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Thursday, October 15, 2020

Flood-like situation in 7 Karnataka districts after excess water released from dams

Floods
More than 7,500 people in the region had to be evacuated from their homes as a result of floods over the last three days.
Rains have been lashing the northern districts since August
Representational image: TUNGABHADRA RIVER FLOODS HARIHAR IN DAVANGERE
As a result of excess water released from upstream dams in Maharashtra and Telangana, seven districts in north Karnataka witnessed floods over the last three days. According to a preliminary report by Manoj Ranjan, Commissioner of Karnataka State Disaster Management, 7,776 people were relocated to 54 relief camps, from Kalaburagi, Yadgir, Raichur, Bidar, Belagavi, Bagalkot and Vijayapura districts, as of Thursday. The same report said that 799 houses have been partially damaged, and one house was completely damaged. The National Disaster Relief Force, State Disaster Relief Force and Fire and Emergency Personnel were mobilised to rescue stranded persons. According to government records, there were no new deaths reported as of Thursday. However, large-scale damage to crops and property continue to be reported. Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa will hold a review meeting with the Deputy Commissioners of all the flood-affected districts on Friday. He has instructed district officials to compensate all those affected by the floods. “The rainfall intensity has reduced and has been focussed mostly in Vijayapura and Belagavi districts. Until Yesterday, the rains were pretty much concentrated in Kalaburagi, Bidar and Yadgir districts. By tomorrow we expect the rainfall to completely seize as the low-pressure system has moved westwards towards Maharashtra already,” GS Sreenivas Reddy, senior consultant with the state Disaster Management Authority, told TNM. "Since today morning the rainfall has not been much. Due to the resultant rains since the start of the week, there is localised flooding in many areas. In Vijayapura, Doni river from Maharashtra flooded some villages and low-lying areas. In Belagavi, there are some areas on the bank of river Krishna which have been flooded due to excess release of water from the reservoirs. Much of the flooding is localised,” he added.


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Bengaluru housing sales likey to increase 30-35% this festive season: Report

Housing
In all, housing sales are set to rebound to 90% of the pre-COVID-19 levels (Q1 2020), says the report by property consultants Anarock.
Bengaluru housing sales likey to increase 30-35% this festive season: Report
Image for representation
Despite spiralling COVID-19 cases in the second quarter of 2020, residential sales rose significantly. This provides sufficient reason to expect a significant increase during the upcoming festive season, which will prompt many fence-sitters to avail the best deals on offers. Developers have pulled out all the stops to attract buyers, announcing schemes for the festive season – many of which result in an actual reduction in the cost of acquisition.  Housing sales in Bengaluru are likely to increase by at least 30-35% during the October-December quarter, according to a report by property consultants Anarock. Housing sales in the city in Q3 of 2020 stood at 5,400 units. In Hyderabad, a 20-24% jump is expected in housing sales in Q4 2020 against the preceding quarter, when nearly 1,650 units were sold. In NCR, there is likely to be a 27-31% jump in sales in the festive season. As many as 5,200 units were sold in Q3 2020. Chennai may see a 20-25% rise in sales in Q4 2020 as against Q3 2020 when sales stood at 1,600 units. In MMR (Mumbai Metropolitan Region), housing sales in Q3 2020 stood at 9,200 units. The ongoing October-December period may see anywhere between 33-36% rise in sales. Previous year’s trends suggest that housing sales across top cities in the festive quarter (Oct-Dec) mostly saw an uptick - anywhere between 5-10% - over the preceding quarter. This is largely because the festive season is considered most auspicious for property buying in India and developers also roll out various schemes and offers to lure buyers. However, these offers come with an expiry date - when the housing market regains enough momentum, they will be withdrawn. Most end-users will aim to use this period to their advantage. The prevailing lowest-best home loan interest rates coupled with limited-period government incentives such as reduced stamp duty and registration charges in markets like MMR are added flavours to the festive treat.  The years 2016 and 2017 were a marked contrast - festive quarter sales in these years actually reduced against the preceding quarter, mainly because of structural reforms including Demonetisation, RERA (Real Estate Regulation Act) and GST (Goods & Service Tax), the report says. This year, the top 7 cities can cumulatively witness a 35% jump in housing sales in the ongoing festive quarter (Oct-Dec) against the July to September period, the report adds. Moreover, the Q3 2020 base period saw nearly 29,520 units sold across the top 7 cities - much lower than the pre-COVID-19 quarter (Q1 2020) which saw nearly 45,200 homes sold. This effectively results in larger scope for growth. In all, housing sales are all set to rebound to 90% of the pre-COVID-19 levels (Q1 2020), the report notes.


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'Prioritise Bengaluru airport suburban rail line': Activist group writes to govt

Transport
It is widely understood that work on the airport line by K-RIDE will take three years to finish.
Graphic representation of T2 design
Representational image
With a dedicated suburban rail project for Bengaluru finally getting an approval from the Union government, citizen activists want the Karnataka government to expedite work on the terminal connecting the city to the airport, at the earliest. This, they say, is especially required because of the Union government’s dilly dallying on approving a metro line connecting the Outer Ring Road to the airport, raising question marks on its feasibility. The Union government has approved the suburban rail project, which had been pending for decades, with four corridors: Bengaluru City (Majestic/KSR)-Devanahalli (Airport), Byappanahalli-Yeshwantpur-Chikkabanavara, Kengeri-Cantonment-Whitefield and Heelalige-Byappanahalli-Rajanukunte. Amit Garg, Managing Director of K-RIDE said that they will finish work in all the four corridors in the next six to seven years. “It is the prerogative of the state and Union governments to expedite or prioritise on any particular corridor,” he told TNM. Activists point that working on this particular corridor is important as the footfall to the airport is likely to increase further with the second terminal set to  Citizens for Citizens, a Bengaluru activist group has written to the Chief Secretary expressing fears that the work on the rail project would not be prioritised, as stated earlier. In the letter, Rajkumar Duggar, the group’s convenor, said, “....we remind you that it has been repeatedly understood and highlighted that the priority corridor to be taken up by K-RIDE (the implementing agency) would be the Bengaluru City-Airport corridor which will connect the airport and Majestic and Yeshwantpur, both of which already have Metro Stations nearby.” “Also, everyone is fully aware that the metro project to the airport awaits approvals on account of feasibility (as stated by a Union Minister in writing in Parliament recently). Even if work starts on the metro to the airport line right now, it is obvious that we will see metro services earliest only by 2025-26 or later.” Sanjeev Dhyamanavar, a public transport advocate in Bengaluru, said, “As citizens, we want the airport railway line to be done first as it requires minimum land acquisition. We want the Chief Secretary and other relevant authorities to come up with a timeline about how they want to execute the project.” A section of activists fear that vested interests within the state government may want to delay the suburban rail project to the airport in favour of the metro rail. This is because the metro rail to the airport may not pass the feasibility test if the suburban rail project is already ongoing. A source said, “Since metro projects offer opportunities for kickbacks compared to rail work, there is hardly ever enthusiasm for them from politicians.”


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Working from home before COVID-19: Bengaluru-based quadriplegic tells her story

Human interest
"Everyone now asks me how I work from home! I have been doing it for years," says Shubhra Mishra.
Shubhra Mishra
Shubhra Mishra
On March 20, 2012, Shubhra Mishra’s mind was occupied with the pressures of working as a systems engineer at Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) as she walked to her office in Chennai. But an accident, in which a lorry driver hit her from behind, disabled her, with no movement below her neck and limited sensation in her arms and hands. “I don’t remember any of it. People told me later that I was taken in an auto to a nearby hospital. For more than two months, I was in the ICU and I was worried that my voice wouldn’t return again,” says Shubhra, speaking to TNM, eight years after the incident.  She was 25 at the time and in the years since the accident, Shubhra says she has painstakingly gone about adapting herself to live with quadriplegia. “You think that your life is heading somewhere and all that changes in an instant. You need to be ready for the emotional part of it as much as the physical difficulty,” she says in hindsight.  After she was discharged from the hospital, she moved from Chennai to Bengaluru in 2012, a mammoth task in itself since she had to travel in an ambulance. “We decided to move to Bengaluru for physiotherapy and because institutions like NIMHANS were based here. My physiotherapist was also from St. John's Hospital based in the city. I was paralysed below the neck and found it hard to even sit up during the day for long periods. Everyone at home had work to do to adapt to my life,” she says. She decided to return to her work at TCS in 2014, this time in the Bengaluru office. “We wrote to the HR head for India - Ajay Mukherjee - and we explained the situation to him. He approved it and he wrote to all resource management groups that I should be included along with her conditions,” she recalls. “I started working from home with TCS here (in Bengaluru). Everyone now asks me how I work from home! I have been doing it for years and people now realise how difficult it is. You end up living a life of discipline,” she says. When she started working in Bengaluru, not many people in her own office knew about her condition. “Initially, a number of people asked me why I wasn’t coming to the office. But over the years, people have understood and have been extremely supportive. They see to it that I am not overburdened,” she says. Shubhra never lost her adventurous spirit and after five years of working with TCS in Bengaluru, she decided to pursue a masters degree. She wrote the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) examination, for which she had to travel from Bengaluru to Hyderabad. “It was a big challenge again. There was no space to take my wheelchair through the aisle in the flight and even at the exam centre in Hyderabad, I had to deal with a scribe who was unable to write on the paper properly,” she says. “My score was low but we wrote to the IELTS detailing our struggles with the examination. They said that they don’t get a lot of candidates like me,” she says.  In her second attempt, which was held in Bengaluru, she cleared the IELTS exam and is now waiting to pursue her masters at Stockholm University. “I have deferred my semester for now due to the COVID-19 pandemic but I intend to join it next year,” she says.  Shubhra credits her family, especially her father, who died earlier this year, for helping her rebuild her life after the accident in 2012. “My father was quietly supportive and I learnt so much from him. He actually left it for me to fight it (adapting to life with quadriplegia). He would support me whenever I needed it and I thank him for that,” she adds.  Shubhra says that there is a lot more that needs to be done to make spaces in a city like Bengaluru accessible for people with disabilities. ”Accessibility needs to improve. People don’t even realise that something that is straightforward for them is a herculean task for us. For instance, the passport renewal office did not have a place where my wheelchair would fit and they could not take my picture. There are many places that are not inclusive of someone in a wheelchair,” she says. Throughout her life, whether it was securing her job or writing the IELTS exam, Shubhra says that she has had to write a series of letters explaining her situation before she was considered. She also says that she was able to face these problems because she was financially stable. The details are complex but the cost of managing life as a person with quadriplegia is daunting, she says.  “We looked for a nurse to take care of me, but any big organisation offering nurses would cost too much. The problem of fiances is huge if you are in my situation and lucky ones like me can cope with it,” she says, adding that accessible mobility, government grants and programmes will help people with disabilities. For now, Shubhra is simply hoping to continue her work and quietly inspire the people around her.


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Sandalwood drug case: Bengaluru cops search actor Vivek Oberoi’s house

Crime
The CCB is currently looking to locate Vivek Oberoi’s brother-in-law Aditya Alva.
Vivek Oberoi
PTI
The Bengaluru Police probing the Sandalwood drug case on Thursday conducted a search and seizure operation at the residence of Bollywood actor Vivek Oberoi in Mumbai. Vivek Oberoi’s brother-in-law Aditya Alva is one of the persons accused in the drug case that the Central Crime Branch is probing.  Police sources said that at around 1 pm on Thursday, two inspectors with the CCB in Bengaluru began searching Vivek Oberoi’s residence in Mumbai after a search warrant was obtained from a court in the city.  CCB sleuths suspect that Aditya Alva, who absconded since September this year, is allegedly taking refuge in his brother-in-law’s residence.  “We had reason to believe that Aditya Alva was in Mumbai. Besides, we also wanted to question his relatives there regarding his whereabouts,” a CCB source said.  Aditya Alva, is the son of former Janata Party Minister, the late Jeevaraj Alva. He is accused number 6 in the sandalwood drug case and his name appeared first when the first information report (FIR) was registered at the Cottonpet Police Station on September 4. Among the accused in the case,  Aditya Alva, accused number 1 Shivaprakash Chuppi, and Sheik Faazil are still absconding. So far, the CCB has arrested 14 persons in connection with the case including actors Ragini Dwivedi and Sanjjanaa Galrani. All of these people are accused of being part of a drug racket that bought and distributed drugs in Bengaluru. The CCB had earlier in September searched Aditya Alva’s resort in Bengaluru’s Hebbal -- House of Life. CCB claims that Aditya Alva allegedly threw several parties at this resort, which were attended by celebrities and that drugs were allegedly procured, distributed and consumed at these parties.  On September 22, the CCB issued a lookout notice for Aditya Alva after multiple attempts to locate him failed.  Watch: TNM Explainer about the Sandalwood drug case


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RR Nagar bye-polls: Bengaluru police file case against Congress candidate Kusuma Ravi

Politics
Karnataka Congress chief DK Shivakumar lashed out against the BJP and called the move “dirty politics”.
H Kusuma and DK Shivakumar
Facebook
The Bengaluru Police on Wednesday registered a case against Congress candidate for the Raja Rajeshwari Nagar bye-polls, H Kusuma Ravi for allegedly assaulting a police officer on duty while filing nominations. The First Information Report (FIR) was registered at the Kengeri Police Station under Sections 34 (Common intention), 188 (Deterring a public servant from performing duty) and 353 (Assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharging duty) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).  In his complaint to the Kengeri Police, assistant sub-inspector Nagaraja N alleged that the incident occurred on Wednesday when he was deployed for security at the east entrance of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) office at Raja Rajeshwari Nagar. Candidates from the BJP, Congress and JD(S) were to file their nominations on Wednesday, due to which security measures were in place.  Nagaraja alleges that H Kusuma Ravi and Siddaramaiah arrived at the east entrance of the BBMP office in RR Nagar at around 11.15 am and when they saw the barricades, they allegedly asked Nagaraja to set them aside and allow them to pass. He said in his complaint that despite informing Siddaramaiah and Kusuma’s entourage that they would not be allowed to pass, Siddaramaiah’s bodyguards and several Congress leaders allegedly assaulted Nagaraja and pushed the barricade aside in order to allow three cars to pass.  The Congress however, has taken issue with the case being registered against its candidate. Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee President DK Shivakumar called the move “dirty politics” and accused BJP leaders and the BS Yediyurappa government of “using the police” to “intimidate” the Congress candidate and party workers.  “We have drone footage of what happened. Within 100 metres of the barricade, there were two BJP ministers, five MLAs, and there were leaders from all parties. Why couldn’t they register cases against them then? They are targeting a woman candidate in order to intimidate our party workers. Our candidate has been trying to work towards the empowerment of women in the area and the BJP is trying to stop this,” DK Shivakumar said, while adding that the state government is hand in glove with the police in trying to intimidate Kusuma Ravi, as she is new to the political environment in the state.  “If you think you can intimidate us, you are dreaming and you are being foolish. This is the dirtiest of dirty politics the BJP is indulging in. If you think you can file a case against our candidate, you think we will get scared? You are trying to stop our candidate for campaigning and trying to scare her. We won’t be scared. Weren't BJP leaders there? Weren’t BJP party workers dancing around and did they not violate norms? We will go to the Election Commission and we will expose the dirty politics of the BJP to the voters,” DK Shivakumar added. Watch: DK Shivakumar lashes out against ruling BJP government after FIR against H Kusuma Ravi


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Retd IGP of Karnataka BNS Reddy accused of forgery as Pres of Indiranagar Club

Crime
A member of the club’s managing committee has accused BNS Reddy of forging signatures of committee members.
BNS Reddy
Facebook
Trouble is brewing in Bengaluru’s Indiranagar Club as its President, retired Inspector General of Police BNS Reddy, has been accused of cheating and forgery by a member of the club’s managing committee. An FIR was registered at the Indiranagar Police Station after a sessions court in Bengaluru directed the police to do so. The story was first reported by Bangalore Mirror.  One of the club’s founder members Ram Mohan Menon, has accused BNS Reddy and Secretary of the club, M Nagendra of forging signatures of managing committee members to get hold of the club’s bank accounts. He has also accused them for siphoning off funds meant for the club’s use without the knowledge of other members of the committee.  In his complaint to the sessions court, Ram Mohan Menon said that on February 2 this year, BNS Reddy and Nagendra allegedly removed the treasurer of the club M Narayan and another member of the managing committee Rajkumar, without following due procedure.  BNS Reddy and Nagendra allegedly passed the resolution to remove Narayan and Rajkumar without having a quorum in the committee meeting and without majority votes for the same. In his complaint to the sessions court, Ram Mohan Menon has said, “They have passed a resolution of the managing committee without holding a meeting. They have forged the signatures of committee members and passed a resolution with malafide intentions to get access to the club’s bank accounts.”  Speaking to TNM, Ram Mohan Menon said that in February this year, he approached the Indiranagar Police and lodged a complaint. Despite multiple visits to the station, the police did not register an FIR. On February 23, he wrote a letter to the Police Commissioner of Bengaluru to direct the Indiranagar Police to register an FIR. He claims that no action was taken. Finally, he filed a complaint with the court in October this year and on October 8, the court directed the police to register the FIR.  “I had to sit outside the police station and protest even after the court order was issued. They finally registered an FIR,” Ram Mohan Menon said. The Indiranagar Police have registered an FIR against BNS Reddy and Nagendra under sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 418 (Cheating with knowledge that wrongful loss may ensue to person whose interest offender is bound to protect), 465 (punishment for forgery), 471 (deliberately using forged document), 420 (cheating), 468 (forgery for purpose of cheating) and 417 (punishment for cheating) of the Indian Penal Code.  Indiranagar Police said that they have not questioned BNS Reddy as he is not in the country. The police are still probing the case. 


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