Monthly Archives: March 2018

Spastics Society director is ‘Bengalurean of the Year’

Namma Bengaluru Foundation presents awards for 2018

Rukmini Krishnaswamy, director of Spastics Society of Karnataka, has won the ‘Namma Bengalurean of the Year’ award given by the Namma Bengaluru Foundation, which is founded by Rajeev Chandrasekhar.

Sanjeev V. Dyamannanavar, an urban transport activist and one of the founders of Prajaa Raag, has been recognised as citizen of the year’, Rasheed Kappan, a senior journalist with Deccan Herald, as the mediaperson of the year, Dipika Bajpai, DCF, Bengaluru Urban, as government official of the year, Prashanth S.B., chairman of Nayonika Eye Care Charitable Trust, as social entrepreneur of the year, and Vidya Y., co-founder and trustee, Vision Empower, for her work to make education accessible to the visually impaired, as rising star of the year. These awards carry a purse of ₹2 lakh.

Citizen groups

The NBF also felicitated four citizen groups as ‘Champions of Namma Bengaluru – 2018’ for their work towards “reclaiming Bengaluru”, the theme of the awards this year. Friends of Lakes, a coalition of lake activists across the city, Save Pattandur Agrahara Lake and Save Kaggadasapura Lake, both local residents’ groups fighting to save and rejuvenate the lakes in their locality, and Project Vruksha Foundation, for its work on tree census, were the four citizen groups awarded on Sunday.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / Bengaluru – March 26th, 2018

For slums, by its dwellers: A paper’s rebirth

A six-member team, led by editor Isaac Arul Selva, brings out ‘Slum Jagatthu’. | Photo Credit: Bhagya Prakash K.
A six-member team, led by editor Isaac Arul Selva, brings out ‘Slum Jagatthu’. | Photo Credit: Bhagya Prakash K.

20-page black-and-white magazine that was relaunched in April 2017 is slowly making waves

In a city where class divisions remain ingrained in the landscape, it perhaps did not come as much of a surprise when a Bengaluru magazine — produced for and by slum dwellers — died quietly. In 2013, Slum Jagatthu (Slum World), a monthly magazine in Kannada, ended its seemingly miraculous 13-year-run of over 135 issues.

For its editor, Isaac Arul Selva, 47, a Class IV dropout who has fought against an indifferent bureaucracy for over three decades, resilience is a virtue that is never far away. Egged on by friends in academic circles, he re-launched the 20-page black-and-white magazine in April 2017 out of a small room on the fringes of posh Koramangala. Here, glitzy pubs and towering malls are within a walking distance on the one side, while on the other is the site that once hosted the city’s largest slum, which has since been levelled to make way for a mall.

By February 2018, the reborn Slum Jagatthu with a cover price of ₹10 had a paid circulation of 300 readers — a far cry from the 2,500 it had reached earlier in this decade. “But we add more than 50 subscribers every month,” says Mr. Selva. A free online edition is put up on their blog and circulated through social media to slum leaders across the State.

A six-member team churns out the edition with a few laptops and some mainstream newspaper articles on slum dwellers stuck on the walls. Mr. Selva and Balamma K., who manages the office, are the only team members who have stuck through since the first Slum Jagatthu was published in 2000. What is constant, though, is that those working in the paper are slum dwellers.

For Hariprasad Anandpur, who works full-time with little guarantee of assured monthly pay, the magazine has allowed him to live a lifelong dream amid words and thoughts. The 34-year-old, who comes from a nomadic tribal community, was working as a helper for a wedding caterer until he attended a four-day workshop on media conducted by Mr. Selva. For over 10 years, after he had cleaned up lavish dinners in wedding halls, he jotted down his thoughts as poetry.

“When I was younger, my books were burnt to make me focus on work. Now, writing is my work and these new thought processes are my motivation,” he says, adding rather glumly, “I wasted more than 12 years of my life working mindlessly in the catering firm.”

Archiving slum history

Mr. Selva realised during the four-year break in publishing Slum Jagatthu that the larger society lacked a consistent archive cataloguing the thoughts of the urban poor. The renewed avatar of the magazine deviates from its previous form, which primarily disseminated information on slum schemes, infrastructure issues in slums, and new slum policies. It now focuses on the living history of slums, building a record of the lives and aspirations of slum dwellers, and critiques of policies such as the Smart City scheme that excludes slum dwellers.

“It isn’t enough to write that a slum doesn’t have basic amenities while neighbouring areas have developed. It is important to ask ‘why?’. Slums in cities are the products of the discriminatory thinking that sees Dalit colonies in villages remain a few centuries behind their neighbours. It is important for slum dwellers to start questioning these discriminatory practices,” says Mr. Selva.

Vision

Mr. Selva is never short of dreams. He wants the magazine to reach at least 4,500 registered slums and around 11,000 public libraries.

At an annual subscription of ₹100 — any more and it would be out of reach of slum dwellers — there is no viable business model yet for the small newspaper. Instead, it runs on ingenuity and idealism, raising funds through fellowships and consultancies.

The team dismisses the idea of approaching private enterprises for advertisements as the language of marketing would run contrary to the voice of the paper.

As a registered newspaper, Slum Jagatthu even refuses to carry ₹1,500-worth government ads it is entitled to every month. “Why waste a page on the government’s voice and sacrifice a slum dweller’s voice?” asks Mr. Selva.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Mohit M. Rao / Bengaluru – March 26th, 2018

Karnataka’s first 4G tower of BSNL commissioned

Manoj Sinha, Union Minister of State for Communications and Railways, inaugurating Karnataka’s first 4G mobile tower of BSNL in Shivamogga on Saturday.   | Photo Credit: VAIDYA
Manoj Sinha, Union Minister of State for Communications and Railways, inaugurating Karnataka’s first 4G mobile tower of BSNL in Shivamogga on Saturday. | Photo Credit: VAIDYA

The first 4G mobile tower of the State-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. (BSNL) in Karnataka installed in Shivamogga city was commissioned by Manoj Sinha, Union Minister of State for Communications and Railways, at a programme held at Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Bhavan here on Saturday.

Mr. Sinha said that because of the dedicated efforts of its employees, BSNL has posted operational profits in the past three years. BSNL is upgrading its infrastructure and technology to extend quality service and has plans to install 534 more 4G mobile towers in Karnataka shortly, he added.

He said while there was a decline in the number of customers of private telecom companies after the entry of Reliance Jio into the market, there was a steady increase in the number of customers of BSNL.

On the progress achieved in providing high-speed Broadband to rural areas by laying optical fibre network under the BharatNet project, he said the network had been laid in 1.09 lakh gram panchayats by December 2017. The remaining 1.5 lakh GPs will be covered soon, he said, adding that access to Broadband services would bring about a comprehensive transformation in the social and economic life in rural areas, he said.

The Core System Integration (CSI) solution, an IT modernisation initiative, and the Digital Advancement of Rural Post Office for a New India(DARPAN) project for Karnataka circle of the Department of Posts was also rolled out by Mr. Sinha on the occasion. The DARPAN project aims at digitisation of rural post offices to upgrade the quality of services offered there. The CSI will bring all services of the Department of Posts, including mail handling, insurance, banking, retail operations, and administrative operations, on a single platform.

Senior officers of BSNL and the Department of Posts were present on the occasion.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Staff Reporter / March 24th, 2018

Rudresh Gowda, Congress MLA, dead

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He represented Belur constituency for two terms

Y.N. Rudresh Gowda, Congress MLA representing the Belur Assembly constituency, passed away in a private hospital here on Saturday. He was 63.

He was hospitalised after he collapsed on the way to Bengaluru to cast his vote in the Rajya Sabha elections on Friday.

Rudresh Gowda began his political carrier in 1985 when he was 30. He was a member of the Hassan Zilla Panchayat from 1985 to 1996 and was its president during 1995–96. He was a member of Parliament from the Janata Dal when H.D. Deve Gowda was the Prime Minister. He quit the JD(S) and joined the Congress in 2004. He represented Belur constituency for two terms — 2008–13 and 2013–18.

Rudresh Gowda is survived by his wife, M.N. Keerthana, daughter, Y.N. Anshrutha, five brothers, and four sisters. He hailed from a coffee planter’s family known for its philanthropic activities in the district.

Tributes paid

Hundreds of people paid tributes to him when his body was kept on the premises of the District Congress Committee office and the Deputy Commissioner’s office in Hassan.

The last rites will be performed at his estate at Cheekanahalli in Belur taluk on Sunday. Congress president Rahul Gandhi, who is touring Mysuru district, and Chief Minister Siddaramaiah are expected to participate in the funeral.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – Hassan, March 25th, 2018

Karnataka: Facebook group for farmers runs online agriculture manifesto

AgricultureFBmpos24mar2018

Puttur :

Ahead of the upcoming assembly elections in Karnataka some of the agriculturists in the state have started an online agriculture manifesto campaign through a Facebook group.

The Facebook group created by the agriculturists has 2.77 lakh active members across the world. According to Mahesh Pucchapadi , one of group’s admin, the group members include both Indians and NRIs.

Earlier, the group members were from the areas of Puttur and Sullia only, but now it has members from across the world, said Ramesh Delampadi, one of the group admin.

Manifesto for Farmers

It is said that the youths are not interested in agriculture but the recent trend has seen high salaried people too turning to agriculture sector. So with the technological advancement, the expectations of the agriculturists have risen. The admins say that they discuss the problems faced by the agriculturists in their Facebook group.

Following are the group’s demands for political parties and their election manifesto:

– 24 hours power supply for agriculture pump sets
– Market Price Declaration for agricultural products
– Support price announcement when price falls down for agri products
– Support for using modern technology

– Control of mediator

– Supporting educated people who enter the agriculture sector

– Hiring science graduates to village level of agriculture technological information

– Water refilling system to be made mandatory.

– Taluk level agriculture warehouses.

– Support for cattle farming and products selling

Read this story in Kannada

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City News> Bangalore News / by Vijay Karnataka / March 23rd, 2018

Mangaluru professor Dr Anurag Bhargava makes app for TB patients

A professor from Mangaluru has developed a first-of-its-kind mobile application for tuberculosis patients ahead of World Tuberculosis Day on Saturday (March 24).

An Android-based application ‘N-TB’ was developed by Dr Anurag Bhargava, professor of medicine, Yenepoya Deemed to be University, Mangaluru in collaboration with McGill International TB Centre, Canada, to calculate the body mass index (BMI) of patients with tuberculosis.

According to doctors, TB often results in significant weight loss, which can exacerbate under-nutrition. Under-nutrition in TB patients points toward a consistent risk factor. Such patients are also at a higher risk of side-effects of drugs, poor absorption of drugs, reduced ability to return to work, and recurrence of the disease.

The application will tell the users their BMI and will counsel them on an appropriate diet regime which includes daily caloric and protein intake based on their BMI.

“The application is currently intended to help healthcare providers to quickly assess the body mass index of patients with TB and how severely undernourished the patient is so that they can be guided accordingly,” said Dr Bhargava.

He added that the TB cards currently record the weight alone and not the height to assess the nutritional status of the person, whereas the new application assesses the height and weight to calculate the BMI of the person.

He said the new N-TB mobile application specifies the weight and height and raises a red alert if it is below the desired weight.

The application was launched on Thursday (March 22) and is yet to be rolled out. It can currently be downloaded from Playstore free of cost.

“Certain aspects for the application such as analysing nutrition component, counselling are to be improvised,” said Dr Bhargava.

The application, endorsed by Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) and World Health Organisation (WHO), was included in the new initiatives unveiled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during the Delhi End TB Summit on March 13, 2018.

“We are glad that such as application was developed, but we are yet to receive information on the use and implementation of the application,” said Dr Ramachandra Bairy, Joint director, TB, Department of Health and Family Welfare, Karnataka.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> States / DH News Service, Bengaluru- Mangaluru / March 24th, 2018

Mahadevappa Pattan passes away at 107

Mahadevappa Shivabasappa Pattan and his wife Sharadamma M. Pattan in Bangalore. (FILE) Photo: Bhagya Prakash K.
Mahadevappa Shivabasappa Pattan and his wife Sharadamma M. Pattan in Bangalore. (FILE) Photo: Bhagya Prakash K.

The freedom-fighter was active in the tax-denial Satyagraha against the British

Freedom fighter and former MLA Mahadevappa Pattan died in Ramdurg in Belagavi district in the early hours of Friday. He was 107.

He is survived by his wife and former MLA Sharadamma M. Pattan and his son Ashok Pattan, who is the Congress MLA from Ramdurg and the Congress chief whip in the Assembly, and daughter Mrunalini Siddaramappa.

Role in tax-denial Satyagraha

Mr. Mahadevappa was active in the tax-denial Satyagraha against the British. He also led an uprising against King Rao Saheb Bhave in 1939. The Ramdurg administration issued shoot-at-sight orders against Mahadevappa. He went underground for nearly 10 years only to return to launch another Satyagraha against the kingdom. He was jailed for some time.

He founded the Lok Seva Sangh for Sarvodaya movement. He served as the Ramdurg MLA, by defeating the Congress nominee in 1957. He joined the Congress later. He retired from politics in the early 1970s to engage in Khadi and other social activities.

The Pattans are one of the only two families in Karnataka where the father, mother and son have been MLAs from the same district. The other is of that of Allum Veerabhadrappa who represented Kurgod constituency in Ballari four times in the past.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Bengaluru – March 24th, 2018

75 years on, Mankuthimmanna Kagga lives on

It is considered one of Kannada literary world’s masterpieces

“What is the use of you eating so much? The body gets nourished from whatever is assimilated by the stomach; remainder is expelled as waste. You may earn how much ever, but what is it that you acquire? A fistful of flour, isn’t it?”

These lines — a translated version by a music company — may sound familiar to some, new to some others, but largely make sense to both categories.

DVG’s (D.V. Gundappa) ‘Mankuthimmanna Kagga’, considered one of Kannada literary world’s masterpieces, lives on even in 2018, reinventing itself in more modern avatars as well. From an app dedicated to what is referred to as the ‘Bhagavad Gita in Kannada’ to animated videos explaining the content, the popularity of the classic has not diminished even 75 years after it was first published.

Animated musical

A city-based music studio has created videos, some in animated form, some others as a motion picture, introducing the kaggas (collection of verses) to newer audiences. Up on YouTube, one of the renditions is a peppy number with English subtitles (cited above).

M. K. Ramanujan, the music composer, whose Musicloud Studio and Technology in Sahakarnagar has made the videos, said he was a DVG fan from his school days. “Becoming a music composer was a childhood dream. I composed music for a Tamil film in 2010. But I have always felt closer to Kannada language and literature, and wanted to bring out something similar to Malgudi Days. That is why I decided to bring out musical stories for Mankuthimmanna Kagga, which has a lot of relevance to today’s life,” he said.

The team has composed an animated music video for one kagga, and one has been translated into English. “Another one has been made into a motion picture using stop footage,” he added, explaining that the intention was to keep the kaggas like a jingle to keep the audience engages as the verses are all about reading between the lines.

Dedicated apps

There have been other attempts at making the magnum opus readily available. Dedicated apps offering Mankuthimmanna Kagga have been well received by literary connoisseurs. Venugopal. M.N., the creator of one such app which has over 28,000 downloads, is a corporate engineer who has developed over 50 apps as a hobby. Only two among them are of books — DVG’s work and the Bhagavad Gita. “Mankuthimmanna Kagga is considered the main Bible for humanity. It contains truths about life and every kagga tells how one can lead life,” he said.

Kagga yatre

Admirers of the magnum opus have an event to look forward to this year. On October 16, which is the death anniversary of DGV, ‘Samanvita’, a cultural organisation, will take out a ‘Kagga Amruta Yatre’ from Devanahalli (‘D’ in DVG stands for Devanahalli) to DVG Road, which will see the organisers set up platforms at places on the way with programmes to honour the book.

Radhakrishna K.V. from Samanvita, who is also from the Department of Kannada and Culture, said the kaggas resonate with people even today just like the vachanas as they speak of an ‘ideal society and norms and summarise the principles of life’.

Pointing to the government’s efforts in keeping the popularity of the book alive by introducing ‘Kaggarasadhaare’ on Kanaja, the knowledge portal, in text and audio format with interpretations last year, he said there were parallel efforts by others too.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Staff Reporter / March 23rd, 2018

Karnataka : Manipal Professor’s tryst with Antartica

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Balakrishna spent 95 days there as part of a research expedition

AManipal professor is back from Antarctica — what he calls a lifetime experience — where he spent 95 days at various Indian research bases such as Bharati and Maitri. Dr K Balakrishna, professor, Dept of Civil Engineering, was part of the 37th Indian Scientific Expedition to the coldest continent along with 40 other scientists from IMD, GSI, IIG, BARC, BSI, ISRO, NCAOR and logistics personnel from Army, Border Roads Organization and others.

He was the only scientist from a deemed private University for the expedition, organized by the National Centre for Antarctica and Ocean Research (NCAOR), a research institute of Ministry of Earth Sciences and based in Goa.

“The selection procedure was tough as it demanded not only research work but also physical fitness, including two weeks of snow acclimatization at the Mountain-eering and Skiing Institute of Indo-Tibetian Border Police in Auli, Uttarakhand. Acclimatization included mountaineering, trekking across the Himalayan terrains and rock-climbing,” Dr K Balakrishna said.

Describing the entire experience as thrilling and most unforgettable, Prof Balakrishna said, “It was a rewarding experience for me both professionally and personally. Though it was tough initially with temperature dipping -10 degrees, I acclimatized quickly and got down to my research.

The research was on obtaining a baseline of micro-pollutants like pharmaceuticals, personal care products and other naturally occurring metals in the seawater, sea-ice, lakes, sediments and soil of the region. He collected over 100 samples at different locations within a radius of 20 km from the Bharati station.

The samples are being analyzed at Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences lab here.

Prof Krishnamurthy Bhat is the co-investigator of the project. The sampling was done by travelling across the region through skidoo (snow scooter) and helicopter. Bharati station has 24×7 broadband internet access with comfortable rooms, , library, Indian food and so on. The Indian expedition also used MV Ivan Papanin, an Indian ship chartered exclusively for the Antarctica expedition.

His study: Effect of micro-pollutants

The professor is measuring the level of micro-pollutants in seawater, sea-ice, lakes, sediments and soil of the region. Talking about the experiment, he said, “The environment in Antarctica is pristine with minimal pollution. However, in that region there are three stations – India, Russia and China.

Whenever we go on field trips, we use sunscreen lotions and other personal care products to prevent us from UV radiation. In the stations, we use several other products like soaps/detergents. All these contents have low amount of antibiotics. There are chances that these products including medicines we eat, may go in low doses to the sea water and may affect the sensitive eco-system. The fauna may not die, but there could be side-effects.

I am trying to get the current status of the micro-pollutants- pharmaceuticals. They may be in very low concentration, but this can affect the sensitive fauna. I am measuring the level of micro-pollutants in seawater or lakes and so on.”

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> News> States / March 22nd, 2018

Dravidian language family is 4,500 years old: study

The Dravidian language family’s four largest languages — Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil and Telugu — have literary traditions spanning centuries, of which Tamil reaches back the furthest, researchers said.

DravidianFamilyCF21mar2018

The Dravidian language family, consisting of 80 varieties spoken by nearly 220 million people across southern and central India, originated about 4,500 years ago, a study has found.

This estimate is based on new linguistic analyses by an international team, including researchers from the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany, and the Wildlife Institute of India in Dehradun.

The researchers used data collected first-hand from native speakers representing all previously reported Dravidian subgroups. The findings, published in the journal Royal Society Open Science, match with earlier linguistic and archaeological studies.

South Asia, reaching from Afghanistan in the west and Bangladesh in the east, is home to at least six hundred languages belonging to six large language families, including Dravidian, Indo-European and Sino-Tibetan.

The Dravidian language family, consisting of about 80 language varieties (both languages and dialects) is today spoken by about 220 million people, mostly in southern and central India, and surrounding countries.

The Dravidian language family’s four largest languages — Kannada, MalayalamTamil and Telugu — have literary traditions spanning centuries, of which Tamil reaches back the furthest, researchers said.

Along with SanskritTamil is one of the world’s classical languages, but unlike Sanskrit, there is continuity between its classical and modern forms documented in inscriptions, poems, and secular and religious texts and songs, they said.

“The study of the Dravidian languages is crucial for understanding prehistory in Eurasia, as they played a significant role in influencing other language groups,” said Annemarie Verkerk of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.

Neither the geographical origin of the Dravidian language nor its exact dispersal through time is known with certainty.

The consensus of the research community is that the Dravidians are natives of the Indian subcontinent and were present prior to the arrival of the Indo-Aryans (Indo-European speakers) in India around 3,500 years ago.

Researchers said that it is likely that the Dravidian languages were much more widespread to the west in the past than they are today.

In order to examine questions about when and where the Dravidian languages developed, they made a detailed investigation of the historical relationships of 20 Dravidian varieties.

Study author Vishnupriya Kolipakam of the Wildlife Institute of India collected contemporary first-hand data from native speakers of a diverse sample of Dravidian languages, representing all the previously reported subgroups of Dravidian.

The researchers used advanced statistical methods to infer the age and sub-grouping of the Dravidian language family at about 4,000-4,500 years old.

This estimate, while in line with suggestions from previous linguistic studies, is a more robust result because it was found consistently in the majority of the different statistical models of evolution tested in this study.

This age also matches well with inferences from archaeologywhich have previously placed the diversification of Dravidian into North, Central, and South branches at exactly this age, coinciding with the beginnings of cultural developments evident in the archaeological record.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Science / by PTI / Berlin – March 21st, 2018