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Coronavirus Scare: Four people quarantined in Mumbai

CoronaViru, china, india, mumbai, virus, disease, china virus

While no positive cases of the dreaded virus Coronavirus have been detected in Maharashtra so far, but there is news that four people in state and over 400 people have been kept under observation.
According to recent reports, the fourth person from Mumbai has been quarantined and is on suspicion of possible exposure to this deadly Coronavirus virus. While one patient has been admitted to Kasturba Hospital, two patients have been admitted to BMC run hospitals last week.

The External Affairs Ministry has made a request to Chinese authorities for evacuation of Indians from Wuhan. Air India flight (B747) is on standby to fly back all Indians including students from Wuhan to India.

On its part, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has created an isolation ward at its Kasturba hospital based in Chinchpokli for the treatment of people who might have been affected by this virus. The four people who are under scanner for possible exposure have been admitted in this hospital. In addition to this, all the private doctors in Mumbai have been asked to alert BMC in case they observe symptoms of the virus in anyone who has returned from China.

Over a dozen people are being monitored in isolation wards of hospitals in various cities including Delhi and Mumbai for possible exposure to a deadly strain of Coronavirus that has killed 106 people and infected over 4,000 in China. A man was hospitalised in Pune on suspicion of possible exposure to the deadly Coronavirus during his recent visit to China. A health official had said that the Maharashtra government will prepare a list of passengers who have returned to Mumbai from China especially from the Wuhan region since January 1 this year.

In Kerala, over 400 people have been kept under surveillance at their homes for possible exposure to the virus. So far authorities have screened nearly 30,000 passengers at various airports across the country for the virus that has sparked a global scare with cases being reported from as far as the US and Europe. Despite several cases being reported outside China, the World Health Organisation has stopped short of declaring the new virus a global health emergency.

Over 430 people have been placed under surveillance at their homes in Kerala. “Six of the seven people who were placed under observation at isolation wards in three cities in Kerala have tested negative while tests report of one of the people is awaited,” Dr Shaukat Ali, Adviser, Union health ministry said.

A new screening facility was scheduled to have been opened at the Thiruvananthapuram airport on Tuesday for possible exposure to the novel Coronavirus. The Union health ministry has asked people who have a travel history to China since January 1 to report to the nearest health facility if they experience any symptoms such as fever, cough, respiratory distress etc.

China always gives virus attacks to India; this time it is Coronavirus

As fears about Coronavirus is spreading fast, India is battle-ready to identify, isolate and prevent the spread of this epidemic. Like the Chinese health bureaucracy, in India too there is a remarkable time lag before diseases get identified and before they get notified if at all there are. India’s medical bureaucracy is often loath to report bad news. We see that happening in case of Dengue and Chikungunya outbreaks in most Indian cities where news only emerges after a few people die and several seriously take ill. The risk from communicable diseases increases manifold when other factors-environmental, socio-economic and demographic are considered. The Nipah virus outbreak of 2018 in Kerala has several lessons for today’s emergency. This epidemic showed how the Indian infectious disease management infrastructure could be severely challenged. After its discovery in a small Malaysian village in 1999, the virus emerged in Kerala in May 2018 claiming 17 lives. The seriousness of the public health threat was underscored by the lack of a vaccine or even targeted treatment. This allowed the virus to spread unchecked initially.

No wonder India ranks high globally in the burden of communicable diseases, a burden which causes approximately 10 per cent of deaths in the country. The issue is serious considering the phase of rapid urbanisation, the country is going through raising challenges to an already beleaguered and cash-crunched healthcare system. Barring a few states, India’s medical system is not in the best of shape. But the Indian public health machinery has shown that it can fight well when it wants to. As China struggles to curtail the deadly new virus that has killed 81 people and spread to four continents, there are flashing warning lights for India. Vaccinations are among the most efficient and effective instruments for preventing diseases, operating primarily by providing acquired immunity and thereby preventing the easy spread of infectious diseases among large populations. However, developing vaccines, especially for new and mutated strains of diseases can take a very long time. Coupled with the time and the resources needed for mass production and delivery, vaccines cannot be seen as the only solution during fast-spreading epidemics.

The Coronavirus epidemic was a major crisis in China even before the news came out on 10 January and alerted the Chinese leadership. The illness by then was no longer localised. In fact, it had even travelled abroad. China’s rigid bureaucracy discourages local officials from raising bad news with central bosses. China’s health sector is so heavily compartmentalised that officials in the public health division, the disease control department, in hospital administration and drug procurement seldom speak to each other. This makes it harder to manage or even see a crisis in the making. Those systemic flaws appear to have played a role in the pace at which Chinese officials responded to the outbreak and the country’s inability to address the health risks from its so-called wet markets which are stuffed with livestock living and dead, domesticated and wild. The real bad news is the Coronavirus which comes from a family of viruses that affect the respiratory tract, seems to be far deadlier than before. In 2002, when the SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) virus hit China, it took more than 90 days to mutate and take its new deadly form. But the Coronavirus seems to have achieved the capability of transmitting among humans within the first month. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has clarified that the disease only spreads from animals to humans and is not communicable between human beings. However, now questions are being raised as some among those affected claim not to have been near any animals in the recent past.

That is why the panic within the public health machinery in China is palpable even as human resources are being mobilised and sent to the epicentre in Wuhan, the capital of central China’s Hubei province by the thousands. For over a month from 8 December 2019 to 17 January 2020, all the confirmed cases in China were from the sole city of Wuhan. Yet meanwhile, there were already confirmed cases in Japan and Thailand. Many on the Chinese social media commented on the implausibility of the data and suggested that the authorities must be concealing the actual numbers with some sardonically calling the outbreak a “patriotic virus” due to its appearance of infecting people overseas rather than people in China. Several Hong Kong media correspondents were detained by the police for over an hour when they were interviewing in Wuhan’s Jinyintan Hospital on 14 January. Reports said that the police brought the correspondents to a police station where the police checked their travel documents and belongings and then asked them to delete video footage taken in the hospital before releasing them.

Authorities in Wuhan and Hubei provinces have been criticised for downplaying the severity of the outbreak and responding slower than they should. Caixin blamed Wuhan for not rolling out the first level of “public health emergency response mechanism” until 24 January which came even later than several other provinces and cities outside of the centre of the outbreak. On 19 January, four days before the city’s lockdown, a “Wanjiayan,” literally meaning “banquet of tens of thousands of families,” was held in Wuhan with over 40,000 families turning out at the banquet tables. Experts said that the authorities “lack basic common sense” for allowing such a banquet to be held. China continues to reel under the deadly Coronavirus (nCov) outbreak as the sharply rising death toll reached 106 causing a global alarm. The virus, which has spread across the country, has infected over 2,700 people mostly in Wuhan and other Chinese cities. Meanwhile, the Indian and the Chinese officials discussed plans to evacuate over 250 Indians from Wuhan city and Hubei province in view of the virus outbreak. Indian diplomats held a meeting with officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China regarding the evacuation of the Indians from China.


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Rajinikanth at Bandipur Tiger Reserve shooting for Man vs Wild

Rajinikanth -,Bear Grylls,Man vs WildPopular movie star Rajinikanth is now at the Bandipur Tiger Reserve shooting for the popular international series Man vs Wild. The shoot concluded after a six hour schedule today while the next schedule has been fixed for Thursday.

According to a senior forest department official permission for the shooting has been given for six hours on January 28 and 30. On Tuesday, the special guest will be Rajinikanth while on the 30th, noted Bollywood actor Akshay Kumar is expected to join.

“Permission for the shooting has been given for Sultan Batteri highway and ranges of Mulleholle, Maddur and Kalkere ranges. They will be shooting in non-tourist zones. If permission was given for the shooting of Wild Karnataka, then this can also be permitted. Also, no tourist or regular forest patrolling activities will be affected. The shooting will be done under special forest protection and no one will be aware of the locations,” the official added.

The series caught the eye of Indian cinegoers after Prime Minister Narendra Modi shot for it in the forests of northern India with British adventurer Bear Grylls.

The shooting of films and documentaries inside forest areas of Karnataka is increasing and the department must exercise caution as this will only lead to more man-animal conflicts, warned conservationists.

Malegaon: 7 died, more than 20 injured after bus rams into auto rickshaw and falls in well

Bus falls in well in Malegaon

At least seven people were killed and more than twenty injured after a bus and rickshaw collided and fell into a well in Maharashtra’s Nashik district on Tuesday. As per reports, the accident took place around 3.45 pm when the bus was on its way from Malegaon to Kalwan and the driver allegedly lost control of the bus.

Malegaon Bus Accident,Malegaon, Bus Accident,Malegaon Accident,Accident

After crossing the Deola-Saundane road near Meshi Faata, the bus rammed into an auto rickshaw. Reportedly, the bus was carrying 35 passengers while there were 7 passengers in the auto rickshaw. It is said that the well is 70 feet deep.

Malegaon Accident,Malegaon Bus Accident,Malegaon, Accident,Bus Accident

After the accident, the police, civic authorities and locals rushed to spot and got engaged in the rescue operation. A crane has been deployed to pull the vehicles out. The rescue operation is on. More details are awaited.

Letters to the Editor: 28 January, 2020

letters to the editor, afternoon voice,

1Alappuzha houseboat accident

It was just a few days ago that in a shocking  tragedy eight tourists from Kerala died in a mountain resort in Nepal  due to asphyxiation caused from carbon monoxide leakage from a room heater. Now in a really shocking incident a house boat  in the backwaters of Alappuzha got on fire and sank but  timely intervention of the local boatsmen and people nearby a major tragedy was averted as all the tourists were rescued. Thirteen tourists from Kannur district, including a six-month-old baby, had a miraculous  escape from the houseboat that was engulfed in the fire near the popular tourism destination Pathiramanal in Kerala’s Alappuzha district.

As the accident happened in the shallow area of the backwaters around Pathiramanal the boat crew immediately took measures to see that all the tourists including women and children were rescued and they were put on a sandbar. The whole  house boat was gutted in the blaze. Even though some people jumped into the water they were rescued by a passenger boat.

This incident once again shows that life of tourists are not safe and those stakeholders including agents, department and concerned authorities don’t learn any lesson from tragedies. What they want is more and more income and in the long run tourist’s life are put at risk. Primary investigations point to short circuit being the cause of the fire. Here too like the Nepal tragedy carelessness, negligence and ignorance is the cause of such an accident. It’s really sad that those connected to tourism directly or indirectly turn irresponsible and put the life of people at risk.

House boats are a major attraction in the backwaters but whether these are maintained properly and whether proper inspections are done are questions that need answers and immediate attention. Just a few days ago another houseboat was completely gutted in a fire at Marthadam backwaters near Kuttanad. The tourists jumped out of the boat and saved their lives. Tourism is a sector that fetch good money but when the motto of those in this field and those connected to the department is only wooing the travellers for quick bucks forgetting all safety norms and regulations then our tourist destinations may turn into danger destinations killing innocent travellers.

M Pradyu

2Bold words but well said Kangana Ranaut

Indira Jaising must be kept in jail with Nirbhaya’s convicts said actress Kangana Ranaut and that seems to be the anger of most citizens after the advocate had requested Nirbhaya’s mother to pardon the rapists and killers of her daughter. She even opined that all rapists are born from the womb of women like Indira Jaising which may be said out of anger and frustration at the ground realities in our country but the law of the land needs to be respected and so should the court sentence.

Sexual crimes would rise in the country if we start forgiving convicts sentenced in heinous crimes. Not sure in what context Indira Jaising made the controversial statement but advocates like her who are in the profession of proving the crime of criminals should not be advocating to free those sentenced for crime. The least Indira Jaising can do is to apologise to Nirbhaya’s mother for her controversial statement. Actress Kangana Ranaut is known for taking stands for the dignity of women and more power to her for enlightening issues that affect the fairer sex.

S.N.Kabra

3Rajasthan emulates Kerala and Punjab

After the Kerala and Punjab Assemblies passed resolutions to build pressure on the Union government over the contentious citizenship law now Rajasthan government would introduce a resolution against the implementation of CAA in the Assembly session. l believe the present wave of largely peaceful protests that have gripped the country shall once again enable the further deepening of our democratic roots.

Mahmudul Hasan


(The views expressed by the author in the article are his/her own.)

Truck rams into pedestrians in Vasai, 1 killed, 4 injured

Truck killed pedestrians in vasai
Image Courtesy: Times of India

On Monday night a speeding truck allegedly rammed into two pedestrians and a fruit vendor that left one killed and four seriously injured in Vasai area. The incident took place at around 11:30 pm at Valiv Road in Vasai.

According to the locals, the driver was drunk who was initially nabbed and later handed over to the Valiv police.  Police said that the loaded truck was on the Valiv Road when it rammed into two pedestrians and a fruit vendor who was returning home along with his hand cart.

Later the truck moved further towards Fatherwadi Road where two motorbike riders were knocked down. One person died on the spot while the other four injured have been admitted to the nearby hospital for treatment. The identity of the deceased is yet unknown. Police said that the accused will be taken for medical test to check if he was drunk. The truck has been seized.

Data Privacy Day: Empowering people to protect their privacy

Data Privacy Day, bank fraud, banking fraud, privacy, datra privacy

Privacy is one of the most urgent issues associated with the information technology and digital media. Data Privacy Day (DPD) that falls on 28th January is an effort to empower people to protect their privacy, control their digital footprint and escalate the protection of privacy and data as everyone’s priority.  It serves as a timely reminder for organisations about the importance of correctly handling and safeguarding individuals’ personal data. It is led by the National Cyber Security Alliance, a non-profit, public private partnership focused on cyber security education for all online citizens.

Internet banking frauds and ways to avoid them is undoubtedly a topic that has been done to death. And yet, people across the country continue to lose money in such frauds with an alarming frequency. Today, computer and internet has become very common and necessary for our daily life. Back in 1990, less than 1 lakh people were able access internet worldwide. Now around 2.5 million people are hooked up to surf the net around the globe.

The internet brings joy to our lives but at the same time it has some negative sides too. The cyber criminals are always in a search to find out the new ways to attack the possible internet victims. A new generation is growing up with computers and most important is that all the monetary transactions are moving on to the internet. So, it has become very important for us to be aware of the various cyber frauds being committed with the help of computers. The cyber frauds today are on rise and the latest and perhaps the most complicated problem in the cyber world.  According to a survey, for every 500 cyber frauds, only 50 get reported to the police and just one out of this 50 is registered as an FIR.

Personal data is now considered as the “black gold” of tomorrow in particular because it enables companies to better address the market needs. There are many individuals who are generally unfamiliar about the risks related to the protection of their personal data and of their rights in this respect. It is well known fact that most of the citizens all over the world are unaware about their rights in relation to data protection while some people are breaching data protection laws unknowingly on a daily basis.

According to a report of the Internet and Mobile Association of India, India has around 400 million internet users. Data protection is a bigger part of our lives. But, often we ignore its importance. We come across data protection issues at work when browsing the internet when dealing with public authorities when we shop when we book tickets online and in many other circumstances. Whether data is stored on premise or with an external private or public cloud provider, organisations should assess and reassure both employees and customers that data is collected, processed, accessed, shared, stored, transferred and secured in accordance with all laws and regulations and that data is only being used in pre-agreed, legitimate and lawful ways.

There’s no doubt that Data Protection Day serves as a timely reminder for organisations about the importance of correctly handling and safeguarding individuals’ personal data.

Maintaining of data bases is not as much a difficult task as maintaining its integrity, so in this era, the most concerned debate is going on to innovate a perfect method of data protection. Raising awareness of and compliance with data protection and privacy across the organisation must not be seen as an exercise that can be satisfied once a year. It requires ongoing committed activity from everyone within the organisation from the top down/bottom up. It is the very big headache for the business houses, financial institutions and the governmental bodies so as to give adequate protection to their huge databases.


(The views expressed by the author in the article are his/her own.)

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#MaharajaOnSale : Government invites bids for 100 pc stake sale of Air India

Air India Maharaja on Sale,Air India, #MaharajaonSale,Air, India,Airline,Indian airline,indian airways,indian airport,mumbai airport,air india privatisation,government airlinesAs was presumed, the government has decided to sell its entire stake in Air India. The development comes after an initial attempt to sell a majority stake in the airline failed to draw a single bid in 2018. The airline is sitting on a debt pile of around Rs 58,000 crore besides huge accumulated losses running into thousands of crores. As on December 2019, Air India has a fleet of 125 aircraft and its domestic market share is 11.9 per cent. A successful sale of Air India is vital for government to meet its disinvestment target. Besides a huge financial burden Air India’s employee to aircraft ratio is also on the higher side. The airline which has 14,000 employees has ratio of 133 employees per aircraft.

Currently, the Government of India holds a 100 per cent stake in the airline and its subsidiary Air India Express. The government said that as part of the sale, the control of the carrier will remain with an Indian entity limiting the scope of any foreign bidder who is interested in the asset. In a document inviting expressions of interest, the government said that it would sell a 100 per cent stake in the carrier which operates both domestic and international routes. As the government is set to invite preliminary bids from selling 100 per cent stake Air India, all eyes are on the portion of airline debt to be taken off its books and qualification for suitors. According to industry sources, some of the potential bidders could be Tata Group, Indigo, Spicejet and few private equity firms.

The government has set March 17 as a deadline for potential buyers to submit their initial expressions of interest. Any bidder will need to agree to assume roughly $3.26 billion in debt along with other liabilities, according to the sale document. In 2018, the government had tried to sell 76 per cent stake in Air India and offload about $5.1 billion of its debt that potential buyers at the time viewed as too onerous. Air India has some of the most lucrative international and domestic landing and parking slots that are vital for airlines.

With Air India reeling under around Rs 80,000 crore worth of debt, the government has said that there is no option left with it but to privatise the carrier. In the past decade, Air India’s accumulated losses stood at about Rs 69,575.64 crore, aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri informed the Parliament in December. According to industry analysts there could be significant investor interest Air India given its wide domestic and international network, traffic rights, slots at key foreign airports such as London and Dubai, large fleet and technical manpower. With Air India reeling under around Rs 80,000 crore worth of debt, the government has said that there is no option left with it but to privatise the carrier.

Is there absence of law regarding Indian prisons system? – Part II

Poor criminals, with no serious background and who are inside for petty crimes, often become victims in everyone’s hands. Most of the time, they try to commit suicide. According to my opinion, in a certain number of cases bullied criminals who die in brawls are framed as ‘committed suicide in guilt’ just to curtain the inefficient ineffective Indian Jail System.

Indian jails, in reality, are nothing short of a nightmare. In India, two types of prisoners are detained. First, those under trial prisoners whose cases are being investigated/tried and judgement are yet not pronounced. Moreover, they do not even get bail. Nearly two third of Indian prisoners are under trail in Indian jails who are languishing in jail for years. Some women spend 10 years, some with their infants till they become five years of age. Not only the mother, but also even a child goes through hell seeing mother’s jail term. When such children sent off the jail they tend to become criminals or low esteemed suppressed personalities. They see their mother been brutally harassed by authorities inside the jail. They come out with hate and revenge. There is a facility of education for these kids.

The second category is of convicts who are undergoing their pronounced sentences. Both have different daily routines. They are nearly one third of total inmates lodged in Indian jails. Convicts are in minority while under trials are in majority in Indian jails. Their daily routine is little bit more relaxed. Under trails have fixed hour of free life, but convicts have their own relaxation based on their work routine.

Coming back to Mumbai prison, every month, each of the more than 1,000 women at the Aadharwadi prison in Kalyan is given a bar of soap. They have to use this to wash all their clothes, utensils and themselves. Skin ailments are routine. Throughout the day, there are two toilets for all of them to share. Several women have had a series of urinary tract infections. At night, they crowd into a space meant for 150.

1,000 women jailed in a space meant for 150, each making do with one bar of soap to bath and to wash clothes for a whole month. Their children grow up knowing little about the outside world unable to recognise even cats and dogs. This is the world of women prisoners in the two jails that house them in and around Mumbai, one at Byculla and the other at Kalyan.  It’s tragic, but true that women prisoners are ostracised much more by their kin than men.

There is a stigma attached to women in prison. They are not supposed to be ‘criminals’, so their families want nothing to do with them. While family members come to the aid of many male prisoners, with women they are reluctant. These female criminals have no one to care for them, neither jail authorities nor family members. No one comes forward to help them with, for instance, another bar of soap. No one offers medical aid or moral support. No one explains where their cases stand, what their legal options are.

Many of these women are facing trial for murdering their husbands or domestic disputes. Families find it difficult to reconcile with this and snap all ties with them. Sometimes NGOs step in and counsel the relatives. Some of them come around. And sometimes, as it happened with a mentally ill woman at the Kalyan prison in 2010, families don’t even know they are in jail and give them up for dead. It was only after extensive counselling that she was able to tell them her family’s address. Then, officials get in touch with them and they are reunited.

The absence of family is felt most when health problems strike. Those suffering from high blood pressure or diabetes require a regular supply of pills. This is possible if their family members buy it and give it to them. Those with no relatives are taken to the nearby JJ hospital only after their condition worsens from lack of medicine. A psychiatrist and a gynaecologist visit the prison once a week and there is a full-time doctor. These women are mentally disturbed and physically exhausted, they become aggressive haters towards each other.

In such an atmosphere, fights are common, and prison guards often have to intervene. Staff and teachers who sometimes visit also need to have tremendous patience. The job of looking into the problems of prisoners is the probation officers (PO) who are appointed by the department of women and child development. But there is a shortage of POs and they are often handed other responsibilities. So inmates are hardly a priority.

Traumatising prison conditions and practices often have damaging and long-term impact on the mental health of inmates especially women. Institutions of correction and custody are as fraught with gender and other biases as the world outside. The World Health Organisation suggests that one in nine of the total prison population of 9 million in the world suffers from some form of mental disorder or illness. The total capacity of women inmates was highest in Tamil Nadu (1,070) followed by Uttar Pradesh (420), West Bengal & Delhi (400 each), Rajasthan (350), Andhra Pradesh (308), Maharashtra (262), Punjab (150), Bihar (83), Kerala (72), Odisha (55) and Tripura (30), according to a NCRB data. There is a need to provide dignity and hygiene to women who serve long sentences inside as well as under trials. Let’s hope some change comes in this dark world.

Also Read: Is there absence of law regarding Indian prisons system? – Part I


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2 men consuming drugs near Borivali railway tracks run over by a local train

Mumbai Local Train AccidentOn Sunday evening, two men who were allegedly consuming drugs at a place between the Borivali and Dahisar stations were run over by a local train. According to the police, the bodies of the two were found around 7:30 pm near the Dahisar river bridge that borders a sprawling slum cluster.

The deceased who have been identified as Chhotu Ramesh Chouhan (19) and Ishwar Shankar Rathod (22), were the residents of Ganpat Patil slums near the I C Colony in Borivali. Police said that the duo were dead before they could be admitted to a hospital.

During the investigation, it was revealed that the duo took cannabis and charas and would frequently visit that area to consume drugs as the location is away from the glare of the police. After heavy smoking, the duo dozed off on the tracks and did not respond to the horns of a coming train.