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A TN home for persons with mental disabilities shut after video of inmate abuse surfaces

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Abuse
The video showed Krishnamurthi, the owner of 'Anbin Sigaram' in Kanyakumari, mercilessly beating a victim.
On May 20, residents of Kanyakumari who were scrolling through social media were shocked to see a video of a young male being beaten brutally by an older man. The victim was being hit by a thick wooden pole and despite the avalanche of beatings, he remained docile, allowing the attacker to continue the assault. Finally the victim falls to the floor in the video and that is when the man hitting him throws the pole away and walks off.  Amongst those who received this one minute video was S Kumutha, the District Child Protection Officer."The visual was really shocking and it was being circulated across the district," says Kumutha to TNM. "Immediately we tried to identify the location and found that the victim was a 22-year-old from 'Anbin Sigaram', a home for children and adults with mental disabilities. While the victim may technically not be a minor, his mental age is taken into account for the admission there. The man who was beating him was Krishnamurthi, the owner of the home," she adds.'Anbin Sigaram' ironically means peak of affection. And while a complaint was filed on May 21, the home was sealed by the tahsildar only on Monday. The owner who was absconding, was also arrested by the police and booked under sections 341( Punishment for wrongful restraint) and 323 (Punishment for voluntarily causing hurt) of the Indian Penal code. According to District Differently Abled Rehabilitation Officer Kathirvel, the home which is situated at NGO Colony in Nagercoil, has been in existence for close to four years now and admitted even individuals above 18 years.  It had a day school for mentally disabled people and also gave accommodation to individuals whose parents wanted them to stay back at the institution."We had given a complaint to the local police immediately. But the owner was absconding," says Karthirvel. District officials allege that soon after the video of the abuse went viral, Krishnamurthi sent all the inmates to their respective houses, locked the building and left. The video, they suspect, was shot by one of the neighbours."We learnt that he has been abusing the inmates for a long time now and the neighbours have been observing this. Finally one of them has shot this video," says Kumutha. "The inmates who were verbal made it clear that this was not the first time one of them was getting beaten up," she adds.  Only in 2018, a mentally disabled child at a home in Aalangodu, Kanyakumari was rescued after she was confined to a room, tortured and burned by staffers.
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Watch: In car chase, TN cops recover 1000 kg of PDS rice

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Crime
Officials on Tuesday night chased down a car that was smuggling rice to be sold for double its price in Andhra.
An intense car chase in the dark, the path ahead illuminated just by the trailing car’s headlights, takes place on a bumpy, narrow road. Even as the car honks, the Tata Sumo in front of it jolts across the main road in a jiffy and proceeds to the other side.  As the trailing car’s honks get louder, the Tata Sumo finally pulls over to the side of the road and the visual shakily ends. This car chase took place in RK Pet area in Thiruvallur and was done by Thiruvallur Civil Supply CID unit sub-inspector Tr Muthamil Selvan and Inspector Pc Muthumanickam on Tuesday night. In high-speed car chase, #Thiruvallur CSCID unit SI Tr Muthamil Selvan and Pc Muthumanickam catch a TATA Sumo vehicle from smuggling 1000 kg PDS #rice to #Andhra. pic.twitter.com/P37HN1azjn — Anjana Shekar (@AnjanaShekar) May 29, 2019 “We received a tip-off from the Inspector that sacks of fair-price rice, that are sold in our PDS shops, was being smuggled to Andhra and we were waiting in our police vehicle in RK Pet area. Around 9.30 pm we spotted and followed the Tata Sumo for about 2 kilometres and when we finally rounded up the driver, who jumped and ran off into the forest area near RK Pet Pallipet main road,” says Muthamizh Selvan. The driver who absconded has identified as Linganathan, son of Annamalai, a resident of Samathuvapuram in RK Pet. 1000 kilos of rice was recovered from the vehicle which will be sent back to the state’s storage area and will be back in circulation in PDS shops.  The sub-inspector also states the main intent behind such operations are to sell them for double their price in Andhra. He also adds ever since smart cards were issued to households, such incidents have reduced. “This happens quite frequently. There are people who buy rice from people for an amount and sell them in Andhra for double its price. Rice is the main commodity that can be sold like this. We’ve done several seizures in the past, this is the first time it was caught on camera,” he explains. He also adds that unlike rice, items like sugar and dal cannot be sold for twice their price.
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Anna University paper scam: 4 professors including addl, deputy CoE suspended

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Anna University Paper Scam
The professors were accused of helping NRI students by replacing their answer sheets and taking Rs 25,000 to Rs 1 lakh to ensure they score well.
In the latest development in the Anna University paper scam, four Anna University professors including former additional controller of examinations (ACOE) and deputy controller of examinations were suspended on Tuesday following an in-house inquiry that found out about their involvement in the cash-for-marks scandal. The professors include ACOE S Srinivasulu, deputy COE K Selvamani, K Kulothangan from department of Information Technology and Pugazhendi Sugumaran C from Electrical and Electronics Engineering department. They have been accused of helping NRI students by replacing their answer sheets and taking Rs 25,000 to Rs 1 lakh to ensure that the students not only pass but score well in their exams. In a Times of India report, the University officials admitted to having found evidence of their wrongdoing in exams held in April and November 2017. It has also come to light that the original answer sheets of the NRI students were destroyed and in some cases, students who received single digit scores were given marks up to 85 during re-evaluation. In August 2018, a former Controller of Examinations (CoE) of Anna University, GV Uma, along with 38 other employees were suspended over charges of irregularities reported in the re-evaluation of engineering examination answer sheets. Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) filed an FIR against 10 academicians for their alleged involvement in the answer paper scam at Anna University, which happened in August 2017. After the university management suspected signs of a scam, 38 contractual staff members were fired in several instalments from early 2018. The last batch of employees was let go in March 2019, after the university conducted an internal probe into the issue. According to a Times of India report, the scam has been happening for at least 10 years. Also Read: Was Anna University’s internal inquiry into answer paper scam a mere sham?  
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Karti asks SC to refund bond money, court tells him to attend to his constituency

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Court
The newly elected MP wanted a refund of the money he had deposited before he left for foreign trips.
File image/PTI
The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a plea by Sivaganga MP and former Union Minister P Chidambaram’s son Karti Chidambaram for immediate refund of his deposit of Rs 10 crore, while telling the newly-elected Lok Sabha member to "pay attention" to his constituency. Karti Chidambaram is facing proceedings in cases linked to Aircel-Maxis and money laundering. One of the cases includes the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) clearance to INX Media for Rs 305 crore of foreign funds, when his father was the Finance Minister. Karti Chidambaram had moved the apex court seeking release of Rs 10 crore, deposited with the court's registry regarding his overseas travel. His counsel argued that since Karti is back in India, the money deposited with the registry must be refunded."Every time you go abroad you deposit Rs 10crore. Ok..we will refund Rs 10 crore but next time you go we will say deposit Rs 20 crore," a Vacation Bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi told Karti. The court also asked him why he was after the money? He claimed he raised loans to deposit Rs 10 crore and was paying interest on it. His plea was mentioned before the Vacation Bench, comprising Justices Indira Banerjee and Sanjiv Khanna. The bench refused to grant him any relief and instead asked his counsel to mention the matter before the bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi. Earlier, the bench headed by the CJI allowed Karti to travel to the UK, the US, France, Germany and Spain in May and June this year on condition that he deposit Rs 10 crore with the Secretary General of the apex court. The court had said it would be returned to him upon his return. Karti is being investigated by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate (ED). The ED had opposed Karti's travel request but the court had asked Karti to file an undertaking that upon his return, he will fully cooperate with the investigating agencies. He had been out of India for 51 days in the last six months, the probe agency informed the top court.
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Water in TN's Papanasam dam reduces to 10 feet, protests break out in Tirunelveli

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Water crisis
While the district officials blame the failed monsoons, DMK MP Kanimozhi alleges government apathy.
Protests broke out on Wednesday outside the Tirunelveli Collectorate over the lack of water supply to surrounding villages. Over a hundred men and women sat with empty plastic pots under the blazing sun alleging that complaints to the Collector for close to a year now, have fallen on deaf years. Further, the images of the near empty Papanasam dam with dead fish floating on its surface has sparked concern among residents. Several parts of Tamil Nadu are already facing acute water scarcity after multiple failed monsoons. But the fast depleting water of the Papanasam dam, which caters to the needs of Tirunelveli, Thoothukudi and Virudhunagar districts, has proved to be the straw that broke the camel's back. The storage level of the dam located near Tirunelveli which has a maximum capacity of 143 feet currently has water only up to 10 feet. This, reportedly, after the  failure of the southwest monsoon and north east monsoon.  While Collector Shilpa Prabhakar Satish was not available for comment, officials in the local administration told TNM that they were helpless as lack of rainfall had created the shortage. Maintaining drinking water supply to rural and urban localities has proven to be very challenging with water only extracted from Manimuthur, Tirunelveli district’s largest dam. 'Govt apathy to blame'"We are expecting rainfall when Kerala gets showers. But even that seems to be getting delayed," laments a district official. However, DMK leader M Kanimozhi alleges that it is the state government's apathy that must be blamed for the current situation. In a series of tweets, the newly elected Thoothukudi MP says, "Thousands of dead fish are floating on the Papanasam dam which caters to the water needs of Thoothukudi, Tirunelveli and Kanyakumar, after water levels reduced to less than 10 feet. Since this dam was built, no desiltation was done and its base is full of slush. Even the little water extracted from the dam smells and is contaminated, adding to the possibility of disease spreading." She further appeals to the state government to let go of its apathy, remove the dead fish on the dam and begin desiltation work. Speaking to TNM, Tirunelveli MLA Lakshmanan ALS says, "This is the first time in 30 years that the dam is seeing water below 30 feet. It is only the government that can order the Public Works Department and electricity board to look into the desilting. Even now, it is not late. We can clean the dam before the next set of rain which will come in 15 days."  
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TN man arrested after posing as Bollywood singer to extort cash from several women

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Crime
Mahendran Varman was arrested on Wednesday after an affected woman filed a complaint with the Coimbatore SP.
Posing as a Bollywood singer, a 30-year-old man has been duping young women and using their private photos to extort money from them. The Coimbatore District Crime Branch arrested Mahendra Varman on Wednesday after he used social media to impersonate singer Armaan Malik to blackmail the women. Mahendra was arrested after one of the affected women filed an official complaint with the Superintendent of Police of Coimbatore. According to police, Mahendra had created a Facebook profile and Twitter ID through which he pretended to be Armaan Malik by uploading photos and videos of the singer. Armaan is a 23-year-old Bollywood playback singer who was a finalist on Zee Tv’s Sa Re Ma Pa L’il Champs. Through the social media accounts, he sent friend requests to various women. He would spend a few weeks conversing with them before asking them to share their private photos. He then used those photos to blackmail the women, threatening to post them online and extorting cash from the women. The women, in order to prevent the photos from being circulated publicly, would follow Mahendra’s demands. One of the women, however, realised that he was a conman and filed a complaint with the Coimbatore SP, who formed a special team to trace and trap the accused. They had contacted him and lured him to Coimbatore on the pretext of giving him money. An unsuspecting Mahendra was apprehended by the police when he reached Coimbatore from Ulundurpet near Villupuram on Wednesday morning. On questioning him, he allegedly revealed that he had used his mobile phone and tablet to lure the women in question. Speaking to TNM about the arrest, SP Sujith Kumar said that though the police do not have an exact figure of the money extorted by Mahendra yet, the amount could be anywhere upwards of Rs 15 lakh. The police has registered an FIR against him for extortion, compelling a woman to be naked, criminal intimidation and various other sections of the Information Technology Act.
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How Chennai’s OMR residents are at the mercy of private water tankers

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Urban Infrastructure
With borewells running dry and no piped water connection, residents of Chennai’s OMR have no option but to rely on private tankers.
Image for representation/PTI
For around four lakh families living in the IT hub of Chennai, one of their biggest fears came true when private water tankers threatened to go on strike from May 27. Also known as the IT Expressway due to the hundreds of IT and ITES companies that dot the skyline, the Old Mahabalipuram Road (OMR) is solely dependent on private water tankers for potable water supply. The strike, that was later withdrawn, was the reason OMR residents chose to write to the Chief Minister seeking his attention at their grave situation. With groundwater depleted and borewells going dry, the severe water crisis in Chennai has forced residents in several neighbourhoods to rely on water tankers– managed both by private players and the Chennai Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board (CMWSSB). Residents like those in OMR, who have no piped water connection, say they have no option but to depend on private water tankers, even when they increase prices at whim. At the mercy of water tankers One homeowner in Navalur tells TNM that in addition to depending on private water tankers, residents have to pay the exorbitant rates quoted. "At the beginning of the summer we would have agreed upon a particular rate. But as the days go by, the tankers will start demanding more money. They behave like a cartel and so we cannot even look for an alternative. Rates are doubled and even tripled sometimes. Even appealing to the local panchayat leader about this was of no use," he says, on the condition of anonymity. While a 9 Kilolitre water tanker from CMWSSB costs Rs 750, the rates for a private water tanker charges anywhere upwards of Rs 1200.   Srikanth, a resident of Olympia Opaline, which has around 120 residential units within the gated enclave in Navalur, says, “Though we have always purchased water as this place is outside metrowater limits, the sudden price increase has happened with us as well. As of now, we spend around Rs 2,000 for one tanker and we buy 20 such tankers per day to cater to the needs of our residents.” Speaking to TNM, Harsha Koda, Coordinator of FOMRRA, a collective of 100 Resident Welfare Associations on OMR says that they have been pushed to this situation because CMWSSB’s water tanker do not supply to this stretch (OMR). “Their online booking system is not reliable. It has crashed for the last three days and we can't make a booking because they take five days to give water. They are not able to bridge the gap and when a private player has stepped into do it for a charge, they shouldn't make things harder,” he explains. No pipelines, no water Harsha says that the many appeals to CMWSSB to provide them with a water pipeline connection have only fallen on deaf ears. “They keep saying that they will give us a connection in a couple of months but it has been 10 years since these promises started. We were initially told we will get water from the Nemmeli desalination plant. But it bypasses us and goes to Velachery because the Corporation has not completed the pipeline work here. Chennai Corporation keeps blaming the Public Works Department (PWD) and CMWSSB alternatively for lack of progress,” he observes. Emphasising on the point that the fees paid to CMDA during construction of the apartments includes electricity and water connection charges, Harsha says that despite paying the amount, residents are left in the lurch. Some residents on OMR also expressed their anger at having to pay water taxes when they were yet to get a single drop from the state.  “We live in constant anxiety over water. Every morning when we go for a walk we first ask if the water lorry came. This is our primary cause of concern," Harsha laments. Are flat owners to be blamed? However, there has also been criticism that Chennai’s expansion and the unscrupulous construction of apartments on the OMR has in many ways caused this crisis. Many have also pointed out that several of these house owners knew exactly what they were getting into – a property with no water connection.   KP Subramaniam, visiting professor, Urban Engineering in Anna University however rejects such criticism. Placing the blame squarely on the city planning authorities for the present crisis, he says, “When plots/flats approved by appropriate authorities are made available for sale, how can housing aspirants be blamed? How would they apprehend scarcity of essential amenities? It’s only the planning authorities, who should have forecasted and analysed all those issues. Therefore, if at all, it’s only the failure of planning and not the people.”  Adding that the growth of Chennai can be countered only through appropriate strategies and policy corrections, Subramaniam points out that these issues can be solved only by pumping investment for industrialisation and infrastructure development of Tier II cities like Coimbatore, Madurai, Trichy, Salem and Tirunelveli.  Demand-supply gap will soon be bridged  Speaking to TNM about the water woes faced by the residents of OMR, a senior official from CMWSSB says that the authorities are working to augment the supply. “We have around 900 tanker lorries of various sizes on hire. These lorries make around 9,000 trips a day together. Of this, around 6,500 trips are free trips, which means the tankers go to areas which already has deficit of water supply and provide water for free. The remaining is set aside for ‘Book a water tanker’ service,” he says. The CMWSSB supplies around 525 MLD of water to Chennai every day when demand is 830 MLD during the peak summer season. The water authority introduced the facility to book water tankers in 2017, by which consumers can purchase water from CMWSSB on payment of a fee. Consumers can book tankers through the Chennai Metrowater website using their unique water connection IDs. The CMWSSB official adds that they receive at least 3,500 such bookings per day through the website and since there is no upper limit on the number of bookings that can be made, there are a lot of backlogs and duplications. “We are in the process of readying up smaller vehicles with 2,000-3,000 litres capacity with tankers to ply as makeshift water carriers. We intend to hire 200 such vehicles in the coming days to ease up the situation. These vehicles will be making 15-20 trips a day which adds up to 3,000-4,000 trips a day over and above the 2,500 trips we already have,” he added. He also added that on the demand side, the CMWSSB is trying to streamline the bookings so as to prevent duplication. “A lot of bookings happening today is panic-induced booking. We will try to increase the trips and are streamlining the process. I am sure that the situation will soon be addressed,” he added. Pipeline project in progress As regards to the residents’ accusations of CMWSSB not laying pipelines in OMR, the official says that only the areas that were newly added to Greater Chennai Corporation in 2011 face this issue. “Building a pipeline system goes through multiple stages. OMR is one of the newly added areas and in all these areas, project for laying water and sewerage pipelines is already in various stages of execution,” he explains. He also attributes the delay in execution of infrastructure works to the terrain of the southern part of the city. “The southern part of the city has a rocky structure. This makes it three times difficult to carry out the works when compared with a locality with normal geological structure,” he says and adds that the water board has also acted on a lot of contractor issues which delayed the work further. However, the official is quick to disagree with the claims that the water tax paid by the residents is of no use. “Tax which is paid to us is nothing but a part of the property tax. It is levied because they have a property in that area. These taxes basically fund a good portion of the infrastructure works carried out to provide necessary services to the people,” he explains and points out that residents who have piped water connection are levied user charges in addition to the water tax they pay. Assuring that the state government is working towards framing guidelines to regulate the private water tankers in the city, the officer says that CMWSSB is working hard to address the situation and sort it out. “Chennai is probably the only metropolitan city which does not have a perennial source of water to supply to its residents. So, having a connection or laying a pipeline is not going to be enough. We have to augment water sources in the same manner, which we are doing,” he explains, adding that by 2025, Chennai will have an additional source to provide 650 MLD of water to cater to its residents needs.
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Vadivelu clueless about Neasamani storm, says happy to have made people laugh

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Kollywood
When informed of the internet circus around his character Neasamani, Vadivelu breaks into amused laughter, barely able to contain himself.
(Screenshot from the movie Cheena Thaana 001)
For over 12 hours, a Twitter storm has been blowing as netizens have come together to pray for Contractor Neasamani, a character played by comedian Vadivelu in the 2001 Tamil movie Friends. But fast asleep through this hilarious social media exchange in Theni district was the actor himself, who was flabbergasted when told about how this scene from two decades ago has become the subject of India's number one Twitter trend. Speaking to TNM on Thursday morning, a surprised Vadivelu says, "I have no idea what is happening. I haven't seen anything yet." When informed of the internet circus around his character Neasamani, Vadivelu breaks into amused laughter, barely able to contain himself."What? It has become famous across the world? Oh god. It has gone to America and everywhere? Thank you," he says, addressing his fans now. "Yes, the movie was with Vijay and Suriya.  I have acted in a lot of movies and made the whole world laugh. But I didn't know about this," he adds. The actor further told Tamil channel Puthiya Thalaimurai that characters like Neasmani were a god-given gift to his career. #Pray_for_Neasamani trended after a Pakistan-based meme page Civil Engineering Learners posed a question, “What is the name of the tool in your country?” by posting a photo of a hammer. A Vadivelu fan was quick to connect the hammer with a scene from Friends, in which Contractor Neasamani ends up with an injury because one of his inept assistants (Ramesh Kanna) drops a hammer on his head after failing to follow the simplest of instructions. The humour in the scene is accentuated by the poker-faced expressions of Vijay and Suriya, who play second fiddle to Vadivelu. After the user connected the hammer to Neasamani, another Tamil Facebook user, mockingly wrote, “Is he ok?” Now these two decided to rib the entire Facebook culture of praying for someone with #Pray_for_Neasamani which later snowballed into a major Twitter trend with memes and funny responses. Following this, even journalists and politicians joined the joke and began to add more satirical tweets to the growing trend. Brands too joined in, making Neasamani ads, the latest being Sony Music which has released a special collection of songs for 'Pray for Neasamani'.  Even Manushyaputhiran, a poet and DMK supporter joined the trend, penning a poem for the contractor, who he says, passed away after being in a coma. Linking the Twitter trend to the ongoing political scenario, Manushiyaputiran pointed out that on a day that the PM was being sworn in, the death of Neasamani was seen as a sign of misfortune. Taking a dig at the BJP, the poet adds that nobody is really bothered because bad things happened even when people were promised that 'Good days will come'. Several social media users pointed out that the entire phenomenon was actually a tribute to actor Vadivelu's evergreen comedy scenes. He has acted in over 100 films in Tamil cinema and received several awards for his comic timing and ability to make members of all age groups laugh. From 2012 however, he slowly began to reduce the number of film he acted in and was last seen in the Tamil movie Mersal in 2017. But today, as #Pray_for_Neasamani evokes mirth across the world, Vadivelu wants to join the laughter."Send me the memes on Whatsapp," he says, before signing off.   Also read: Who is Contractor Neasamani and why is the world praying for him?   
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Big disappointment for AIADMK, no minister from party in Modi Cabinet

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Politics
The AIADMK had hoped to secure a Minister of State post for either Deputy CM O Panneerselvam’s son, Raveendranath Kumar or R Vaithilingam.
It is one disappointment after another for the AIADMK government ever since the Lok Sabha election results were announced. Contesting the General Elections as part of an alliance with the PMK and BJP, the party managed to secure only one seat and had been eyeing a ministerial berth in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's new Cabinet.  On Thursday, after the swearing-in ceremony, however, it became clear that the state of Tamil Nadu will have no representation in the Centre, neither from the BJP, nor from the AIADMK. This seems to be a fallout of the rift between the O Paneerselvam and Edapadi Palainiswamy factions in the AIADMK.  First-time MP and son of Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, Raveendranath Kumar and Rajya Sabha MP R Vaithilingam were in a race for a Minister of State (MoS) post, according to AIADMK sources. They were both expecting to receive phone calls from the Prime Minister's office ahead of the swearing-in ceremony but both had told TNM that there was no communication regarding a ministerial post. Chief Minister Edapaddi Palaniswami had backed Vaithilingam, arguing that he is a senior leader with more political experience. Vaithilingam used to be the state Housing Minister before the 2016 assembly election and has been elected as MLA from the Orathanad constituency in 2001, 2006 and 2011.  Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, meanwhile, saw the ministerial post as a given, considering that his son was the only AIADMK candidate to win a seat in the Lok Sabha polls in Tamil Nadu. With 5,04,813 votes, 39-year-old Raveendranath managed to gain 43.02% of the total votes in Theni constituency. Next in line with less than 8000 votes away was EVKS Elangovan from the Congress. Raveendranath, according to sources, had requested to become the Minister of State in either the Communications, Aviation or Fertilisers Ministry. Both Raveendranath and Vaithilingam refused to comment on their prospects ahead of the ceremony. AIADMK Rajya Sabha MP Navaneethakrishnan, however, told TNM neither MP was likely to get a seat."As far as I know the BJP government is not giving them any post in the ministries. This would not have been the case if Amma (former chief minister J Jayalalithaa) was there," he said. "But whatever the ruling party is doing, it is for the nation," he hurriedly added.
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Andhra Chief Minister Jagan says DMK's Stalin will be sworn in as TN CM

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Politics
Stalin had attended the swearing-in of Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy in Vijayawada on Thursday.
Even as YSRCP chief Jagan Mohan Reddy took oath as Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister on Thursday, he said that DMK chief and Leader of the Opposition in Tamil Nadu MK Stalin would hopefully be sworn in as Chief Minister in the neighbouring state. Stalin had attended the oath-taking ceremony in Vijayawada, even as both leaders gave PM Modi’s swearing-in a miss.  According to one report in the Times of India, Jagan said, “With God’s blessing and my prayers, he (Stalin) will be sworn in as chief minister of Tamil Nadu." Stalin, who was seated on stage with other leaders, including Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao, reportedly smiled back. The YSRCP chief had swept to power in Andhra Pradesh last week, winning 151 seats in the 175-member Legislative Assembly, in addition to 22 out of 25 Lok Sabha seats. Earlier on Thursday, Stalin had tweeted saying he was delighted to be at the event. "On behalf of the Tamil people and DMK, I wish him a successful tenure as Andhra Chief Minister filled with pro-poor and pro-farmer schemes in the footsteps of his father and former Chief Minister YSR." he wrote. Delighted to attend the swearing-in ceremony of @ysjagan at Vijayawada. On behalf of the Tamil people and DMK, I wish him a successful tenure as Andhra Chief Minister filled with pro-poor and pro-farmer schemes in the footsteps of his father and former Chief Minister YSR. pic.twitter.com/VWkqoiXwBq — M.K.Stalin (@mkstalin) May 30, 2019 Despite emerging the third largest party in the Lok Sabha polls winning 37 of 38 seats in the state, it was reported that the DMK chief was not invited to the swearing-in ceremony of PM Modi. Speaking to The Hindu, one senior DMK leader said, “We were not expecting an invitation from them and neither were we dying to attend it anyway. All parliamentarians as a norm are called for the events. Our invitation cards were dumped at the Tamil Nadu house and not sent individually to any of us.” Meanwhile, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami and actor Rajinikanth were present to witness the oath-taking at the Rashtrapati Bhavan
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TN shops not to sell tobacco products to mark World No Tobacco Day

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Health
This is the first time such a move is being undertaken in Tamil Nadu.
Image for representation
The Tamil Nadu Forum for Trader's Associations has urged traders across the state to not sell tobacco on Friday as a mark of respect for World No Tobacco Day. This is also reportedly the first time such a move is being undertaken.  According to one report in The New Indian Express, Vellaiyan, president of the Tamil Nadu Vanikargal Sangangalin Peravai, was addressing a gathering when he announced the decision. “We have sent communication to all our members. No shop in the State will sell tobacco products tomorrow,” he reportedly said. Dr V Shanta, chairperson of Adyar Cancer Institute, added that move was aimed at creating awareness and helping with measures to contain the increasing usage of tobacco products.  According to one report in The Hindu, she also urged the government to ensure speedy implementation of tobacco vendor licensing. The proposed vendor licensing is meant to crackdown on illegal sellers of tobacco products. Vendors who intend to sell tobacco will need a license to do so, failing which they will lose their license. This is in contrast to the existing plan where vendors can pay a fine and go back to tobacco sale, reported the newspaper. According to the World Health Organisation, the focus of World No Tobacco Day this year is on "tobacco and lung health." The campaign aims to increase awareness on: the negative impact that tobacco has on people’s lung health, from cancer to chronic respiratory disease, the fundamental role lungs play for the health and well-being of all people. "The campaign also serves as a call to action, advocating for effective policies to reduce tobacco consumption and engaging stakeholders across multiple sectors in the fight for tobacco control." says the WHO.
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CBI moves Delhi HC to expedite hearing in 2G case

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2G case
With the move coming a day after the Modi government was sworn in, DMK MP Kanimozhi, speaking to TNM, asked why the CBI found it necessary to expedite the case.
Close to a week after the DMK became the third largest party in the Lok Sabha, the CBI has moved the Delhi High Court to expedite hearing of its appeal against the acquittal of the accused in the 2G spectrum allocation case. The accused include former Union Telecom Minister A Raja and DMK’s newly-elected Thoothukudi MP Kanimozhi, daughter of former Chief Minister and late party chief M Karunanidhi. A source in the CBI confirmed that the High Court will now hear the plea to expedite on July 30 and that notices have been issued to the accused.  On 21 December 2017, a special court in New Delhi acquitted all the 17 accused in the case including Kanimozhi and A Raja. The verdict was based on the fact that CBI could not find any evidence against them in the seven years of investigation and trial. Special CBI judge OP Saini had said, "Some people created a scam by artfully arranging a few selected facts and exaggerating things beyond recognition to astronomical levels." The DMK had faced a massive electoral loss in the 2011 Tamil Nadu Assembly Elections and 2014 Lok Sabha Elections as backlash to the alleged corruption in allocation of 2G license. The state is set to head for its next polls in 2021 and local body elections could be held as early as August. The move comes a day after the Narendra Modi-led government was sworn in.  Speaking to TNM, Kanimozhi says, "We have to ask the government why this case is suddenly being expedited. We faced the courts, we didn't try to postpone or drag the case. We tried to finish it as soon as possible. All those accused were proved to be innocent by the trial court. Judge OP Saini had given a very clear judgement. Why should they expedite the case? But whatever it is we will face it." The CBI's decision to move against the acquittal comes after a scathing verdict from Justice OP Saini who said that, "...I have absolutely no hesitation in holding that the prosecution has miserably failed to prove any charge against any of the accused, made in its well-choreographed chargesheet...There is no evidence on the record produced before the court indicating any criminality in the acts allegedly committed by the accused persons...The chargesheet of the instant case is based mainly on misreading, selective reading, nonreading and out of context reading of the official record...The chargesheet is based on some oral statements made by the witnesses during the investigation,  which the witnesses have not owned up in the witness box." The CBI in its chargesheet had alleged that there was a loss of Rs 30,984 crore to the exchequer in the allocation of licenses for the 2G spectrum. In addition to the DMK leaders, former Telecom Secretary Siddharth Behura, Chandolia, Unitech Ltd MD Sanjay Chandra and three top executives of Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group  -- Gautam Doshi, Surendra Pipara and Hari Nair were also acquitted in the CBI's case.  
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PMK to continue fight against Chennai Salem Expressway

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Chennai-Salem Expressway
The PMK contested the recently-concluded Lok Sabha polls as part of the AIADMK-BJP alliance. Both parties have been pushing for the project.
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Former Union Minister and PMK leader Anbumani Ramadoss on Friday said the party will continue its legal fight against Chennai-Salem eight-lane expressway project. In a statement issued in Chennai on Friday, Ramadoss said that the PMK had been opposing the project as it was unnecessary as there were three highways connecting Chennai and Salem and one national highway was being converted into a four-lane road between Vaniambadi and Salem. Sections of the media reported on Friday that the Tamil Nadu government has filed an appeal in the Supreme Court against the Madras High Court's order quashing the land acquisition proceedings for the project. Ramadoss said that the proposed 277-km eight lane Expressway will affect the livelihood of over 10,000 farmers. Tamil Nadu had witnessed massive protests last year over the Chennai-Salem Greenfield Expressway. Farmers and residents had staged protests in several villages accusing the government of not consulting them before taking away their agricultural land and livelihoods. The centrally sponsored project traverses through the districts of Chennai, Kanchipuram, Tiruvannamalai, Krishnagiri, Dharmapuri, and Salem. The project under the Bharatmala Pariyojana, was proposed by the state government with the aim to cut down travel time between Chennai and Salem. Its sudden proposal, and prompt approval by the central government in February last year had raised eyebrows. Both the Modi government and the AIADMK government in Tamil Nadu are interested in the project. The PMK contested the recently-concluded Lok Sabha polls as part of the AIADMK-BJP alliance. The alliance managed to win just one of 38 seats in the state while Anbumani Ramadoss lost his Dharmapuri seat to the DMK. In April, the Madras High Court quashed the land acquisition proceedings as the project would affect the environment and environment clearance was necessary for the road project.  (With IANS input) 
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Chennai local trains lose 18 lakh commuters in April, users may be moving to Metro

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Railways
This steep fall in patronage could be due to the migration of commuters to the Chennai Metro Rail whose Airport-Washermanpet line runs parallel to the Tambaram-Chennai Beach-Tiruvallur suburban lines.
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Chennai’s suburban rail network that connects Chennai with places like Tambaram, Arakkonam and Tiruvallur has lost around 18 lakh in April 2019. A statistical report from Southern Railways said that the network has lost around 60,000 commuters a day in April 2019, reported Times of India.  The number of commuters in suburban network is 30.8 million in April 2019 and 34.3 million in March 2019 as against the corresponding figures of 32 million and 33.2 million for April and March 2018 respectively. This steep fall in patronage could be due to the migration of commuters to the Chennai Metro Rail network whose Airport-Washermanpet line runs parallel to the Tambaram-Chennai Beach-Tiruvallur suburban lines. Chennai Metro rail now has a patronage of around 90,000 commuters everyday, which translates into 30 lakh users a month, ToI reported. It is not just the number of users that has reduced, but the number of commuters using the first class season ticket on suburban network has also decreased, says the report. While the number of season ticket holders has fallen by 40,000, the regular travellers who use first class coaches in local trains have also decreased by 1,000. The first class fare in Chennai’s suburban trains are 5-10 times the normal fare and officials doubt that it could be these travellers who could have migrated to the metro railway service since the fares are almost the same.  Chennai metro rail’s air-conditioned rakes and connectivity to populous localities in Chennai like Anna Nagar could be a possible reason for the migration, the officials claim. Another possible reason for the sharp fall in patronage could be the frequent cancellation of suburban trains services by Southern Railways due to scheduled maintenance work on the line. However, the officials have expressed confidence that the numbers would pick up once schools and colleges reopen in June. 
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To tackle Chennai’s water crisis, TN govt sanctions Rs 233 crore

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Water Crisis
Chennai’s reservoirs hold only 0.58% of the total capacity as of Friday.
File Image/PTI
In an attempt to tackle the severe water crisis in Chennai, the government of Tamil Nadu has sanctioned Rs 233 crore for getting water projects in the city up and running. In the review meeting held in the Secretariat on Friday, which saw the participation of a slew of higher officials including the Minister for Municipal Administration and Water Supply SP Velumani, the government allocated money to tap more water from the available sources in the outskirts of the metro city. After the meeting, SP Velumani said that the CMWSSB was supplying 525 MLD of water at present and despite the drought conditions it would supply at least 500 MLD from June to November, when the monsoons are expected to arrive. The meeting comes at a time when the water levels in the storage tanks that supply to Chennai are abysmally low. The cumulative storage in all four reservoirs that supply water to Chennai is 11,257 mcft. The water level on Friday stood at  a cumulative level of 65 mcft, which is 0.58% of the total capacity. This is in sharp contrast to the water level on the same day last year, when the water levels were well above 2,000 mcft. At present, the two desalination plants at Nemmeli and Minjur supply 100 MLD of water each. Water is also tapped from stone quarries in Sikkarayapuram to the extent of 30 MLD and soon quarries in Erumaiyur will also join the supply. Works are also underway to bring water from Retteri, Ayanambakkam and Perubakkam tanks and also to tap water from 126 borewells in the city’s periphery. The minister also said that a a work order for a third desalination plant at Nemmeli with a capacity of 150 MLD was issued on May 25.
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DMK workers were insulted with caste abuses by AIADMK and PMK: MP Thol Thirumavalavan

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Politics
The newly-elected MP, in an interview to a Tamil channel said that electoral alliances can change according to situation.
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Days after his win from the Chidambaram (Reserved) constituency, VCK leader Thol Thirumavalavan said that DMK partymen could have worked harder in his constituency in the run-up to the polls. Speaking to Thambi Tamilarasan of the Tamil TV channel Puthiya Thalaimurai, the Dalit leader said that the DMK workers who were canvassing for votes in Chidambaram before the elections were insulted by the AIADMK and PMK workers using caste names. “There is no proof whatsoever to say that DMK men worked against me. But we can say that they did not work hard and the reason for this is that they were humiliated to that level using caste. Tolerating all the insults thrown at them, the DMK functionaries worked for me in Chidambaram,” he said adding that however in some areas, the DMK men were open with me and said that they will ensure votes from those pockets but the focus must be to not let any violence break out in those regions. Explaining further about the logic of protecting the region from incidents of violence, Thirumavalavan said, “They just did not want any violence to crop up in any of the constituencies because they knew that such incidents would definitely divide the electorate into Dalits and non-Dalits.” Thirumavalavan won from Chidambaram by a slim margin of 3,219 votes against the AIADMK candidate Chandrasekar. The contest was so tough that the leads kept oscillating every hour since the minute counting began in the sensitive constituency. Finally it was after the district collector intervened that Thirumavalavan was declared winner from the seat. Commenting on his victory in Chidambaram, Thirumavalavan said that it was the victory of BJP at the Centre that continued to bother him. “Though I won, what worries me the most is that who shouldn’t have won the mandate at the centre ultimately won. Who would save this country? This worry is more than the happiness that I get from my victory and our alliance partner DMK’s victory,” he said. There have been widespread criticisms from all the quarters that the margin of Thirumavalavan’s victory could have been wider had he contested on DMK’s Rising Sun symbol, much like his party colleague D Ravikumar in Villupuram. Responding to those criticisms, Thirumavalavan said that it was a conscious decision to not contest in DMK’s symbol and to instead contest in his own independent symbol in Chidambaram. In the interview, Thirumavalavan also clarified his stance on electoral alliances in Tamil Nadu. His comments on how parties choose alliance partners based on situations had ruffled quite some feathers in Tamil Nadu’s political circles. Standing by his take that electoral alliances are indeed based on the situation before the polls, Thirumavalavan said, “Assembly election is different and parliamentary election is different. That is what I said. We were there with DMK since 2016 Assembly elections but still DMK proceeded to hold talks with PMK first for the general elections. So every party decides alliances based on winning chances during elections. That is not wrong.” He also reiterated that VCK will not be a part of the side which has PMK in it.   PMK, a political party that favours a dominant caste in Tamil Nadu, the Vanniyars, has been accused several times of inciting caste-based violence in north Tamil Nadu. The party’s unofficial stance is against the VCK, which is a pro-Dalit party.
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Are CBSE schools in TN gaming their admission schedule to evade RTE quota?

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Education
And despite the issue being raised by the state education department, CBSE has been claiming the board has ‘no control’ over how schools admit students.
Image for representation/PTI
Many parents who belong to marginalised sections of society, or earn less than Rs 2 lakh per annum in Tamil Nadu, were in for a shock recently when they tried to file a school application under the Right To Education (RTE) quota for their children. In most districts, they found CBSE schools missing from the list of schools with RTE quota seats, pushing them to give up their dreams of enrolling their children in CBSE schools. The reason? Several CBSE schools are allegedly evading the RTE rules by conducting their admissions before the official RTE schedule. While the state government claims to be taking steps to address this issue, authorities are wary about the inaction by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), the regulatory body which sets rules for CBSE schools across the country. In Tamil Nadu, all private unaided schools are compulsorily required to allocate 25% of the total available seats in entry level classes (Kindergarten and Class 1) for students from marginalised sections of the society. Essentially this includes children from socially and economically disadvantaged families, children of HIV+ parents, children with parents who work as scavengers, and children with physical disabilities. The process for applying for one of the schools for RTE quota seats was made fully online this year (for academic year 2019-20) in Tamil Nadu. The online application process in Tamil Nadu started on April 22 and ended on May 18. It was during this period that many parents discovered that the CBSE schools in their districts did not show up on the list of schools with RTE allocation in the application form. This prompted many parents to call various NGOs and volunteer organisations to figure out the reason for such a lapse. Speaking to TNM about this, Saravanan, a volunteer with Bhumi, an NGO that works in the RTE domain in Tamil Nadu, said that the organisation’s helpline was buzzing with scores of calls, all from worried parents who could not find the CBSE school of their preference in the RTE application website. “All these years, CBSE schools and a lot of private matriculation schools have dodged RTE norms because of reimbursement issues from the government. This year, based on information we got from the Directorate of Matriculation Schools in Chennai, CBSE schools stayed away from RTE admissions because they apparently have closed their admissions by February itself,” he explained. Confirming this, Dr S Kannappan, the Director of Matriculation Schools, Tamil Nadu told TNM that CBSE schools have stayed out of RTE all this while because they claim to complete admissions by March. “We have taken this up with the CBSE many times and every time the board tells us that it is the prerogative of the schools to do so, and that they have no control over it. The term ‘private unaided school’ given in the act includes all schools – be it matriculation or CBSE – and hence the schools closing the admissions way before the set deadline is not correct,” he said. Adding that this year the state government has initiated process to bring CBSE schools in Tamil Nadu within the ambit of RTE quota, Kannappan said that moving forward the process will be regularised. “This year itself the district educational officers have submitted a special report on this violation to us. We will study it and do the needful so that the students are not losing out on their rightful education,” he said. Tamil Nadu government’s order on RTE admissions has prescribed tentative timelines for all the schools which conduct RTE admissions. According to the information published on the Department of School Education website of the government of Tamil Nadu, the tentative timeline for RTE admissions start from April 2 every year when the schools prepare an intake capacity report, and end on or before May 29 every year. Going by this timeline, the process of CBSE schools completing 100% admissions by February or even March every year is a violation of the RTE norms in the state, activists say. Despite multiple attempts on call and messages, CBSE officials could not be reached for a comment. 
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Forget kothu parotta or chilly parotta, if you’re in Madurai try the bun parotta

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Food
This Madurai special traces its origin to a roadside eatery that was started in the early ‘90s.
You might be familiar with the south Indian parotta (pronounced barotta/prota) in its many forms - kothu parotta, chilly parotta, parotta salna, to name a few - but have you tasted or heard of bun parotta? If you are from Madurai, you might know of its fame but if you aren't, this cross between a bun and a parotta is a must try! Served with the choicest of sides like mutton chukka or quail (kaada) gravy, this puffed up parotta makes for a scrumptious meal.   Crispy and golden brown on the outside, chewy, flaky and soft on the inside, this Madurai special traces its origin to a roadside eatery that was started in the early ‘90s. You can head towards Madurai’s KK Nagar locality and ask anyone on the road to direct you to the roadside stall that makes and sells bun parotta.  The making of the dough in itself is a spectacle worth watching, a show that begins at 2.00 pm every day, right when Madurai’s gears reach a slow grind at mid-afternoon. If you’re stopping at the traffic signal at this junction around this time, an interesting sight awaits you. A group of five men headed by Durai Pandi, the parotta master, scratch clean and wipe a long stainless steel table with short slabs on its three sides. This is the work table where the parotta dough will be mixed. Several sacks of maida are emptied onto this work table. A very thin layer of the flour is blown away from the mountain, coating the pavement floor and the vehicles parked nearby with fine white dust.  The mountain’s peak is then flattened and evenly heaped to its sides to form a well in the centre where several ingredients will be mixed in quick succession. Into this well, 65-70 eggs are cracked open, six to seven litres of milk is poured and the mix is beaten well to form a smooth yellow liquid. Half a kilogram of sugar and the required amounts of salt are swiftly blended into this mix that will soon have to be buried with maida.  The dough drinks close to 75 litres of water to take its shape, and from this moment on is a carefully choreographed dance with just the hands: fingers clawing and scrunching, forearms pushing, pulling and tearing the dough apart.  In the beginning, the maida is scooped from the sides and dropped into the centre where it melts first and then starts getting thicker until it becomes an ivory mass of tough looking dough. The men slowly move around the table, repeating their movements without a pause. It is stretched and pressed until its texture turns smooth and taut. The dough is covered in wet plastic sheets and a moist towel and allowed to rest for about 20 minutes. The men flex their arms briefly before getting to it once again, but this time cutting it into portions and shaping them separately. These portions, heaped one on top of the other in smooth cylindrical rolls, are made into small balls, greased with oil, ready to be rolled using the veechu method. Around 5.00 pm the first batch of bun parotta is made for the day. For the uninitiated, the veechu can be compared to the Rumali roti from North India - thin and multi-layered parotta. In Tamil, Veechu means ‘to throw’. Here, the dough is spread thin, flipped and stretched multiple times in the air and with deft hand movements, the slim dough is twisted and rolled into a small bun sized piece. This is patted down and shallow fried on a wide pan mounted atop a coal-fired stove. Cooking oil in small amounts is poured on top of it and the smooth dough fluffs up and crisps before it is turned to its other side.  Heaping the oily bun parottas on a plate, one member from the team roughs them up, clapping the parottas in between his palms, an action that gives the veechu layers more definition.   Served with some of the spiciest meat sides, Madurai’s bun parotta is considered a treat not just by the locals but by everyone who visits the city. The street joint Madurai Bun Parotta Kada, was started together by Karupanna and his wife Vijayam in 1991. The couple claim that it was here that the bun parotta was envisioned for the first time by their first parotta master. “We get customers from Singapore, Malaysia who come here asking for parcels. Chennai people, especially, love it. We didn’t think it would become so famous back then. Now it has become a Madurai special,” laughs Karupanna. Karupanna One plate of bun parotta is priced between Rs 90 and Rs 100. While the stall remained open until 2.00 am in the ‘90s, when Madurai was more vibrantly the ‘Thoonga Nagaram’, today it closes by 12.00 midnight. For indoor ambience, Madurai Bun Parotta Kadai has also opened its doors on Madurai-Kallal Road. 
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This Chennai teen animal activist plans on selling his family's house to build a shelter

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Animal Shelter
18-year-old Sai Vignesh is hoping to open a safe shelter for sick animals to be cared for and a place abandoned pets can call home.
Sai Vignesh was seven years old when he first began feeding strays, a habit he made a part of his routine after he lost his pet dog Bairava when he was 5. While Vignesh himself has not adopted another pet since, he has helped several abandoned dogs find new homes after the 2015 floods in Chennai. When Cyclone Vardah wreaked havoc the next year, 16-year-old Sai Vignesh began rescuing and treating injured animals and birds. The same year, he turned vegan. Now at 18, Sai Vignesh’s independent house in Alapakkam has 15 injured and abandoned dogs, all of whom he personally cares for, in addition to 15 other dogs he regularly visits and tends to in paid boarding facilities. Since 2017, Sai Vignesh has vaccinated and sterilised hundreds of stray dogs through camps and drives and has helped find homes for over 200 dogs and cats. He also estimates that he has resqued close to 300 animals in distress so far. The young law aspirant now hopes to open an animal shelter, a safe space where sick animals are cared for and a place that abandoned pets can call home. This was a dream he first had two years ago, in 2017. “But I knew I was inexperienced. So I worked in shelters, understanding how to give animals the care that they need,” he tells TNM. Sai Vignesh has actively been working as an animal rescuer and activist in the city since 2017. To be called 'Almighty Animal Care Sanctuary,' which will be run by his Almighty Animal Care Trust, Sai Vignesh plans on opening a medical dispensary in addition to the shelter. “I want to be able to care for parvo- and distemper- affected dogs as well. Usually, they are not taken in by hospitals because they are contagious. I would like to be able to take them in and treat them in isolation. I will also take in paralysed dogs and cats, abandoned animals right from dogs to horses,” he explains. For this, Sai Vignesh has received 8.4 acres of land from a generous donor and an animal enthusiast. “Sivamani sir donated his land in Tiruvallur. Right now we have fenced about 2 acres. With more funds, we will be able to expand,” says Sai Vignesh. The donor is a retired private sector employee who lives with his wife Valarmathy in Thirunindravur. He is also an animal lover and the two met at a rally organised by Sai Vignesh in 2017. “We conducted an awareness rally in Basin Bridge against cruelty meted about by government-run pounds on these stray animals. That is where I first met Sivamani sir and his wife. We’ve been in touch since and when he learnt about my dream to build a sanctuary, he wanted to donate his land,” Sai tells us. In 2017, a PIL was filed in Madras High Court against Chennai Corporation for cruelty in dog pounds (ABC Centres) on behald of his Almighty Animal Care Trust. While construction is currently ongoing, Sai Vignesh has started an online campaign to raise Rs 10 lakh to complete the sanctuary. “My grandfather would contribute his pension money, Rs 35,000 every month, as long as he was alive. We also plan on selling our house in Tirunelveli to be used as corpus fund. In that way, even if we don’t get enough donation we will be able to run the shelter with this money,” he adds. Sai Vignesh goes on to talk about how the existing animal shelters, even though they are functioning to their fullest, are overburdened. “Besant Animal Dispensary, Blue Cross, PFA do a very good job but they can’t take in all cases. An additional shelter like this will be able to help injured, sick and abandoned animals,” he asserts. You can contribute to Sai Vignesh’s animal sanctuary here.
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Usha's Pickle Digest: How a TN woman wrote the ultimate guide for fans of the condiment

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Food
The cookbook containing 1,000 pickle recipes sourced from friends, family and well-wishers, was put together over several years.
Usha R Prabakaran learned that there was a certain magic in pickle from her mother-in-law. A skilled home cook, her mother-in-law would regularly make at least three pickles or chutneys in the course of a week, even as she churned out traditional dishes at a moment’s notice in their home in Andhra Pradesh. Usha recalls being given a share of that week’s pickle, neatly bottled and ready for her and her husband to devour.   “It inculcated a fondness in me for anything pickle,” she says in an interview with TNM. “There was a special magic in her pickle that I liked to eat and also prepare with ease.” Usha’s love for pickle didn’t just stay in her kitchen. In 1998, she published Usha’s Pickle Digest, a cookbook containing 1,000 pickle recipes collected over several years from friends, family and well-wishers. Though the book is almost impossible to find today — only about 1,000 copies were printed in the first edition — 21 years after its publication, it has left its mark. The cookbook has been called a “Bible” for pickle lovers and Usha has been dubbed “the pickle queen of India.” TNM spoke to Usha, 63, a retired lawyer who lives in Chennai, about her journey to the Pickle Digest and the art of pickle-making. 25 recipes to 1,000 Once Usha found her passion for pickling, she translated her interest to the kitchen without too much difficulty. She recalled making batches of pickle that would be polished off by friends, with little to none left for her family. She tried to prepare more than she thought they needed, but it never seemed to be enough. Though she loved making pickle, the process of making large quantities eventually grew a bit tiresome. So instead, she started to write down recipes and hand them over to friends. That triggered a long journey of sourcing recipes from friends, relatives, acquaintances and cooks, she said. What started as a selection of 25 recipes grew bigger and bigger, with each new preparation that she added to her collection. Step by step in meticulous fashion, Usha documented these recipes, some of which were family traditions or secrets that well-wishers were willing to part with. She ended up with scores of recipes, tested and culled down to 1,000 for her book. The book is divided into nine sections — Classique, Unique Flavours, Exclusive, Exotic, Quick Serve, Assorted, Oil Free, Dietary and Anti Waste — and also has several educational charts, including one for detecting adulterants and another to show the mineral and vitamin content of commonly-pickled fruits, vegetables and grains. She has also included the health benefits of certain kinds of homemade pickles. But Usha’s mission wasn’t just to document, but to teach. She wanted to break misconceptions that pickle-making had to be tedious work. Everyone, from the “passionate cook” to the “ardent beginner,” could fall in love with pickle.   “Pickle making remains a mystery to most. The purpose of this work is to demystify. I’ve never found it necessary to overcomplicate the preparation of any pickle. Almost all the recipes can be prepared in the average kitchen - No fuss - No mystique. Only rewarding authenticity,” she writes in the book’s introduction. The art of pickle-making Pickle is one of India’s most prized and diverse condiments - which is evident, considering the vast and varying range of fruits, vegetables, meats and spices typical to different parts of the country that are pickled. Even with the staggering number of recipes Usha found, she realised that she had barely scratched the surface. “Anything and everything can be converted into a spicy pickle,” she said. “A person with not much means can make do with a roti and pickle and, if lucky, some curd to wash it down,” she added.   One of her favourite recipes from the book is her version of avakkai pickle. The book also holds a recipe for mango ginger pickle, which was her mother's favourite, made with thinly sliced mango ginger bits and spiced with green chilli slivers, lemon juice and salt. All of the recipes in her book contain natural preservatives, though the similarities end there — from tamarind-based preparations to ones steeped in whipped buttermilk to others made with Himalayan gooseberry or garlic or gongura and much more. If prepared properly, the pickle could keep for months and sometimes years. Though the art of pickle-making is not nearly as popular as it was in previous decades, Usha believes the younger generation will soon start picking it up again. As people become more and more health conscious, many will start to turn away from store-bought pickles, which contain additives and preservatives. “People buy from stores owing to paucity of time, not because they prefer to buy them,” she said. “The trend is changing.” Usha is currently working on a new book, Usha’s Rasam Digest, which will contain 1,000 rasam recipes, though chronic health issues have hampered her ability to work. She also hopes to publish the Pickle Digest and the Rasam Digest as e-books in the near future. “Pickle preparation is varied and limitless from home to home, region to region and state to state. If we don’t learn them soon enough, these recipes will be lost to posterity forever,” she said.
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