beds allocated to them. Officials with the SAST said that the problem could be in the lack of awareness. “The awareness posters in public places and all hospitals only say that the cost is free if patients are referred by the government. There is no information about how the process works. Most people are also scared of delays in allocation of beds if they have to rely on BBMP (Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike) and so they approach private hospitals directly,” the official said. The SAST in Bengaluru has a call centre with eight persons in each zone, dedicated to make calls to each COVID-19 patient admitted to a private hospital in their respective zones and finding out whether they were charged more than required. In cases where patients were charged more, the extra money is refunded to the said patients and this amount is deducted from the total amount that would be reimbursed to the hospital. SAST officials told TNM that even patients referred under government quota were charged Rs 3-7 lakhs for treatment for an average of 6 to 9 days and that the hospitals also filed claims with the SAST. Since August this year, the SAST has made 12,000 calls to patients who were admitted in private hospitals, of which around 7,000 picked up the calls. Of these, 300 furnished documents which showed that private hospitals had charged them more than the price cap that was set. SAST says that on an average, they get 6,000 claims every day from private hospitals for treating patients under the government quota and their task is to vet each one of them. “In most cases, people don’t pick up the calls at all and we have to keep calling them. After a point we also stop as there are so many claims to look at,” the official said.  SAST conducted inspections on 100 private hospitals empanelled for COVID-19 and found that 44 of them were overcharging patients. “It's the greed of the private hospitals that never abates. People should also start becoming more aware but when it comes to private hospitals, they are just using the people’s distress and panic to their benefit,” a senior official at SAST said.  Private suites and exemption from price cap The desperation to get a bed at a hospital has left many COVID-19 patients at the mercy of private facilities. Besides overcharging, a number of private hospitals are cashing in on the desperation of COVID-19 patients and their families by forcing them to take beds that do not come under the price ceiling.  Last week, Sowmya*, an 81-year-old Bengaluru woman, who tested positive for the coronavirus and was diagnosed with pneumonia, was allegedly told by a private hospital in Kumaraswamy Layout, that she could get admitted. They informed her that the cost per day for a ward would be Rs 35,000 for the first night and Rs 25,000 each for the subsequent days she would be at the hospital. The woman, who has a shared insurance with her husband, was unable to use it as the claim limit had been reached due to multiple procedures he underwent earlier this year.  Her family, which was unable to pay such an exorbitant amount, desperately began looking for another hospital bed. Finally, the 81-year-old woman and her daughter, who also tested positive, were admitted to a twin-sharing suite at another private hospital in the city. However, they were asked to deposit Rs 1 lakh each and were charged Rs 25,000 each for the twin-sharing suite. The amount, their family says, covers food and the beds. “The hospital in Whitefield is more reliable compared to the one in Kumaraswamy Layout and my aunt knows people there, so we were more comfortable going to that hospital,” Sowmya’s grandson said. And while he was aware of the government price cap, he did not know that the Karnataka government order specifically exempts private hospital suites from the price ceiling.  As per the June order, “An additional 10% may be charged for twin sharing wards and 25% more for single rooms (for those who don’t have insurance). There will be no ceiling for suites.” According to officials with the Department of Health and Family Welfare, a suite is different from a private ward in terms of the facilities available. “Suites generally have automated beds, private bathrooms, which also have amenities for persons with hip surgeries and these suites also have television sets. While a private ward does not have these facilities,” the official said. He, however, did not provide a reason as to why suites are exempted from the price ceiling.   Government going soft on private hospitals? Akhila Vasan, a member of the Karnataka Janarogya Chaluvali, an organisation of health activists, alleged that private hospitals have been violating “every rule in the book”, especially during the pandemic, and are focused only on “generating more money” than view the situation from the perspective of community service.  “Initially all private hospitals were crying about how footfalls had drastically reduced and asked the government to give them subsidies. It is a pandemic and this is a time to serve the community. Here private hospitals are demanding government resources. When they finally got empanelled for COVID-19 treatment, they were overcharging, trying to mislead patients and taking payments from them and the government,” she said, while adding that the state government is not even in a position to enforce action against them.  She said that although the Commissioner of the Health Department, Pankaj Kumar Pandey has issued “warnings” to private hospitals, the government has not taken any measure to set an example to establish deterrence and ensure that private hospitals begin “toeing the line”. She said that the state government has powers under the Karnataka Private Medical Establishments Act to cancel the licenses of hospitals that violate norms, which it is not doing. “This is because the government has very little control of the private hospitals,” she added.  What action will the government take? Karnataka Minister for Health and Family Welfare, Dr K Sudhakar told TNM that action has been taken against private hospitals that were found to have overcharged patients.  “There have been incidents in the past where few hospitals including one Apollo Seshadripuram have overcharged the patients. I have issued notices to such hospitals and they have refunded the excess money charged to the patient family. Strict action will be initiated against the erring hospitals breaching the price cap prescribed by the government. Government is ensuring all facilities available for the general public at COVID-19 designated hospitals and government hospitals,” he said.  He said that cases would be filed against hospitals found violating the government’s orders under the Disaster Management Act. “As I have already said, violation of state government guidelines by charging in excess while treating a COVID-19 patient is considered as a criminal offence and will be liable for action under the Disaster Management Act. However, I request the citizens to bring in such incidences to the notice of the government for further action,” he added.  If you have been admitted to a private hospital and were charged more than the amount capped by the government, you can reach out to the SAST’s toll-free numbers 1800-425-8330 and 1800-425-2646 and lodge a complaint. You will be asked to provide copies of your hospital bills. SAST will help you get the extra money back even if you were not admitted under the government quota.  *Names changed  


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Bengaluru power plant fire: Two more engineers succumb to injuries

Death
The two engineers were among the 15 engineers who were injured in the fire on October 2. It has now claimed the lives of three people.
Injured engineer after KPCL Plant fire
Injured engineer after KPCL Plant fire
Two more engineers, who were injured in the fire that broke out at the Karnataka Power Corporation Limited (KPCL) plant in Bengaluru's Yelahanka on October 2, succumbed to the injuries on Monday. Executive Engineer Krishna Bhat, 56, and Assistant Executive Engineer Manjappa, 58, died on Monday. This takes the total number of deaths related to the incident to three. They were among the 15 people who were injured in the fire that broke out at the plant in the early hours of October 2, The Hindu reported. At least 15 of the staff working in the 370 MW Gas Power Plant were injured and rushed to the hospital on October 2. One engineer, identified by the police as Balraj Murugan, succumbed days after the fire broke out. He was critically injured in the incident.  During the preliminary investigation, the KPCL claimed that an oil leakage from a bearing is suspected to have caused the fire and that the flame came from the chamber, thus resulting in the incident. "The root cause is being analysed to find out the exact reason for the incident. The Combined Cycle Gas Power Plant at Yelahanka is under construction and commissioning phase. The construction is being done by the Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL)," a statement by KPCL had said. Karnataka state fire and emergency services director K Shiva Kumar had stated that a heat blast occurred in the KPCL's Combined Cycle Power Plant (370 MW) in Yelahanka while the engineers were carrying out the tests in a gas turbine chamber. The natural gas is supplied to this plant by GAIL India Limited.  "The plant was supposed to commission its operations in December. The engineers were testing the plant on the day of the incident. However, variations in pressure were observed when they were testing. The incident occurred when KPCL engineers were conducting several checks to test the turbine," Shiva Kumar had explained.


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