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Monday, February 15, 2021

Protest in Bengaluru over move to allow Ayurveda docs to perform surgeries

Controversy
Doctors in Bengaluru were on a hunger strike, against a proposed move to allow Ayurveda doctors to perform surgeries after a training period of six months.
Protest held by IMA Karnataka
Doctors belonging to the Indian Medical Association (IMA) in Bengaluru submitted copies of a memorandum to local authorities on February 15, which demanded the revoking of permission for Ayurveda practitioners to perform surgeries. The doctors submitted the memorandum after a 14-day hunger strike, which they called ‘Save Healthcare India Movement’. This move by the doctors came amid country-wide protests against the National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, which provides provisions to allow community healthcare workers to practice primary care independently. The doctors have especially taken objection with the mixing of curriculum of different streams of medicine, as a circular from Central Council of Indian Medicine (CCIM) allowed Ayurveda doctors to perform surgeries after a training period of six months. “We oppose this ‘mixopathy’ which the government is trying to bring about. Ayurveda doctors can now perform 53 surgeries, though Ayurveda doesn’t even have a concept of an anesthesia or an anesthetist. Without this basic requirement, how can you deem anyone fit to perform surgeries? This will end up turning into a serious hazard for public health,” said Dr Srinivasa S, former president and spokesperson, IMA Bengaluru. The other concern expressed by the IMA and other students’ organisations and medical forums is that combining the different streams of medicine, could turn them into legalised quackery. “This move by the Union government is absolutely unscientific. Each stream has its own set of rules and practices developed over centuries. Each of them has been time-tested. Modern medicine also has developed through a scientific process. Mixing all these fields will only destroy these processes and result in a public health crisis. Furthermore, this could lead to people losing trust in modern medicine altogether,” said Hanmanth SH, state convener of ‘White Sparks’ Medical and Dental Students Forum, Karnataka. 


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Social media hasn’t stopped anti-vaxxers. Now docs are fighting back.

Health care workers are organizing online networks to promote Covid shots, strategically aiming to drown out vaccine opponents active on those sites.

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From Siddharth to Chinmayi, celebrities condemn arrest of activist Disha Ravi

Disha Ravi arrest
Several actors, politicians and celebrities demanded Disha Ravi’s release after the 22-year-old activist was arrested from Bengaluru on Saturday.
Arrested Bengaluru climate activist Disha Ravi posing with her dog
Facebook
Several actors and celebrities from across the country have strongly condemned the arrest of 22-year-old climate activist Disha Ravi. Support has been pouring in from all quarters for the Bengaluru-based activist ever since she was arrested from her Bengaluru home by the Delhi police on Saturday. Actor Siddharth extended his “unconditional support” to Disha Ravi on Twitter. Standing unconditionally in solidarity and support with #DishaRavi. I'm so sorry this happened to you sister. We are all with you. Stay strong. This injustice too shall pass. #shameondelhipolice — Siddharth (@Actor_Siddharth) February 14, 2021 Actor and politician Prakash Raj urged people to raise their voice against the activist’s arrest and demanded her release. #ReleaseDishaRavi #ReleaseNodeepKaur .... raise your voice against this intimidating fascists.. ... #justasking https://t.co/WCBQiFNGNR — Prakash Raj (@prakashraaj) February 15, 2021 Carnatic singer and activist TM Krishna pointed out that the arrest is a cause for concern and questioned whether “we have descended into police state territory”. If arresting a 21 year old environmental activist for sharing a social media tool kit is not a sign that we have descended into police state territory, I don't know what is ? And the intention is also to threaten young people of this country#DishaRavi — T M Krishna (@tmkrishna) February 14, 2021 Playback singer Chinmayi was among the celebrities who raised her voice against the arrest, adding that she was “heartbroken”. I’m heartbroken. We ARE STILL are a democracy. Dissent is normal even if you don’t like it. In solidarity with the hero, Disha Ravi. pic.twitter.com/t0gSwdivdt — Chinmayi Sripaada (@Chinmayi) February 15, 2021 Read: ‘Disha is a passionate environmentalist’: Friends, activists shocked at her arrest Actor Swara Bhasker who has been known to call out the government on various issues, also tweeted to support Disha. #ReleaseDishaRavi https://t.co/AtynglMLxr — Swara Bhasker (@ReallySwara) February 14, 2021 Kannada actor Chetan Kumar, better known as Chetan Ahimsa, strongly supported the young climate activist. “Centre that values profits over people & its violent appendage Delhi Police decimate our democratic ethos by tormenting fighters like Disha,” he tweeted. On Sat, Delhi Police arrested Bengaluru environment activist #DishaRavi for supporting our #farmers Centre that values profits over people & its violent appendage Delhi Police decimate our democratic ethos by tormenting fighters like Disha Khakis wielding lathis TERRORISE daily — Chetan Kumar / ಚೇತನ್ (@ChetanAhimsa) February 15, 2021 Hashtags such as #DishaRavi, #DishaRaviArrested, #ReleaseDishaRavi #IndiaBeingSilenced and #FreeDishaRavi are being used by celebrities and users alike, to stand in solidarity with the arrested activist. Various politicians too slammed Disha’s arrest. Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Arvind Kejriwal, Kanimozhi Karunanidhi, P Chidambaram and Sitaram Yechury are some of the prominent politicians who have stood in solidarity with Disha. Youth-based environmental collectives issued a statement on Sunday condemning the arrest of the young activist. The Delhi Police accused the 22-year-old activist of “sharing” and “spreading” a ‘toolkit’ related to the farmers’ protest that was posted by international climate activist Greta Thunberg. An FIR was filed by the cybercrime unit of the Delhi Police against the creators of the toolkit on February 4. Though toolkits are Google documents used to prepare a social media campaign or plan protests, the Delhi Police have registered an FIR under sedition and conspiracy, alleging that this toolkit was being used to malign India. After she was produced before a Delhi court on Sunday afternoon, Disha was remanded to police custody for five days.


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28 residents in a Bengaluru apartment complex test COVID-19 positive

Coronavirus
BBMP Commissioner Manjunath Prasad told TNM that more tests will be conducted on Monday and the premises of the complex had been sanitised.
Photo of an apartment complex
Representative Image
Twenty-eight residents of an apartment complex in Bengaluru’s Bommanahalli zone have tested positive for the coronavirus. The residents of the complex were tested on Saturday and Sunday, Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Commissioner Manjunath Prasad told TNM. As many as 26 residents tested positive on Saturday while two more people tested positive on Sunday. A party hosted in the apartment complex is being considered as a probable cause for the cases. “There are 1,000 more residents who are yet to be tested, which will be carried out on Monday. The cause cannot be ascertained yet but a party hosted is being considered to be a probable reason. Among the five blocks, 533 residents in three units were willing to be checked,” the Commissioner told TNM. He further added that members who have tested positive are self-quarantining and that they are using the reverse isolation technique to limit the exposure of those who tested negative for the virus. In addition to this, the Bengaluru civic body has been carrying out health check-ups and maintaining the sanitation of the apartment complex. He added, “We are taking all precautions and have sanitised the premises. Surveys of the households are underway and we will also be sending samples for genome sequencing to NIMHANS (National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences) on Monday.” Karnataka on Sunday reported 414 COVID-19 cases and two deaths, taking the total number of infections and death toll to just over 9.45 lakh and 12,265 respectively, the Health Department said. Bengaluru Urban district accounted for 241 of the fresh cases, Dakshina Kannada came next with 24 followed by Mysuru at 21, while the remaining cases were scattered over the state.  Cumulatively 9.45 lakh COVID-19 positive cases have been reported in the state so far, which includes 12,265 deaths and 9.27 lakh discharges, the bulletin said. Karnataka at present, has 5,836 active cases. One death was reported in Bengaluru Urban and the other in Kalaburagi. Four of the 31 districts, Bagalkote, Ramanagara, Haveri and Shivamogga, reported no new infections and fatalities. A total of 1.70 crore samples have been tested so far, including 60,876 on Sunday, the bulletin said.  


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Karnataka CM and son dividing Veerashaiva-Lingayats for political gain: BJP MLA Yatnal

Politics
Yatnal was recently issued a show-cause notice over allegations he levelled against the Chief Minister.
Basangouda Patil Yatnal speaking into the mic
Facebook
Bharatiya Janata Party’s Basanagouda Patil Yatnal on Sunday, in Tumkuru, alleged that Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa and his son BY Vijayendra, the state vice president of BJP, were making systematic attempts to divide the dominant Veerashaiva-Lingayat community for their political gain. He told the media that the CM does so every time he receives intimation of a threat to his position from the party high-command. “Whenever Yediyurappa gets an indication from the top that there is a threat to his chair, he uses the Veerashaiva-Lingayat issue for his benefit. His son, Vijayendra, acts on similar lines. Their intentions behind not granting the community Other Backward Class (OBC) status,” claimed Yatnal. He also made allegations that Vijayendra and Minister Murugesh Nirani were trying to divide the community systematically and that they would never succeed. Yatnal has often actively participated in the agitation by Basava Jaya Mrutyunjaya Swami of Kudalsangama mutt seeking OBC 2A category (non-creamy layer category) status to the Veerashaiva-Lingayat community. The seer last week started a padayatra from Kudalasangama to Bengaluru to press for the demand and is supported by various seers and leaders of the Veerashaiva and Lingayat communities. Yatnal alleged that Yediyurappa, a Lingayat himself, was not keen on granting 2A status to the community. The Vijayapura MLA said that no government order had been issued on the matter. To a question on the show-cause notice issued by the BJP high command for speaking against the Chief Minister and others, Yatnal said he was yet to receive it. He alleged that issuing the notice was part of false propaganda to stop other BJP MLAs from speaking. Yatnal has been up in arms against the Chief Minister and his son Vijayendra and has even said that Yediyurappa would be 'removed' from his position shortly. Yatnal's outburst against the CM intensified after a recent cabinet expansion, in which he was not included, despite being a senior party functionary and a former union minister. 


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Sunday, February 14, 2021

CDC director: Too early for states to roll back mask mandates

“It's encouraging to see these trends coming down but they're coming down from an extraordinarily high place,” Rochelle Walensky said.

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‘Disha is a passionate environmentalist’: Friends, activists shocked at her arrest

Controversy
A climate activist based in Bengaluru, Disha will spend the next five days in jail after she was arrested under charges of sedition and conspiracy.
21-year-old Bengaluru climate activist Disha Ravi surrounded by placards with various slogans
Facebook
Disha Ravi was a regular college student at Mount Carmel College in Bengaluru, when she watched a documentary on animal cruelty at a screening. Her friends describe her as a tenacious and social person who had always dreamed of becoming a chef, even though she thought her parents would never let her go to culinary school. But that documentary changed her life. It opened her eyes to the cruelties of the meat industry, and set her on a path of environmental activism, which has now landed the 21-year-old in trouble with the Delhi police.  On Saturday evening, Delhi police turned up at Disha’s home in north Bengaluru, took her on a flight to Delhi and arrested her.  The allegations? She planned and edited parts of the ‘toolkit’ or a Google document on farmers’ protests that Greta Thunberg had tweeted. Though toolkits are nothing but Google documents used to prepare a social media campaign or to plan protests, the Delhi police have registered an FIR under sedition and conspiracy, alleging that this toolkit was being used to malign India. Disha will be spending the next five days in police custody. Disha is a familiar face at cleanups and tree-planting drives in Bengaluru. She is both passionate and concerned about climate change and her arrest has come as a shock to close friends and family members who describe her as a young and dedicated climate campaigner. “She was just 19 when I met her at two events — one of them was a lake cleaning drive in Ulsoor and the other was an event in Sarjapur called Mara Kadi Bedi (Don’t Cut Trees). As a person, she was very resourceful and knowledgeable. She explained how many human activities were linked to climate change,” says Mukund Gowda, who volunteers for pro-environment groups in Bengaluru. Another activist shares that Disha attended cleanup drives in Hebbal in 2019. “She carried reusable bottles and even came to cleanups by travelling on buses. She often promoted alternatives to industrial dairy production,” says the activist. Before her life of environmental activism, she was a business administration student in Bengaluru’s Mount Carmel College and was known to be an avid animal lover and an aspiring chef. “As a student, she enjoyed doing what most of us do — vibe to the latest Bollywood songs, keep up with YouTubers who talk about skincare and fashion, watch Netflix, cycle, chill with her friends or her dog Sammy. She also loves making food and experimenting with new vegan recipes and is determined to make the world's best hummus,” says a close friend of Disha. Her friends say her role model is Jane Goodall, a primatologist who spent her life in the jungles of Asia and Africa, and is considered one of the world’s foremost experts on chimpanzees. “Disha dreamt of working with turtles and marine life and hoped to pursue a career in ecological conservation and restoration,” says her friend. Her family’s experiences spurred her to take up causes related to the environment. “Her grandparents were farmers and she has seen how they struggled and how food production gets affected by the climate crisis through droughts, floods, change in pH balance of the soil and other problems,” says her friend. In college, Disha was introduced to the cruelties of the meat industry. “She attended an on-campus screening of a vegan documentary that really opened her eyes to the cruelties of the meat industry. As an animal lover and a passionate chef who hoped to travel the world and try all sorts of cuisines, it wasn't so surprising that she'd been so deeply affected by what she'd seen. After getting involved with the vegan community, she eventually started attending rallies to help spread awareness on the problems with industrialised farming,” says her friend. Disha then turned vegan herself and interned at Goodmylk, a company that makes plant-based alternatives for dairy products. “She lives by the principles she believes in and straight out of college, she joined Goodmylk full-time,” says her friend. In January 2019, she was inspired to take up volunteer work with Fridays For Future (FFF), the international movement led by climate change activist Greta Thunberg and was a part of protests that took place in Bengaluru in September 2019. The ‘toolkit’ that Greta shared had information on how to support the farmers’ protests, including text that could be tweeted and Twitter handles that could be tagged to amplify those tweets. However, Greta deleted her February 3 tweet that had a link to the toolkit, as it contained dates from January, and replaced it with a new one. The modified tweet is still on her profile. However, by then, screenshots of the older Google doc had gone viral. According to the Delhi police, Disha shared the document with Greta. When the Public Prosecutor accused Disha of conspiring against the nation, she told the court, “I was just supporting the farmers. I supported the farmers because they are our future and we all need to eat.” Also read: Disha Ravi sent to 5-day police custody, she breaks down in court Disha’s neighbours say that she and her mother have been living in her residence in north Bengaluru for over a year now. Activists and friends who know her well say she is the sole earner in her family and was looking to take up extra work. “She came to me looking for extra work from 7 am to 9 am and 7 pm to 9 pm. It was evident her pay was not enough to manage herself and her family,” the activist says. The same activist scoffs at the idea that she was being funded for her activism. “I have Splitwise accounts of all my transactions to manage expenses. Our volunteer work is not being funded by anyone,” says the activist. Prominent environmentalists came forward to condemn her arrest on Sunday. “I know a lot of young people like her and I am proud to know people like her that are upset with the way in which the government has prioritised corporations over their futures and how it has neglected important issues. These are people who have taken the principles of the Constitution to heart. Penalising or criminalising their voices is something that is condemnable,” says Nithyanand Jayaraman, a Chennai-based environmentalist. Also read: Academics, activists condemn Disha Ravi's arrest, say govt distracting from real issues He adds that environmentalists were first targeted during the protests against the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), 2020. “The government has targeted young people since the time of the protests against EIA when charges under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) were invoked on organisations and websites that had hosted petitions,” says Nithyanand. “A democracy cannot function like this and the government should ideally engage with them. People who are older, including me, need to listen to younger people and understand what their aspirations and concerns are,” he adds. One of the organisations that was charged under the stringent UAPA in 2020 was Fridays for Future. The charges were later withdrawn after the Delhi police said they had erroneously sent notices.    This time, the Delhi police have pressed charges against Disha and are also investigating others who made edits to the document. But the police’s actions were decried by several youth-based environmental collectives which came out in support of Disha. “To imply that climate change activists are a danger to the peace and harmony of this country in a political climate that is highly polarized is to play fast and loose with their safety and security, especially when there is absolutely no proof to back up this claim,” a statement issued by the collective says. Also read: Youth-based environmental collectives condemn Disha Ravi’s arrest in ‘toolkit’ case With inputs from Soumya Chatterjee


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