Tag: Karnataka

  • Deja vu in Bengaluru: 2 homebound MP migrants walk 600 km to Belagavi

    By Express News Service
    BELAGAVI: Two migrant workers, employed by a private civil contractor as centring workers on a construction site in Bengaluru, walked 600-km on railway tracks from Bengaluru to Belagavi on their way home in Madhya Pradesh.

    The duo —  Pawan Dhurve, a resident of Azwar Rayat and Funde Mithusingh Lal from Kundwari (Both in Dindori district) — fears that they would have to suffer the similar crisis which the migrant workers faced last year due to the Covid crisis.

    A gateman at the railway gate near Gandhi Nagar in Belagavi stopped them when he found them walking on the railway tracks on Thursday. Tired and exhausted, the two had decided to walk to their hometowns via Maharashtra on the railway tracks. The duo had lost their jobs after the death of their employer and was unpaid for some days. The duo did not have money to buy a train ticket.

    The two were extremely scared of the worsening situation in Bengaluru due to the outbreak of Covid second wave and therefore, decided to walk to MP along the railway tracks from Bengaluru. They did not have any hope of getting any work in the Covid-ravaged Bengaluru either.

    According to them, they left Bengaluru with the hope to reach MP on foot and decided to go along the railway tracks. On reaching the railway gate near Gandhi Nagar in Belagavi, they met the railway department gateman there who asked them where they were going.

    The gateman Umesh Aptekar said the two asked him whether the railway tracks lead to Pune. On knowing that they were in deep trouble and ready to walk to MP, Aptekar offered them food and water, and immediately contacted activists Ravi Nirmalkar, Sachin Kelvekar Raju Mutkekar, and Shubhak Shelke, all from Belagavi, who not only arranged food and a room for their stay but also bought train tickets for them to ensure their safe journey back home.

    The two daily-wagers left for MP by Goa Express on Thursday thanking all the activists from Belagavi who came to their rescue on time.

  • Maharashtra Covid situation alarming; Haryana, Karnataka, Gujarat, MP at tipping point: Centre

    Express News Service
    NEW DELHI: Senior officials at the Centre on Thursday expressed serious concerns over the continued surge of Covid-19 cases in some states including Maharashtra which has been seeing the most intense second wave of the infections.

    Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan said the active COVID-19 cases have almost halved in Kerala and have more than doubled in Maharashtra. Some other states such as Punjab, Haryana, Karnataka, Gujarat, and Madhya Pradesh, he said, are at a tipping point.

    “We are very worried about Maharashtra,” said V K Paul, Member, Health, Niti Aayog, who also heads the national Covid-19 task force.

    “This is a serious matter. This has two lessons — don’t take the virus for granted and if we have to remain Covid-free, then, we need to follow Covid appropriate behaviour, containment strategy, and vaccination,” Paul said in a weekly press briefing by the Union Health Ministry.

    ALSO READ | Strict lockdown will be enforced in parts of Maharashtra: CM Uddhav Thackeray

    Maharashtra, which has been reporting the highest number of Covid-19 cases almost throughout the pandemic, had nearly 37,000 active cases on February 11 which crossed 1 lakh mark a month later, the data shared by the Centre showed.

    On Wednesday, the state recorded 13,659 fresh coronavirus cases, the highest one-day spike this year, which took the state’s total caseload to 22,52,057.

    The state has so far reported 52,610 deaths due to the disease, as per the official tally.

    ICMR Director General Balram Bhargava, while ruling out the role of the mutant virus in the surge in the cases, put the blame on slackness on part of the administration and people.

    “Maharashtra has shown a worrisome trend. The mutant strain has not been found incriminating in this surge in cases. It is just related to reduced testing, tracking and tracing and Covid inappropriate behaviour and large congregations,” he said.

  • Social media, a double-edged sword for activism 

    Express News Service
    “How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.”This diary jotting by Annelies Marie “Anne” Frank, whose life was cut short at a tender age of 15 in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Nazi Germany in February 1945, rings prophetically true for today’s young activists who are literally just a click away from “starting to improve the world”.

    Activism lately is armed with social media, which has emerged as a dominant medium for speech and expression, freedom of which are guaranteed in the Indian Constitution.

    Activism – assuming legitimacy from this constitutionally granted freedom – is the effort of seeking a perceived good through reforms in domains directly or indirectly affecting humans and their surroundings.

    Social media has loomed large as a cyber outlet, through which ideas are expressed, trounced, trolled and wars among ideologies and differing views are waged over unending threads. But more disturbingly, it is also scrutinised by a Big Brother-like eagle-eye, the optic nerve of which is directly connected to the government.

    By the very nature of each, activism and social media, the latter is a double-edged sword that arms the former: It can benefit activism as long as reach and communication is concerned to provoke like-minded thinking, highlight issues to be taken up and galvanise support.

    But due to its visibility, it can also make it vulnerable to repression if the authorities perceive the form of activism to be “anti-government”, “anti-national”, or qualifies for “sedition”. Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution guarantees that “all citizens shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression”.

    But the very next clause – Article 19 (2) – makes exercising this freedom subject to restrictions that are often overlooked. These restrictions pertain to the freedom affecting the security of the State; friendly relations with foreign states; public order; decency and morality; contempt of court; defamation; incitement to an offence; sovereignty and integrity of India.

    Unfortunately, while an increasing number of youth are taking to activism via social media, their excitement in pursuit of a “better world” makes them turn a blind eye to these restrictions. In fact, many young activists, while talking about freedom of speech, are ignorant about, or prefer to ignore, 19(2) of the Constitution.

    The result can be unfortunate incidents, like the February 13 arrest of 22-year-old climate activist Disha Ravi from Bengaluru on charges of sedition and inciting violence for sharing a Google doc ‘toolkit’ for farmers’ protest which she is alleged to have edited before sharing. Her act is now allegedly linked to elements on the government’s intelligence radar for “waging war against the nation”, which is also being probed.

    Senior advocate BT Venkatesh, who took up the case for Amulya Leona (charged for shouting “Pakistan Zindabad” at an anti-CAA rally in Bengaluru in February 2020) and for a school headmistress and a parent for allegedly staging an “anti-national” play in Bidar and facing sedition charges, says, “Article 19(2) is a problem.

    It comes from the fact that the state has control over the freedom of expression and the state gets to decide what is wrong and who is wrong. I believe that if someone is making a hate speech then he/she should be prosecuted, but don’t say that he or she can’t speak at all. Free speech is an absolute need!”He feels it should be the young minds that need to discover and figure out the nuts and bolts of society.

    “Let the young minds debate, discuss, falter, and learn on their own without being manipulated by any side. Let them be themselves – independent, free and responsible to make their own democratic choices, to decide for themselves and to take charge of issues in their own way within the given constitutional framework. They are there for that very purpose and even if they are imperfect in their decision-making, let them learn and find a way out on their own within the ambit of rules and laws,” he says.

    Maitreyi Krishnan, Executive Member, All-India Central Council for Trade Union, says, “Young minds should know that the flip side of social media is that all kinds of messages are out there. Fake news is so prevalent that the idea of truth is distorted. Danger is that it is not just about belief or disbelief, but the entire truth is distorted. People should make a commitment to themselves that they will not circulate anything unless verified and only correct information is circulated.” Tara Krishnaswamy, founder of Shakti and co-founder of Citizens for Bengaluru, says it takes a lot of courage to be an activist in this social media generation.

    “If you post anything unpopular or against the government, troll armies are unleashed on you,” she says. She points at paid trolls whose only job is to echo hateful, templated comments, which are not unlike toolkits, she says.

    “Activists or individuals with Twitter accounts cannot compete with thousands of trolls which may include anonymous people, fake accounts, or those with multiple accounts. The government has too much power and when anyone objects to what they do, social media forces are unleashed on those citizens,” she says, adding that this psychologically damages people due to unfair targeting, name-calling and using expletives, which happen because social media platforms are unregulated.

    Amrut Joshi, an activist in Hubballi, admits everyone has freedom to express, but “there should be a limit to our freedom, otherwise it hurts others.”

    But Venkatesh feels, “One should know that once it is out on a platform like this, we should be ready to accept that there will be criticism, which will be also visible just like your opinion. If your opinion is an informed one then it is good, but if it is not then it can be stupid or provocative. Here, what matters is that space needs to be protected.”

    Inputs from: Chetana Belagere, Ranjani Madhavan/Bengaluru, K Shivakumar, Ajith MS/Mysuru, Arunkumar Huralimath/Hubballi

  • PM attacks Cong on loan waiver promises

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi continued Saturday  with his attack on the Congress over its “unfulfilled” loan waiver promises.

    Addressing a public meeting here, Modi said only a small number of loans were waived in Karnataka after the recent assembly elections in the state, where a JD(S)-Congress government is now in power.

    He laid the foundation stone of a medical college here and released a commemorative postal stamp on Maharaja Suheldev.

    “Several important steps have being taken to transform Purvanchal into a big medical hub and to strengthen the small industries of UP,” he said.

    The prime minister will also address a meeting in Varanasi later in the day.

  • Karnataka govt wants “development-free corruption”: Modi

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi today launched a blistering attack on the JDS-Congress coalition government in Karnataka, alleging it was interested only in “development-free corruption”.

    He also said the agricultural loan waiver announced by the H D Kumaraswamy government was the “most cruel joke” on farmers.

    “People want corruption-free government, but Karnataka government wants development-free corruption,” Modi told BJP’s booth-level workers of the state during an interaction with them through video conferencing as part of the party’s ‘Mera Booth Sabse Mazboot’ programme.

    The outreach is aimed at engergising party cadre ahead of next year’s Lok Sabha elections.

    Modi said people of Karnataka had reposed faith in the BJP and it was the duty of the party workers to become the voice of people if the government was neglecting their welfare.

    “It seems people in power in Karnataka are playing the game of musical chair. When people in power are not interested in the welfare of people, it is the duty of our workers to become the voice of people,” he said, and referred to reported strains between the ruling coalition partners.

    Responding to a question about farm distress and farmers suicide in the state, Modi said only a handful of agriculturists benefited from the government’s loan waiver programme.

    “Those who go around the country claiming credit for the farm loan waiver will they also take the blame for farmers suicide?” he asked.

  • Tax office cautions against buying Vijay Mallya’s shares

    The Income Tax Department, Karnataka & Goa has cautioned the public against the purchase of shares held by beleaguered liquor baron Vijay Mallya in United Racing and Bloodstock Breeders Ltd. (URBBL), which have been put up for e-auction on October 30 by the Debt Recovery Tribunal-II, Karnataka.

    “A sale proclamation has been published by the Debt Recovery Tribunal-II, Karnataka whereby 41,52272 shares held by Dr Vijay Mallya in United Racing and Bloodstock Breeders Ltd. (URBBL) have been put up for e-auction on October 30. This is to bring to the notice of the public that Income-tax Department has already created charges against the said shares on account of outstanding demand. Therefore, such sale/transfer of these shares will be void in terms of Section 281 of the Income-tax Act. Any persons purchasing such shares will be doing so at their own risk,” stated the  official statement.

  • Edirorial :- Peeem Pad kee Daud Mein Maaya Aage Raahul Peechhe

    After considering some of today’s news related to SP-BSP, we can reveal the possibility that the maya has overthrown Rahul Gandhi on behalf of the Opposition in the race for the prime minister’s post. Akhilesh has already kneeled.
    Today, in Rahul Jhansi, Rahul said the young brigade of the SP will be shocked by the false promises of BJP. This implies that Rahul and his Congress are now zero in Uttar Pradesh. The nephew Akhilesh has already been bowed before Bua Mayawati.
    Today the BSP has made big bets. In 2019, the party has taken the resolution to make Mayawati a PM.
    On Monday, there was a meeting of co-ordinators and senior workers in Lucknow, in which Mayawati’s name was kept under the single-point agenda, it was clearly stated that after the 2019 general elections, Mayawati is to be the Prime Minister of the country. This is the first time that thousands of workers gathered in Lucknow’s largest auditorium Indira Gandhi Foundation, but Mayawati was not on the stage.
    This made it clear that Mayawati could not compromise with Rahul Gandhi in any way for the post of Prime Minister. If the BSP will get the support of the Congress, as it is being seen in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, it will impose its condition on Congress. Even if they do not disclose this condition in the media.
    Right now Rahul Gandhi is desperate from the Congress, Madhya Pradesh and other provinces in the Congress that is going on in the heat and poster. This is the reason that in the manner in which the announcement of the Prime Minister’s post in the US during Karnataka assembly elections and now he is quiet. On the contrary, BSP has turned the tables for making Maya a candidate for the post of prime minister.
    During the UPA regime, a banner in the stage at a Congress program was a picture of Robert Vadra, besides Manmohan Singh.
    This was the story of Gandhi Vadra family. Prior to this, Robert Vadra had once said that whatever he is, he is not due to Priyanka Gandhi, because of his ability and ability.
    Prior to Uttar Pradesh, there was a poster war between the supporters of Priyanka Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi. Today’s news is that poster war between Jyotiraditya Scindia and Kamal Nath supporters has started.
    There is a poster on the Facebook page of the Madhya Pradesh Youth Congress Idea Forum, on which Kamal Nath has been asked to make the next Chief Minister of the state. This poster has written ‘Rahul Bhaiya’s message, Kamal Nath Sahela Territory’.
    Right now, there is a poster on Facebook about Scindia. In the poster, Scindia has been projected as the Chief Minister’s candidate and has written, “The next Chief Minister will bring a storm of development in Madhya Pradesh”. This poster of Scindia has been posted on the Facebook page of ‘Shrimant Scindia Fan Club’. It is written on this poster: ‘There will be a storm of development in the country, Scindia in the state, Rahul Gandhi in the center’.
    Today’s news in Loksakti’s first page is the news: The accusation of harassing the CM Swamy, imposed by the former Assembly Speaker, in the Karnataka Congress. This is also the situation of Rajasthan.
    It seems that until the coming assembly elections, at least Rahul Gandhi will remain silent on the issue of PM candidate and SP will continue to bounce to present Maya as a PM candidate.

  • Spreading word on blood donation 1 step at a time

    Thirty-three-year-old Kiran Verma has a goal in life: to decrease the number of deaths due to blood shortage to Zero by 2025 . For this, he is voluntarily travelling 15,000 km across India, Nepal, and Bhutan to encourage and spread awareness about blood donation. Verma, who founded ‘Simply Blood’-a blood donation platform- reached the state capital on Wednesday.
    Talking to the media, Verma said his journey began from Lal Chowk in Srinagar on Jan 26 this year. Till now, he has travelled more than 8,500-km- which includes 3,000 km by walking- in last 3 months.

    Verma added that every day more than 12,000 people die in India due to lack of availability of blood and his mission is to encourage at least 10 people every kilometre to take a pledge to donate blood at least once in their life. If this happens, he claimed, then his 15,000-km journey is going to save at least 1,50,000 potential lives through blood donation.

    “I started ‘Simply Blood’ when my own blood was sold to a poor family in Delhi. I left my job and took this as my goal- to decrease the number of deaths due to blood shortage to Zero by 2025. My life’s mission is to save 1 million lives through blood donation by 2020 using ‘Simply Blood’ platform,” he said, adding that ‘Simply Blood’ is world’s first virtual blood donation platform and first social media platform, an initiative by Change With One Foundation.

     Jain said that he has spread his message among more than 7,00,000 people across Jammu and Kashmir, Punjab, Chandigarh, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Daman, Dadra Nagar Haveli, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Madhya Pradesh and now in Chhattisgarh. In the coming days, he is planning to visit all states and all union territories.