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Thursday, February 27, 2020

Freedom fighter and one of India's oldest men, Sudhakar Chaturvedi dies in Bengaluru

Crime
Sudhakar Chaturvedi was witness to the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in 1919.
Centenarian freedom fighter, vedic scholar and a former journalist who had witnessed the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, Sudhakar Krishna Rao died on Thursday in Bengaluru. Known as Pandit Sudhakar “Chaturvedi” as he was well versed in the four vedas, the scholar died at his home in Bengaluru’s Jayanagar, media reports stated. His last rites will be performed after 4 pm in Bengaluru’s Chamarajpet cemetery, Kannada Prabha reported. Sudhakar Krishna Rao was born on Rama Navami in Tumakuru’s Khyatasandra. Unverified reports say that he was born in 1897. When he was in school, Sudhakar Chaturvedi moved to Haridwar under the guidance of his father to join the Arya Samaj. Known as “postman to Gandhi,” several reports claimed that Gandhi fondly called him “Karnataki”. Sudhakar Chaturvedi was deeply influenced by the Vedas and the teachings of Swami Shraddhanand. In his youth, he joined a newspaper named Vijay, which was run by Swami Shraddhanand, TOI reported in 2019. The newspaper focused on covering the freedom movement in the country. Sudhakar Chaturvedi is believed to have been deployed for reporting at Amritsar when he witnessed the Jallianwala Bagh massacre on April 13, 1919, which killed 379 Indians. His eyewitness account of the massacre is documented in the Kannada book by N Nagalaxmi, titled Shataayushi Pandita Sudhakara Chaturvedi. Chaturvedi recounted to TOI that Colonel Reginald Dyer announced that if the gathering did not disperse, they would open fire. “As Bachat Singh, the Congress leader from Lahore, who was in-charge for the day climbed up a wall and attempted to address the large gathering, the firing began within three minutes,” TOI quoted him as saying. Sudhakar Chaturvedi then hid in a drain and witnessed people crying and trying to climb the walls of the Bagh. In the book by Nagalaxmi, Sudhakar had recounted that he had helped cremate the unclaimed bodies of the dead after the massacre, the report added. He was residing in the Sabarmati Ashram with Mahatma Gandhi when he was jailed for part taking in the Khilafat Movement, the Kannada Prabha report added. Condoling his death, Chief Minister BS Yediyurappa said, “I am deeply saddened by the demise of freedom fighter and vedic scholar Pandit Sudhakar Chaturvedi. He witnessed the Jallianwala Bagh massacre and fought along with Mahatma Gandhi during the freedom struggle. He has also comiled over 50 books about the Vedas. May his soul rest in peace.” ಸುಧಾಕರ ಚತುರ್ವೇದಿಯವರ ನಿಧನಕ್ಕೆ ಮುಖ್ಯಮಂತ್ರಿ ಸಂತಾಪ ಶತಾಯುಷಿ, ಸ್ವಾತಂತ್ರ್ಯ ಹೋರಾಟಗಾರ, ವೇದ ವಿದ್ವಾಂಸ ಸುಧಾಕರ ಚತುರ್ವೇದಿಯವರ ನಿಧನಕ್ಕೆ ಮುಖ್ಯಮಂತ್ರಿ ಶ್ರೀ @BSYBJP ಅವರು ತೀವ್ರ ಸಂತಾಪ ವ್ಯಕ್ತಪಡಿಸಿದ್ದಾರೆ. ತುಮಕೂರಿನ ಕ್ಯಾತಸಂದ್ರದಲ್ಲಿ ಜನಿಸಿದ ಚತುರ್ವೇದಿಯವರು, ಜಲಿಯನ್ ವಾಲಾಬಾಗ್ ಹತ್ಯಾಕಾಂಡದ ಪ್ರತ್ಯಕ್ಷದರ್ಶಿಗಳು. 1/2 — CM of Karnataka (@CMofKarnataka) February 27, 2020 Congress MLA from Jayanagar, Sowmya Reddy offered her condolences following news of his demise. “I extend my deepest condolences to his entire group of friends and family. He will forever be remembered. I pray to God to rest his soul in peace.With utmost pride I would also like to share the fact that he hailed from Namma Bengaluru, a resident of Jayanagar,” she said in a tweet.  Today we have lost a man who is believed to be India's oldest man ever to have lived - Sri. Sudhakar Chaturvedi. He was a Vedic scholar and an Indologist. #SowmyaReddy #jayanagar#FreedomFighter 1/6 pic.twitter.com/jQrN8fPBMM — Sowmya Reddy (@Sowmyareddyr) February 27, 2020  
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Notorious Bengaluru gangster shot dead after police chase through city

Crime
Slum Bharath, involved in murder and extortion cases, escaped police custody, causing a chase through the city.
A notorious Bengaluru gangster was shot dead in an encounter after he allegedly attempted to escape police custody in an early morning chase through the city. Slum Bharat, who has over 50 criminal cases registered against him, died after suffering grievous gunshot wounds on Thursday.  Bengaluru north division police shot Slum Bharat at Hesarghatta around 5 am on Thursday after he and his associates allegedly tried to attack the police with guns and machetes. Police Inspector Venkataramanappa shot at Bharat twice. He was rushed to Saptagiri Hospital where he died as he was not responding to treatment. Slum Bharat was involved in several criminal cases, including murder, attempted murder, extortion and assault. Bharat was apprehended by the Bengaluru police in Uttar Pradesh two days ago. He was brought to Bengaluru on Tuesday. Around 11.30 pm on January 30, the Banashankari Police crashed a birthday party organised by Slum Bharat after receiving a tip-off on his location. Bharat and his associates managed to escape the police and remained elusive until the police tracked him down to UP, where he was finally arrested on Tuesday. The police were taking Bharat to various crime scenes as procedure during investigation when he allegedly attempted escape. What happened on Thursday morning? In the late hours of Wednesday, the police had finished conducting the spot mahajar (a process where the accused is taken to various scenes of crime and asked to describe in detail the events that transpired in said areas). The convoy of two vehicles was moving through Rajgopalnagar when Slum Bharat’s associates waylaid the police vehicle. His associates attacked the police vehicle with machetes and even fired shots at the police. One of the bullets hit Rajagopalnagar Police Inspector Dinesh Patil BS on his torso. Since he was wearing a bullet-proof vest, he did not sustain injuries. Another bullet fell on the police vehicle. DCP North Shashikumar said that Slum Bharat’s associates tried to hack one of the policemen in the second vehicle with a machete. They managed to get Bharat onto a Zen car and fled the scene. The police immediately alerted the control room and all police stations across the city and also in its outskirts were alerted of Bharat’s escape. Patrol vehicles were asked to notify the control room if any car bearing the said license plate number as the Zen car was spotted in their jurisdiction. Around 5 am, a patrol vehicle on Hesaraghatta Road alerted the control room that a Zen car with the same license plate number was in the area. A team of police officials rushed to Hesaraghatta Road in Peenya. After chasing Bharat for a few minutes, the police were closing in on the car when Bharat allegedly opened fire at the policemen. Nandini Layout Police Inspector Venkataramanappa fired a shot in the air and asked Bharat to surrender. However, Bharat’s associates allegedly attacked the policemen in the vehicle. Police constable Subhash of Nandini Layout police station sustained a bullet injury to his arm. Venkataramanappa shot two rounds at Bharat. The bullets hit his leg and abdomen, DCP North Shashikumar said. The abdomen injury proved fatal, the police said. Constable Subhash is currently undergoing treatment at Saptagiri hospital and his condition is stable, police said. In March 2019, Bharath was arrested for being part of a gang that hacked to death Gangster Lazmana near ISKCON temple in Bengaluru. At the same time, he was also accused of hiring other rowdies to kill Sandalwood actor Arjun Dev. He was arrested in March 2019 in connection with both these cases.    
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Attack on media covering Delhi riots is an act of cowardice: Bengaluru journos protest

Delhi riots
Journalists submitted a copy of their resolution to Governor Vajubhai Vala.
Journalists in Bengaluru met in solidarity at the Press Club over the violence meted out to several reporters covering the communal violence in Delhi, which has resulted in the death of at least 34 persons. Mediapersons wore black bands to register their protest on Thursday against the alleged police inaction. They met Karnataka Governor Vajubhai Vala and handed over a copy of their resolution seeking action against those who attacked media personnel. They also plan to send a copy of their resolution to the Union Home Minister Amit Shah. The resolution states, “In the last few days, we have seen unprecedented levels of violent attacks on many media professionals in Delhi. These media personnel were only discharging their duty as expected of them by their organisation Attacking them while on the job is an act of cowardice.” Accusing the Delhi police of failing to provide security and safety for the media, the resolution states, “What many fail to see is that as journalists, we try to uncover the truth while putting our lives and families at risk. We are proud patriots and do our job to help society, just as many others do. If we are threatened, heckled, beaten or killed, they are strangling the country's voice and not just ours.” “We appeal to you to kindly look into the matter to ensure that perpetrators of these heinous crimes on media personnel are brought to book and punished for causing grievous injuries to them,” it says.  On Tuesday, in a brazen attack against press freedom, Akash, a video journalist working for JK24 news channel who was reporting from Maujpur in north-east Delhi was shot. He was admitted to a hospital in serious condition where he is recovering from bullet injuries. Several journalists reporting on the riots were attacked including NDTV reporters Arvind Gunasekhar and Saurabh Shukla.  Another NDTV reporter Mariyam Alavi was also hit by a mob. Many journalists have highlighted the challenges of reporting the violence, with the mob threatening those on the ground, snatching mobile phones of reporters and deleting videos and images.  The full text of the resolution: We, the members and representatives of various media organizations in Bengaluru are quite pained with the way media personnel today are being attacked. We have become soft targets while we risk our lives just doing our job. We write to you with the request to kindly ensure the safety concerns of our media colleagues. In the last few days, we have seen unprecedented levels of violent attacks on many media professionals in Delhi. These media personnel were only discharging their duty as expected of them by their organisation Attacking them while on the job is an act of cowardice. Members of the media carry no opinion when on ground and report on the basis of what they see and capture it on cameras. Sir as you are aware that these media personnel were subject to brutal attacks, including firing by bullet in one case apart from being heckled, chased and beaten leading to grievous injuries, mentally and physically. All this while the Delhi Police officials failed to provide any security and safety while discharging their duties. It's not just Delhi, the media faces such situations across the country and Bengaluru's no exception. What many fail to see is that as journalists, we try to uncover the truth while putting our lives and families at risk. We are proud patriots and do our job to help society, just as many others do. If we are threatened, heckled, beaten or killed, they are strangling the country's voice and not just ours. We appeal to you to kindly look into the matter to ensure that perpetrators of these heinous crimes on media personnel are brought to book and punished for causing grievous injuries to them We would also appreciate it if jurisdiction police officers are directed to assure safety and security of the media personnel on the field.
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Many languages, one people: The linguistic diversity of Mangaluru

Linguistics
Mangaluru is the largest city in Karnataka where the primary spoken language is not Kannada, the official language of the state.
Mangaluru city
Mostly known for its exquisite seafood and pristine beaches, coastal Karnataka also boasts of some of the richest linguistic diversity in the entire state, something that is immediately apparent to anyone who travels along the coast. No other city exemplifies this - and by extension, Karnataka’s own diversity as a state - better than Mangaluru, the largest city in all of coastal Karnataka, and the fifth largest city in Karnataka as a whole. Mangaluru is the largest city in Karnataka where the primary spoken language is not Kannada, the official language of the state. Mangaluru and Tulu According to the 2011 Census, the most spoken language in Mangaluru at 39.2%, is Tulu, a South Dravidian language, directly related to Kannada, but also Malayalam, Tamil, Kodava, and the languages of the Nilgiris. Tulu, a non-literary language that has been influenced by Kannada for centuries, is spoken by around 1.85 million people along a stretch of coast between the Chandragiri and Suvarna rivers, and west of the ghats. This cultural region, commonly called Tulu Nadu, roughly corresponds to Dakshina Kannada district and most of Udupi district in Karnataka, and the Kasaragod and Manjeshwar taluks of Kasaragod district in Kerala. Mangaluru, its largest city, is the political capital of Dakshina Kannada district, and also the unofficial but de facto cultural and economic capital of Tulu Nadu, from Udupi to Kasaragod. Under the British, Mangaluru was the capital of undivided South Canara district, from Kundapura to Hosdurg (now in Kerala); local economies in the region were oriented towards the bustling port city of Mangaluru, and people would travel from all over for its public institutions and markets. Although Tulu is not a standardised language, the northern dialect of the language, local to Mangaluru, has emerged as the ‘prestige’ variety of Tulu, thanks to the city’s importance and stature. Beyond Tulu However, as much as Mangaluru is identified with Tulu, it would be incomplete to leave it at that. Looking at language data from the 2011 Census paints a fascinating picture. In addition to Tulu, Mangaluru’s linguistic makeup includes Konkani (16.41%), Kannada (15.11%), Malayalam (6.4%), and “others” (13.12%). The “others” category most likely refers to Byari, a language closely related to Malayalam, spoken by most local Muslims. Mangaluru’s many languages form an essential part of its identity; this is reflected in the fact that the city is known by a different name in each of its languages. Kuḍla, the Tulu name for Mangaluru, is used by most of its population, as well as across the whole of Tulu Nadu itself. In addition to Kuḍla, Mangaluru is called Koḍiyāl in Konkani, Maikāla in Byari, Mangaḷūru in Kannada, Mangalāpuram in Malayalam, and Mangalore in English (although the Kannada name was made official in English too, in 2014). Each name reflects its own history of the city, and the ways different communities have inhabited it. For example, Mangaḷūru and Mangalāpuram refer to the city’s medieval era Mangala Devi temple. Both names, along with Mangalāpura in Sanskrit, were used to refer to the city in Vijayanagara inscriptions across Tulu Nadu, and would have been the names known to foreign travelers and merchants as well. The famous Moroccan traveler visited Mangaluru in 1342, and referred to the city as Manjarūr, its name in Arabic records (Arabic lacks the g sound). According to the Tulu Lexicon, Kuḍla means “a confluence of two rivers”, referring to the meeting of the Gurupura and Nētravati rivers near the Mangala Devi temple. Byari Maikāla is likely a reference to the city’s early Buddhist history. As you walk through Mangaluru, from neighborhood to neighborhood, the languages you hear around you change, flowing effortlessly from one into another, often mixing and finding themselves sharing common spaces. People switch from language to language based on who they’re talking to, where they are, what they need, and even just to mutter to themselves. As the primary written language across Tulu Nadu, Kannada serves an important role in the city’s linguistic transactions. When Konkani or Tulu speakers read literature or even write community records, they use Standard Kannada without any inherent sense of contradiction. Different communities - and by extension different languages - occupy different spaces in the city, playing different roles. Mangaluru and modern Kannada print literature As a part of Karnataka, Mangaluru’s primary official language is Kannada, the written language used across Tulu Nadu. Kannada is learned by most locals as an additional language. Kannada print culture was born in Mangaluru, under the aegis of the Basel mission and its missionaries. The most notable of these, Ferninand Kittel, compiled the first Kannada-English dictionary in 1894. The first Kannada newspaper, Mangalura Samachara, was published from Mangaluru in 1843. As the region’s written language, Kannada was the language local intellectuals turned to, to express their dreams for a modern, independent India; a Karnataka that could hold its own in a rapidly changing world. They experimented with new forms and styles in the language, contributing greatly to a rapidly growing corpus of modern Kannada literature, often firmly rooted in Tulu Nadu’s coastal surroundings and its cultural milieu. The first rashtrakavi (national poet) of Kannada, Manjeshwara Govind Pai, grew up in Mangaluru and spent almost all his life in Tulu Nadu. Cosmopolitanism ignored Unfortunately, despite how vital Mangaluru’s linguistic diversity is to its identity and culture, it does not enjoy the level of support it should. Government services are only available in Kannada and English; Tulu, the language of the masses, is conspicuously absent in this sphere. Although it is true that locals speak Kannada anyway, this is hardly reason enough to exclude Tulu. State support for Mangaluru’slanguages is limited to the funding of various Sahitya Akademis, including one each for Tulu, Byari, and Konkani. These Sahitya Akademis publish various books on these languages, in Kannada, English, as well as the source language itself. They also organise literary events and conduct some limited level of outreach to speakers. While encouraging, these institutions only scratch the surface; Mangaluru’s languages deserve a lot more active funding and attention, given how important they are. Mangaluru has contributed eagerly to Kannada and Karnataka, and it deserves the support of the state and local intellectuals in developing its own unique literary and cultural heritage. Mangaluru and multilingualism Mangaluru and its languages offer us an alternative way of looking at diversity in India, showing us how multilingualism can function healthily, without threatening the integrity of a political entity. People can - and do - use multiple languages for different purposes, and institutions should acknowledge, and actively support this. Although most people do not speak the state language as their mother tongue, they choose Kannada as their written language and balance multiple languages in their daily lives. Here, more than arguably anywhere else in south India, multilingualism is a very real aspect of daily life, one that is navigated and negotiated effortlessly. Mangaluru’s many languages deserve official recognition, active state support, and a framework to sustain and expand their linguistic and literary development. Resources and archives can be digitised, and citizens made more aware of their rich linguistic heritage. Likely in an effort to recognise this, the Karnataka government has pushed for Tulu to be made an official Scheduled language. It remains to be seen how this move will fare, however. Mangaluru’s own society can serve as a shining example of how multilingualism, when tended to and cultivated, can expand the boundaries of our cosmopolitanism. Karthik Malli is a Bengaluru-based communications professional with a keen interest in language, history, and travel. He tweets at @SandalBurn, and posts on Indian languages at @TianChengWen.
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Bernie Sanders tweets on Delhi riots, BJP leader threatens India will influence US polls

Politics
BJP's BL Santosh, the party's National General Secretary (Organisation), however, later deleted his tweet.
The  BJP's National General Secretary (Organisation), BL Santosh on Thursday hit out at Bernie Sanders, the Democratic candidate for the US Presidential election for his take on the riots in New Delhi. In a tweet that he has since deleted, Santosh wrote, “How much ever neutral we wish to be you compel us to play a role in Presidential elections .Sorry to say so...But you are compelling us (sic)”.  Bernie Sanders had posted a link to Washington Post's article on the riots in New Delhi and called US President Donald Trump's reaction to the violence a failure of leadership on human rights.  "Over 200 million Muslims call India home. Widespread anti-Muslim mob violence has killed at least 27 and injured many more. Trump responds by saying, "That's up to India." This is a failure of leadership on human rights," Bernie Sanders said in a tweet.  Over 200 million Muslims call India home. Widespread anti-Muslim mob violence has killed at least 27 and injured many more. Trump responds by saying, "That's up to India." This is a failure of leadership on human rights.https://t.co/tUX713Bz9Y — Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) February 26, 2020 The Democratic candidate’s comments come days after Trump’s visit to India, when New Delhi was on the boil with communal violence in several parts of the capital.  When asked about incidents of violence during his India visit, the US president had said, "As far as the individual attacks, I heard about it, but I didn't discuss that with him (Modi). That's up to India."  A staunch RSS man, BL Santosh is a close associate of Union Home Minister Amit Shah and has made communally-coloured statements in the past. Santosh had on February 25 also insinuated that the Delhi riots were planned and that the AAP government was not taking action against the "rioters".  "What is the reason for Delhi Govt and AAPs subdued reactions to panned Delhi riots? No relief to cops killed or citizens murdered. Is it because of one way polling in selected booths and AAPs total victory in minority dominated constituencies? Nation will never forgive them," he had said in a tweet.  After violence broke out in Jaffrabad, BL Santosh tweeted to say “rioters needed to be taught a lesson”.  The communal violence that began on Sunday in parts of northeast Delhi has so far claimed 32 lives. Clashes had erupted on Sunday between protesters against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) and right-wing groups, before escalating into riots.  With inputs from PTI   
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Man falls asleep after breaking into house in Karnataka, handed over to cops

Crime
The strange incident took place on Wednesday in the one-storey, tiled-roof house in Dakshina Kannada.
A seemingly drunk man broke into a home in Dakshina Kannada district of Karnataka, but he was so tired that he reportedly decided to take a nap. However, the homeowner caught the strange man taking a nap on his sofa with a set of keys clutched in his hand.  The strange incident took place on Wednesday in the one-storey, tiled-roof house of Sudarshan, a resident of Ullas Junction in Uppinangady police station limits in Dakshina Kannada. The man who broke into the house has been identified as Anil Sahani, a native of Bihar’s Majipur district.  A statement by the police in the district stated that on Wednesday morning, Sudarshan noticed that the tiles on the roof of the house were removed. After noticing the unknown man on his sofa, Sudarshan promptly woke him up by hitting him with a stick before handing him over to the police.   According to the police, Anil had entered the house on Tuesday night by removing a tile on the roof. But instead of stealing items from the house, he fell asleep on the sofa after grabbing a bunch of keys kept near the TV stand, the statement read.  "It appears he was too inebriated and fell asleep. We are investigating whether he is linked to other cases of theft reported in the area," a senior police official told TNM.   A case has been registered in the Uppinangady police station charging Anil with the attempt of theft.  A similarly strange incident was recently reported in Kerala. After reportedly robbing five shops in Ernakulam district of Kerala, a thief broke into a house on the night of February 18. However, after entering the house, he noticed an army cap, and soon realised that it was an Army man’s house.   The thief then scribbled an apology letter on the wall. Quoting the Bible, the man wrote in Malayalam that he violated the seventh commandment of the Bible, “Thou shalt not steal.” Expressing his regret, he also wrote that he would not have entered the house if he had known it was a soldier's house. The caretaker of the house in Thiruvankulam, who alerted the police the next morning, also noticed that the thief consumed alcohol from the army man’s collection.
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Ramesh Jarkiholi urges Centre to notify Krishna, Mahadayi tribunal orders

Politics
Karnataka Water Resources Minister Ramesh Jarkiholi met with Gajendra Singh Shekhawat and also urged him to grant approval for the Mekedatu project
Karnataka Water Resource Minister Ramesh Jarkiholi along with a delegation of officials from his department met Union Minister for Water Resources Gajendra Singh Shekhawat on Wednesday and urged him to look into various water disputes related to the state. Ramesh Jarkiholi urged Gajendra Singh Shekhawat to notify the order of the Mahadayi Water Disputes Tribunal and also the Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal. He also requested the Union minister to give the go ahead for the Mekedatu project. Mahadayi issue Supreme Court on February 21 granted interim relief to Karnataka and allowed the state to implement the Mahadayi Water Dispute Tribunal’s order after the Centre notifies the same. On August 14, 2018, the Mahadayi Water Disputes Tribunal had allocated 13.42 tmcft of water to Karnataka. Of the 13.42 tmcft, 5.5 tmcft is was meant for use within the Mahadayi river basin and for diversion to the Malaprabha reservoir. Of the total allocation, 8 tmcft was meant for power generation. Goa has opposed the tribunal’s order and moved the Supreme Court asking for relief from the order. The case is currently being heard by the Supreme Court. The Goa government is also against the construction of canals on the Kalasa and Banduri tributaries of the Malaprabha river, which the Karnataka farmers have been demanding for over three decades. Farmers in north Karnataka, who depend on water from the Malaprabha river, were unable to avail benefits of the tribunal’s order as the Centre had not notified the Mahadayi Water Dispute Tribunal’s order. The Krishna water dispute Ramesh Jarkiholi also sought the Centre’s intervention in issuing a gazette notification of the Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal. The tribunal had in 2013 granted Karnataka 907 tmcft of water for irrigation purposes. This was meant to benefit farmers in Yadgir, Raichur, BIjapur, Bagalakote and Gulbarga districts of Karnataka. The final award was meant to irrigate 15.4 lakh acres of land. The tribunal also allowed Karnataka to increase the capacity of the Almatti Dam from 519m to 524m. Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana are opposing Karnataka’s government’s decision to increase the height of the dam. “We submitted separate memorandums to the Centre to notify the tribunals’ orders in both the Mahadayi and Krishna water disputes. Construction of the Kalasa Banduri project must begin soon to benefit the farmers,” an official with the Water Resources Department said. The Mekedatu project Minister Jarkiholi also requested the Centre to okay the Mekedatu project, which aims at providing drinking water to Bengaluru. The Centre had granted conditional clearance for the project in 2018 after the state government submitted a detailed project report earlier that year. However, in 2019, the Union Minister for Environment, Forests and Climate Change refused to grant environmental clearance for the project. The Mekedatu Balancing Reservoir project aims at bringing in Cauvery water to Bengaluru city. The MoEFCC had stated in 2019 that the project would destroy 52.5 sq km of forest land, including the Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary. The MoEFCC’s  Expert Appraisal Committee (EAC) had then stated that the issue of an environmental clearance would be discussed only if Tamil Nadu and Karnataka reach an amicable solution to the construction of the project. The Tamil Nadu government has opposed the project stating it would affect the farmers of the state adversely.
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