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MK Stalin slams TN govt for inaction on hydrocarbon project and Cauvery water

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Politics
Stalin’s latest statement comes after ONGC sought environmental clearance to dig 104 more hydrocarbon wells in Tamil Nadu.
File Image/PTI
The DMK recorded its strong opposition to Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC)'s move to set up 104 hydrocarbon wells in Tamil Nadu. If ONGC is granted permission by the government of India, these wells will be over and above the permission granted for 341 hydrocarbon wells. The simmering issue of allowing agencies to dig up Cauvery delta districts for hydrocarbon exploration once again came to the forefront following ONGC's letter to the Ministry of Environment. The letter, dated June 18, requested the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change to grant clearance to the company to set up 104 more wells in various locations in Tamil Nadu for exploring hydrocarbon. "Government of India plans to reduce the import dependence on crude oil up to 10% by 2022. In order to achieve these targets ONGC has to drill and complete more development wells," the letter stated. The DMK, in its statement on Thursday, condemned the move and said that the farmers in Tamil Nadu are worried that the BJP government has decided to destroy agriculture in the region. "It is condemnable that the BJP keeps granting permissions to set up such wells after claiming to frame schemes for the benefit of the farmers," read the statement.  Further accusing the union government of not taking the initiative to arrange a meeting with the farmers who have expressed their opposition to the hydrocarbon projects by forming a 596-kilometre long human chain, the statement said, "It is painful that the central government is not giving due respect to democratic values." The statement also questioned why the Tamil Nadu chief minister is silent on this issue despite assuring people that no scheme will be implemented without their consent. DMK also slammed the state government on its silence on the Cauvery issue. Calling the working of the Cauvery Water Management Authority akin to that of a 'post office,’ the DMK said, "The AIADMK government is betraying the farmers of Tamil Nadu by not mustering up the courage to pressurise Karnataka to obey the orders of CWMA or to escalate the violation to the central government." It was a reference to the CWMA's order to Karnataka government in May to release 9.19 tmcft of water to Tamil Nadu from Cauvery. Karnataka did not release water since it claimed that it had insufficient water level in its reservoirs. The CWMA then recently ordered Karnataka to release 31.24 tmcft of water from Cauvery as the instalment for July. However, later, the CWMA watered down the order by allowing Karnataka to release water only if there is inflow to its reservoirs. DMK President MK Stalin, in the statement, also stressed on the need to appoint a permanent chairman for the CWMA and requested the union government to order Karnataka to release 40.43 tmcft of water as per CWMA’s orders. 
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HC bars Chennai prof accused of sexual harassment from entering college premises

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Sexual Harassment
The professor had moved Madras High Court after the Madras Christian College’s Internal Complaints Committee found him guilty of sexual harassment.
The Madras High Court has forbidden a Chennai professor accused of sexual harassment from entering the college premises until further orders. According to reports, the order came after the institution, Madras Christian College, where the professor worked, filed a submission in the court stating that the professor was trying to create trouble in the college after allegations against him surfaced. The college has also reportedly informed the court that though there are serious allegations of misbehaviour against the professor, the college is willing to pay him salary without him working. Justice S Vaidyanathan of the Madras High Court stated that if the court finds that the allegations against the professor are baseless, then the period of his absence should be treated as ‘on-duty’. The order came after the accused professor Samuel Tennyson moved the court seeking the findings of the Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) of the college and also to quash the second show cause notice issued against him. The ICC, in its report which was submitted to the college’s Board of Directors, stated, “...it is the unanimous finding of the committee that the actions of the respondents, Dr Raveen and Dr Tennyson did constitute sexual harassment by creating a hostile work/study environment that resulted in gender discrimination against complainants.” Students from the Zoology department in Madras Christian College accused two of their professors – R Raveen and Samuel Tennyson – of sexual harassment during their college trip. The two professors had allegedly sexually harassed many women students during a trip to Kerala which took place in February. From passing lewd comments to touching the women inappropriately, the students levelled a series of complaints against the two men. Following this, the students filed an anonymous complaint to the Head of the Department which was allegedly ignored. The students then wrote a formal complaint to the HoD with their signatures after which an inquiry was conducted. When the HoD attempted to let the professors off with just a warning, the students staged protests, seeking stringent action against the erring teachers. As the news of students’ protests came out, many former students from the same department shared similar instances of sexual harassment against one of the two professors. The college then set up an Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) in the college and began a formal inquiry into the students’ complaints. The ICC then found Professor Samuel Tennyson guilty of sexual harassment. 
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Parts of Chennai to face 7-hour power cut on Saturday: Full list

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Electricity
If maintenance works are completed before 4 pm, power supply will be restored earlier, TANGEDCO said.
Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation (TANGEDCO) has announced power cut in parts of Chennai on Saturday, June 29. According to TANGEDCO, power supply will be suspended from 9 am to 4 pm in the following areas for maintenance works. Power supply will be restored if the works are completed before 4 pm. Usman Road Kodambakkam High Road, Pillaiyar Koil Street, Balu Mudali Street, Kolamamani Amman Koil Street, Parathasarathypuram, Habibullah Road, Thiyagaraya Gramani Street, Gangaiamman Koil Street, Unnamalai ammal Street, Ramakrishna Street, Vivekananda Street, Chari Street, Bazullah Street, Krishnan Street, Krishnasamy Street, Anandan Street, Ramachandra Street, Gandhi Street, Cart Track Road, Jawaharlal Nehru Street, Vasan Street, Griffith Road, Tanjore Road, Mambalam High Road, North Usman Road and several other arterial streets and roads. Padi Balaji Nagar, Palla Street, TVS Nagar, Annai Nagar, Agraharam, North, East & Central Avenue, Sakthi Nagar, Part of Housing Board, Entire Padi, TVS Colony & Avenue, Kumaran Nagar, Devar Nagar, Thathan Kuppam, Senthil Nagar, Santhi Nagar, Srinivasa Nagar, Vivekananda Nagar, Teacher’s Colony, Puthuthagaram and Mahathma Gandhi Road. Recently, Tamil Nadu’s Minister for Electricity P Thangamani had ruled out rumours of power shortage in the state. According to reports, he said that Tamil Nadu has adequate power supply and the power outages are due to nature’s play. He also said that the power outages in Chennai were mostly due to the works carried out by the Chennai Corporation which damages the power supply cables.
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Manual scavenging in TN: Three dead in Coimbatore while cleaning sewer at pig farm

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Crime
Tamil Nadu has recorded the highest number of deaths due to manual scavenging in the last five years.
"When my father was leaving, the dog suddenly barked. It was a bad omen and I told him not to go," says Kuppamma, swaying in grief. "But he left. He went into the septic tank and didn't come out," she laments. On Thursday, Kuppamma’s father Rajappan, along with two other colleagues, joined the growing list of manual scavenger deaths in Tamil Nadu. It was close to 9 am when the 38-year-old entered the septic tank at a pig farm in Coimbatore. When he went in, two others, both named Vediappan, followed him – to their deaths. The task given to them was to clean the septic tanks filled with the faeces of 30 pigs present at the farm. According to a police report on the incident, Rajappan first succumbed to poisonous gas emanating from the septic tank. When they saw him struggling, the other two men, rushed to rescue him but fell prey to the fumes as well. They died inside the tank. 38-year-old Rajappan 29-year-old Vediappan While employing labour for manually cleaning sewers is prohibited by law, the practice is still widely prevalent across the country. And despite severe criticism regarding the practice, it allegedly continues to thrive. Coimbatore, in fact, saw two manual scavengers deaths even in January this year. "We have demanded that those who hire people for such work must be punished severely to prevent this from happening," says Sivagnanam, the general secretary of the Tamil Nadu Untouchability Eradication Front. "But both the district administration and police have been lax about this, leading to so many deaths," he adds. When TNM contacted the Coimbatore police they confirmed that the owner of the pig farm, 70-year-old Subramaniam, has been apprehended."This happens in the city," admits an investigating officer. "But for the first time we are seeing such deaths in rural Coimbatore," he adds. Tamil Nadu already has the ignominy of having recorded the highest number of deaths due to manual scavenging in the last five years. The death count in Tamil Nadu stood at 144 – more than double the number of casualties reported by Uttar Pradesh, the state that recorded the second-highest number of deaths. This information was released by the Union Minister of State for Social Justice and Empowerment Ramdas Athawale in February in Lok Sabha to a series of questions posed by Mullapally Ramachandran, a Congress MP from Kerala.  The MP had requested the Minister to provide the number of deaths of workers engaged in sewer cleaning in the last five years (till December 31, 2018). In the list provided by the Union Minister, Tamil Nadu recorded 144 deaths from 2013 to 2018 followed by Uttar Pradesh which recorded 71 deaths in the same period. The Minister also stated that out of the 144 deaths reported from Tamil Nadu, compensation of Rs 10 lakh each has been disbursed to the victim’s families in 141 cases. The reply also mentions that except Karnataka, Rajasthan and Delhi, no other state has filed FIRs on the employers for engaging people for manual scavenging.
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Microplastics dumped in the sea are ending up inside mussels on Chennai coast

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Environment
A study has found microplastics and colorants (dyes and pigments), probably of human origin, inside Asian green mussels collected from Kasimedu harbour in Chennai.
Microplastics filtered by mussels. (Photo courtesy S.A. Naidu/NCCR-MoES Chennai)
By Neha Jain A study has found microplastics and colorants (dyes and pigments), probably of human origin, inside Asian green mussels collected from Kasimedu harbour in Chennai. The microplastics were identified mainly as polystyrene polymers of the size 30 micrometers and thread-like fibres (ranging from 5 to 25 micrometers) while the colourants ranged from 62 to 103 micrometers and were orange, green, dark red and light blue. It is likely the microplastics have been ingested by the filter-feeding mussels because they are of the same size range as their food particles. More research is needed to determine the effects of microplastics on the mussels and their rate of transfer in the food web. Microscopic plastic particles and colourants have been detected inside the commercially important Asian green mussel Perna viridis from a fishing harbour in Chennai for the first time in a preliminary study. “Although, several research articles have reported the presence of microplastics even in market bivalves/fishes of natural coastal waters in Europe and Japan, the present results are surprising as this has been reported for the first time from India,” said S.A. Naidu, a project scientist at Chennai’s National Centre for Coastal Research (NCCR), Ministry of Earth Sciences and author of the paper. “Chennai harbour region is influenced by industrial, domestic and other land-based sources of microplastics.” The sheer scale of plastic pollution in the oceans is staggering: scientists estimate over 5.25 trillion pieces of plastic inundating the oceans. But while large plastic debris floating in the seas and oceans—that are increasingly being found in alarming quantities inside marine life such as sea turtles and whales, for example—can be spotted easily and scooped up, tiny bits of plastic, which are invisible to the naked eye, remain a pressing concern. Plastic waste dumped on land ends up in the ocean through river discharge as well as domestic and industrial waste. In the sea, ship spillages, fishing trawlers, and coastal gas platforms also leave behind a trail of plastic debris. Over time, much of the debris undergoes fragmentation and degradation into tiny particles, known as microplastics (less than 5 mm), by physical forces such as the waves and currents, ultraviolet radiation and microbial breakdown. Microplastics can remain afloat or sink to the seafloor and accumulate in sediments depending on their density. They can be ingested by both suspension and filter-feeders. As part of the “Marine Litters and Microplastics” programme of the NCCR, Naidu collected five mussels from three locations in Kasimedu fishing harbour of Chennai coast, which receives plastic debris through various sources such as fishing boats, industrial and domestic sewage, and discharge from rivers. Map of the study area showing sampling locations of the mussels in the harbour waters of Tamil Nadu, India. Image courtesy S. A Naidu, NCCR – MoES Chennai. Microplastics probably ingested by filter-feeding After carefully removing the soft tissues of the mussels, he examined them directly under the microscope. He also treated the soft tissues with acid to digest them and isolate the microplastics. Using Raman spectroscopy, a method that determines the type of plastic from their characteristic spectral bands, Naidu deduced that the microplastics in the soft tissues were mainly polystyrene polymers around 30 micrometers in size. He also observed thread-like fibres ranging from 5 to 25 micrometers. Some coloured particles did not match any kind of known plastics in the Raman spectral library, suggesting they could be colourants—dyes and pigments. These microscopic colourant particles ranged from around 62 to 103 micrometers and were found in orange, green, dark red and light blue colours. Naidu believes the colourants are probably of human origin. They could have come from textiles, synthetic paints, paper printing, food, ship, idol-making and cosmetics, among other industries. A study estimated that over 10,000 different dyes and pigments are used industrially and in 2010, India produced around 200,000 tonnes of dyes, according to one estimate. Some of these dye effluents are discharged into the sea. It is likely that the microplastics and colourants have been ingested, believes Naidu, because mussels are filter feeders. A standard mussel filters on average 24 liters of water per day. “When the organisms sieve water through the inhalant siphon across the complexly folded gills, planktons and other food particles are retained but along with them, non-food microplastics which are microscopic-sized and unwanted are also retained inadvertently,” he explained. After the Chennai floods in November 2015, a team of scientists observed a threefold increase in microplastic pellets along the coast of Chennai, providing evidence for the transport of a large quantity of microplastics from land into the sea through the Cooum and Adyar rivers. Tracy Mincer, assistant professor at Florida Atlantic University, is not surprised by the presence of microplastics in the Asian green mussel in this study. “The plastic particles were in the size range that is typically found in marine aggregates,” he said. In fact, he pointed out that his team also found the same patterns in a 2018 study conducted on the widely consumed blue mussel Mytilus edulis collected from the U.S. northeast coast. “The diversity of plastic materials was similar to our findings,” he noted. “With our study, we looked at not only presence but clearance rates of plastic debris and found that for the most part, plastic tends to be expelled in pseudofeces and feces of Mytilus edulis,” added Mincer. Soft tissues extracted from the mussels. Photo by S.A Naidu, NCCR – MoES Chennai.  Does the plastic affect mussels and humans? “As for the impact these plastics may have on benthic animals [organisms living near the sea bed], it seems likely that these plastic particles are putting a burden on certain suspension and filter-feeding organisms but more work is needed to understand the risks,” said Mincer. For example, “are the plastics being incorporated into animal tissue over time? And if so, do these plastic particles biconcentrate up the food chain?” “The bivalve mussels of the fishing harbour waters are not generally fit for human consumption anywhere,” said Naidu, adding that the study was mainly conducted to see if microplastics were found in the soft tissues of the mussels. “In future, it is proposed to take up the study of mussels in different environments along the Indian coast for assessing the status and comparison between polluted and unpolluted areas,” said NCCR Director M.V. Ramana Murthy and Pravakar Mishra, Project Leader of the “Marine Litters and Microplastics” program. “Studies on the accumulation rates and residence time of microplastics in organisms are needed to understand the transfer rates of microplastics across the food web.” Recognizing the severity and dangers of plastic pollution, the state of Tamil Nadu had banned the sale of plastic bags and cutlery starting January this year, following similar bans in the states of Himachal Pradesh, Goa, and Maharashtra. CITATION: Naidu, S.A. (2019). Preliminary study and first evidence of presence of microplastics and colorants in green mussel, Perna viridis (Linnaeus, 1758), from southeast coast of India. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 140, 416–422.  This story was first published on Mongabay and has been republished with permission. The original article can be found here.
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4-yr-old Chennai girl killed, body dumped in a bucket in her own home

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Crime
Police suspect sexual assault and are investigating a 60-year-old man— a relative and neighbour.
When the parents of a 4-year-old girl from Thirumullaivoyal in Chennai city discovered she was missing, they frantically started searching in the neighborhood. It was only after sometime that they noticed a woven plastic bag immersed in the bucket inside the bathroom of their own home.  In a horrific crime, the four-year-old girl had been murdered, her body stuffed into the bag which bore the name of a rice company, and was placed inside a water bucket with her feet up. Adding to the brutal act, the police suspect that she was sexually assaulted before being murdered. The heinous incident took place on Thursday evening, when the 4-year-old was home alone. Her father had gone to work at a private company in Ambattur and her mother had gone to drop her 8-year-old brother off at an after-school tuition class nearby. Speaking to TNM, one police officer said, “The mother had left home to drop off her brother at 5 pm. She came back at 5: 15 pm and found her daughter in the bathroom of the house. She had been murdered and put in the bathroom. We are investigating.” As in a large number of cases of child sexual abuse, the police have detained a 60-year-old man— a relative and neighbour— who was reportedly seen near the house. The police confirmed that when the girl's mother first raised alarm about her missing daughter, this man had helped search for the child along with her. The man is also an army veteran.  “However, he has not admitted to the crime yet,” said one police officer. No case has yet been filed against the suspect. The police, who sent the girl’s body for post mortem last evening, are awaiting its results. “We have found injury marks with blood on the body so according to our preliminary investigation, she may have been sexually assaulted before being murdered. We have to wait for confirmation from the post mortem report.” said one officer.   The brutal incident is reminiscent of another horrific crime that shook the city just two years ago— the rape and murder of a 7-year-old by 23-year-old techie Dhasvanth. Dhasvanth was sentenced to death by the Madras High Court in July last year.   
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AMMK’s Thanga Tamilselvan to join the DMK after talks with AIADMK break down

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Politics
Talks with the AIADMK broke down due to opposition to his entry into the party from Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, sources tell TNM.
Disqualified MLA and AMMK leader Thanga Tamilselvan is set to join the DMK on Friday. This, after talks with the AIADMK broke down due to opposition to his entry into the party from Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam, sources tell TNM.  It is no secret that the former Andipatti MLA was miffed with AMMK chief TTV Dhinakaran after the party's massive loss in the recent elections. He had made it abundantly clear in multiple interviews that people did not accept the party without the two leaves symbol. He further pointed out that AMMK did not consult its leaders regarding important decisions and that he had several differences of opinion with the leadership.  He was initially in talks with a senior minister in the AIADMK and there was a discussion on his return to the party. "But Deputy CM O Panneerselvam was against this because during the Lok Sabha campaign there was an ugly fight between his son and Thanga Tamilselvan. He said that the AMMK leader had insulted him and his family and cannot be brought back," says an AIADMK source. "Moreover, they are from the same community and it would be direct competition for OPS in Theni," he adds. OPS’s son P Raveendranath had ended up winning the Theni Lok Sabha constituency, while Thanga Tamilselvan contesting for the AMMK, ended up third. Congress’ EKS Elangovan, who contested as part of the DMK alliance, was the runner-up.  According to reports, a majority of AIADMK functionaries from the Theni district unit of the AIADMK voiced their opposition to allowing the former Andipatti MLA, to rejoin the party. From the DMK meanwhile, MLA Senthil Balaji who was earlier with the AMMK, was in talks with Thanga Tamilselvan.  "He will be an asset to the party because we need stronger leader in the Theni region," says a source in the DMK. It is expected that his entry would strengthen the party's organisation in Theni district, which is seen as an AIADMK turf. Incidentally, in the recently concluded bye-elections, the DMK had ended up bagging the Andipatti seat and the Periyakulam Assembly seats that fall under the Theni Lok Sabha constituency. The AMMK, meanwhile, appears unfazed regarding the defection of its senior leader and cadre."These are people who have made politics a business," says P Vetrivel of the AMMK. "If he goes to AIADMK it is understandable. But he has always been against the DMK his entire political career and this shows his mindset. Even now, the cadre in DMK will not accept him. His political career is over."  
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Madras HC grants permission to Arappor Iyakkam to hold protest on water crisis

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Court
Arappor Iyakkam approached the court after the police denied permission to hold a protest called ‘Kelu Chennai Kelu’ on the current water crisis in the city.
Emphasising the need for people to be aware of the water crisis in Chennai and the right of people to hold a peaceful protest, even if it was against the government, the Madras High Court granted permission to the city-based citizen activist group Arappor Iyakkam to hold protest highlighting the water situation in Chennai. The matter had gone to the court after the Chennai police denied permission to hold the event. Arappor Iyakkam is organising a public event called 'Kelu Chennai Kelu' (Ask Chennai, Ask) to call attention to the water crisis that is looming large in Chennai. The anti-corruption NGO had approached the Commissioner of Police requesting permission for holding a protest at Valluvar Kottam on Sunday. However, the police refused to grant permission, stating law and order issues and hindrance to peace and tranquillity of the city. The NGO then approached the Madras High Court with a petition seeking permission for the protest. Speaking to TNM, Jayaram Venkatesan, the Convener of Arappor Iyakkam, said that the government tried to delay the case to the last moment by seeking an adjournment to the case. “We had a hearing on Tuesday and Wednesday. On both these days, the police sought an adjournment and got it. On Friday, the court has granted us permission to hold the protest meeting till 1 pm on Sunday,” he added. He also said that the judge, Justice N Anand Venkatesh, mentioned how awareness is important to bring in solutions for tackling the water crisis. The protest meeting, he said, will be to highlight the water issue in various parts of Chennai and also to discuss solutions that the government needs to work on and to prevent another such crisis in future. “This event is to create awareness among the people and urge them to take responsibility for the water bodies in their localities. We are not asking them to desilt the lakes by themselves, but urging them to hold the government officials concerned responsible for the inaction,” he said. Recently, the NGO had launched a campaign to highlight the water crisis in Chennai. The campaign, which involved posting pictures with an empty bucket, came after Tamil Nadu ministers made insensitive comments on water crisis in Chennai.
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DMK not to press no-confidence motion against TN Speaker

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Politics
The DMK chief had proposed a no-confidence motion against Dhanapal after the latter sent show-cause notices to three AIADMK MLAs.
File image/PTI
DMK President M.K.Stalin on Friday said his party will not press for a no-confidence motion against Speaker P. Dhanapal owing to the changed circumstances. Speaking to reporters here, Stalin said: "We will not insist on taking up the no-confidence motion. The situation has changed now. We have given a letter to the Speaker not insisting on the notice for the no-confidence motion." The DMK chief had written to the Secretary of Tamil Nadu Assembly proposing a no-confidence motion against Dhanapal after the latter sent show-cause notices to three All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) MLAs -- A. Prabhu (representing Kallakuruchi), Rathinasabapathy (Aranthangi) and V.T. Kalaiselvan (Virudhachalam) -- in April seeking explanations for their anti-party activities. In the 234-member Tamil Nadu Assembly, the ruling AIADMK has 123 members (including the Speaker), DMK 100, Congress 7, Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) and Independent one each and two vacant seats. Meanwhile, the opening day of the Assembly session on Friday was adjourned after adopting obituary references for two lawmakers -- R. Kanagaraj of AIADMK and K. Radhamani of DMK -- who died recently. The House will meet on July 1 to take up the demands for grants for various departments.
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Ex Armyman held in Chennai for rape and murder of child; wife held for destroying proof

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Child Abuse
The man, who is also a relative, went with the parents to file a complaint at the police station, in a bid to be above suspicion.
Less than 24 hours after the murder of a four-year-old girl in Chennai, the city police have arrested her neighbour and a relative of the child. The police have also confirmed that the child was raped before she was murdered and her body dumped in a bucket in her bathroom. The 60-year-old man, identified as Meenakshi Sundaram, who had worked in the army before, allegedly raped the child before she was asphyxiated to death. Meenakshi Sundaram’s wife Rajamma too has been arrested. She had attempted to obstruct justice by cleaning evidence.  Speaking to TNM, investigating officers said that the post mortem of the child done at the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital in Chennai confirmed a case of rape and murder. The cause of death was determined to be asphyxiation.  The child had been home alone on Thursday evening for a short while when her father was at work and her mother had gone to drop off her brother at his tuition class nearby. Meenakshi Sundaram, living on the first floor of the two-floored house that the family stayed in, is alleged to have taken the child to his house, raped her and murdered her in his bedroom. However, before he got time to dump the body, the child's mother came back home and raised an alarm when she could not find her daughter. In order to be above suspicion, when the frantic parents searched the neighbourhood for the child upon their return, Meenakshi Sundaram, too, pretended to aid their efforts. He even accompanied them to the police station to file a complaint. According to a police source, when the parents came back from the police station, they had stopped to speak to a few neighbours. During this time, Meenakshi Sundaram allegedly took the body and dumped it in the bucket. In a horrifying sight for the family of the four-year-old, the child was then found inside their own bathroom. Her body was stuffed into the woven plastic bag, which bore the name of a rice company, and was placed inside a water bucket with her feet up.  “There were three main clues to determine that Meenakshi Sundaram had committed the crime — half of the girl’s gold ear stud was found on the bed of his house, the lint on his bed matched the lint on girl’s body and lastly, the family didn’t own or use a rice bag like the one the child was found in. It was his.” said one police source.  According to the police, Meenakshi Sundaram’s wife, who also had knowledge of the crime, helped him in wiping off evidence at their home. The couple also allegedly gave contradictory statements to the police. An FIR has been registered against Meenakshi Sundaram under sections 376A (punishment for causing death or resulting in persistent vegetative state of victim) and 302 (punishment for murder), in addition to section 6 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act (punishment for aggravated penetrative sexual assault).  A case, meanwhile, has been filed against Rajamma under Indian Penal Code section 201 (destroying evidence) and 120B (criminal conspiracy).
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Obfuscation to blame-games: How TN govt attempt to bury CAG report on 2015 Chennai flood

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Book Excerpt
It took a year for the Tamil Nadu government to table the CAG report in the state Assembly, writes Krupa Ge.
PTI File image
It is possible to guess why the TN government did not table this report for one whole year and sought legal advice before finally presenting it. Further communication that I accessed from the AG’s office through RTI revealed that the chief secretary of the state, Girija Vaidyanathan, wrote a letter to the principal accountant general, TN and Puducherry, on 28 June 2017 about this report. The state’s senior officer felt that some of the observations in the final report—such as ‘the Government wanted to protect an illegal patta land in the foreshore area from being submerged’, ‘indiscriminate discharge … led to a man-made catastrophe’, ‘lack of seriousness attached to disaster preparedness on the part of the State Government’ and ‘reply was misleading and did not at all address the issue that the GoTN lacked an organised structure and approach for disaster preparedness’—‘are sweeping in nature and do not have any evidential backing’. She further wrote, ‘It may be noted that if such unfounded observations find place in the final report, it would cause serious embarrassment [emphasis added] to both the state government and to the office of the Principal Accountant General.’ So, what exactly were the state’s objections to this report? The AG’s office revealed those too in response to my RTI query. (I cannot emphasise enough just how important RTI is and why we must resist its dilution at any cost. The RTI gives us the right to peer beneath the iron veneer of bureaucracy and see just who is responsible for what. It is RTI that helped me find answers to questions about this flood that will stand legal scrutiny, and came to me written and signed by authorities, as irrefutable proof of the lax approach of the state and the measures it undertook in covering up its own shortcomings.) In a 155-page response, various departments of the government such as the CMDA, PWD, Chennai Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board, Greater Chennai Corporation, and the office of the Commissioner of Revenue Administration sought to not only blame each other but also gave bafflingly silly reasons for the extremely serious charges levelled at them by the CAG. They were so incompetent in even defending themselves that, in fact, for two completely different allegations, the exact same answers were used word-for-word. Just why is this 155-page report, with highly local, technical information, important? This report not only shows us the ways in which land belonging to all of us—our common properties, spaces that belong to us and to the state, spaces that are meant to act as buffer zones and help in mitigating floods—are written away slowly and steadily by people who do not possess the authority to do so, but also throws light on how the real estate industry as well as others, with the outright support of the state government’s representatives and, in effect, the government, leech away mindlessly from what belongs to all of us. The CMDA in its reply to the first draft of the CAG’s report passed the buck to the local officials on several allegations— for non-removal of encroachments, water channels covered in shrubs and bushes, and non-laying of even roads in Kundrathur, Perungalathur and Poonamalle areas. While the entire reply docket seemed to be an exercise in obfuscation, which is possibly why the CAG did not take most of what was said by the state government into consideration and went ahead to file such a damning report, some of the most shocking revelations from this reply was the TN government’s attitude to facts. While the CAG pointed out that the lack of communication equipment for rescue operations were a huge hindrance—a fact corroborated by news reports from that time, in which rescue personnel expressed the same concerns—the government, in its reply, said: ‘communication was never a problem during the rescue, relief and restoration works’. Responding to a question that asked why the government ordered excess sarees and dhotis and then distributed them as part of rations during Pongal, thereby misusing the Disaster Relief Fund, the Revenue Department said, ‘Since the people affected by flood did not show interest, all the suppled [sic] quantity could not be distributed and they were utilized for the purpose of Pongal 2017, free saree and dhotis scheme.’ The CAG did not buy the government’s explanation for releasing an extraordinary amount of water as being ‘within the rules’ and that the flood was caused by the rains. This, despite the state government giving pages and pages of garrulous explanation to recuse itself. The CAG’s report stuck to its initial stand, despite refutations from the government, that the release of 29,000 cusecs of water in a bid to save illegal patta lands in the foreshore of the reservoir caused the 2015 floods. The CMDA, in one reply, said, ‘The contention of the Audit findings that the violation of the First Master Plan resulted in haphazard growth of the city, leading to adverse consequences such as congestion, impact on environment and flooding is not correct …’. This very first rebuttal from the authorities responsible for developments in the metro is troublesome. In the rest of this response, the CMDA wilfully misrepresented what ‘flood plain zones’ mean. Their response to the allegation seeks to conflate the terms ‘water body’ with ‘flood plain zones’. The CMDA claimed that the areas that are likely to be inundated are marked as water bodies in the city’s master plan—‘all the flood plain area which include river, pond, eri, and other low lying area which are classified as water body in the revenue records, have been zoned as water body in the Master Plan’. They also insisted that the maintenance of these areas vests with the PWD and the local body. The CAG report mentioned several properties, complete with their plot number, that are in violation of norms and should not have been there. For many of these violations, the response of the development authorities was that the PWD gave these properties No Objection Certificates (NOCs). An NOC is required when a particular piece of development is near a coast, in the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ), as construction is not allowed up to 500 metres from the high tide line of the sea or 100 metres from the high tide line of the creek. The law says that ‘the distance upto which development along rivers, creeks and back-waters is to be regulated shall be governed by the distance up to which the tidal effect of sea is experienced in rivers, creeks or back-waters.’ The high tide line calculation in Tamil Nadu has in itself run into controversies. Satellite imagery shows how the high tide line of the National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management (which functions under the Ministry of Environment) ends much before a more ‘robust line’ proposed by the Institute of Remote Sensing, established by the Anna University, Chennai. The state government uses a manmade structure, a bridge at that, to decide where the tidal influence on the waters of the Adyar River end. It is the same bridge—the Maraimalai Adigalar or Saidapet Bridge—that was completely submerged, cutting off access to South Chennai during the floods. In India, we have gone from taking the CAG’s words too seriously to completely ignoring it. Some years ago, it was the CAG’s report on the infamous 2G scam that was responsible for the misfortunes of the ruling United Progressive Alliance. The DMK and Congress parties lost the elections after these reports came out. However, the audit body’s report on the flood had no repercussions for anyone. Excerpted with permission from ‘Rivers Remember’ by Krupa Ge, Published by Context (Westland). Buy the book here     
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Coimbatore woman succumbs to fever, swine flu suspected

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Swine Flu
The woman succumbed to her illness on Thursday evening soon after she was brought to the government hospital.
Image for representation
A 54-year-old woman from Coimbatore who died on Thursday at the Coimbatore Government Hospital, has been suspected to have succumbed to swine flu. Shanti, a resident of Poomarket neighborhood had been admitted to a private hospital for the past week with high grade fever. Doctors allegedly suspected that she had contracted swine flu and had sent her samples for investigations. She was shifted to the government hospital on Thursday evening, even as her condition worsened, and succumbed to her illness at around 7.45pm. “She was brought in a very weak state, and was not very responsive. We were told by those who accompanied her to the hospital that she had been receiving treatment for swine flu at the other hospital, but we do not have any reports to confirm her diagnosis,” said Dr Ashokan, Dean of Coimbatore Government Medical College and Hospital. Shanti’s condition was aggravated by an underlying condition of diabetes and uncontrolled hypertension, which doctors suspect resulted in a rapid decline in overall health. She also had been diagnosed with hypothyroidism, which may have further worsened her health. Swine flu (influenza), or H1N1, is a disease caused by a strain of the influenza A virus and was noted to have been initially transmitted to humans from pigs, which are the primary hosts. Person to person transmission of the disease is the result of contact with infected air droplets. Symptoms of swine flu include cough, fever, sore throat, headache, nausea, and vomiting. People may also present with chills and severe myalgia (fatigue). Diagnosis is done by examination of the individual along with lab investigations which will confirm the presence of the virus. A throat swab and culture will determine whether a person is indeed suffering from swine flu. A worldwide outbreak of the flu in 2009 led to health officials deeming the crisis a pandemic. Seasonally, it is seen each year during the rainfall periods in particular. A vaccine is available against the flu, which those in contact or at risk of exposure to an infected person (namely doctors and other medical personnel) have been advised to take the vaccine as a precaution.
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Tamil Nadu to get new Chief Secretary, police chief as Governor clears names

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Governance
The present Chief Secretary Girija Vaidyanathan and DGP, TK Rajendran are set to retire on June 30.
Tamil Nadu is all set to get a new Chief Secretary and Director General of Police as the incumbents of both these posts are due to retire soon. According to a report in The Hindu, Tamil Nadu Governor Banwarilal Purohit has cleared the names of K Shanmugam IAS and JK Tripathy IPS for the top posts in the state.  The appointment orders for the same would be issued on Saturday, according to the report. K Shanmugam will succeed Girija Vaidyanathan in office while JK Tripathy will succeed TK Rajendran. Both these officers belong to the 1985 batch of the civil services. Currently the Finance Secretary of Tamil Nadu, K Shanmugam’s name was preferred by the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu Edappadi K Palaniswami over R Rajagopal (Secretary to Tamil Nadu Governor) and Rajeev Ranjan (Special Secretary of GST), who are in fact senior to K Shanmugam. He is expected to hold office till his superannuation in July 2019. JK Tripathy, currently the Chairman of the Tamil Nadu Uniformed Services Recruitment Board, was also the Chennai City Police Commissioner before. He will hold the office till 2021, since the post of DGP is of a fixed tenure of two years. JK Tripathy was the senior most in the list of probables considered by the selection committee, which had members from Union Public Service Commission and from the state and central governments, besides the Chief Minister himself. The two officers will take charge on Sunday as the tenures of Girija Vaidyanathan and TK Rajendran come to an end.  Speculations were rife since the last few weeks that the names in contention for the top administrative post in the state government include present Home Secretary Niranjan Mardi, Commercial Taxes Secretary TV Somanathan and Rural Development Secretary Hansraj Verma.  Girija Vaidyanathan had taken charge in December 2016 soon after the Income Tax department conducted searches at the house and official premises of the then Chief Secretary P Rama Mohan Rao. 
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After 40 years under water, Kancheepuram temple deity to open for devotees from July 1

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Religion
The Aththi Varadar deity will be kept for worship from July 1 to August 17.
Wikimedia Commons/By Ssriram MT, Own work (CC BY-SA 4.0)
The temple town of Kancheepuram is gearing up to receive lakhs of devotees hoping for a rare 'darshan' of the Aththi Varadar deity after a long gap of 40 years at the Sri Varadharaja Perumal Temple. The 12-foot idol of Aththi Varadar (made out of fig tree), lying in a silver casket under water in the temple tank for the past 40 years, was taken out on Friday early morning amidst chants of ‘Varadha Varadha’ by devotees. Darshan will be allowed for 48 days from July 1 to August 17 at the temple.  The idol will be kept in a reclining position for the first 40 days of the darshan and in standing posture for the last eight days. The last time Aththi Varadar was raised out of the water was on July 2, 1979 and before that in 1939. Normally, a person can have 'darshan' of Aththi Varadar once or twice in his or her lifetime. The idol was the main deity of the temple during the 16th century till it was immersed in the temple tank to protect it from being plundered by invaders. Later, since the temple authorities could not trace the original idol, poojas resumed with a stone idol in place of the fig tree idol. After 40 years, in 1709, the temple tank was emptied for some reason and the authorities discovered the original idol on the bed of the tank. It was then decided that the idol will be taken out once every 40 years and worshipped for 48 days."We are expecting between 30,000 - 50,000 devotees per day between July 1 and August 17. All the arrangements are in place. Three temporary bus stands have been built outside the town. Parking lots have been created outside the town for cars and other vehicles. Shuttle services will be operated to transport the devotees to the Varadaraja Perumal Temple," P. Ponniah, Collector, Kancheepuram District told IANS. With inputs from IANS
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Caste violence claims 2 lives in TN: Dalit girl attacked by boyfriend’s brother dies

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Caste Killing
Varshini Priya and Kanagaraj were brutally attacked in broad daylight by his elder brother who was opposed to his brother marrying a Dalit girl.
The 17-year-old Dalit girl, who was attacked by her boyfriend’s brother in Mettupalayam a few days ago, has succumbed to her injuries. The girl, Varshini Priya, who was undergoing treatment at Coimbatore Medical College and Hospital, succumbed to her injuries on Saturday. Her boyfriend Kanagaraj (22) was also killed in the attack on Tuesday. Varshini Priya and Kanagaraj were in a relationship for over a year and were planning to get married soon. Hailing from Mettupalayam, Kanagaraj belonged to the Valaiyar community, which is a Backward Class community in Tamil Nadu, and Varshini Priya was from the Arundathiyar community, which is a Scheduled Caste. Though both their parents initially were opposed to the relationship, however, Kanagaraj’s parents gradually accepted their relationship and were planning to get the couple married soon. However, Kanagaraj’s elder brother Vinoth was opposed to the union from the beginning since he did not like that his brother will be marrying a Dalit girl. On June 25, when the couple was walking down the road, Vinoth approached them and picked an argument with Kanagaraj over his relationship. Infuriated by the argument, Vinoth pulled out a machete and hacked his brother to death and attacked Varshini Priya as well. Kanagaraj, who suffered severe injuries to his neck and head, died on the spot, while Varshini Priya was rushed to a nearby hospital and then referred to the Coimbatore Medical College and Hospital due to the severity of her injuries. Vinoth, who was absconding immediately since the attack, was arrested in the wee hours of June 26. The police registered an FIR under Sections 302 (Murder) and 307 (Attempt to murder) of the IPC and the relevant provisions of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.  Varshini Priya’s mother Amudha has also written to the State Human Rights Commission on Wednesday stating that Vinoth and his relative had come to her house and used filthy language to abuse them and issued death threats to her family. She demanded justice, compensation and protection for herself and her family in the aftermath of the incident.   Varshini Priya’s body has been kept at the morgue at Coimbatore Medical College and Hospital and will be sent for postmortem. 
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K Shanmugam appointed as TN Chief Secretary, JK Tripathy is new police chief

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Governance
With the retirement of Girija Vaidyanathan and TK Rajendran, Governor Banwarilal Purohit cleared the names of the two newly appointed chiefs on Friday.
With the decks cleared for their appointment on Friday, K Shanmugam IAS and JK Tripathy IPS are set to take over as Chief Secretary and Director General of Police respectively for Tamil Nadu on Sunday. Issuing transfer orders to her successor, outgoing Chief Secretary Girija Vaidyanathan notified that she was retiring on Sunday post noon. K Shanmugam, presently posted as Additional Chief Secretary to Government, Finance Department, is expected to take over in the afternoon.  Following a meeting of the Empanelment Committee of the Union Public Service Commission and its recommendation, the state government has appointed JK Tripathy as Director General of Police and Head of Police Force.  Both chiefs are from the 1985 batch of the Indian Administrative Services and Indian Police Services, respectively. During his nine-year-long stint at the Finance Department, K Shanmugam was appointed Director of Tamil Nadu Newsprint and Papers Limited. In addition to serving as Collector of Sivaganga and Pudukkottai district early in his career, he also headed the Tamil Nadu Civil Supplies Corporation.  Outgoing Chief Secretary Girija Vaidyanathan is the second longest-serving woman chief secretary after Lakshmi Pranesh. She had served as Secretary to several departments including Health and Civil Supplies. In recent years, however, Girija Vaidyanathan has come under fire for a number of police decisions including the two-year delay in conducting local body polls as well as the rehabilitation in the wake of Cyclone Gaja.  JK Tripathy has previously served as Commissioner of Police for Chennai two times. Tripathy, who is also expected to take over on Sunday, currently occupies the office of the Chairman of the Uniformed Service Recruitment Board (DGP). He had also served as Additional Director General of Police (Law and Order).  Tripathy’s appointment however comes a day after 61 IPS officers in the state were transferred and /or promoted by outgoing DGP TK Rajendran. Rajendran leaves behind a scandal-marred legacy with several instances of police high-handedness in recent years. He was also raided in connection with the multi-crore Gutkha scam that rocked the state in 2017. 
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Protests break out in TN village over proposed facility in Kudankulam nuclear plant

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Kudankulam
Protests broke out in Vijayapathi village after a gram sabha resolution on a proposed facility at the Kudankulam plant was not recorded by district officials.
The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP), CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=31287228
Over five years after massive agitations against the Kudankulam nuclear plant were quelled in Tirunelveli district, protests in connection to the reactors broke out once again on Friday. As gram sabha meetings were held across the state of Tamil Nadu, villages around the contentious reactors moved a resolution to put a stop to the government's plans to construct an Away From Reactor (AFR) facility on the premises of the nuclear power plant. The AFR is a storage unit meant to store spent fuel generated at the two nuclear plants in Kudankulam. While a Deep geological disposal is widely agreed to be the best solution for final disposal of radioactive waste, the AFR is meant to store spent fuel till the construction of the former. And while resolutions passed at four villages -  Kavalkinar, Vadakankulam, Perumanal  and Kudankulam were recorded by district authorities, a similar move in the village of Vijayapathi was stopped. The decision led to protests at around 11 am in the village and was forcefully dispersed by the police.  According to Kebinston, a resident of Vijayapathi and anti-nuclear activist, who was present at the village meeting, "The Block Divisional Officer (BDO) Selvaraj and his deputy were present for the meeting. They are supposed to record what we as a panchayat decide but they simply refused. That is when protests broke out. They couldn't even offer us a reason." When TNM contacted the district administration, an official on the condition of anonymity stated that the decision was made based on order from Tirunelveli Collector Shilpa Prabhakar Satish. "We were told that we can receive petitions from the villagers and give receipts regarding this but not allow them to pass a resolution.  The government hasn't officially announced the AFR facility or allowed for a public consultation. So, it is too premature to pass such resolutions now," he says.  Then why allow the resolutions to be passed in other villages?"In Kudankulam, the crowd was much larger and they feared law and order issues. In this village things were under control," he says. "Law and order problems will end up attracting more attention to the issues. The BDO was only acting on orders from higher authorities," he adds.  A public hearing regarding the AFR scheduled for July 10 was recently postponed indefinitely. A look at the circular shows that only two villages were invited - Kudankulam and Vijayapathi. Activists allege that this was an intentional attempt to shut down dissent against the proposed facility. "This is a blatant violation of the democratic rights of a Gram Sabha. They have the right to pass such resolutions and district authorities must record it," says G Sundarrajan of Poovulagin Nanbargal. "And their concerns are very valid," he adds.  The resolutions included - opposition to collection of nuclear waste in Kudankulam, demand to stop construction of an AFR facility and demand to permanently shut down the plant. Opposition parties and activists had urged the Centre to come out with a detailed plan for setting up a permanent deep geological repository and drop the plan of a proposed Away From Reactor facility. "This entire exercise is meant to create storage for spent fuel and an AFR is only a temporary solution till the government finds land to build a deep geological repository," explains Sundarrajan. "But across the country, no state is ready to risk giving land for permanent disposal of nuclear waste. So, residents fear that this will used as an excuse by the government to make the AFR a permanent storage space."
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How revival of embroidery is helping stem migration of Lambadi tribes in Tamil Nadu

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Tradition
A revival of the Lambadi women’s famed embroidery has not only ensured the sustenance of the craft but also livelihoods.
All images by Jency Samuel
As she kept embroidering, Sunitha kept an eye on her children, besides her nieces and nephews. The children were playing near the thatched roof hut in Sittilingi Thanda. Thanda is a settlement of the once-nomadic Lambadi tribes. Sittilingi Thanda is in the Sittilingi valley in Dharmapuri district that is placed at the bottom among the districts of Tamil Nadu in multi-development poverty index. With monsoon failures, the Lambadis, who once led a sustainable life in terms of food and nutrition by farming locally, also lagged in development. A revival of the Lambadi women’s famed embroidery has not only ensured the sustenance of the craft but also livelihoods, effectively helping households to stay back in their villages, instead of migrating for labour work. Lambadi embroidery Traditionally, Lambadis were a nomadic tribe. They came to Gujarat and Rajasthan from Afghanistan and then migrated south with the Mughal army, according to Lalitha Reji, one of the founding physicians of Tribal Health Initiative (THI), a rural hospital that works on healthcare and overall development of the Sittilingi valley. Traditionally, elaborate mirror work and exquisite embroidery marked the Lambadi women’s clothes. “They learnt the craft as young girls, so that they could embroider their own clothes,” Reji told VillageSquare.in. “In the course of time, they stopped wearing their traditional clothes, and the craft also died down.” Craft revival Under the craft initiative of THI, a few older women who had learnt the craft from their grandmothers started teaching the younger women. “Neela, Gammi and Jumma, who are the older women in our thanda, taught us to embroider,” said 33-year-old Uma, who has been doing embroidery work since 2006, when the revival process started. Interested women and teens underwent training for 10 days. “First we learnt to embroider on pieces of cloth and then moved on to working on garments,” said Uma. Training or refresher sessions are conducted for the women as and when necessary. As part of their craft revival, Lambadi women have started a tailoring unit and embroider the clothes made there The women take pride in their skill and in sustaining the tradition. “Observing us, women from other villages try to do embroidery. But this skill is inherent that we and our children do it easily and so nicely that sometimes customers ask us if it is machine embroidery,” said Uma. Craft society As part of the revival of their embroidery, the Lambadi women formed a craft association and decided to call it Porgai. “Porgai, in our Lambadi dialect means happiness and pride,” Uma told VillageSquare.in. Porgai was registered as a society in 2009. According to Lalitha Reji — who is addressed simply as Tha, the last three letters of her name — though there are groups in Karnataka and Andhra, Porgai is the only group that practices the craft in Tamil Nadu now. About 60 women from the 300 Lambadi families of Mel Thanda, Keezh Thanda, A K Thanda and Sittilingi Thanda in the valley practice the craft regularly since the inception of Porgai, with younger women showing an interest in learning it. Monetising the craft Starting with small products, the women have now moved on to embroidering clothes, home furnishings and accessories such as purses, wallets and bags. With scraps of cloth, they make a variety of trinkets. To facilitate easy and full production, the association has also started a tailoring unit. Uma’s mother Beena who used to embroidery and take part in exhibitions, subsequently learnt tailoring and now stitches clothes at Porgai. They sell the products regularly in the southern states through craft exhibitions. “Before we started participating in exhibitions, Tha used to market the clothes embroidered by us, displaying them literally like a salesperson at exhibitions,” said Uma. The women use their embroidery skills to make trinkets, which are a hit among the youth News of Porgai products has spread by word of mouth, through the young physicians coming to the THI hospital for internship. A new building that was constructed in 2016 with the support of the corporate social responsibility (CSR) wing of Titan has enabled Porgai to have a showroom to display their products. They have also started selling their products through their online portal. Stemming migration Most of the women earn about Rs 5,000 per month. The work opportunity has stemmed migration of the Lambadis considerably. Those who own land have plots measuring less than three acres. With unpredictable monsoons, farming became an unsustainable livelihood, forcing the villagers to migrate. “If not for this embroidery work, I would be working as a labourer in Tiruppur or Chennai,” Sunitha told VillageSquare.in. According to Reji, most of the men, and women if they accompany the men, work as construction workers. “Having worked among them for 25 years, I can say Porgai has enabled families of at least 45 of the 60 women doing embroidery to stay back in their thandas,” said Reji. Blimsha, who worked in Tiruppur and then in Coimbatore, returned to Sittilingi four years back, since Porgai offered him a job as a master. He also trains women in tailoring. His wife Sangeetha is also a part of Porgai. “I came back since this is my native, my home; and I can be among family,” he said. As Porgai makes embroidered clothes in organic cotton also, they buy organic cotton grown in Sittilingi valley and send it to Gandhigram near Dindigul, where it is handspun, and naturally-dyed. This practice encourages even the youth who migrate, to come back when it rains, so as to cultivate cotton. Financial and social benefits Embroidery work gives them the flexibility to work from home, and at hours suitable for them. Most of them being relatives and neighbours, they lend a hand when needed. “If some works need to be completed urgently, but the person is lagging for some unavoidable reason, we share the work among ourselves and complete the work,” said Maheswari. The women said that working together helps maintain the familial and societal rapport. “Some of them used to leave the children with their grandparents when they migrated for work. Now we don’t see the social problems we observed when the families were separated because of work,” said Reji. The women use their income for their children’s education, health needs and on essential household appliances that would give them more time to embroider. Rama observed Reji’s children attend an alternative curriculum school a bit far from her thanda. With a strong desire to send her daughter to the same school, she bought a two-wheeler to drop her daughter at school and pays the monthly instalments from her work at Porgai. Their work has also boosted the confidence of the women. They find dignity in their work. They travel for craft exhibitions and man their stalls. Observing the preference of customers, they are able to decide on the colours and designs. And they are happy that they are breaking even. Jency Samuel is a civil engineer and a journalist based at Chennai. Views are personal. This article was originally published on VillageSquare.in and can be found here. 
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Water crisis in Chennai once again exposes the city’s climate vulnerability

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Environment
With all the four reservoirs that cater to the 4.64 million population of Chennai city having gone dry, India’s sixth largest city has run out of its drinking water.
PTI
Chennai, the sixth-largest city in the country is going through a severe water scarcity. The four reservoirs that supply water to the city are dry, and with groundwater levels having receded, there are altercations at the water supply points. While there is international attention on Chennai’s current water shortage, in November-December 2015 the city was in similar lime light due to a devastating flood that cost more than 400 lives and billions in rupees in damages. This swing between too much and too little water is the story of Chennai’s increasing vulnerability to climate change. by Dharani Thangavelu, S. Gopikrishna Warrier It is noon and the scorching heat of Chennai’s sun hits across S. Punitha’s face. She has just filled her first pot for the day from a hand pump in Vyasarpadi, located in the northern pockets of Chennai. As she carries the green-coloured plastic pot to her house across the road, her 11-year-old daughter fills the next pot. Five such rounds later, she is done for the day. Punitha, or the others standing next to the hand pump, are unable to recollect when exactly the water taps in their houses went dry. After a small discussion, they arrive at a conclusion that it was somewhere around January-February when a majority of the water connections failed. Unlike Punitha, 50-year-old Ravi who is a daily wage worker has to walk about a kilometre with water-filled pots to reach his house. He does at least 10 trips a day back and forth with water pots. “My family of five can’t afford to buy the 20 litres water can for Rs. 35 on a daily basis. We use this for cooking and drinking too.” He added, “My condition is better, there are people who come here, from as far as five to six km to collect water.” Padmavathi, travels about three km on her two-wheeler bike to fetch water for her and her sister’s house. The old well in her house that “has never gone dry, is empty now.” About 15 km away, living in a housing board flat near Padi, Maheshwari who works as a domestic help said she went hunting for water, last week, after she missed fetching water from the water tanker. “I work at five houses. I step out of the house around 8 in the morning, by the time I return home it is evening. The tanker usually comes in the morning and since it didn’t come that day, I left for work. It had arrived just few hours after I left and I missed it,” said Maheswari. “I would have walked at least five km searching for water that day,” she added. Ironically, within the 10 km radius of Maheswari’s house are the Puzhal lake (also known as Red Hills lake), Retteri, Ambattur, Korattur and Ayanambakkam lakes. Chennai residents wait for hours to collect water from public taps. Photo by Dharani Thangavelu. Reservoirs run totally dry With all the four reservoirs— Chembarambakkam, Poondi, Puzhal and Cholavaram— that cater to the 4.64 million population of Chennai city (according to Census 2011, the Chennai Metropolitan Area population is 8.65 million) having gone dry, India’s sixth largest city has run out of its drinking water. While big apartment complexes and high-end residential areas have been able to afford private water tankers, the slums that are home to more than 25 percent of the total population of Chennai are now dependent on the metro water tankers where the waiting period has gone beyond 20 days, in many areas. Tamil Nadu’s capital city is currently dependent on two desalination units and water tankers from districts around Chennai. The Chennai Metro Water Supply and Sewerage Board’s(CMWSSB) managing director T.N. Hariharan claimed that the water supply to Chennai has reduced from 830 to 525 million litres a day (mld). Meanwhile, the managing director of Tamil Nadu Water Supply and Drainage (TWAD) Board C.N. Maheswaran confirmed that there is water scarcity in 17 districts across the state. Over the last few weeks, major clashes have erupted among residents of the city, educational institutions have reduced the working hours, hotels, restaurants and corporate firms have cut down operations: all due to the water crisis. However, the ruling All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) state government has been in denial. Earlier this week, Fisheries Minister D. Jayakumar said, “There is no crisis, it is just scarcity.” Chief Minister Edappadi K. Palaniswami even stated, last week, that the water crisis was being blown out of proportion by the media. When Kerala Government offered 20 lakh litres of drinking water to Tamil Nadu using rail wagons, the Tamil Nadu chief minister’s office neither declined nor accepted the offer, but, claimed that there was “no immediate necessity.” This summer, the heat wave that gripped the country including Chennai made the situation worse, and for most part of June the temperature soared above 40 degree Celsius in the city. The rainfall during the current southwest monsoon has so far been 38 percent below normalin this southwest monsoon, according to the India Meteorological Department (IMD).  Last week, parts of Chennai received mild showers after having gone without rains for 196 days. Chennai which receives its maximum share of rainfall during the northeast monsoon has recorded 5.9 mm this month (until June 24) as against 56 mm. :   Blue and green has been steadily changing to brown The water shortage in Chennai has made international news, with attention focused on cities running dry. There was news of Cape Town in South Africa running dry and projections about Bengaluru following suit in not-so-distant future. Globally, with more people moving into cities for their employment and livelihoods, and with many smaller urban centres turning into bigger cities, the fear and concern is genuine. Cities are locations of consumption, where the residents are either unaware or do not care from where they get their natural resources. It is only during crisis situations such as this do the city residents introspect on their consumption loops and ecological footprints. In addition to international media coverage about Chennai’s situation, celebrity voice was added when Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio talked about the city’s situation through an Instagram post.      View this post on Instagram          #Regram #RG @bbcnews: "Only rain can save Chennai from this situation." A well completely empty, and a city without water. The southern Indian city of Chennai is in crisis, after the four main water reservoirs ran completely dry. The acute water shortage has forced the city to scramble for urgent solutions and residents have to stand in line for hours to get water from government tanks. As the water levels depleted, hotels and restaurants started to shut down temporarily, and the air con was turned off in the city's metro. Officials in the city continue to try and find alternative sources of water - but the community continue to pray for rain. Tap the link in our bio to read more about Chennai's water crisis. (Getty Images) #chennai #watercrisis #india #bbcnews A post shared by Leonardo DiCaprio (@leonardodicaprio) on Jun 25, 2019 at 1:42pm PDT Ironically, while Chennai is getting international attention due to water shortage in June 2019, in November-December 2015 the city was in similar lime light due to a devastating flood that cost more than 400 lives and billions in rupees in damages. This swing between too much and too little water is the story of Chennai’s increasing vulnerability to climate change. According to the Tamil Nadu State Action Plan for Climate Change, extreme weather events such as the 2015 floods and the 2019 drought are going to become more frequent in the state. In the decades leading to 2100, the annual average rainfall in Tamil Nadu is projected to reduce by 9 percent, and the annual maximum temperature will increase by 3.1 degrees Celsius. There will be less rainfall in the southwest monsoon and more rain during the northeast monsoon season. This is of significance for Tamil Nadu, since it is the southwest monsoon that provides a steady supply of rain water for agriculture and for filling reservoirs. The northeast monsoon, on the other hand, is more of a string of cyclonic events that bring heavy rainfall over short bursts of time thereby making it less usable. Chennai’s problem is that its water availability is mostly from outside the city and not from within the surface of the metropolis. The four reservoirs are located upstream of the city and divert the water of the Kosasthalaiyar, Cooum and Adayar rivers. When these three rivers plus Araniyar flow through the city, they have lost their incoming water and carry the waste that fall into them. Thus, their ability to recharge the aquifer is dramatically reduced in the city. Adding to this has been the neglect of the city’s water bodies and green patches over the past decades. According to maps prepared by the Care Earth Trust, with increasing urbanisation these patches of blue (wetlands) and green (vegetation) have consistently changed to brown of the buildings and other structures. “Drought does not happen in quick time. The current drought has been building since the 2015 floods, when in its immediate aftermath the effort was to empty the water bodies,” said Jayshree Vencatesan, managing trustee of Care Earth Trust, an NGO working for the conservation of Chennai’s wetlands.”The city should be looking at ways to hold water on its surface by increasing permeable ground area and conserving the water bodies.” Over the decades, Chennai lost its ability conserve water in situ, with all the interventions bringing water from outside into the city. Historically, water has been moved into Chennai from Veeranam lake in Cuddalore district, and from the Krishna river in Andhra Pradesh. In more recent years, two 100 million litres per day (mld) desalination plants are operational, and another 150 mld plant is in the development process. “Last year there was an overall 800 mm rainfall in Chennai and if the expanded Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA) – including Kancheepuram, Tiruvallur and Arrakkonam taluk, is also considered we had about 1200 mm of rainfall. If proper water accounting and auditing was done we could have easily managed it this summer for the more 8,000 sq.km area that constitute CMA,” said G. Sundarrajan of Poovulagin Nanbargal, an environmental organisation based in Chennai. “The fundamental option is to catch water where it falls. Rest of the methods are purely secondary,” he added. While the neglect of in situ conservation is making the situation worse for the city during this dry period, it also led to severe flooding during the November-December 2015 floods. These cascade of wetlands and water bodies hold water when it rains and stores it for the dry period. With these structures becoming ineffective over decades, the city is vulnerable to both drought and floods. With climate change, both these extreme weather events are likely to become more frequent. Photo by Steevez Rodriguez/PEP collective. There is a law to harvest rainwater, but then … In 2001, when Chennai was going through a similar water crisis, the then state government passed a legislation. In a first in India to make rainwater harvesting mandatory across all houses and buildings in the state and, the scheme was promoted aggressively. Though only few structures installed were effective, the groundwater levels in Chennai did replenish after a torrential downpour in 2005. The union government’s report in 2011 titled Groundwater scenario in major cities of Indiastated that the rooftop rainwater harvesting made mandatory by the Tamil Nadu government has indeed improved the water level but due to lack of periodical maintenance, the effect reduced over the period of time. More than 15 years later, the situation has completely reversed. The Niti Aayog’s reportpublished last year gave alarming details: 21 major cities including Chennai will run out of groundwater by 2020, affecting approximately 100 million people.  Chennai also needs more recycling “Until 20 to 25 years ago the idea of classical civil engineering was to concretise urban spaces, control the nature and to harness energy. For example, floods merely meant evacuation. Only in recent times, the necessity for civil engineering to work hand-in-hand with environmental science has become mainstream,” said Jeyannathann Karunanithi who works for the International Water Association (IWA) in Chennai. Environmentalists suggest that reuse and recycle of wastewater as an immediate solution to tackle the water crisis and, a committed and sustained approach to desilt and restore water bodies. Even as the state government is making efforts to launch two more desalination plants to tackle the water woes, environmentalists warn that it will be another ecological disaster as it may affect the sand dunes, lead to sea erosion, damage marine life, and increase the salinity of water table. According to a 2018 report by the IWA, there is a need to reuse and recycle wastewater. Around 80 percent of all wastewater – one of the most under-exploited resources – is discharged into the world’s waterways creating health, environmental and climate-related hazards. While using more of the dwindling resources, urbanisation has further exacerbated this challenge with increasing wastewater generation. Chennai already has wastewater treatment mechanism and 15 percent of the city’s water demand is achieved through recycling as per CMWSSB. This may need to increase. For a city that packs 26,553 people in every square km, conserving water is the best way to deal with drought, and also floods. This report was first published on Mongabay.com and has been republished with permission. The original article can be found here.
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Meet Vijayalakshmi, an auto driver and fierce champion for women’s issues in Thanjavur

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Human interest
In the morning and evening, Vijaylakshmi ferries a gaggle of girl students to school and back. But the rest of the time, she is at the forefront of multiple protests in the fight for women’s rights.
At 49, Vijayalakshmi Manimohan is a tireless fighter. She is not only a woman auto driver in Thanjavur — likely one of very few in the city — but she is also the district secretary for the National Federation of Indian Women (NFIW), a front organisation of CPI. When she is not busy shuttling between schools and residences to pick up and drop young girl students, Vijayalakshmi can be found championing women’s issues. It has been 20 years since Vijayalakshmi started driving an auto rickshaw. Born into an agricultural family in a village near Virudhunagar, she had a difficult childhood. “In places like Virudhunagar, farming even back then was not profitable. My parents could get me educated only till Class 10,” she reminisces. Married to Manimohan at Thirumangalam near Madurai, she moved to Thanjavur in early 1990s since her mother lived there. “I was a single child, you see,” she reasons.  In 1998, Vijayalakshmi decided to learn how to drive an auto after she came across a news report about five women in Chennai driving autos. “That is when I decided to give it a try,” she said.  “My family was struggling and I already had three children. My husband was working in a company making brass vessels, but he was not earning much. The thought of not being able to give my children a good education threatened us immensely and I had to look for better livelihood options,” she said.  Vijayalakshmi had not even driven a two-wheeler before that, but something compelled her to try. She approached male drivers asking them to teach her, and while many complied, the instruction brought its own challenges.  “I had problems sitting by their side to learn because, in every case, they tried to take advantage of it,” she said. But Vijayalakshmi persisted. Today, she holds a heavy vehicle drivers license as she can effortlessly handle lorries and buses. Though she also attempted to find a government job, she came across insurmountable obstacles. “They wanted a bribe, and I honestly couldn’t afford it. But right now looking back, I think I am happy driving an auto.” With a family to care for and her active involvement in local affairs, Vijayalakshmi decided to do only school trips, which she makes from 7.30 to 10 am and from 3.30 to 6 pm. “Today I pick up and drop 25 girls at their schools and back. It has almost always been girls. The girls I have ferried to schools are now doctors and engineers, spread across the world. They still keep in touch and invite me to their family functions. My customers have always become like family. The families trust me also because I am actively involved in women’s issues.” Her own family has also settled down well, in part through Vijayalakshmi’s auto driving work. Her daughter holds a B.A degree and currently pursuing her B.Ed. Both her sons hold diplomas in Engineering. “One of them is in Oman and the other one is getting ready to fly off to Dubai.” she said.  Her husband, Manimohan, is among a dozen people who learnt how to drive an auto from Vijayalakshmi. He was travelling almost an hour and a half to get to his previous work, which was becoming increasingly difficult. Vijayalakshmi realised it would be more practical if her husband drove an auto instead. “Also, it was definitely bringing us more money.” The rest of the people she taught were all women. “I also helped some of them get loans to buy autos.” Two years after she started driving an auto, Vijayalakshmi joined the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC) through which she found her way to NFIW. “Somehow, women’s issues have always been close to my heart. A newspaper report on women driving autos inspired me to try it. Women are intrinsically fearless, but they are moulded by the society that they live in. When they follow their gut, they can discover a whole new world, just like I did.” In her second term as the district secretary for NFIW, Vijayalakshmi has stood at the forefront of many issues. From Nirbhaya to Pollachi, she has led multiple protests against crimes on women. There have been protests against TASMAC shops and against a bus fare hike. NFIW in Thanjavur also led a protest during Gaja cyclone, and finally managed to get relief for at least 250 affected families. “Women constantly approach us with complaints about harassment or simply to seek advice on livelihood options. Our doors are always open for them. When they see me as an example, as an inspiration in a small way, I feel my life is fully lived.”
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