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‘Our life by the Cooum was better’: Chennai residents forcibly moved slam govt

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Civic Issues
Power cuts, piles of garbage, no transport system, no shops or hospitals nearby – these are just some problems facing residents who were moved in the Cooum beautification project.
The residents along the banks of the river were forced to move to make way for the beautification project.
‘No plague shall approach your tent’ reads the tiny sticker pasted on the door of her small house. That is the only time 34-year-old Bhavani Senthil Kumar’s face lights up with a smile. “If there is something that keeps me going, despite this drudgery that we have been thrown into, it is this,” she says, pointing to the image of Jesus Christ. “My belief in him.” Bhavani’s is among the thousand-odd families relocated from the banks of the River Cooum in Chennai to Gudapakkam in Thiruvallur, to facilitate the Cooum restoration project.  It has been over a year since the families were relocated and ‘left in isolation’. “There has not been a single day where we have not had problems since we came here,” she rues. Almost every day, the locality suffers power cuts. “Normally from 5.30 to 7.30 in the evenings when the children come back from schools. They just cannot do their homework” Bhavani says. But power cuts are just one of their many problems. Ever since they relocated to Gudapakkam, the inmates allege that their children have been falling ill ‘too often’. “Even when we lived near Cooum, we were healthier. But we live amid filth at Gudapakkam and our children often fall ill,” says R Revathi, who had relocated from Maduravoyil. The Gudapakkam locality has 32 blocks and each block has about 32 houses making it a total of 1,024 houses. But only two women have been appointed by the local administration to clean the entire locality. “It is worse than the Cooum. You can see the garbage just piled up here. We have petitioned many times to clear the garbage, but nothing is happening,” Revathi says. Relocation also means loss of jobs for both men and women. Selventhiran, 38 years old, works at a lathe workshop in Padi, Chennai, and comes home only on alternate days. With a two-year-old kid, his wife Vimala herself finds it difficult to travel to the city in search of a job. Vanitha Balaji, 37 years old, who worked as a housekeeper in Chennai, was forced to sit at home after being relocated to Gudapakkam. “It simply doesn’t work. I will have to spend all the money I manage to earn on transport alone. And I will come home very late, which means I will be missing out on my family duties” says Vanitha. Nagomi has managed to find herself a meagre source of income – she has converted the front portion of her 300 sq.-feet house into a shop and sells stuff through the window. “Stuff you would need for your daily chores. I get them once a week from Poonamallee. If it is perishable, like milk, I buy every day,” she says. But does she manage to make any profits? “Not every day. On certain days, the milk doesn’t sell. Also I buy stuff on loan – what we call thandal. Which means the interest I pay is exorbitant. So I actually make very little money.” It is not uncommon to spot posters that offer eatables, from soup to chicken pakoda, within the locality. “Since we need to walk at least 2 kilometres to buy anything, some people have set up stalls within this complex. But not many are able to make ends meet with such innovations. After all, those who buy are also among them” says Vimala. For students, it is an entirely different set of problems. The nearest school is 3 kilometres away and the students have to walk it on most days, due to a lack of proper transport. “By the time we come back from school, we are too tired to do any of the homework assigned to us,” says 11-year-old Arun. But Preethi, studying in Class 12 in a school at Egmore, faces a unique issue. “The relocation came when I was in Class 11. It was difficult to change schools then. So these days, I leave at 6.30 am, with my mother who works as domestic help in the city, and I come back home well past the evening.” She’s also mortally terrified of being asked to stop going to school if ‘anti-social elements’ in the locality harass her. “Till date, there has been no problem,” she says. “But I dread the day they do something that could make my parents rethink the idea of sending me so far away to school.” Residents complain that men often sit in the lanes that run between the buildings and drink booze late into the nights, limiting their mobility. “There are houses which procure liquor and sell it at slightly higher prices to men living here, because you will have to travel several kilometres the nearest TASMAC shop. We have also complained about this, but there has been no action till date,” says a resident pointing to the empty bottles strewn on the roads. But what agonizes them collectively is the fact that they have been removed from the banks of the Cooum River because the ‘state can afford to remove them’. “There is a college still functioning in the very same place from where we have been evicted. If we had to move away to allow Cooum to be beautified, why is the college still there? Does the government think we are an eyesore in the city and the college is a cynosure of all eyes? Isn’t the law the same for all?” fumes Bhavani. G Sangeetha, of Pen Thozhilalargal Sangam (Women Labourers Union), who has been working in Gudapakkam for months now, says the residents have been wronged in more ways than one. “They have lost their livelihoods and the compensation given to them was meagre. Also, they have been moved to a very isolated place. To reach the main road, they will have to walk for about 10 minutes and it is dangerous because this place is otherwise isolated. There are no proper transport facilities or security. Also, they have been promised houses, but the facilities here are really bad. The displaced people, like the ones in Gudapakkam here, suffer a new, modern form of untouchability,” she says. Bhavani couldn’t agree more: “They say they have put up concrete roofs above our heads. We were far better off living under the thatched roofs along the Cooum.” This story is part of GAATW fellowship on women and labour. Also read: Chennai's Pallavaram to face 7-hour power shut down on Saturday: TANGEDCO

Sexual harassment of woman SP: Madras HC issues notice to DVAC Director

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Sexual Harassment
The woman police officer had approached the court seeking transfer of Murugan IPS, against whom she had filed a sexual harassment complaint.
Wikimedia Commons
The Madras High Court has issued a notice to the Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Director on the petition filed by a woman superintendent accusing a senior colleague of sexual harassment.    The DVAC director has been asked to respond to the demand made by the woman SP seeking the transfer of Murugan IPS, the Joint Director of Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption, against whom she had filed the complaint.  The SP, in her petition, has also sought the Internal Complaints Committee (ICC), which was constituted by the Tamil Nadu government to probe the incident, to be reconstituted according to the provisions of the law and to take criminal action against Murugan. Tamil Nadu government had appointed Additional Director General of Police (ADGP) Seema Agarwal to head the ICC.  The other members of the ICC are Additional Director General of Police S Arunachalam, Deputy Inspector General of Police Thenmozhi, Superintendent of Police (retired) Saraswathi and Ramesh, an administrative officer in the DGP's office.  The State Advocate General, representing Murugan, said that the DVAC comes under the Public Administration Department and not under the Home ministry. He has asked the HC to direct that the woman’s complaint be probed by the ICC under the Public Administration Department, according to reports in local media. The court had ordered the DVAC to submit CCTV camera footage from its office and to add the ICC as a respondent in the case. It has posted the matter for further hearing on September 11. Recently, a PIL was filed in the Madras High Court seeking a stay in all the proceedings in the case until the ICC was reconstituted according to the provisions of law. The PIL had stated that the ICC constituted right now is not in accordance with the Supreme Court order in the Vishaka vs State of Rajasthan case, and also the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act of 2013.    The PIL details reservations on the inclusion of Saraswathi as a member of the ICC. The petitioner has claimed that there are several allegations against Saraswathi during her time as DSP and while he says he, on his own, is not levelling any allegations against her, he feels that she should not be a member of the ICC.  According to the workplace sexual harassment law in India, the ICC can probe allegations of sexual harassment in the workplace and prescribe action after proper proceedings. A quasi-legal body, the ICC must be headed by a senior woman in the organisation and must also have an external member who is either part of an NGO or an ‘association committed to the cause of women’ or a person familiar with the issues relating to sexual harassment. The law also stipulates that half the members of the committee must be women.  

'No cursed treasures or mummies’: Meet one of the youngest female archaeologists in TN

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Human Interest
From discovering wall murals to hitherto unseen inscriptions, S Deepika has many credits to her name, but the journey has not always been easy.
There were two things that fascinated me as a child – archaeology and astronomy. Ironically, while one entails hours spent in the soil, carefully brushing away sandy grains, the other would quite literally propel you to the stars. Torn between the two, I resolved to not choose but to only remain fascinated by it. But here is someone who did choose and is walking down the road less taken. Archaeologist S Deepika is among the very few female archaeologists in Tamil Nadu and is the only one in her age group. A science student at school, Deepika was compelled to o her Bachelor’s degree in computers by her parents, relatives and friends. “The pressure was serious. Back in 2004, the IT boom was in full swing. I had no choice but to relent,” she begins.  But her love for archaeology could not be contained. “I’d sit for hours in the library reading history books. I did drop out after a year,” she laughs.  Understanding the subject This was when, after weeks of carefully scouting, she enrolled herself in the History vocational course at Madras Christian College in Chennai. “Many did not know that such a course even existed and I had to deal with the tags associated with taking up history. I was sure of what I was doing, and this was the only course that offered archaeology and museology in addition to history. My batch had only seven students,” says Deepika. Between 2005 to 2008, Deepika shares that her understanding of archaeology widened. “We started a forum and I was its treasurer. This was also when I understood no one knew about archaeology. Barring myself and one other student no one else had chosen the course for the sake of archaeology. This was the sad truth I had to accept,” she says. Another major drawback was the lack of guidance. “While we have plenty of excellent scholars in history, we do not have enough colleges offering the right kind of course for those interested in archaeology. Madras University had a post-graduation course in archaeology, but what can you do for your under-graduation then? Some suggested I do a Bachelor’s degree in chemistry and then choose archaeology for my Master’s. It isn't the ideal choice,” she explains.  Deepika went on to pursue her Master’s degree from Deccan College in Pune, a renowned institute for archaeology and linguistic studies. “The most exciting thing here was we had one student from each state of the country and there were plenty of women in my class. Those two years were the best,” smiles Deepika. She also expanded her knowledge in archaeology. “All my teachers were extremely good in their respective fields. I also chose to take up scientific subjects – archeobotany and archeozoology, as opposed to the common art and architecture for my specialisation. This has surely given me a unique edge to be able to understand the whole process better,” she shares. Unearthing history When you’re an archaeologist, you may not run into mummies and cursed treasures, but you will have your share of exhilarating moments, she says. For her MA thesis, Deepika chose to do deal with ethno-archaeology, a comparative study of past and present.  “I studied the pearl and conch fishery in the Gulf of Mannar. Of how it was several hundred years ago and how it is today,” she says. While pearl fishery has been restricted to just cultivating oysters, people still indulge in conch fishing. It is called sangu kuliyal in Tamil and the tradition is continued in Rameshwaram and Thoothukudi districts in TN, says Deepika. “These shells are sent mostly to Bengal for making their traditional white bangles. There are references to these shell bangles being worn by women here in the Sangam period literature as well,” she adds. This study was helpful when Deepika encountered shell bangles while she was working at the Harappan site in Farmana during her post-graduation. This popular Harappan site is in Haryana today. “The variety of shell used in the making of those bangles can only be found in the Gulf of Kutch or in the Gulf of Mannar. This explains the Lothal’s (in Gujarat today) connect with the Harappan site,” she shares.  Deepika at Farmana But the ultimate treasure for archaeologists in one that you and I would never imagine. “If you’ve chanced upon a garbage bin during your excavation, then that’s it! You’ve hit jackpot!” laughs Deepika. “You won’t believe the kind of findings we can make by sifting through someone’s garbage. From the kind of food they ate to the kind of things they used… It’s amazing.”  Deepika is currently working on her PhD thesis that she began in 2015, 'Feminine Sculptures in Pallava Rock Architecture – A Socio-Religious Study'. Historical eye  Deepika has three main discoveries that she is quite proud of. She explains that as an archaeologist, “an eye form the past” is important. “You have to place yourself from when it happened and think from that period of time,” she says. She stumbled upon an ancient wall mural in Tiruvottiyur temple that was thus far unrecorded and later chanced upon a 7th century AD Pallava Grantha inscription near the Pallava rock-cut cave temple in Mahendravadi. Deepika was also able to record the earliest representation of Srivatsam, an iconography that represents Goddess Lakshmi, at a temple in Seeyamangalam. “While the temple in Seeyamangalam is quite famous for the very first Nataraja sculpture in Tamil Nadu, the Srivatsam above the Makarathorana above another famed sculpture of the two warriors remained unrecorded,” she explains. Srivatsam She goes on to add that all these discoveries might not have come to light were it not for her guide and mentor, Dr S Vasanthi, the Deputy Superintending Archaeologist (retd.), State Department of Archaeology, Government of Tamil Nadu. “Every time I called her with a hunch, she’d go to lengths to check my leads and enter them into our records. This is quite important for a student to stay motivated,” says Deepika. While women, throughout history, have been at the receiving end of prejudices, a defiant-looking Deepika tells us that not once in her career has she experienced the kind of bias that women are usually subjected to in their workplace. “I think it has to do with dealing with history. In my personal experience, history has always widened my understanding of human evolution and from that perspective, the gender bias seems very obtuse. I’ve never been asked to not travel late in the night or not do a particular task because I’m a woman. Those complexities do not apply here,” she explains. Treasures you may have walked right past When Deepika was doing her undergraduation here in Chennai, the students, along with the zoology department professor, had planned for an exploratory trip to Thiruvakkarai, in Villupuram district of Tamil Nadu. This village may be famous for the temple, but there’s another more interesting side to it. “You may have heard of Thiruvakkarai Vakrakali Amman temple. But do you know there’s a geological park for wood fossils here?” she asks. This geological park, we learn, could be older than human evolution. “The trees have been fossilised here and this village is also a famous megalithic (burial) site,” explains Deepika.  The process of fossilisation takes place due to a lack of oxygen when the organic compounds are replaced by minerals. These trees from several thousands of years ago have been petrified as fossils and have been preserved in this area. Deepika also shares the first stone tools, dating to over 1.2 million years ago, to be discovered in the Indian subcontinent, proving that India too had a wealthy Palaeolithic history, were found in Pallavaram in the 19th century. Up until then, the Indian subcontinent did not feature in the Palaeolithic sites. It was a phenomenal discovery that lead to other findings across the subcontinent and Robert Bruce Foote, an English geologist who made that discovery, is regarded as the father of Indian pre-history,” she explains.  Busting myths Deepika talks at length about the misconceptions that are often associated with archaeology and history in the country. “People also think that if you’re an archaeologist, you’d know everything there is to know in the field. We’ve got plenty of subdivisions that we specialise in. For instance, I have not studied epigraphy, therefore I may not know what the inscriptions actually mean. I need an epigraphy specialist for that.”  We also learn that archaeology in India focuses more on art and architecture than it does on scientific methods. “But we are changing that now. There’s a lot of awareness, findings from excavations are being sent to laboratories. Archaeologists are opening up to scientific ways now,” she adds. “This popular notion that archaeologists deal with hidden treasures and solve ancient puzzles is one that gets to me. It is one of the most absurd portrayals, goaded on mainly by films and fiction,” she adds irritably.  Most of these inscriptions bear details of who gave what, how should the temple be maintained, etc. “Back then, oil for lighting up the temple was of paramount importance. So these inscriptions had details of how such finances were to be maintained. Very rarely, have we found historical events recorded in these inscriptions.” The representation of history in films and novels too can sometimes be over exaggerated explains Deepika. “If you’ve seen an ancient wall mural at the Tanjore Big Temple, King Raja Raja, whose fame is incomparable, is actually dressed most modestly, wearing only a waist cloth. So are his wives. This notion that kings wore elaborate clothes and were extravagantly fashioned is a very pop-culture thing,” she laughs. Raja Raja Chola encircled Yet, history and archaeology are one of the most underrated subjects with very few students coming forward to learn it.  According to Deepika, history can be understood by reading a few books and possibly visiting a few sites. “If you’re bored on a Sunday, you should head to the Government Museum in Egmore. The kind of history lessons you’ll learn there, would make you laugh and cry at the same time,” she smiles.

Former Chennai top cop admits gutkha scam was real, but passes buck to others

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Gutkha Scam
Former city top cop S George laid the blame on current Villupuram SP Vijayakumar, stating that he was in the clear himself.
Over a year after the first raids were conducted in the multi-crore Gutkha scam that rocked Tamil Nadu, former Chennai Police Commissioner and an accused in the probe, S George has confirmed that there was, in fact, a scam among the ranks of the Tamil Nadu police department in connection with the unchecked sale of gutkha. However, proclaiming himself as innocent, George went on to blame many other officers – seniors and subordinates – including sitting DGP TK Rajendran. In an unprecedented press conference at his residence, the visibly exasperated former city top cop said that the scam erupted in June 2017 to scuttle the chances of him and TK Rajendran who were in the running to be the state’s next Director General of Police. “Decision was to be taken about the posting of a new DGP. It was June 27, 2017. The whole thing was blown out of proportion and put in the papers to prevent me and TK Rajendran from becoming the DGP.  Something has happened. Why should it come on June 27? Who leaked official records? Where were the official documents given to previous DGP? Why was no report submitted to the Chief Secy? Why was not a report forwarded to Vigilance Commissioner?,” he slammed. In July 2016, raids were conducted at the godown, offices and residences of a pan masala and gutka manufacturer in Tamil Nadu, who was facing charges of evading tax to the tune of Rs 250 crore. Seized during the raid was a diary containing names of those who were believed to have been paid off by the gutkha manufacturers– including the Tamil Nadu Health Minister S Vijayabaskar, current Director General of Police TK Rajendran and other top police officials.  George too has been named in a petition moved by DMK MLA J Anbazhagan, seeking a CBI probe into the scam. Citing this, George denied that he had been the Commissioner of Police at the time the payments had allegedly been made. According to the petition, the payouts were done in three instalments between April and June 2016 while S George was the Chennai Police Commissioner between 2012 and 2014 and from March to July 2017. Not guilty In an attempt to exonerate himself, George further said that following the death of Chief Minister Jayalalithaa in 2016, he wrote to the government in an attempt to quell rumours on social media."As the allegations were against the Commissioner of Police, that is me, it would be inappropriate for me to order an inquiry or conduct an investigation. Therefore I decided that some enquiry has to be ordered by an appropriate agency. So I wrote a letter to the government," he said. Stating that such a massive illegal activity could not have taken place with the ‘blessing of the Commissioner’ alone, he implicated current Villupuram SP Jayakumar and other officers. “I want to ask a fundamental question. There are 300 police stations in Chennai city. Is it possible or probable that such a massive illegal activity can go only with the blessing of the Commissioner?” he asked. When a reporter pointed out that one of the ledgers claimed that Rs 15 lakh had been paid to George during Christmas in 2015, an angry George shot back, asking the reporter to disclose his faith. “Why should an ex CoP be paid? When you are no longer to be paid. I'm a Christian. So if you say Christmas, it becomes credible. I'm a Christian. I'm an ex CoP. Somebody is misusing my name,” he asked. He claimed that he came to know of the allegations after he took over and hence wrote a letter to the Government of Tamil Nadu to inquire into the matter. Preliminary inquiry “When I became Commissioner, rumours were going around about the Gutkha scam and the involvement of senior officials. I was aware that discussions took place at highest levels of government and decisions taken. This can be verified. However no inquiry was ordered then. Subsequently CM Jayalalithaa passed away. At that point of time I felt it was appropriate for me that some inquiry or investigation has to be ordered to quell the rumours on social media. As the allegations were against the CoP it would be inappropriate for me to order an inquiry. So I wrote a letter to the government asking for a probe,” he said. He also stated that before he wrote the letter, he conducted preliminary inquiries with the then Deputy Commissioner (Intelligence) Vimala who had assumed charge in December 2015. He said that Vimala told him about her visit to a paan masala godown in Red Hills after CB-CID had seized goods from there along with Jayakumar, who was the Deputy Commissioner (CCB) then and that she did not find any tobacco products there. He said that she also informed him of visits made by officers from the Food Safety Department and other higher officials. Further stating that even officers at the inspector level knew of the scam, George placed the blame squarely on Jayakumar (currently the and said that he had asked other police officers to leave the gutkha case and instead focus on red sandalwood. Emphasising that higher officials ignored Vimala’s report which also named a list of officers, George blamed DC Jayakumar for not having reported about this to his higher officials. The former top cop also said that he had ‘punished’ Jayakumar by giving him below average rating in his performance appraisal. “The officer was taken for duty in CCB and was working as Additional Commissioner of Police and was in charge of anti gangster operation. It was felt that he would be sensitive and reliable. He was directed to concentrate on major illegal activities in the city. Intelligence reports indicate that he was aware of a major organised crime activity and did not bring to the notice of the officers. His actions lack discipline and was aimed to.sabotage the aims of well intentioned senior officers who wanted to curb crime in the city,” said George reading out an excerpt from the appraisal. CBI raids Rubbishing the claims that he was away when the CBI team came knocking at his doors, he said that the CBI officers have taken the sale deed of his TNHB house allotted to him in 1994, his lease documents and insurance policy. The CBI, on Thursday, arrested five persons in connection with the Gutkha scam in Tamil Nadu. The promoters of the Gutkha godown, an SP from the Central Excise and Customs department and an officer from the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI). The arrests came a day after around 40 locations were raided by the CBI sleuths in connection with the scam. Among the locations raided were the houses of TN Health Minister C Vijayabaskar, S George, and DGP TK Rajendran.

TN man, who helped in Kerala flood relief, dies due to rat fever

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Rat fever
The Joint Director of Health Services Banumathy told TNM that the district is fully equipped to deal with the situation and that surveillance has been stepped up in the TN border.
Representational image
A volunteer from Coimbatore, who helped with flood relief work in neighbouring Kerala, died due to rat fever on Thursday. Another person has also been diagnosed with leptospirosis or rat fever and is undergoing treatment at the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital (CMCH). Following the two cases, Coimbatore district has been put on high alert. Twenty-nine-year-old Sathish Kumar had carried out relief work in Kozhikode and had returned to his home in Kinathukadavu near Coimbatore with fever. While he was admitted to the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital on Wednesday, Sathish had been undergoing treatment for high fever at a private hospital in Coimbatore for five days before being referred to CMCH. On arrival, he was diagnosed with rat fever and was given treatment accordingly. He, however, died on Thursday due to multiple organ failure. Speaking to TNM, Dr Asokan, the Dean of CMCH said that Sathish Kumar was referred to Coimbatore Medical College Hospital by a private hospital after he reached a critical stage due to fever. “His organs were almost gone when he came here. We did our best to tackle the rat fever but we lost him to organ failure,” he said. Another man, 65-year-old Ponnaiah from Valparai was also diagnosed with rat fever and is undergoing treatment in the hospital. Dr Asokan also advised people to watch out for stagnant water and to wear rubber boots and gloves while working in unsanitary conditions. “Rat fever or leptospirosis spreads through the urine of rats and cattle. Hence it is important to safeguard ourselves from being exposed to the excrement of animals. If you have a fever, please come and get treated here. We have enough stock of medicines to treat rat fever and have sensitised the doctors and other medical staff here about the diagnosis and treatment of rat fever,” he added. Dr Banumathy, the Joint Director of Health Services, Coimbatore district suggested people to approach any government medical facility or a qualified doctor if they have high fever together with redness of the eyes. “We have advised the doctors to keep leptospirosis in mind when patients present themselves with these symptoms. Also, we request the patients to not self-treat with fever medicines without consulting a doctor. It is a bacterial infection and hence there is no need to panic,” she said. Stressing on the importance of preventing the infection, she said that ensuring sanitation in and around the house and simple measures like using a mix of bleaching powder and lime in the ratio of 1:4 and drinking boiled water will help. Adding that the district administration is equipped to deal with the situation if it becomes severe, she said, “We have stepped up surveillance in all the 18 villages that is on the Kerala-Tamil Nadu border. We have also alerted all the Primary Healthcare Centres (PHC) in the district to watch out for rat fever.” 47 people have died due to rat fever in Kerala from August 1. Since Coimbatore is on the border, a high alert has been issued across the district to treat cases of rat fever.  

Nirmala Devi case: CB CID accused of protecting culprits luring college girls

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Crime
The opposition is demanding a CBI probe in the case in which a college professor was caught promising students scholarships and jobs in return for sexual favours.
In April this year, Tamil Nadu heard a shocking tape that exposed the attempt by an assistant professor to lure four female students into sex work at a college in Virudhunagar. Nirmala Devi who taught at the Devanga Arts College was arrested and based on her confession, assistant professor Murugan from the Madurai Kamaraj University and a former research scholar Karuppusamy were also nabbed. Though there was a buzz that bigger names were involved in the scandal, the CB CID wing which is handling the case dismissed this speculation, when they told the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court a few days ago that Nirmala Devi was luring the young women only for her two colleagues, Murugan and Karuppuswamy, who had already been arrested. They claimed she was in an intimate relationship with them and spoke to the girls on their instructions. In short, the investigating agency alleges that the three people in police custody were the only ones responsible for the crime in which Nirmala Devi had promised scholarships and jobs in return for sexual favours. Opposition parties and relatives of the accused however, say there is more than meets the eye. Suja, Murugan's wife too alleges that senior officials in the university are being protected by the CB CID."The investigating officials already know who is behind this crime. A look at Nirmala Devi's call records would have proved this. But they are not even questioning the right people. How can my husband, an assistant professor whose salary is only enough to run our homes promise jobs to these girls?" she claims. The CB-CID in its report however made no mention of higher officials in the University. “Based on the confession of accused Nirmala Devi and statement of witnesses, it was found that two other accused, namely Murugan and Karuppasamy, were involved in this case. Both these accused persons were in close association with the accused Nirmala Devi. She had illegal intimacy with both these accused and she has gone to an extent by promising to please them by providing her own college students for sexual favours. Both the accused Murugan and Karuppasamy asked Nirmala Devi to seduce young innocent college girls to offer sexual favours to them. They had repeatedly insisted that college girls shall be arranged for them for providing sexual favours and thus they had tried to sexually exploit the young college going girls their personal benefits," the report read. Political parties meanwhile term the investigation a sham."From the audio recording that was leaked, it is clear that the person for whom the girls were being lured was in a powerful position, because the students were offered scholarships and jobs," says A Saravanan, spokesperson for the DMK. "Someone who could move things was involved. But this sham of an investigation doesn't tell us who. If the right people are not exposed, this menace will only continue. The undue haste shown by the Governor to appoint a one man inquiry commission, the decision to not reveal its content and the overall manner in which the case is being handled all raises several questions," he adds. The CPI(M)  in a recent press release alleged that the police was attempting to close the case without pulling up any 'big fish'."They want to just blame these three accused and wind up the case. Why would an assistant professor even do such favours for a research scholar?" asks CPI(M) state General Secretary Balakrishnan. "Moreover none of the accused are being given bail because the police are scared that they will come out and talk to the media," he adds. The CB-CID has objected bail pleas of all the three accused, claiming that they would influence witnesses. The have further furnished phone records in court to show that the three accused were in frequent contact before the call to the victims was made."The only way to get to the bottom of this is to have the CBI or court appointed committee take over the probe," says Saravanan. The CPI(M) too demands that the CBI take over the case in order to ensure a fair probe.  

Gutkha scam: MK Stalin demands sacking and arrest of Min Vijayabaskar, DGP Rajendran

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Scam
Stalin said he was shocked over the "inaction" of the Tamil Nadu government and Governor Banwarilal Purohit in moving against the two.
DMK President MK Stalin on Friday expressed shock that no action has been taken against Tamil Nadu Health and Family Welfare Minister C Vijayabaskar and DGP TK Rajendran after CBI raids related to the gutkha scam and again demanded their sacking as well as arrest. Stalin said he was shocked over the "inaction" of the Tamil Nadu government and Governor Banwarilal Purohit in moving against the two. It is shocking that even after the CBI raids at the residences of Vijayabaskar and Rajendran the government had not dismissed them and even the Governor had not taken any action, he said in a statement in Chennai. The DMK leader said it was not clear why Vijayabaskar and Rajendran, who are accused of accepting bribes from a gutka manufacturer, have not been arrested yet while bribe-giver gutkha manufacturer AV Mahdava Rao, intermediary and government officials were arrested by CBI on Thursday. On September 5, the Central Bureau of Investigation raided the houses of Vijayabaskar, Rajendran, gutkha manufacturer Rao and several state and central government officials in Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh as a part of investigating the alleged payment and receipt of bribes. Stalin said that as per a diary noting by Rao, a bribe of Rs 60 lakh was allegedly paid on April 21, May 20 and June 20 in 2016 to 'CP'. He alleged that Rao told Income Tax officials that 'CP' stood for Commissioner of Police. The Leader of the Opposition in the Tamil Nadu Assembly said that it was Rajendran who was then the Commissioner of Police in Chennai. Stalin said that another diary noting mentioned Rs 56 lakh paid to 'HM' between April 1, 2016 and June 15, 2016 and as per Rao 'HM' means Health Minister. Citing other diary entries, Stalin said Rs 20 lakh was given to a Joint Police Commissioner on November 4, 2015, December 10, 2015 and January 2, 2016.

Jaya death: Apollo COO says CCTV turned off occasionally on govt official's request

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Jayalalithaa death probe
The Apollo Hospital COO told the Arumughaswamy Commission that the hospital had occasionally switched the cameras off, upon the request of a government official.
The Chief Operating Officer of Apollo Hospital, Subbaiah Vishwanathan, has told the inquiry commission investigating the death of former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa that the hospital CCTV cameras were working when she was admitted to the hospital. However, the COO told the Arumughaswamy Commission, which is looking into the case, that the hospital had occasionally switched the cameras off, upon the request of a government official. The COO has been asked to furnish the official’s name and the written request that was allegedly made to the hospital within seven days. According to a report in The Hindu, Subbaiah Vishwanathan told the lawyers of the Commission that the cameras were switched off when Jayalalithaa was being moved from one room to another or when she was being taken for check-ups. The COO has also been asked to furnish CCTV footage from the hospital within a week. The COO has said that he is not sure whether the hospital has preserved the footage from December 2016. On Thursday, the Arumughaswamy Commission had noted that some of the doctors who were summoned had not appeared in court, and warned Apollo Hospital of legal consequences if they failed to do so. The doctors and staff have been asked to appear before the panel in a phased manner between September 10 and 12. In March earlier this year, the Chairman of the hospital group, Prathap Reddy, had told the media that all CCTV cameras in the section where Jayalalithaa was being treated at hospitals were switched off. The only video footage of Jayalalithaa in Apollo Hospital which was allegedly shot during this period and is available in public is the one that an MLA from the TTV Dhinakaran camp had released before the RK Nagar bye-polls in December 2017. It was a video of Jayalalithaa seen on the bed inside the hospital. Jayalalithaa was admitted to Chennai’s Apollo Hospital on September 22, 2016. She was admitted there and was reportedly responding well to her treatment till she suffered a cardiac arrest on December 4 and passed away the next day.

Will Nalini, Perarivalan and others be released? TN cabinet to meet on Sunday

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Rajiv Gandhi Assassination case
This comes after the Supreme Court on Thursday asked Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit to consider the mercy plea of one of the convicts, AG Perarivalan.
It has been four years since former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa announced in the state assembly that her government will ensure the release of the convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case irrespective of the Centre's decision in the matter. While her statement received cheers from members of the ruling cabinet in 2014, there was no change in the fate of the seven prisoners who continue to remain behind bars. But now, with the Supreme Court on Thursday asking Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit to consider the mercy plea of one of the convicts AG Perarivalan, the state has the chance to act upon its previous promise. Highly placed sources in the government have told TNM that they plan to use this opportunity."A cabinet meeting is being called on Sunday to discuss the release of the convicts serving life imprisonment in the assassination case," a minister confirmed to TNM. "Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami will be leading the meeting," he added. Law Minister CV Shanmugam meanwhile maintained that the government stands by the late CM's wish to release all seven convicts. On Thursday, a bench of Justices Ranjan Gogoi, Naveen Sinha and KM Joseph also disposed of the Centre's petition regarding a proposal for release of the convicts, filed by the state government. The Centre on August 10 had told the Supreme Court that it will not agree to the release of the prisoners. It maintained that remission of their sentence will set a 'dangerous precedent' and have 'international ramifications'. The Apex court had earlier asked the Centre to take a decision on a 2016 letter of the Tamil Nadu government seeking its concurrence on release of the convicts. Months before the former chief minister’s Jayalalithaa’s demise, her chief secretary K Gnanadesikan was directed to write to the BJP government informing that the state was ready to release the convicts - Murugan, Santhan, Robert Payas, Nalini, Ravichandran and Perarivalan. On August 20 this year, 47-year old Perarivalan told the apex court that no decision has been taken as yet on his mercy petition filed before the Governor. He was convicted at the age of 19 and had filed a mercy petition in 2015 to the then Governor under Article 161 of the constitution. It gives the constitutional head the power to pardon an offence or suspend the sentence of a convicted individual. He was charged with supplying the battery which was allegedly used for the belt bomb that had killed Rajiv Gandhi and 14 others. The former CBI officer who had taken down his confession earlier told TNM that Perarivalan had stated that he was not aware of the purpose of the battery but that he omitted this part in the statement he submitted. In addition to this, his counsel has pointed out multiple times in court that the investigation regarding the bomb itself was still pending. "The Supreme Court after listening to our arguments and taking into view Article 161, ordered for the Governor to consider the plea," says K Sivakumar, one of Perarivalan's lawyers. "We are now hearing that the cabinet is also convening to discuss the release of the prisoners. So we are confident that this will end on a positive note," he adds.   

Yogendra Yadav detained by TN cops for meeting farmers for Salem-Chennai Green highway

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Salem-Chennai Green Corridor
While the Chengam police denied such detention, Yogendra Yadav tweeted saying that he was kept in a marriage hall by the police.
File Image/PTI
Yogendra Yadav, the President of Swaraj India and his team members were detained by Tamil Nadu police in Thiruvannamalai. They were in the district for a fact finding exercise on the land acquisition for the Salem-Chennai Green Expressway project. In a series of tweets, Yogendra Yadav said that he was detained by the police at the Chengam Police Station and that they were manhandled by the policemen. He also tweeted that the Superintendent of Police told him that the detention was due to anticipation of law and order problem because of Yogendra Yadav’s presence. “TN police has detained me and team in Chengam PS, Thiru Annamalai district. We came on the invitation of Movement Against 8Lane Way. We were prevented from going to meet farmers, phones snatched, manhandled and pushed into police van. First-hand experience of police state in TN!,” said the first tweet in the series. TN police has detained me and team in Chengam PS, Thiru Annamalai district. We came on the invitation of Movement Against 8Lane Way. We were prevented from going to meet farmers, phones snatched, manhandled and pushed into police van. First hand experience of police state in TN! — Yogendra Yadav (@_YogendraYadav) September 8, 2018 Supdt. Police, Thiru Annamalai is here to tell me hay they apprehend law and order problem due to my presence! I am saying I will only visit farmers inside their homes. SP says I am not allowed! Gandhian disobedience is the only way out, it seems. — Yogendra Yadav (@_YogendraYadav) September 8, 2018 He also said that 49 farmers had also been detained by the police for meeting and expressing interest to meet him. “It's 4 hours now, we are still locked inside this marriage hall. No formal order. Not even oral information about whether we are under detention or arrest. 9 Farmers who met me this morning detained. Another 40 farmers waiting to meet me also detained. Rule of law? Or police Raj?” he asked. It's 4 hours now, we are still locked inside this marriage hall. No formal order Not even oral information about whether we are under detention or arrest 9 Farmers who met me this morning detained Another 40 farmers waiting to meet me also detained. Rule of law? Or police Raj?— Yogendra Yadav (@_YogendraYadav) September 8, 2018 He said that he had spoken to the District Collector of Thiruvannamalai, KS Kandasamy, about the complaints of police excesses in the acquisition of land for the project and that he was detained minutes after that phone call with the Collector. The tweet said, “I had spoken to Mr Kandasamy, Collector, Thiru Annamalai about acquisition and complains of police excesses for 8 lane way. He completely denied any police interference. Within minutes of the phone call police detained us.” I had spoken to Mr Kandasamy, Collector, Thiru Annamalai about acquisition and complains of police excesses for 8 lane way. He completely denied any police interference. Within minutes of the phone call police detained us. https://t.co/KYrA0oHJ26 — Yogendra Yadav (@_YogendraYadav) September 8, 2018 His series of tweets also included news reports on the police harassing land owners who speak up against the project. “Status of acquisition process: Notice issued, objections invited, govt yet to settle objections. So, no final decision on acquisition yet. Still police and administration is pressuring farmers to accept, refusing to allow gram sabha resolutions and harassing anyone who protests,” said another tweet. Status of acquisition process: Notice issued, objections invited, govt yet to settle objections. So, no final decision on acquisition yet. Still police and administration is pressuring farmers to accept, refusing to allow gram sabha resolutions and harassing anyone who protests. pic.twitter.com/yQrE0df6Zr — Yogendra Yadav (@_YogendraYadav) September 8, 2018 Speaking to TNM, Balakrishnan, the State Convenor of Swaraj Abhiyan said, "We came here on the request of the members of Movement against 8lane Way. The motive of the trip was to meet the farmers and listen to their grievances on the project. We are now detained in a marriage hall near Thiruvannamalai and were given no information as to why we have been detained. Only a few minutes back the SP passed on the information that there is an order in place in this region regarding meeting people about this project. Many farmers have also been detained along with us. Yogendra Yadav and one other farmer were pushed into the police vehicle and manhandled while we were brought here."   While the police officers at Chengam Police Station denied detaining Yogendra Yadav, multiple attempts by TNM to reach the Superintendent of Police, Deputy Superintendent of Police and the District Collector for information on the incident failed. The Tamil Nadu police have been facing flak from multiple quarters for detaining and arresting anybody who speaks against the Salem-Chennai Green Corridor. Activist Piyush Manush, student activist Valarmathi, actor Mansoor Ali Khan were all arrested by the police for opposing the project.

KV principal accused of sexually harassing students in Bengaluru, posted in TN

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Controversy
In February 2017, Kumar Thakur was booked under the POCSO Act but has still not been suspended, even as the trial is underway.
In January 2017, shocking allegations of child sexual abuse emerged from a Bengaluru based Kendriya Vidyalaya. The accused Kumar Thakur who was the principal of the school would allegedly target vulnerable female students and harass them under the guise of counselling. Investigators had told TNM that he would gather multiple girls and talk to them about their sex lives. Not just students, even teachers were subject to lewd messages from him and he would he would apparently threaten to stop paying them salaries if they complained. The revelation led to outrage amongst the parents of students and the general public. An Internal Complaints Committee was formed, Thakur forced to go on leave and finally arrested in February, 2017. The principal was booked under various sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act and Section 354(A) (Assault or criminal force to woman with intent to outrage her modesty) of the Indian Penal Code. But a day later, he was let out on bail.  And now, despite a trial in the matter being underway in the Karnataka High Court, Thakur has been posted as the Principal of a Kendriya Vidyalaya in Tiruvannamalai, Tamil Nadu. His date of joining was August 13 with the school's website posting his picture on its home page.  When TNM spoke to the principal about his latest appointment, he denied the charges against him. "The allegations against me are all false. The matter is sub-judice and trial is underway in court. It is a departmental decision to transfer me," Thakur says. "If anyone sees this as a problem, that is merely their perception," he states.  This is, however, not the principal's first appointment after the allegations came to light. Thakur was earlier transferred to the Karwar branch in Karnataka despite the grave charges against him. The Commissioner of the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan (KVS) was summoned by the Karnataka State Commission for the Protection of Child Rights over this.  DK Dwivedi, Assistant Commissioner (Vigilance), KVS had then said, "As per the rules, an accused principal is not allowed to stay near the spot where the incident took place or come in contact with any witness, including students and teachers. Accordingly, we had transferred him to a school in Karwar. Initially, he was asked to go on leave but we revoked it so that he could come back for inquiries." This time however, the child rights body is set to escalate the matter further. "This transfer is definitely not legal," says Kripa Alva, former Chairperson of the Karnataka State Commission for Protection of Child Rights. "It is very clear that up until he is acquitted by the court, he cannot be serving in any position, leave alone being a principal. Now that he is coming in contact with students again, you are putting the safety of students at risk. We strongly object to it. The Child Rights Commission will be writing to the Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan and this is something that we have done in the past as well. KVS is going against the order of a quasi-judicial body and we will be taking it up very seriously. If this does not work, we will be writing to the Human Resources and Development Ministry," she added.  

Govt contracts to brother, friends: The allegations against TN minister SP Velumani

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Explainer
Five companies, run by SP Velumani's brother and close aides, are said to have won tenders for government projects worth hundreds of crores since he became a minister.
Facebook/Minister SP Velumani
  The AIADMK government in Tamil Nadu has found itself in another controversy, this time in connection with awarding contracts to people who are close to a minister. The newest in the line of ministers accused of irregularities in awarding government contracts is SP Velumani, who is the Minister for Municipal Administration, Rural Development and implementation of special programmes. An investigation by news channel Times Now said that the minister awarded government contracts relating to various municipalities and corporations to the companies owned by his brother and close aides. Reports say that he allegedly allowed these companies to bid for the same tender, thereby flouting tender rules. The amount involved in this scam runs to hundreds of crores. There are six companies that are now in the limelight as receiving undue advantage due to their proximity to the minister. P Senthil & Co -  Run by SP Velumani’s own brother P Anbarasan, this company has allegedly bagged projects worth more than Rs 80 crores from the Coimbatore corporation for the past eight years. KCP Engineers Private Limited – This company was run by Rajan Chandrasekaran, who is SP Velumani’s close political aide. Rajan was the Managing Director of KCP Engineers till he quit in 2016, after which Chandraprakash took over as the MD. Rajan Chandrasekaran is also the Secretary of the Coimbatore Youth Wing of AIADMK and the printer and publisher of the AIADMK mouthpiece, Namadhu Amma. Documents have allegedly revealed that KCP Engineers has projects worth Rs 100 crores from Chennai Corporation. The company had also received projects worth Rs 50 crores related to Coimbatore corporation between the years 2011 and 2015. Constromall Goods Private Limited – This is newly started company, in which Rajan Chandrasekaran and Chandraprakash are directors. Jayaprakash Vishnuvardhan is also a director in the company. Vardhan Infrastructure – The Company is headed by Sundari Krishnakumar who is Chandraprakash’s mother. Vardhan Infrastructure has reportedly obtained contracts worth Rs 6.5 crores from Coimbatore Corporation. In 2016-17, this company was given the contract to repair bus route roads under Chennai Corporation worth Rs 2.5 crores. Constronics India – This firm is managed by Jayaprakash Vishnuvardhan, Chandraprakash and his wife Umamaheswari and other partners. The firm has also allegedly received contracts valued upto several lakhs of rupees from the Coimbatore and Chennai Corporations. Aalayam Foundation Private Limited – This real estate company has Rajan Chandrasekaran, Chandraprakash, Sundari Krishnakumar and Umamaheswari as shareholders and is a subsidiary of KCP Engineers Private limited. The above mentioned companies, together, have been in possession of multiple contracts under the portfolio held by SP Velumani. The presence of the same people in the managing capacities in all the above companies have raised suspicions on the minister for undue favouritism. SP Velumani was elected to the 2016 Assembly from Thondamuthur constituency in Coimbatore. As the minister for Rural administration, he is also in charge for Corporations, Panchayats and Panchayat Unions, Poverty Alleviation Programmes, Rural Indebtedness and Urban and Rural Water Supply (TWAD) in the state. 

3 dead, one severely injured in accident at fireworks unit in TN’s Sivakasi

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Accident
The police told TNM that the unit did not have the necessary safety measures in place and have taken the unit owner into custody.
Image for representation
An accident in a fireworks factory in Duraisamipuram, near Sivakasi, has claimed three lives, while severely injuring one person, on Saturday. The accident took place on Saturday morning at Krishnasamy Fireworks Industry, which is owned by Raju in Sivakasi, Virudhunagar district. More than 200 workers were involved in the manufacture of fire crackers at the factory, which had more than 40 rooms. According to reports, the fire started following a spark when the workers were mixing raw materials in one of the rooms. The spark caused the raw materials in the room to explode, thereby bringing down the walls of the room. Two workers, Krishnan and Mariappan, were trapped under the rubble and died on the spot, while two others, Ponnusamy and Pandiarajan, were severely injured in the accident. The injured workers were rushed to the Government Hospital in Sivakasi, where one of them succumbed to injuries. The factory falls within the Maraneri Police Station limits and upon receiving the information, the police and the revenue officials rushed to the spot to investigate. The Maraneri police have registered a case against Raju under the Explosives Act and have taken him into custody. Speaking to TNM, an investigating officer said, “The factory did not have the necessary safety measures in place to avoid the accident. Hence, we have put an FIR under Explosives Act also, apart from the IPC. We have also taken the owner of the factory into custody and are conducting inquiry.” Since Deepavali is approaching, the production of fireworks are in full swing in Sivakasi, which is the hub of firecracker manufacturing. In April, at least four people were killed in separate accidents in two fireworks units in Sivakasi.

'Vague, unscientific, unwarranted': TN govt rejects Centre’s report on Sterlite

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Sterlite
The Union Ministry of Water Resources conducted a groundwater analysis, without the state’s knowledge, in Thoothukudi where Sterlite is located.
The Tamil Nadu government rejected a suo motu groundwater analysis conducted by the Union Ministry of Water Resources in Thoothukudi district, where the Sterlite copper smelter plant is located. The study, conducted without the knowledge of the state government, has been slammed by Tamil Nadu as “vague and unscientific”. The Ministry of Water Resources had instructed to the Central Ground Water Board to conduct a study on September 5, 2018. The concluding paragraph of the Centre’s study states, “It is to mention that the investigation team couldn’t enter into the premises of M/s. Sterlite Copper Industry for collection of representative samples from inside and outside of industry; because district authorities sealed the Sterlite Copper Plant following the Governments order to close down the plant permanently. Therefore, it can’t be stated that M/s. Sterlite Industry is only cause of pollution indicated above (sic).” In a strongly-worded letter to the Union Ministry, Chief Secretary Girija Vaidyanathan hit back, saying the study was both inappropriate and unwarranted. “As you know, TNPCB, after detailed investigation and analysis of all the relevant factors, has taken a decision to refuse renewal of consent for the Sterlite Copper Smelting Plant in Tuticorin. On the basis of scientific studies, TNPCB has concluded that the level of pollution caused by the Sterlite Copper Smelting Plant has gravely affected the health and safety of the residents in the locality, warranting closure of the industry,” Chief Secretary’s letter states. Slamming the conclusion of the report, which is favourable to Sterlite, the Tamil Nadu government questioned the methodology of the study. “This conclusion, which appears to support the Sterlite Industry, is totally unwarranted, besides, being absolutely vague, and is not supported by any empirical data whatsoever. It does not appear to be made on any scientific basis and it is not known how the two scientists who have submitted the report have made such a vague and an unsubstantiated statement in the report,” the letter states. Further, the letter alleges that the report was commissioned to “prejudice the Government of Tamil Nadu and the TNPCB” in cases pending before the Courts. It also stated that such a report was likely to upset the normalcy that has been restored in Thoothukudi. Rejecting the report, the state government has also called upon the Secretary of the Ministry of Water Resources to immediately withdraw the entire report since the TNPCB had already conducted a detailed analysis and reached a decision. The Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board ordered the closure of the plant on May 24, two days after police shot dead 13 civilians during the anti-Sterlite agitations in the district. The state has also since argued against its re-opening in various courts, stating that Sterlite causes pollution in the area.

DMK calls for TN-wide protests against state government on September 18

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Politics
DMK Working President Stalin said the protest aimed at targeting the "misrule" of the government.
DMK President MK Stalin on Saturday said the party has decided to hold protests at various district headquarters on September 18 against the AIADMK-led state government. Speaking to reporters after a meeting of party district secretaries and lawmakers, Stalin said that the protests were aimed at targeting the "misrule" of the government. He added that the DMK demands the dismissal of the gutkha scam-tainted Health Minister C Vijayabaskar and Director General of Police (DGP) TK Rajendran. Stalin said the party also adopted a resolution urging the state government to call a Cabinet meeting and pass a resolution to release the seven convicts in the late former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. He said Governor Banwarilal Purohit should immediately order the release of the seven convicts based on the resolution. A bandh is also set to affect the state on Monday with the Congress calling for a Bharat Bandh over the rising fuel prices. In Tamil Nadu, the DMK, MDMK and Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) have extended their support for the bandh. Fuel prices in the country have been on the rise over the past few months and have almost touched Rs 90 per litre in major cities. While Opposition parties led by the Congress plan to organise a bandh on September 10, Left parties have given a separate call for bandh on the same day. According to reports, Congress has also asked NGOs and civil society groups to join the bandh which will be held from 9 am to 3 pm on Monday. The bandh was finalised in a meeting between top Congress leaders Ahmed Patel and Ashok Gehlot, CPI(M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury, NCP’s Tariq Anwar and JD(U) leader Sharad Yadav.  

West Mambalam, KK Nagar, other areas in Chennai to face 7-hour power cut: Full list

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Power
TANGEDCO announced that power will be restored before the scheduled time if the maintenance works are completed early.
Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation (TANGEDCO) has announced power cuts in some parts of Chennai on September 10, Monday. Power will be shut down from 9 am to 4 pm for maintenance work. However, if the works are completed before 4 pm, the power supply will be restored immediately by TANGEDCO. Here is the list of areas that will face power cut on Wednesday: Ponneri Chitrarajakandigai, Madarpakkam, Pallavada, Poovalai, Kannankottai, Kannanbakkam, Kondamanalore, Equarpalayam, Arambakkam, Nemalure, Budur. West Mambalam Entire West Mambalam, Rangarajapuram to Govindan Road, Railway Border Road, Reddi Kuppam Road, Paulmore Street, Thalayari Street, Padavattam Street, Ariya Gowada Road, Lake View Road, Thambiah Road and Extension, Natesan Street, Kannamapet, Usman Road, Corporation Colony, Mahalakshmi Street, Rameshwaram Street, Rama Nathan Street and Ranganathan Street. KK Nagar KK Nagar, Ashok Nagar, MGR Nagar, Ekkattuthangal, Kalaimagal Nagar, Balaji Nagar, Visalakshi Nagar, part of West Mambalam, Brindavan Nagar, Nakkeeran Street, part of Guindy, Jafferkhanpet, West KK Nagar, part of Nesapakkam, and part of Vadapalani.

Heavy rains, thundershowers in parts of TN, Puducherry over the next 3 days

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Weather
The Regional Weather Forecasting Centre in Chennai said this in a bulletin issued on Friday.
Tamil Nadu and Puducherry are set to experience heavy rainfall and thundershowers over the next few days, the Regional Weather Forecasting Centre in Chennai has said. According to a bulletin issued on Friday, there would be light to moderate rain or thundershowers in a few places in TN and Puducherry on Sunday. Parts of the state and Puducherry are likely to experience moderate to rather heavy rain or thundershowers on Monday and Tuesday. There is likely to be light to moderate rain or thundershowers in a few places in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry on Wednesday, September 12. Heavy rainfall is also likely at isolated places across Tamil Nadu. #WeatherForecast for next 3 days#TamilNadu #ModerateToHeavyRain pic.twitter.com/OifoiqrJgE — TN SDMA (@tnsdma) September 9, 2018 Pradeep John, a weather blogger from the state who posts on his Facebook page ‘Tamil Nadu Weatherman’, said that the next two weeks are likely to bring thunderstorms to northern and interior Tamil Nadu including Dharmapuri, Krishnagiri, Vellore and Tiruvannamalai districts. He also stated that Chennai would experience rains at night. Coonoor in the Nilgiris, Kodaikanal and Dindigul would also experience rainfall, he wrote. While he ruled out the possibility of floods on account of the heavy rainfall, he said, “In particular, 10, 11 and 12th September will see very good and widespread Thunderstorms. Exciting days are ahead in the form of Thunderstorms and much needed rains in the non monsoon areas. Further, as i said September storms are intense.... So one need to be careful when in open ground / ponds mostly in rural areas to avoid being struct from Lightening.” (sic) Many parts of the state experienced hot weather over the past week. According to a report in The Hindu, the Meteorological Department termed September the ‘second summer’. As per the report, which quotes officials, it is “typical for most parts of Tamil Nadu to experience such hot weather conditions as the monsoon gets into a break mode”.

‘DMK and BJP have secret alliance’, alleges AIADMK leader Thambidurai

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Politics
AIADMK leader M Thambidurai said that the recent CBI raids is because of a ‘joint plan’ of the DMK and the BJP.
File image
Just days after the Tamil Nadu government slammed a suo motu groundwater analysis conducted by the Centre in Thoothukudi, senior AIADMK leader and Lok Sabha Deputy Speaker M Thambidurai slammed the BJP and the DMK and alleged that they are in cahoots. Speaking to mediapersons after a party event in Karur district in Tamil Nadu on Sunday, Thambidurai said that the recent CBI raids on Tamil Nadu Health Minister Vijayabaskar and other senior top police officials is because of the ‘joint plan’ by the BJP-led centre and the DMK. “The next plan is to contact the central government and bring down our government through their help. They have hatched a plan and are working together. That's the reason for all these raids. DMK and the BJP in Tamil Nadu have a secret alliance,” Thambidurai said. “The DMK doesn't know what it is doing. They are trying various things to bring down our government for the past one and a half years. But they couldn't do anything.” Referring to DMK chief Stalin, he said, "He tried tearing up his shirt, screaming on the road and breaking the microphones and speakers. They have tried different things. This government continues to function splendidly. People's support also continues.” The proximity of the BJP and the AIADMK has been speculated in Tamil Nadu. Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam had even earlier said that it was Prime Minister Modi’s personal intervention that made him unite with Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami following the death of former CM Jayalalithaa. However, all has not been well in recent days. On September 5, the Ministry of Water Resources conducted a groundwater analysis at the now-defunct Sterlite copper smelter in Thoothukudi district. This, despite the fact that the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board had ordered its closure on May 24. In a strongly-worded letter to the Union Ministry, TN Chief Secretary Girija Vaidyanathan slammed the Centre’s report of the groundwater in Thoothukudi as vague, unscientific and unwarranted.

Kankatala envisions royal Queens from Andhra in their latest saree series

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Fashion
Following great response from Chennai, Kankatala will have an exclusive exhibit at Amethyst, Chennai on September 9 and 10.
How many of us can name five Indian queens or princesses and talk about their achievements? Kankatala, a 75-year-old saree brand is hoping to change that with their Queens of Andhra campaign. To mark the 75th anniversary of their brand, the makers have launched the new line, drawing inspiration from these Queens. Anirudh Kankatala, Director and the brains behind this campaign, shares that most of these queens’ stories have remained in the dark. Having spent six months researching for this project, the team has come up with 10 sarees each for six queens from the region. “We’ve tried to bring out the characteristics of these queens as accurately as we can. Most of them are a mystery, with very little information about them in the public records. For instance, we do not know much about Rani Bhagmati who is supposed to have given Hyderabad its previous name – Bhagyanagaram. The photoshoot for each queen, therefore, was carefully created. For Rani Bhagmati we’ve used ethereal elements like caged flowers and pink streaked skies to bring out her elusive and mysterious beauty,” says Anirudh The team has worked with historians and spent many hours in the library to bring to life these queens from the past. Rani Aadhi Laxmi Devamma from Gadwall known for stalling Nizam of Hyderabad from taking over Gadwall following the demise of her husband; Rani Akka Devi of the Chalukya dynasty; the mysterious Hyderabad beauty Rani Bhagmati; the elegant Visakha queen Rani Chandramani Devi who donated many of her riches; the valorous Nayakuralu Nagamma; and the now popular Rani Rudhramma Devi of the Kakatiya kingdom are the six Queens featured in this collection. Kankatala has worked on bringing out the most distinctive features of these queens in their sarees, blending elements that closely represent each. They’ve closely worked with weavers from across the country, with the Kankatala family members carefully curating each saree. Fabrics like Uppada, Gadwal, Ikkat, Patola, Organza, Paithani, Kota, Benares, Khadi and linen have been used. Anirudh shares that his grandfather, Kankatala Appalaraju, founded the brand in 1943, setting up their first store in the old port town of Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh. From then, the brand has come a long way, with eight stores across the state. Following great response from Chennai, Kankatala will have an exclusive exhibit at Amethyst, Chennai on 9 and 10 September. Customers can also choose to shop on their ecomm portal here.  

TN Cabinet recommends release of 7 Rajiv assassination convicts, 27 yrs after crime

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Rajiv Gandhi assassination case
The decision was taken at the Cabinet meeting convened on Sunday evening.
Putting an end to weeks of speculation surrounding the release of the seven convicts in the assassination of then-sitting Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, the Tamil Nadu government has decided to recommend their release to the Governor. In a cabinet meeting of state ministers on Sunday, Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami decided to recommend the release of Perarivalan, Murugan, Santhan, Nalini, Robert Pious, Jayakumar and Ravichandran- all serving life terms for assassinating then-sitting Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1991.  Addressing media persons after the meeting concluded, TN Fisheries Minister D Jayakumar said, "We have used Article 161 and recommended to the Governor today (Sunday) on the basis of that. The law is interpreted by the Supreme Court. Their direction is most important. Based on that only state has powers. That's why we have decided to recommend this under the leadership of the Chief Minister. Today itself we will immediately recommend to the Governor. If we have gathered on Sunday, then you need to understand the importance of it." Stating that the Governor had to 'mandatorily' accept the state's recommendation, the Minister said, "The Governor will definitely have to accept the cabinet's decision. Governor represents the state. He's the executive for the state. Whatever decision was taken by the government will be executed by the Governor." When asked to respond to the fact that the convicts killed a sitting Prime Minister, Jayakumar said, "CBI probe and investigation is past. What is present? The Tamil people want their release." The decision comes days after the Supreme Court asked Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit to consider the mercy plea of one of the convicts, AG Perarivalan. According to Article 161, Governors have the power to grant pardons and suspend, remit or commute sentences in certain cases On Thursday, a bench of Justices Ranjan Gogoi, Naveen Sinha and KM Joseph disposed of the Centre's petition regarding Tamil Nadu’s proposal to release the convicts. On August 10, the Centre had told the Supreme Court that it will not agree to the release of the prisoners. It maintained that remission of their sentence will set a 'dangerous precedent' and have 'international ramifications'. On August 20 this year, 47-year old Perarivalan told the apex court that no decision has been taken as yet on his mercy petition filed before the Governor. The apex court had earlier asked the Centre to take a decision on a 2016 letter of the Tamil Nadu government seeking its concurrence on the release of the convicts. Months before the former chief minister’s Jayalalithaa’s demise, her chief secretary K Gnanadesikan was directed to write to the BJP government informing that the state was ready to release the convicts - Murugan, Santhan, Robert Payas, Nalini, Ravichandran and Perarivalan. He had filed a mercy petition in 2015 to the then Governor under Article 161 of the constitution. Article 161 gives the constitutional head the power to pardon an offence or suspend the sentence of a convicted individual. In 2014, former Chief Minister Jayalalithaa announced in the state assembly that her government will ensure the release of the convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case irrespective of the Centre's decision in the matter. Former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated on May 21, 1991, at Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu by Dhanu, a woman suicide bomber belonging to the LTTE.
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