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Sunday, December 27, 2020

How the Mekedatu dam project in Cauvery valley endangers four threatened species

Conservation
The ramifications of flooding one of the last remaining strongholds of four threatened species cannot be compared with the economics of a mega project.
The endangered grizzled giant squirrel photographed hanging upside down feeding on fruit from a tree in the Cauvery wildlife sanctuary.
Grizzled giant squirrel | Pic by Joshua Barton
Very often, an imagined view of ‘wild spaces’ is symbolised as the vast savannahs of Africa, rainforests of Amazon, snow laden tundra of Siberia or the immense iciness of Antarctica. In India, it is difficult to visualise stretches of wildlands shared by humans and wildlife. However, barely 100 km from the urban sprawl of Bengaluru lies a remnant of India’s ancient wildlands, a wind-swept landscape where wildlife still abounds, and forest laden hills stretch as far as the eyes can see. This is the isolated Cauvery valley, the last stretch of the free-flowing mystic river in Karnataka where the arboreal grizzled giant squirrels still screech from the forest canopy, herds of elephants cross the river as crocodiles bask in the distance, otters frolic on the sand banks and fish eagles perch high above. You may see a sloth bear foraging for food beneath boulders or a porcupine hurrying to take shelter in the thickets. If you look hard enough, you may chance upon a leopard vanishing behind the shadow of the hills as scores of spotted deer and four-horned antelopes stand alert in their stiff posture – the Cauvery valley is a veritable paradise. At the valley, you experience a sudden drop of altitude as you enter a seemingly surreal world where the steep landscape changes into an arid shrub land and then into a bustling forest. Villages are left behind and you would be excused for forgetting that you are a mere couple of hours away from the madness of the city. With a predominantly dry climate – albeit rich with water from the Cauvery, the Palar and several streams – the river system is unique in this stretch of the Cauvery. This setting imparts much-needed life into the river systems and unleashes a wealth of diversity with profuse fish populations and an abundance of other life forms. In lieu of its isolated nature, the Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary was instituted in the year 1987 providing safe passage to the Cauvery river meandering through it. Cauvery river flowing through the wildlife sanctuary | Pic by Sivaprasad However, the past few decades have seen an increasing clamour to divert water from rivers and prevent it from flowing into the sea. Using this logic, it is proposed to again dam the Cauvery river, which provides Bengaluru about 1,350 million litres of water per day, and permanently alter this ancient landscape. Government analysis estimates that Bengaluru will require 2,285 million litres of water per day by the year 2030, which can be met if the 67 tmc capacity Mekedatu dam project is implemented successfully. More than 50 square km of land will be submerged as a result of a balancing reservoir in the proposed Mekedatu project. Tellingly, only six villages are scheduled to be flooded while the remaining area is mostly forested. Four threatened species at peril A dam can serve the purpose of substantially augmenting the needs of a water stressed city. However, the issue here is that the proposed land for the submergence zone happens to be an Eden for life forms. An international icon, the valley is home to not one but several threatened species, some of which are rapidly vanishing across most of their natural habitat. Straining our neck at the impossibly tall Terminalia arjuna trees that dot the riverbanks, looking for the elusive grizzled giant squirrel, one is aware of standing a few feet away from the natural habitat of the river-dwelling mahseer on one side and the four-horned antelope on the other. These four threatened species thrive in the Cauvery valley and the ramifications of flooding one of their last remaining strongholds cannot be compared with the economics of constructing a mega project. Cauvery valley with the river flowing through it | Pic by Abhijit Dutta Of all the four species, the threatened grizzled giant squirrel counts the valley as one of its last habitats in their northernmost range. The arboreal squirrel seldom comes down to the ground and is found only in few forest patches of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. In Karnataka, it can only be found on the Cauvery banks in the Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary. This riverine species needs the giant arjuna, tamarind and jamun trees that thrive in the Cauvery valley, and with the valley expected to be fully submerged as a result of the proposed Mekedatu dam, the bells of extinction will toll for the squirrels in one of their last remaining homes. Grizzled giant squirrel | Pic by Joshua Barton The critically endangered hump-backed mahseer is a creature of fast flowing rivers and thrives in wild country and deep gorges. The salubrious Mysore plateau has some of the best-preserved stretches of the fish and the region from Shivasamudram to Mekedatu is known to house giant mahseers. The mahseer found in this stretch of the river is already highly threatened due to pollution, poaching and reduction of its natural habitat. Can the species survive another dam in its last home? Mahseer | Pic by Joshua Barton Of the six antelopes found in India, four are found in Karnataka and of those, the vulnerable four-horned antelope competes with other species as the most charismatic of the Cauvery landscape. This small antelope is probably the only antelope in the world with four horns and is generally found in the highlands of the Cauvery valley with occasional visits to the riverbank. Known to leap in fast-motioned sprints upon sensing human presence, the antelope forms an important prey base for carnivores in the sanctuary. Giant Terminalia arjuna trees can be spotted across the banks of the Cauvery river. Generally found near streams and rivers, rural folk in some parts of India believe that this magnificent tree is an indicator of water in the forest. The arjuna trees along the Cauvery are iconic as they are huge in size with several known to be over 100 years old. They form important nesting sites for numerous bird species found here, with birds even living inside the trunk of these trees. Several raptors use these trees as perching sites to locate their prey. The proposed dam will certainly drown the trees and wash away their ancient legacy. Cauvery river | Pic by Sivaprasad Bengaluru, which is blessed to have a biodiverse forest near it, may soon be the reason for the forest’s destruction, risking the very survival of riverine species. The human cost of relocation may be relatively minor. But the existential fate of the grizzled giant squirrels and the mahseer cannot be compared to that of the project, which currently stands at Rs 9,000 crore, as the real economic value of the riverine forests is infinitely more. The project envisages lifting and transporting the water for more than 100 km, all the way to Bengaluru. While the need of the urban dweller may be urgent, fulfilling it at the cost of sinking this wildlife sanctuary and not searching for sustainable solutions is a recipe for disaster. But there is still some hope. The onus is on Bengaluru citizens to make the administrators accountable for harvesting existing sources of water. A city formed by tapping into age-old rainwater harvesting and tank-based irrigation can still spare the Cauvery valley by making the right choices. And while we debate, the grizzled giant squirrels play in their usual manner, jumping from one tree to another, screeching with joy, unaware of what may come next. The Bengalurean needs to take a call on whether he wants to hear a joyful racket from these forests in the future or just the last staccato cackle of the endangered squirrel. Abhijit Dutta works in the field of conservation and Kunal Sharma is a faculty at Azim Premji University, Bengaluru. Views expressed are the authors’ own.


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Five daily wage workers returning to Bengaluru after voting killed in accident

Accident
Police said that a Karnataka RTC bus travelling in the wrong direction hit the vehicle in which the workers were returning from Raichur.
A ghastly accident in the early hours of Sunday morning left five people dead on National Highway 150A in Chitradurga district of Karnataka. The accident took place at around 4 am when a Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) bus and a cruiser hit each other. The bus was travelling on the wrong side, police said. Radhika G, Superintendent of Police, Chitradurga told TNM that there were 22 people travelling in the cruiser and of them, five persons were confirmed dead after the accident.  "They were daily wage workers travelling to Bengaluru from Raichur after casting their votes in the Gram Panchayat elections in the first phase. Two more persons were unconscious while 15 others have minor injuries. We are awaiting the doctor's report on the injuries," Radhika G told TNM. The deceased were identified as a couple — Rathnamma and Thimmanna, Durgappa (16), and the driver, Mahesh (20). One more person who died in the accident is yet to be identified.  Others who were injured were rushed to a hospital in Challakere in the district. They were travelling back to Bengaluru from H Siddapur village in Devadurga of Raichur district.  "The KSRTC bus was travelling on the wrong side of the road and the visibility was not good. It was very foggy in the morning," Radhika G said, speaking about the accident. Those travelling in the bus including the driver, escaped unhurt in the incident. The cruiser was heavily damaged and its roof was blown off.  Officials in Molakalmuru in Chitradurga are investigating the incident and Virupakshappa (33), who was driving the KSRTC bus on the wrong side was detained by the police. 


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Bengaluru police bust fake currency racket with auto driver’s aid

Crime
The incident came to light after one of the accused handed a Rs 100 note to an auto-rickshaw driver, who suspected it to be a counterfeit
Currency notes of face values Rs 2000
Representative Image/ PTI
An auto-rickshaw driver helped the Bengaluru police unearth a counterfeit currency note racket allegedly run by three men. The three accused have been identified as Mohammed Imran, Mubarak and Jamal Akhtar and the police said that they confessed to their crime. The incident came to light after Imran, who travelled from City Market to Shanthinagar Bus stand in an auto-rickshaw, paid Rs 100 to the driver. Suspecting the note to be a counterfeit, the driver took him to the Wilson Garden Police Station, according to reports.  Upon raiding Imran’s house, the police said they found materials used for printing counterfeit notes, like ink bottles and 33 sheets of A4 paper. Other materials seized included a CPU, a keyboard, print screens and a damaged pen drive. When asked if the three accused are a part of a larger syndicate, an official said, “Investigation is underway. It is not known yet if they are involved with a bigger group.” The official added that the counterfeit notes they produced are in circulation in the city and they are also trying to trace it. The three accused have been booked under Sections 489A (printing counterfeit currency) and 489 B (using fake currency) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) under which they can either be imprisoned for life or face a jail term up to ten years besides a fine. On December 23, Bengaluru police arrested two accused in a murder case of an elderly lady. They later found out that the two also ran a counterfeit currency racket. The Bengaluru Police department plans to initiate stringent action against counterfeit currency rackets operating in the city.   


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Second phase of Gram Panchayat polls underway in Karnataka

Elections
The polling began at 7 am and will continue till 5 pm in 20,728 booths, the state election commission officials said.
Gram Panchayat polls
Polling is underway for 2,709 panchayats in 109 taluks of Karnataka in the second phase of the Gram Panchayat elections on Sunday. The polling began at 7 am and will continue till 5 pm in 20,728 booths, the state election commission officials said. There are 1,05,431 candidates in the fray for 39,378 seats. A total of 3,697 candidates have already been elected unopposed, they said. The polling has not yet picked up the pace in most of the places but the poll officials expressed the confidence that it would gain momentum by afternoon and there will be a good voter turnout by the end of the day. The election is happening amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, and those who have tested positive or are under primary/secondary contacts can vote in the last hour of polling, they said. In view of the pandemic, masks and social distancing have been made mandatory. There will be hand sanitisers at all the polling stations. The number of voters in each booth has been limited to 1,000 from 1,500. About 80,000 police and security personnel have been deployed for the safe conduct of elections. Besides them, Anganwadi, ASHA workers and Health Department officials have been roped in for poll duty. Though these polls don't take place on party symbols, all political parties have put in efforts to ensure that the candidate supported by them wins, so as to have their hold on grassroots level politics, which may prove advantageous for them in taluk or zilla panchayat and even assembly polls when it takes place. Polling for 3,019 panchayats in 117 taluks were held in the first phase on December 22, and the counting for both the phases will take place on December 30. Bengaluru North has about 98,422 voters and there are 538 contenders in the fray for 233 seats. Yelahanka has nearly 1.2 lakh voters and there are 719 contenders for 298 seats.  With PTI inputs


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14 UK returnees to Karnataka found COVID-19 positive, samples sent for further tests

Health
Health Minister K Sudhakar told reporters that the Health Department had so far conducted tests on 1,638 people out of the 2,500 passengers till December 22.
Health Minister Sudhakar wearing mask
Karnataka Health Minister K Sudhakar on Saturday said that 14 of the 2,500 passengers who returned from the UK since November 25 had tested coronavirus positive and their samples were sent for genome sequencing tests to find if anyone was infected with a mutant strain. Sudhakar told reporters that the Health Department had so far conducted tests on 1,638 of the 2,500 passengers till December 22. "Of the 1,638, 14 were positive. Their samples have been sent to the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences (NIMHANS) for genome sequencing test. NIMHANS is one of the 10 institutes selected by the Health Ministry to conduct these tests. Along with Nimhans, the National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS) at Bengaluru can also carry out the tests," he explained. Sudhakar said that genome sequencing was a time-consuming process which takes at least three to four days. "The new strain of the virus found in the UK has 14 mutations, so genome sequencing tests are taking some time," he said. According to the Minister, the state will not have direct access to these reports. "NIMHANS or NCBS is supposed to send the reports to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) which, in turn, will disclose the results to the respective states," he said. He added that the Union government has barred the state government from sharing any details about the new variants of coronavirus. The Minister clarified that at this stage, the state government has neither directed nor helped any VIP to secure 'Covaxin,' the COVID-19 vaccine being developed in India. "Covaxin is still in the trial stage. Inaugurating the third round of trials of this vaccine, I had appealed to frontline health workers to get shots for their own safety," he said. The Karnataka Health Department traced and tested UK returnees who arrived in India on December 20 and 21. In addition, the health department is also testing those returning from the UK, who arrived after November 25, and has asked them to isolate themselves. 


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Actor Vishnuvardhan's bust vandalised in Bengaluru, angry fans stage protest

Controversy
Devotees of Adichunchanagiri Mutt which is located nearby wanted a statue of the late seer installed at the circle instead.
Vishnuvardhan looking at camera
Vishnuvardhan
Angry fans of Kannada actor Vishnuvardhan staged a protest on Saturday after a bust of the late actor at the Balagangadharanatha Swamiji circle on Magadi highway in Bengaluru was vandalised. The incident took place on Friday night. Umesh Shetty, one of the actor's fans, informed the media that he had found the bust vandalised on Saturday morning. "There was a pressure on us to relocate the statue to a close-by place and we had agreed to it. However, vandalising the bust like that is extraordinarily unwarranted and the police commissioner must take cognisance of such act and send the culprits behind the bars," he said. A resident of a locality nearby said that for many days a section of people have been objecting to the actor's statue being installed there. Devotees of Adichunchanagiri Mutt, which is also located nearby, wanted a statue of the late seer installed at the circle. Kannada actor Darshan demanded that the police should take action against such miscreants who are upto disrupt peace in the society. "He lives in our hearts. He was a legend. None has the right to insult our legends this manner. I oppose and demand the police to take action against miscreants," he tweeted. Karnataka Housing Minister V Somanna, who is also the local MLA, condemned the incident and said that since the actor's followers were prepared to relocate the statue and vandalising it in the night was uncalled for. "We are going to speak to all sides and peacefully resolve the difficulty and reinstall Vishnuvardhan's statue at one other location quickly," he said. It may be recalled that recently, a Telugu film actor Vijay Rangaraju had spoken ill about the deceased actor in one of his interviews, to which the entire Kannada film industry had taken serious note of and demanded an unconditional apology from him. Realising that his interview had snowballed into a controversy, Rangaraju had later tendered his apology to Vishnuvardhan's fans.


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Saturday, December 26, 2020

Karnataka govt to appoint dedicated staff for organ donation facilitation

Health
The Health Department has also decided to equip all district hospitals and medical colleges in the state for organ harvesting.
In a step to promote organ donations in the state, the Karnataka Health Department has decided to equip all district hospitals and medical colleges in the state to harvest organs from donors. A Deputy Director, additional staff and 20 organ transplantation organisers will be newly appointed for the State Organ Tissue Transplant Organisation (SOTTO). In addition to this, training will be imparted to the hospital staff, a recently issued government order said. Other than coordinating organ donations in the state across various hospitals, SOTTO will also maintain a waiting list of patients needing donated organs. A government official who did not wish to be named said, “Till now, we did not have an official body of SOTTO, but we were functioning like an ad-hoc department under the Jeevasarthakathe programme. With this new dedicated administrative staff, we will be able to function better. This is being done as per the policy guideline by the National Law School to have an official body for organ donation.” The official added, “With more administrative staff, more government hospitals will be made part of this organ donation pool. Currently only a few government hospitals in the state have licenses to harvest organs.” According to officials, as COVID-19 cases are decreasing in Karnataka, the number of donors is increasing in the state. In 2019, there were 105 donors. From January to March 2020, during the pre-pandemic time, the state saw 25 organ transplants, while nine more took place in the past two months.    TNM in August had reported how the COVID-19 crisis had resulted in shortage of organ donors, which in turn led to deaths of patients who needed organ donations to survive. Doctors had then said acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) patients were the most affected as they might not have any eligible donors among the near family members. At that time, officials had said that more than 3,000 patients were awaiting kidney donations alone.  wait for HL. read through once. put byline.    ====  Crumb: Health   Karnataka govt to appoint dedicated staff for organ donation facilitation     Karnataka to now have dedicated staff for organ donation facilitation   Blurb: The Health Department has also decided to equip all district hospitals and medical colleges in the state for organ harvesting.   In a step to promote organ donations in the state, the Karnataka Health Department has decided to equip all district hospitals and medical colleges in the state to harvest organs from donors. A Deputy Director, additional staff and 20 organ transplantation organisers will be newly appointed for the State Organ Tissue Transplant Organisation (SOTTO). In addition to this, training will be imparted to the hospital staff, a recently issued government order said. Other than coordinating organ donations in the state across various hospitals, SOTTO will also maintain a waiting list of patients needing donated organs. A government official who did not wish to be named said, “Till now, we did not have an official body of SOTTO, but we were functioning like an ad-hoc department under the Jeevasarthakathe programme. With this new dedicated administrative staff, we will be able to function better. This is being done as per the policy guideline by the National Law School to have an official body for organ donation.” The official added, “With more administrative staff, more government hospitals will be made part of this organ donation pool. Currently only a few government hospitals in the state have licenses to harvest organs.”   According to officials, as COVID-19 cases are decreasing in Karnataka, the number of donors is increasing in the state. In 2019, there were 105 donors. From January to March 2020, during the pre-pandemic time, the state saw 25 organ transplants, while nine more took place in the past two months.    TNM in August had reported how the COVID-19 crisis had resulted in shortage of organ donors, which in turn led to deaths of patients who needed organ donations to survive. Doctors had then said acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) patients were the most affected as they might not have any eligible donors among the near family members. At that time, officials had said that more than 3,000 patients were awaiting kidney donations alone.  Read: Karnataka witnesses acute shortage of organ donors amidst COVID-19 pandemic  


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