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Letters to the Editor: 04 December, 2019

letters to the editor, afternoon voice,Government should intervene and reduce mobile tariff

Mobile call charges and internet charges have gone up by 42 per cent from December 3 onwards as private sector players,  Bharati Airtel, Vodafone Idea and Reliance Jio have raised their tariffs  This is the first hike in the last five years in the country’s telecom space that was facing a bruising a tariff war. How will the common man bear the hike?  The government must intervene in this matter and bring down the rates as a relief to the common man.

Jubel D’Cruz

 

A big salute to Shivangi

The Indian Navy has created history by inducting its first woman pilot, sub Lieutenant Shivangi, and thus has shown that Indian women are ready and will be given all the opportunities at par with men thereby  eliminate gender discrimination and also proving that Indian women are ready to take any ventures. The way in which this brave young Indian woman daring to dream big and carve a niche of her own – is definitely an inspiring and truly motivating story   for our young girls to follow .It excellently shows the fast turning mindset and life of our women. Women are fast moving from a conservative nutshell into a progressive and liberal one which in a way is good for a fast changing society. This young lady is now ready to fly high is definitely a role model for our youth, especially our girls, wonderfully and boldly teaching them a lesson – “Where there is a will, there is a way” .

M Pradyu

 

Establish full-fledged US Consulate at Bengaluru

Bengaluru and Karnataka state has witnessed a growing demand of visitors to United States of America. But one is only compelled to visit its Consulate office located at Chennai to obtain and apply for various types of visas. The move to travel to Chennai every time causes an inconvenience even in case of exigencies resulting in administrative hardships to the Indian visa applicants. It should be otherwise noted that the facility to travel to almost all the other nations including Canada, Netherlands, Germany, France, Mexico, Peru, Japan, UK etc. exists through the presence of full-fledged Consulate offices conveniently located in Bengaluru for the benefit of Karnataka domicile visa applicants.

Further an effort should be made jointly by both India and US diplomatic patrons to establish a new full-fledged US Consulate at Bengaluru. A new US Consulate now at Bengaluru will largely benefit many professionals, visitors and students who otherwise face logistical hardships to obtain a visa from its existing consulate located at Chennai. The suggested move for a new US Consulate now at Bengaluru will otherwise help to expedite visa application requests quickly even in case of exigencies to the needy US visa applicants. Hence the Hon’ble Ministry of External Affairs is requested to look into opening of a new US Consulate in Bengaluru for the benefit of Indian visitors to USA from this region.

Varun Dambal


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

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Creative and imaginative governance needed to manage water

Water is an issue that cuts across all aspects of social and economic life in India. Compartmentalized responses are unlikely to be adequate to address the current crises. There is a need for an integrated approach, which addresses source sustainability, land use management, agricultural strategies, demand management and the distribution and pricing of water. With growing pressures due to climate change, migration and population growth, creative and imaginative governance are needed to manage this precious resource.

The death toll from a fresh spell of monsoon-driven floods in India has jumped to 190 and affected more than a million residents. Heavy rain and landslides have also forced hundreds of thousands of people in southern and western India to take shelter in relief camps, while train services were cancelled in several flood-hit areas. Every year, hundreds of citizens shed their lives, many migrate and some suffer entire life, the loss of beloved ones is n irrecoverable injury. India’s monsoon season lasts from June to September. It sees heavy rains, which refill the country’s water reservoirs and are vital for agriculture, but cause immense destruction and loss of life. Dozens died in floods in India every year, particularly in the eastern states of Bihar and Assam, with the inundation causing heavy losses to farms, homes and infrastructure. It is due to rising deforestation, poor urban planning and increased urbanization as the reasons behind the rise in the intensity of the floods.

India suffers in two extreme conditions, one is heavy pour and another is drought, at least 330m people are likely to be affected by acute shortage of water. As the subcontinent awaits the imminent arrival of the monsoon rains, bringing relief to those who have suffered the long, dry and exceptionally warm summer, the crisis affecting India’s water resources is high on the public agenda.

Unprecedented drought demands unconventional responses, and there have been some fairly unusual attempts to address this year’s shortage. Perhaps most dramatic was the deployment of railway wagons to transport 500,000 litres of water per day across the Deccan plateau, with the train traversing more than 300 km to provide relief to the district of Latur in Maharashtra state. The need to shift water on this scale sheds light on the key issue that makes water planning in the Indian subcontinent so challenging. While the region gets considerable precipitation most years from the annual monsoon, the rain tends to fall in particular places – and for only a short period of time (about three months). This water needs to be stored, and made to last for the entire year.

In most years, it also means that there is often too much water in some places, resulting in as much distress due to flooding as there currently is due to drought. So there is a spatial challenge as well – water from the surplus regions needs to reach those with a shortfall, and the water train deployed in Maharashtra is one attempt to achieve this.

Kolhapur is a city on the banks of the Panchaganga River. Continuous discharge of water from the Almatti dam in Karnataka brought down the water level of the Panchganga River in Kolhapur where it was flowing above the danger mark. Kolhapur and Sangli districts have been battling unprecedented floods in August following heavy rains in Konkan and western parts of the state where 40 people have lost their lives in the deluge. The Mumbai-Bengaluru National Highway No. 4 was shut for six days due to flooding.

Nearly 4.48 lakh people were so evacuated from flood-hit areas across the state, including 4.04 lakh from Kolhapur and Sangli. They were shifted to 372 temporary camps and shelters, a senior state official said on August 11.Rescuers, including the NDRF and military personnel, received kudos from locals for the relief work.

Some women and girls tied ‘rakhis’ on the wrists of jawans of the Navy, Army and NDRF on August 11. Around 35 people have been killed in rain-related incidents in five districts of western Maharashtra in a week, including 17 who drowned after a boat capsized near Brahmanal village in Sangli. Four lakh people have been moved to safety from the flood-affected areas of Maharashtra, officials said adding 761 villages in 69 tehsils are affected by the deluge.

Meanwhile, death toll in Kerala floods mounted to 72 even as rains abated in August after pounding the state for days, while the situation remained grim in Karnataka, Maharashtra and Gujarat where 97 people have lost their lives so far due to the monsoon fury. All rivers are in spate in Karnataka where the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco) world heritage site in Hampi, on the banks of the Tungabhadra river in Ballari district, has been inundated after over 1.70 lakh cusec water was released from a reservoir. Tourists in Hampi have been shifted to safer places, officials said. The unprecedented deluge has left 31 people dead and displaced four lakh people in 80 taluks of 17 districts in Karnataka. Continuous discharge of water from Almatti dam in Karnataka brought down the water level of the Panchganga River in Kolhapur where it was flowing above the danger mark.

Meanwhile, in the state of Kerala alone, at least 76 people were killed in rain-related incidents. Many deaths have been reported in rain-triggered landslides in Wayanad and Malappuram districts. Over five-lakh cusec of water was being discharged from Almatti dam on the Krishna River in neighbouring Karnataka to ease the flood situation in western Maharashtra. In Kerala, over 2.51 lakh people have taken shelter in 1,639 relief camps. The toll in the flood fury has gone up 72 while 58 people still missing. The Railways announced waiver of freight charges for transportation of relief materials to Karnataka, Maharashtra and Kerala, where over 10 lakh people had to be shifted from their homes to escape inundation.

The Ballari district administration in Karnataka has asked people living along the riverbanks to move to safer places as all 33 gates of the Tungabhadra Dam were opened in the wake of incessant rains. The preliminary estimate of flood-related loss in the state was Rs 10,000 crore . Heavy showers continued to lash parts of Gujarat taking the toll in rain-related incidents to 31, including 12 deaths were reported from Saurashtra region.

Orissa has another tragedy; this state is always under casualty. The 482 km long of coastline of Orissa exposes the State to flood, cyclones and storm surges. Heavy rainfall during monsoon causes floods in the rivers. The flow of water from neighbouring States of Jharkhand and Chattisgarh also contributes to flooding. The flat coastal belts with poor drainage, high degree of siltation of the rivers, soil erosion, breaching of the embankments and spilling of floodwaters over them, cause severe floods in the river basin and delta areas. In Orissa, rivers such as the Mahanadi, Subarnarekha, Brahmani, Baitarani, Rushikulya, Vansadhara and their many tributaries and branches flowing through the State expose vast areas to floods. In Orissa, damages are caused due to floods mainly in the Mahanadi, the Brahmani, and the Baitarani. These rivers have common deltas where floodwaters intermingle, and when in spate simultaneously, wreak considerable havoc. This problem becomes even more acute when floods coincide with high tide. The water level rises due to deposits of silt on the river-bed. Rivers often overflow their banks or water rushes through new channels causing heavy damages. Floods and drainage congestion also affect the lower reaches along the Subarnarekha. The rivers Rusikulya, Vansadhara and Budhabalanga also cause occasional floods. The storms that produce tidal surges are usually accompanied by heavy rainfall making the coastal belt vulnerable to both floods and storm surges. People die; livestock perishes; houses are washed away; paddy and other crops are lost and roads and bridges are damaged. Property worth crores of rupees was destroyed in the floods. People are trying to cope up with challenges, what is needed the most is human support. We all should approach fellow human and make them sustainable.


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Money is not secure in banks

bank return only 1 lakh after bankrupt,bankrupt, RBI,DICGC

According to Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) a wholly owned subsidiary of Reserve Bank of India if a bank fails and liquidates then depositors will only get up to Rs 1 lakh as insurance cover irrespective of the amount held by them in their accounts. DICGC has given this information while replying to RTI query. The amount covers savings, fixed, current and recurring accounts said DICGC.

“Under the provisions of Section 16 (1) of the DICGC Act, 1961, if a bank fails/gets liquidated, the DICGC is liable to pay to each depositor through the liquidator, the amount of his deposit up to Rs one lakh as insurance cover, for both principal and interest amount held by him in the same right and same capacity at all the branches of a bank taken together,” it said.

Nishan Poojari a private bank employee said, “Average ticket size of deposits at scheduled commercial bank is increasing, to protect the interest of depositors, deposit insurance should be increased with low or marginal cost to depositors.”

The mentioned amount of 1 lakh will be applicable for all types of account. As a result of this Mumbaikars are worried that if the bank in which they hold deposits fails and get liquidated then they will lose their hard earned money and will only get Rs 1 lakh as insurance cover. Already we have seen the hardships faced by PMC bank depositors who were unable to withdraw their hard earned money after the detection of alleged financial irregularities by the bank. Many people have deposited more than 5 to 10 lakh rupees in their account. If people keep lumpsum money at home then there is a possibility of income tax raid. People nowadays save lumpsum money for meeting future needs like retirement, education and marriage.

For instance if a customer has deposited Rs 15 lakh in a bank and if the bank fails then he will only receive an insurance cover of Rs 1 lakh whereas no guarantee is offered on the remaining 14 lakhs by the bank.  After the alleged irregularities in PMC bank customers are worried about their money. RBI’s rule is applicable to all banks. It also includes foreign banks whom the RBI has granted licence to carry on their business. However, no government owned bank or private bank has failed and liquidated in India. Even if a bank goes bankrupt RBI and government takes necessary steps to protect the interest of depositors.

When asked whether there is any proposal or move under consideration to raise the limit of Rs 1 lakh insured in the bank in wake of the recent PMC Bank fraud, the DICGC said, “The corporation does not have the requisite information.”

On September 24, the RBI imposed operational curbs on Maharashtra-based PMC Bank and appointed an administrator following the detection of alleged financial irregularities.

According to the Mumbai Police’s Economic Offences Wing (EOW), the PMC Bank management, allegedly in cahoots with a business family, concealed huge loan defaults by HDIL group firms from banking regulators. Over 70 per cent of the bank’s advances went to HDIL group, which led to a huge crisis when the realty group defaulted on repayment, the EOW said. Government owned banks have reported frauds of over Rs 95,700 crore in the first six months of the current fiscal.

By Suraj Chandran

‘Shankara re Shankara’ first song of ‘Tanhaji: Ajay and Saif indulge in an intense face-off

Ajay Devgn ,Saif Ali Khan, Tanhaji, Shankara re ShankaraThe first song of Tanhaji The Unsung Warrior, ‘Shankara re Shankara’ is featuring Ajay Devgn and Saif Ali Khan. Sung in the glory of Lord Shiva, in the song Ajay Devgn’s powerful moves which turn into a minor face-off between the Marathas and Mughals after Saif Ali Khan takes to the throne kept in front of the leading man.

The majestic grandeur of the kingdom is also visible in the song. Crooned and composed by Mehul Vyas. And the lyrics have been penned by Anil Verma.

Ajay shared the song on Twitter and wrote, “Danke ki chot par bajega ek hi naara #ShankaraReShankara! Song out now.”

Set in the 17th century, the film is a biographical period drama based on the life of legendary Tanaji Malusare, the unsung warrior who fought alongside Chhatrapati Shivaji against the Mughals.

Meanwhile, Saif will be seen in the role of the antagonist Uday Bhan, a Rajput official who worked for the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.

The upcoming drama also stars Ajay’s real-life wife Kajol as his reel life partner – Savitribai Malusare. Also starring in the film are Neha Sharma, Jagapathi Babu and Pankaj Tripathi in significant roles. It is set for a release next year on January 10.

Kangana Ranaut’s Manikarnika heads for release in Japan

manikarnika teaser 1542074335After a successful run in India, Kangana Ranaut starrer ‘Manikarnika: The Queen of Jhansi’ is all set to release in Japan.

The film will be released a month later by Zee Studios International, film critic Taran Adarsh shared the news on Twitter along with clipping a poster for the local audience. Reportedly the film is schedule to release in Japan on January in 2020.

The poster  of the film showcase the leading lady in the warrior avatar riding a horse with her son tied at the back. ‘Manikarnika: The Queen of Jhansi’ is a period drama an was based on the life and struggles of Rani Laxmi Bai of Jhansi and her war against the British East India Company, during the Indian Rebellion of 1857.

Apart from Kangana, the film also  featured Ankita Lokhande, Atul Kulkarni, Suresh Oberoi, Danny Denzongpa and Jisshu Sengupta in key roles. The film hit the screens in on January 25, 2019  and managed to cross the first benchmark of Rs 50 crore at the box office in just 5 days of its release.

The leading lady Kangana on her work front is awaiting the release of the upcoming sports film ‘Panga’ directed by Ashwini Iyer Tiwari, in which she will be seen in the shoes of a Kabbadi player.

Apart from her, the film also stars Richa Chaddha, Punjabi singer Jassie Gill and Neena Gupta in pivotal roles. The movie will open in theatres on January 24 next year.

Taapsee Pannu roped for Mithali Raj in biopic Shabaash Mithu

Mithali Raj -,Tapsee Pannu,Shabaash Mithu,Mission Mangal ,Saand Ki AankhAfter two successful films to the viewers,  ‘Mission Mangal’ and ‘Saand Ki Aankh’, Taapsee Pannu is now all set to essay role of Indian women’s cricket team captain Mithali Raj on-screen and the flick will go on floors by name ‘Shabaash Mithu’. She announced about the project through Instagram while wishing Mithali on her 37th birthday.

Reportedly, Taapsee’s wish for Mithali wasn’t a simple affair as she surprised fans with the big news. Wishing the birthday girl, the ‘Naam Shabana’ actor assured her that she is all “prepared to learn the ‘cover drive’.”

She captioned a string of pictures shared on Instagram,”Happy Happy Birthday Captain Mithali Raj! You have made all of us proud in more than many ways and it’s truly an honour to be chosen to showcase your journey on screen.”

Adding how confused she is to choose a gift for her, Taapsee promised that “I shall give it all I have to make sure you will be proud of what you see of yourself on screen with #ShabaashMithu.”

The skipper who turned 37 today achieved a remarkable feat by becoming the first woman cricketer to complete 20 years in the international cricket earlier in October.

Meanwhile, Taapsee, on her work front was last seen alongside Bhumi Pednekar in ‘Saand Ki Aankh’, a film based on the lives of India’s two sharpshooters – Chandro and Prakashi Tomar, who took up shooting in their 60s.

Chopped body parts found in suitcase at Mahim Dargah, investigation is on

Mahim Suitcase cutted hand and legA suitcase containing the chopped body of an unidentified man was recovered from Makhdoom Shah Baba Dargah in Mahim on Monday. According to the police, the locals of the area noticed the suitcase which was floating on the waters at the Mahim beach also known as Mahim dargah on Monday evening and informed the police. After that police reached the spot and seized the suitcase.

Police said a hand detached from the shoulder, part of a leg and private parts of a man was found in a plastic bag inside the suitcase. After that police have sent the body parts to the civic-run Sion hospital for post-mortem.

Senior police inspector Milind Gadankush, Mahim police station, said, “We are searching for the remnants of the body and trying to identify the deceased. No case has been registered. The parts seem to be the left arm and right leg, along with some parts of an intestine.”

Currently, police have registered a case against an unknown person under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) Sections 302 (murder) and 201 (causing the disappearance of evidence of offence). Further investigation is underway.

Show no mercy to rapists – Part II

gang rape, child rape,One would find that rape is a sexual as well as cultural attack which has become a great social problem today. There are many rape cases which have become the headlines of the leading newspapers but the timely actions are not taken on it. After a rape incident, a woman lives a pathetic life which includes fear, depression, guilt complex, suicidal action and social stigma. Figures indicate that 10.6 per cent of total victims of rape were girls under 14 years of age, while 19 per cent were teens between the ages of 14 and 18.  Alarmingly in almost 94.2 per cent of cases offenders were known to the victims and those involved included family members, relatives, and neighbours.

It is obvious that there is much to be done to change our laws on rape. While Sections 375 and 376 of the Indian Penal Code are the major laws dealing with rape, they have failed to match the international standards of addressing the crime. Making tougher laws will only be as effective as its implementation. Violent assaults, rapes and murders of women are symptomatic of a deep societal dysfunction. Any new law on rape should include the conduct of the defence lawyer and bar unethical questions against the rape victim. If an FIR is registered against a person in a rape case, he should be automatically disqualified from contesting elections. The prosecution for rape and sexual harassment should have toughest lawyers pleading the case to have 100 per cent conviction and not one in over 1000 cases.

In view of the increasing rape incidents, it is absolutely necessary to review the rape law humanely and progressively as the existing law is not only partial but also outdated. The decision of the government to bring out an ordinance to award death penalty for rape of children below 12 years has ignited a debate over the effectiveness of the step. The maximum sentence for a rapist found guilty remains unclear under prevailing laws. It includes seven years of life imprisonment, or up to ten years. For those who are guilty of gang-rape, rape of a pregnant woman and related offenses the maximum punishment for the guilty is 10 years. The subject needs a comprehensive review and should include various types of assault, violence and torture, and with gender neutrality. Indian women are far too vulnerable to violent assaults. Sexual violence in villages, though little reported, keeps girls and women indoors after dark. The pity is that to change attitudes to rape so many young women have had to suffer and die. An act the police never prosecute and the public ignores. Women are routinely groped and harassed by men on buses and trains. The reason behind is the vulgar display by even top grade heroines in the form of ‘item numbers’ has become a must for any successful movie. All these adds to the frustration where the age of sexual maturity does not match with the permissible age for marriage. A piece of fool-proof legislation is needed to safeguard innocent victims. Before the dignity of more women is sacrificed, we need to have a real change for the better democracy, greater freedom, full transparency, strict law enforcement, and mandatory punishment for heinous crimes against women. Shouting on roads demanding death penalty for  rapists will not work but what we need is that our law makers need be pressurised to enact such law in the Parliament to empower our legal system to hang criminals irrespective of them being major or minor.

Also Read : Show no mercy to rapists – Part I


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

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Letters to the Editor: 03 December, 2019

letters to the editor, afternoon voice,Does it really matter to us who is the CM of Maharashtra?

Whether it is Devendra Fadnavis or Uddhav Thackeray? I am not a supporter of any political party

Life of a common man would remain the same at ground level. The misery and hardship in every step of his life will remain the same.  Well! the list is endless , just to name a few :

  • Extreme weather and global warming at its peak. It is almost December and we are still feeling the scorching heat.
  • Potholes across the city because of which most of us have developed backbone issues regardless of the age.
  • Garbage, filthiness and pollution all around us.
  • To make things worse – Trees getting cut , worsening not only the environment but also the beauty of the nature.
  • Floods in every rainy season, a special mention that our city is still running on the ancient drainage system that the Britishers had built decades back. This needs to be upgraded and maintained to manage a densely populated city and the rains.
  • Bribery: Most of the government officials do not proceed till we fill their pockets with vitamin M
  • Timelines to complete the projects ( Metro, flyover and redevelopment projects ) are uncertain.
  • Problems of clean drinking water, medical facilities, elderly assistance, female foeticide, and women’s safety are not addressed as required.
  • Ban on plastics could be dealt in a better way incepting the substitute first.
  • Aren’t the leaders supposed to help and address these issues rather than debating on religion, fighting and belittling other parties.
  • As a true citizen of India, I vote diligently in every election, but today I feel cheated as our day to day issues are worsening, and the politicians are just concerned about their power, position and money (which ultimately belongs to us tax payers) to sum up. I request the leaders to address these issues and work towards solutions, not forgetting that you are in power because of  our votes.

S.N. Kabra

 

Delhi Police unnecessarily targeted for death of three boys

It is indeed regretful that Delhi Police is being unnecessarily targeted for death of three boys killed near Turkman Gate in Delhi on night of November 30 when their speeding bike hit a pole during their joy-ride. It is significant that the three boys broke all traffic-rules by having three riders on a bike that too all without helmets and overspeed. It may also be possible that the killed boys might have been minors.

Fault lies with parents of the three killed boys who did not care to control their children for such unlawful scooter-ride. Delhi witnesses havoc created by bikers on busy roads including in high security-zone of Leyton Delhi with parents enjoying driving-skill of their children by violating all traffic-rules.

Higher authorities in Delhi should issue necessary notifications giving Delhi Police clean chit in the matter to keep their morals high so that they may perform their duties well during annual feature of creating havoc by bikers violating all traffic-rules and creating fear amongst road-users at night-hours.

Subhash Chandra Agrawal

 

Punish rapists

After New Delhi Nirbhaya case, may be many other unfortunate cases have occurred in India, but this incident in Hyderabad has created sensation across the country. I suggest these rapists should be punished immediately and if legal system approves their hanging no mercy should be shown and after making video of few minutes should be made viral so that other rapists can learn a lesson. I also suggest all ladies going out of home should carry strong chilly powder which tactfully can be thrown to the eyes of the rapists. There may be Police teams to save women but for immediate recourse is chilly powder. I also suggest parents to train their girls in Karate etc from childhood. Prevention is the best option rather than the sufferings.

Jayanthi Mani


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

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IT department sends notice to Congress for alleged Rs 170 cr black money inflow

IT Department notice to congress
Image Courtesy : PTI

The Income Tax department has issued a legal notice to the Indian National Congress asking an explanation over allegedly receiving funds to the tune of Rs 170 crore from a company as part of its tax evasion probe in a mega Rs 3,300 crore hawala racket case. Reportedly Hyderabad-based infrastructure firm had transferred the amount to Congress through hawala channels.

According to the officer the notice has been issued to the party to take the probe forward in a case that was unearthed last month after multiple raids were conducted in Delhi, Mumbai and Hyderabad respectively, with links to “leading corporate houses” in the infrastructure sector.