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Why farmers in TN are reverting to trees and thorny cacti as traditional bio-fences

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Agriculture
Thorny cactus plants and wild trees provide multiple benefits as bio-fences and are making a comeback in Tamil Nadu.
Photo by Muthu Murugan
Crops in the 4-acre land of 61-year-old farmer Muthu Murugan are hardly visible from outside. His farm at Thondamuthur village in Coimbatore district has uyir veli – Tamil for living fence – of tall and thorny cactus plants, jatropha and other wild trees.  “I have heard that traditionally forests would act as fences between villages; when men cleared forests for agricultural purpose, they would leave some trees in between, to demarcate the farms,” said Muthu Murugan. “You can still see this in villages here. The fences played a big part in their lives.” “For instance, siddhars, the traditional medical practitioners, who sourced their herbs from forests started growing them in these border fences. There were also food creepers like veld grape and fodder that farmers grew along these fences,” Muthu Murugan told VillageSquare.in. According to him, there are some plants like veli paruthi (Pergularia sp) that derive their name from the Tamil word veli for fence, due to their exclusive use as fences. Serving as a habitat for many birds and animals, the bio-fences serve multiple purposes such as providing fodder, fertilizer and wind breakers, besides conserving biodiversity and absorbing climate-inducing gases such as carbon dioxide. Wind breakers Aadhiyagai Paramez (30), a progressive farmer from Oddanchatiram in Dindigul district, said that the fencing trees were known as kaatru thaduppan, or wind breaker. “But now, with these trees gone, the wind sucks our lands dry,” he told VillageSquare.in. All the farmers who grow bio-fences said that they are ideal wind breakers. Vetrimaran of Karur said that the moisture of the land is lost when the wind blows and if there are no bio-fences to slow down the wind speed. “Also, the fallen leaves act as mulch, conserving soil moisture,” he said. While protecting crops, fences such as red date plants provide an enabling environment for birds and animals and develop a balanced ecosystem (Photo courtesy Aadhiyagai Paramez) According to Muthu Murugan, people stopped growing bio-fences because they were not patient to wait for the trees to grow, and for the maintenance of trimming every two years. “Growing living fences is more relevant now as they play a huge role in retaining moisture in our farm by acting as wind breakers,” he said. Additional benefits According to the farmers, a little effort in growing living fences, instead of opting for steel fences, usually fixed for orchards, would save them money, and create additional income. For Lakshminarayanan (64) of Rettanai in Tindivanam district, the additional benefit of growing Bengal currant as bio-fence is that the fruits are in high demand in local bakeries and sell at Rs 50 / kilo. Paddy farmers were known to cut small branches of the living fence to use as compost, said Paramez. Leaves of trees such as hummingbird tree and quick stick tree can be used as fertilizers for the crops. According to Muthu Murugan, droppings of birds that take shelter in the bio-fence fertilize the soil. “We can also use these trees to up the productivity of the farm. For instance, we have planted Chinese chaste trees as part of the fence and we plan to use them to make mosquito repellents,” Vetrimaran told VillageSquare.in. In Tamil Nadu, there has been a substantial increase in peacock population that harm crops. “The fence trees provide an enabling environment for animals such as foxes and wild cats and keep the peacock population in check,” said Paramez. Choice of trees While kiluvai (Commiphora sp.) seems to be a popular choice among farmers for bio-fences, farmers in Tindivanam district opt for Bengal currant tree with its attractive red fruits. Lakshminarayanan  said that the thorny nature of the tree keeps cattle away. Drought-tolerant kiluvai trees that improve farms’ micro-climate are the most preferred choice for a bio-fence for farmers like Vetrimaran (Photo courtesy Vetrimaran) “You cannot plant this directly in the ground. You have to transplant it after six months and keep trimming it every two years,” Lakshminarayanan told VillageSquare.in. “But once you set the fence, it remains permanent.” While most of the trees used as bio-fences can serve multiple purposes, Vetrimaran said that the trees should be chosen based on the location and need. “Trees like palmyrah and Manila tamarind can protect the topsoil,” he said. “One needs to be wary of trees like seema karuvel (Prosopis juliflora) that suck the groundwater and create drought,” said Vetrimaran. “Those rearing livestock can opt for hummingbird tree, quick stick tree and adathoda, as the leaves can be used as fodder.” According to Muthu Murugan, some farmers use fences for dual purpose. They use the trellis to grow food creepers such as ridge gourd as fence, as cattle do not feed on the creepers. Paramez agreed that people used to grow creepers along the fences but spend money now to set up supporting trellises. Cost-effective, sustainable fences C. Subramaniam (70), of Valliarachal in Tiruppur district, who grows Malabar neem, has been using living fence for decades. “Why spend unnecessarily, when you can get trees like kiluvai from your own neighborhood? Plant them in the rainy season and you will have a tall fence within a year,” he said. According to Muthu Murugan, farmers face the impact of climate change on a daily basis, not only as reduced rainfall, but increase in night temperature as well. He said that most vegetables that used to flourish in their villages show reduced yield now. “Through hereditary knowledge, we know that trees like kiluvai can survive drought. With them, you can feel a cooler micro-climate in the farms, and observe more moisture retention,” said Muthu Murugan. “It conserves biodiversity and reduces pollution by absorbing carbon. This could be a small way to mitigate climate change.” “Research says that we need at least 30% tree canopy. Bio-fences are a great way to achieve that and to bring balance to our ecosystem,” Paramez told VillageSquare.in.  “Bio-fences can help farmers lead a sustainable life by giving them fertilizer, fodder, herbal medicines and more. It’s good to see people going back to it.” Catherine Gilon is a journalist based at Chennai. Views are personal. The original article was published on VillageSquare.in and can be found here. 
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Save Sujith: 38 hours on, rescue teams start digging parallel 110-ft-deep hole

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Accident
The hole will be 1 metre in diameter, and personnel will tunnel through to rescue the child.
Puthiyathalaimurai TV screenshot
Over 38 hours after a two-year-old boy in Tamil Nadu’s Trichy district fell into a borewell, rescue teams began digging a 110-feet-deep hole in order to rescue the child.  On Friday, Sujith fell into an uncovered borewell at Nadukattupatti village while playing. Despite the efforts of over a dozen rescue teams on the ground, the child, who is now trapped at 100 feet, is yet to be rescued. As of Sunday morning, a rig of the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has reportedly begun drilling a parallel hole through which fire and rescue personnel will enter. The hole will be 1 metre in diameter, and personnel will tunnel through to rescue the child.  Visuals from the site showed that drilling began at around 7 am. It is expected to take over an hour to dig through to 100 feet. Three fire and rescue personnel — Kannadasan, Dileep Kumar and Manikandan — are reportedly ready to enter the hole.  According to reports, a team from Chennai's Anna University confirmed through a specialised thermal camera on Saturday night that the boy was still breathing.  Initial efforts to dig a parallel hole to rescue Sujith was brought to a halt over rocky terrain. Four separate robotic devices brought in by expert groups led by Mandikandan from Madurai, Daniel from Namakkal, Sridhar from Coimbatore, and Venkatesh from Chennai also failed to yield results, with the child being firmly lodged in the borewell. According to government officials present at the site, the machines allowed for ropes to be lowered and tightened around the wrist of the child to pull him out. However, that could not succeed due to wet mud and the inability of the child to grasp the ropes. The child also steadily slipped — from 26-feet on Friday evening to about 100-feet as of Sunday morning Read: TN borewell horror: Sujith's mother puts aside fear to stitch bag to rescue son
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Light rain likely in Chennai on Sunday, heavy rain expected in TN’s delta districts

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Weather
Caution has also been issued for the possibility of light to moderate thunderstorm with lightning at isolated places over the state.
File image/ PTI
Chennai is likely to receive light rains on Sunday while isolated areas in the delta districts of Tamil Nadu may receive heavy rainfall, according to the Regional Meteorological Centre, Chennai.  With the northeast monsoon having set in, light to moderate rain is likely to occur at a few places over north Tamil Nadu and at many places over south Tamil Nadu and Puducherry on Sunday. Coastal parts of the state, a few parts of interior Tamil Nadu and Puducherry are likely to receive light to moderate rain on Monday.  “Light to moderate rain is likely to occur at most places over Tamil Nadu and Puducherry [on October 29, Tuesday]. Light to moderate rain is likely to occur at a few places over north Tamil Nadu and at many places over south Tamil Nadu and Puducherry on [October 30, Wednesday].” an India Meteorological Department bulletin issued at 10 pm on Saturday stated.  The weather agency also stated that heavy rain is likely to occur at isolated places over Tamil Nadu — Kanchipuram, Villupuram, Tiruvannamalai, Cuddalore, Thanjavur, Tiruvarur, Nagapattinam, Pudukottai, Sivaganga, Ramanathapuram, Thoothukudi, Tirunelveli and Kanyakumari districts. Caution has also been issued for the possibility of light to moderate thunderstorm with lightning at isolated places over the state.  Chennai’s sky condition is likely to be generally cloudy and light to moderate rain is likely to occur in some areas. 
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‘Our only aim is to save Sujith’: TN Health Min on day 3 of rescue ops

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Rescue
With a parallel hole being drilled, care is being taken to ensure that the two-year-old, currently at 85-feet, doesn’t slip further.
Tamil Nadu Health Minister C Vijayabaskar, who is overseeing the rescue of Sujith, who slipped and fell into a borewell in Trichy district, said that rescue work is on at a steady pace without a break.  On Friday evening, two-year-old Sujith fell into an open borewell while playing. Rescue efforts have been on for nearly 48 hours since, but with the boy slipping further, efforts to retrieve him have yet to yield results. On Sunday morning, drilling began for a parallel hole to tunnel through to the boy after rescue efforts through ropes and robotic arms failed.   The Health Minister said that in addition to the current ONGC rig being used for drilling, another one from L&T was on its way. “A powerful rig, used for laying foundation, has been employed. It has gone exactly 26 feet deep. It has the capacity of drilling 2 metres per hour. Since there are rocks till the 40 feet mark, it is challenging. The teeth (of the rig) is eroding fast. Despite that, we have spare parts and we're changing it immediately. The full team is involved in the work without a break,” he said.  He further added that while this rig has the power of 150 Newton, another rig with 320 Newton power was on its way. “It's on its way, near Karaikudi. After that vehicle reaches, we will use that if necessary. It is a powerful rig that is three times faster than this. The current rig can go up to 44 metres (144 feet). The boy has been held at 27 metres (88 feet),” he said. On Saturday night, it was reported that a team from Chennai's Anna University had sent a specialised thermal camera to determine if Sujith was still breathing. The team reported the presence of body temperature.  Minister Vijayabaskar said, “Till 5.30 am on Saturday, we heard the child's voice. We heard him crying. Since then we have heard no sounds. We have not seen any motion. We can't hear breathing sounds. I had said the same yesterday [on Saturday]. But based on hope, we are continuing to send oxygen through an oxygen cylinder. Sand sediments have fallen for about an inch. We can see the child’s hand through the CCTV. There is no movement,” he said.  When asked about the Anna University team’s findings, he said, “Anna University's technical team sent a robotic camera inside yesterday. It went in and touched the child's hand. They informed us that the child showed presence of body temperature. The robotic camera shows one colour when there is presence of body temperature and another colour when there isn't. The team opined that maybe the child could be unconscious. We could not confirm this. It is information given by them. We will hope for the best.” ‘Steady, careful operation’ Explaining why the rescue teams couldn't drill any faster than at the current pace, the Minister said, “When we go very powerful, there is vibration nearby. There is only a gap of 2 metres. We can't go super fast. The boy shouldn't slip further down. We have to take that into account. We are going at the maximum speed of the machine while also being careful. Yes, we have to quickly retrieve him. It is also deep and we must retrieve him safely. So we are covering all angles, considering all factors. There are highly technical teams from L&T, NLC (Neyveli Lignite Corporation) and ONGC.” While the drilling was initially expected to take between four and five hours, the ground team has estimated that it would take longer owing to the hard rocks in the terrain, Vijayabaskar said.  When asked why the NDRF and SDRF teams were made to travel by road when they could have been flown in, the Minister said that the work has been happening as fast as it could. “This is a big challenge. The boy is tightly clasped like a ball in a socket with not even a millimetre of space around. That is the biggest challenge. There have been no delays at any stage. It takes time to position the machine. The child has not moved since drilling began. Our only intention is to rescue Sujith. We are checking the monitors with fear,” he informed.
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Boy ejected from TN chess tournament due to All India Chess Federation rule

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Sports
Karthick Rahul was removed in the middle of a chess game in Tirunelveli district after he violated a ‘restrictive’ rule on playing in independent tournaments.
The father of Karthick Rahul, a 11-year old school boy who was emotionally abused at a chess tournament recognised by All India Chess Federation (AICF) and its affiliated units, has approached the Competition Commission of India (CCI) for justice. The CCI last year had ordered AICF to remove its restrictive condition prohibiting chess players from playing in independent tournaments organised by independent organisers. On October 19, Rahul was evicted from The Hindu Tamil Nadu State Level Chess Tournament Tirunelveli Under-13 midway by the secretary of Tirunelveli District Chess Development Association (TDCDA) in Tamil Nadu for playing in tournament that was not affiliated to the district or state associations and AICF. The one-day state level chess tournament for under-10/13/15 boys and girls was organised at Sadakathullah Appa College in Pallayamkottai in Tirunelveli district of Tamil Nadu under the aegis of the TDCDA. In his complaint to CCI, Rahul's father K Murugesh Babu said he had paid the tournament entry fee at the venue and his son was paired against an opponent in the first round pairing list."I left the venue as soon as the first round started because I had work in my office. What happened after I left is very distressing," Babu told CCI. According to Babu, when his son was in a winning position against his first round opponent, the TDCDA Secretary B Paulkumar told Rahul that he could not continue playing in The Hindu tournament unless he gives an apology letter for having played in tournaments not affiliated to AICF, TNSCA or TDCDA. Though Babu said his son pleaded to be allowed to continue playing, his words fell on deaf ears. He could only sign the letter with permission from his parents."What was the most irresponsible act of the Secretary of TDCDA is that they did not even call me on the phone to tell that my son had been removed from further rounds so that I could come over to take him back home," Babu told CCI."It was when Karthick was seen outside the tournament hall when second round was going on that some other participant's parents asked Karthick why he is not playing. He narrated what happened and they called my number and informed me about Karthick's removal from the tournament. Only then I came to know what happened," Babu told CCI in his complaint. Babu requested the CCI to make the Tamil Nadu State Chess Association, AICF and TDCDA answerable. Babu told IANS that he is yet to receive any communication from AICF President PR Venkatrama Raja to his mail. On July 12, 2018, the CCI held that undertakings prescribed by the AICF for players regarding non-participation in events not authorised by it amounted to restraints that were in the nature of exclusive distribution and refusal to deal as defined in Section 3(F) and 3(4)D of the Competition Act 2002. The CCI said the non-compliance of such undertaking will result in banning of players and removal of their Elo rating (a method of calculating the skill level of players in games like chess), create entry barriers, foreclose competition and restrict opportunities available to players. Speaking to IANS earlier, global chess body FIDE's Vice-President and Grand Master Nigel Short had said if players were banned for playing and several state federations were de-recognised by the AICF, it would be a cause for concern. 
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Save Sujith: 61 hours on, rocky terrain poses challenge to rescue boy from borewell

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Rescue
The two-year-old boy fell into a borewell near his house on Friday evening when he was playing with his cousins.
More than 60 hours after Sujith, a two-year-old boy fell into a borewell near Trichy in Tamil Nadu, rescue operations are still underway in the village. The rescue team has drilled a hole around 40 feet deep parallel to the borewell in which Sujith has been trapped.  According to reports, the drilling is progressing at a slow pace than expected since the terrain in the region is rocky. A new drilling machine has also been deployed to expedite the process since the old machine allegedly showed slow progress. Once the hole is drilled, rescue personnel will go inside in pairs and drill a triangular hole big enough for a person to crawl in and bring Sujith out, as per reports. Deputy Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu O Panneerselvam also reached the spot late on Sunday night and consoled Sujith’s father and mother. Apart from O Panneerselvam, other ministers -- C Vijayabhaskar (Health Minister), RB Udhaya Kumar (Disaster Management Minister), MR Vijayabaskar (Transport Minister) etc are on the spot monitoring the progress of the rescue efforts. J Radhakrishnan, Principal Secretary is also at the spot, overseeing the rescue operations.  Sujith fell into the borewell on Friday evening when he was playing with his cousins. Though he was stuck at 27 feet deep earlier, his position slipped to around 100 feet by Sunday. The officials are also monitoring Sujith’s movements and health condition as the drilling is underway to bring him out. State Health Minister C Vijayabhaskar, who was overseeing the operation, confirmed on Sunday afternoon that the boy’s cries were last heard on Saturday morning around 5:30 am.  While a team from Chennai's Anna University employed a specialised thermal camera to report the presence of body temperature on Saturday night, the Minister had said on Sunday that no breathing sounds were heard. However, oxygen continued to be supplied with hopes of the child being alive. No motion had been detected, said the Minister, and Sujith's hand was visible from CCTV footage, amid sand sediments. Initial efforts to dig a parallel hole on Saturday to rescue Sujith was brought to a halt over rocky terrain. Four separate robotic devices brought in by expert groups led by Manikandan from Madurai, Daniel from Namakkal, Sridhar from Coimbatore, and Venkatesh from Chennai also failed to yield results, with the child being firmly lodged in the borewell. According to government officials present at the site, the machines allowed for ropes to be lowered and tightened around the wrist of the child to pull him out. However, that could not succeed due to wet mud and the inability of the child to grasp the ropes.  A parallel hole is being drilled since Sunday using an ONGC rig and an L&T rig. 
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Chennai to host concerts, folk performances at parks to promote art in public spaces

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Art
The Chennai Corporation, along with UNESCO Creative Cities Network, has now launched a collective that will curate and present unique collaborative performances in parks across the city.
On a pleasant Saturday evening, the trees at the Independence Day Park on Corporation School Road in Lake Area, Nungambakkam, swayed gently while listening to some of Thoppil Mohamed Meeran’s stories accompanied by the calming tones of the sitar. As retired judge and writer Prabha Sridevan sat under a tree reading passages from Thoppil Mohamed Meeran’s short stories, alternating with excerpts from her own translations of his works, a small group of listeners were teleported to Meeran’s world even as children played on the swings a little away and passers-by stopped on their tracks to listen briefly before moving on. Just a little while ago, the ground witnessed a parai attam by Mei KalaiKoodal, introducing the reading that was to follow. Chennai made it to the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN) for its rich musical tradition in 2017. The Greater Chennai Corporation, along with Chennai UCCN, has now launched a collective that will curate and present unique collaborative performances in 42 big parks in the city as a way of encouraging Chennai’s unique art and culture in public spaces. Prabha Sridevan, whose translations of Thoppil Mohamed Meeran’s work will be released next year, says she was stunned by the variety that was thrown in together that evening. “I was stunned. The Mei Kalaikoodal played the parai and then the announcement of program was made using the traditional beating of drums. My readings of the passages were done as the sitar was being played. Different art forms are brought into public spaces so that everyone has access and this in itself is an interesting idea,” she shares, talking about that evening. This program was organised on October 19 and will be followed by such unique shows organised at least twice every month for the next two years. The aim of this civic initiative is to put the city’s parks in the spotlight. The UCCN currently comprises 180 cities and focuses on seven creative fields - Crafts and folk art, design, film, gastronomy, literature, media arts, and music performances. Programs will be curated under the above mentioned categories. Representatives from Aanmajothi, the Kalakshetra Foundation, the Music Academy, the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (Chennai) and the Sruti Foundation (Sruti Magazine) will help curate these performances. This civic initiative is currently being spearheaded by Joint Commissioner, Revenue, R Lalitha. Speaking to TNM about her reading session, Prabha Sridevan says, “This is a wonderful initiative and deserves to be lauded. There are different types of events being organised including thol paavai koothu, katta koothu, etc. Also the parks will get a new life. There are two other cities chosen from India but I’m not sure if they are doing something as creative. We must be proud of it.” Two other cities from the country which made it to the list are Jaipur and Varanasi. As part of this initiative, Sivan Park in KK Nagar saw the Thol Paavai Koothu Bommalattam, a photography exhibition and Parai Attam performance by team Madras Marabinar was held at River View Park in Kotturpuram, and Natesan Park in T Nagar witnessed a Kattaikkuttu performance. Chennai’s parks are not entirely bereft of any action. The Margazhi season that is known for Carnatic music performances also finds audience in public parks where open air performances are sometimes organised. Chennai Photo Biennale, the city’s very own photography festival, also used parks as its exhibition space. Art markets, dance performances are also held at parks in the city. Therefore, this initiative only aims to make such programs more frequent, by presenting art forms that may have been under-represented so far, to an audience who may not have had a chance to witness them in person. Natarajan of Aanmajyothi points out, “People have been doing art in public spaces also but this will be a regular thing. These are art forms that you may not be seeing in a general setting. Folk arts are confined to temple events and the likes. Many may not have had the chance to enjoy it live most of the time. Now is an excellent chance to enjoy.” Regular programs will be planned and organised for the next two years as part of this initiative. Since this is a civic initiative, Natarajan shares, it has been more convenient for events to be organised with support from the corporation. “It is easier to host such events when the civic body is involved,” he adds. Black Boys, an indie band from North Chennai, will next be performing at Haddows Road Park at 5.00 pm on November 9. Details of upcoming events will be updated here and here.
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Save Sujith: Karur MP Jothimani questions absence of alternate rescue plan

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Rescue
Jothimani, the Member of Parliament from Karur, has been on the spot since Saturday, monitoring and coordinating relief operations.
File Image
Almost 70 hours since Sujith, a two-year-old boy got stuck inside a borewell, Karur MP Jothimani slammed the rescue operations for having no alternative options and of giving false hope to people. She accused officials managing rescue operations of not having clarity in decision-making and has requested the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu to intervene. Jothimani has been at the spot for the last two days, co-ordinating relief work and offering support to Sujith’s family. Speaking to the press at Nadukattupatti near Manapparai in Tiruchirapalli district on Monday afternoon, Jothimani said that she is scared to go inside the house and console Sujith’s distraught parents. “Sujith’s mother requested me to save her child on the day I came here. Now each minute of delay in the rescue operation, I feel scared to go into the house and meet them,” she said. Adding that there is not much progress in the rescue work since the team is not able to drill through the rocks, Jothimani added that the initial delays in the rescue work was too much. “All of them have been working with good intention since the beginning. But the delays involved in the beginning has caused huge setback to the child’s life. There have been a lot of delays including the late arrival of the disaster management (NDRF and SDRF) teams,” she pointed out. Explaining that she had told the ministers in the spot to suspend the attempts to drill through the rocks since the rocks are thick and that would only delay the actual rescue of the child, Jothimani said, “If a machine can drill only 24 feet in 16 hours, then as per their (relief teams’) words, another machine which is thrice as powerful as this one will take another 16 hours to drill 75 feet and then two more hours to drill another 10 feet. A total time of 18 hours we would need to drill only the length of the borewell. And then comes the horizontal drilling to rescue the child. This horizontal drilling is to be done manually by the fire and rescue services and they are ready to stake their lives and send two of their personnel inside to do it. But it is not possible to drill it.” Commending the good intention, hard work and the concern of the ministers and officials to assure that the boy is rescued, Jothimani said that the team does not have an alternative plan in place in case the current one fails. “For example, we are performing an operation. If that operation fails or gets stuck somewhere what is the alternative option? Nobody is able to say that,” she explained. Justifying the need to speak up at this juncture of the relief operations, Jothimani said that drilling with machines now gives a false hope to the people and hence she is compelled to speak up. “I am compelled to speak to the people of Karur and the family of the child at this point in time as the MP of Karur. It has started raining also,” she said. Slamming the lack of clarity in decision-making and the government’s inability to take risks, Jothimani said, “At this juncture, we have crossed the point where officials need to decide. Now it is for the government to decide. We are at a point where we should take a risk. The government is saying that we cannot take risk because people are in an emotional state. But we have to retrieve the child and hand him over alive.” She also said that the team cannot stay away from taking risks considering the image of the government or of the MP. Reaffirming the the team on the ground is working very hard to reach the child and rescue him, Jothimani said that it is painful that the efforts of the team is not bearing results. “The mother is sitting here, hugging her child’s dress and I am scared to tell her to eat. Because I am a woman, I am able to understand her pain,” she said. Adding that the situation on the ground is in limbo, due to lack of clarity on who should take decisions, Jothimani said, “Nobody is clear as to who the decision-making authority is here -- Is it the ministers? Or the officials? Or the district collector? Yesterday we decided to bring in a borewell operator to dig three borewells near the one in which Sujith has been stuck, but then the operator was sent back and after that the operation is stuck as such.” Requesting the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu to intervene and address the issue at hand, Jothimani said that she was making this request to the Chief Minister as a woman, a citizen of Tamil nadu and as an MP.  Sujith, a two-year-old boy fell into an abandoned borewell near his house on Friday evening. The boy, who was initially stuck at around 25 feet deep has since slipped to around 80 feet deep in the borewell. Rescue teams, teams from the state and national disaster relief forces, senior bureaucrats and ministers are at the spot, supervising the rescue work. High powered rigs and borewells have been deployed to drill holes parallel to the one in which Sujith has been stuck and maximum efforts are being made to take Sujith out of the borewell alive. 
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In the age of OTT platforms, stars like Ajith, Vijay or Suriya need to move beyond image

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Kollywood
Today, it’s important for stars to realise that they are not just competing with their colleagues in the film industry but they also have to compete with OTT platforms to drive the audience into theatres.
  Tamil film releases during Deepavali are always highly anticipated and if there is a film starring Rajinikanth, Ajith or Vijay, then it’s an even bigger celebration for fans. This Deepavali saw the release of Vijay’s Bigil and Karthi’s Kaithi, both of which obviously not comparable in terms of size of release or box office numbers. But one distinction did emerge post release - there was a lot of appreciation for Karthi’s performance and role in director Lokesh Kanagaraj’s Kaithi while quite a few who watched Vijay in director Atlee’s Bigil felt disappointed. While Bigil made more than Rs 25 crore at the box office in Tamil Nadu on day one of its release, word-of-mouth and social media talk is quite average for the film unlike Karthi’s flick.  In recent times, Tamil movies that have a strong storyline, good direction and exceptional performances have the audience asking for more. In the age of Netflix and Amazon Prime, today it is word of mouth publicity and social media comments and reviews (not paid online marketing) that are driving a large section of the audience to theatres. This eventually translates into box office numbers as well. Recently, director Vetrimaaran’s Asuran had Dhanush play a 50-year-old in a rural story about survival and revenge. The movie grossed over Rs 100 crore from India domestic theatrical, overseas, satellite, digital and audio alone. The excellent reviews and strong word-of-mouth publicity (online and offline) pushed the movie forward. And this is exactly what is happening with Karthi’s Kaithi - social media is filled with positive comments urging people around the globe to definitely watch the movie. The bigger question here is why recent films with big stars like Ajith, Suriya and Vijay haven’t necessarily garnered the same attention, positive reviews and social media frenzy post release like other films have done. One of the key reasons is the kind of story the star chooses and how the director is compelled to weave a story around the star’s image rather than make a film for the audience per se. Bigil, for instance, may be about women’s empowerment but it’s primarily a story that revolves around Vijay the star. So, the director has to fit in various elements to cater to the star’s fans - Vijay the hero in any circumstance, the dialogues, the action scenes, ‘saving’ women, and so on. Thus, what is a fantastic story idea doesn’t get translated onscreen into a brilliant engaging film. And this is also true for films of other stars like Ajith, Suriya and Vikram. This is where directors, who have a strong vision and conviction in their script and the characters, come into play. Directors like Vetrimaaran, Karthik Subbaraj, H Vinoth and Lokesh Kanagaraj work hard on the story and script of the film and ensure the actor/star moulds himself into the character he plays rather than the other way around. Director Karthik Subbaraj was able to beautifully combine Superstar Rajinikanth’s stardom with the character he played in Petta and he is one of the few directors who has managed to do so. Petta went on to reportedly gross more than Rs 250 crore at the box office and social media talk and word-of-mouth publicity was very strong as well.  The other factor is also how much a star/actor wants to experiment with new directors, his roles and work in films where the focus is the story and main character. Rajinikanth, Ajith, Dhanush and Karthi have started to venture out of the commercial ‘masala’ space and work in films with new directors with new storylines. Nerkondai Paarvai, the Tamil remake of the Hindi hit Pink, showed that Ajith wants to cater to an audience beyond just his fans by choosing a women-centric subject. Ajith also chose to work with one-film-old director H Vinoth who delivered a hit with Karthi. Thala’s next film too is directed by H Vinoth where he is touted to play a cop. While Dhanush has a Maari and VIP to his credit, he also chose to work in Vetrimaaran’s Asuran playing a 50-year-old father. With Kaithi, Karthi chose to work one-film-old young director Lokesh Kanagaraj and move away from the comedy and romance hole he was in. However, other actors prefer not to take such risks and play roles within the same confines of the ‘known’ which not just limits the novelty factor but often makes their movies cliched. Actor Vikram’s last few films have seen him play double roles (Iru Mugan, Saamy Square), a cop/agent (Saamy Square, Kadaram Kondan) and a regular hero who ends up saving women from the bad guys (10 Endrathukulla). Even Vijay’s last few films have followed the tried and tested formula of the saviour of the people (Bairavaa, Sarkar, Mersal, Kaththi) and cop (Theri). Many of them, in fact, have him in double roles and even triple roles possibly to add a new dimension to the film. Actor Suriya too has played cop (S3, Kaappaan) and saviour in his recent flicks while others like Vishal (cop in Irumbu Thirai, Thupparivaalan) and Jayam Ravi (cop in Bogan and Adanga Maru) have followed a similar route too.  Why do actors choose not to experiment with roles or new directors? Producers invest heavily in films and they definitely want to see profits when they bank on an actor. A tried-and-formula ensures that they have a ready audience for such films and are assured of a high percentage of returns. Secondly, the expectations of an actor’s fans/ audience also come into play. Often the question arises as to whether the audience will accept an actor in a certain role or character. Hence, negative roles are mostly given a pass by top actors as it is seen to affect their image. Thirdly, the question arises as to whether the story and film will elevate an actor’s image among the audience. No actor wants his/her image to be dented and this reflects on the roles they choose to play. Thus, we have many actors playing cop and messiah rather than any other character as they feel these emotionally connect better to the audience. Fourthly, the ability of any director - new or well-known - to successfully combine the image of the star with a novel commercial story is unknown. Many well-known directors have failed at this while some new, young directors have succeeded. But the faith in new directors is not high and often, producers and actors don’t want to sign them on with huge money at stake. This trend, however, seems to be changing now with stars like Rajinikanth, Ajith and now Vijay signing on with new directors who have delivered hits and brought a fresh perspective to Tamil cinema. This is also thanks to social media and word of mouth publicity which has revealed the pulse of the audience to the film industry. Today, it’s important for stars/actors to realise that they are not just competing with their colleagues in the film industry but they also have to compete with OTT platforms to drive the audience into theatres. While pre-release buzz may be exceptional for a film thanks to marketing efforts, the film’s release and subsequent social media buzz and word of mouth publicity, determines its fate to a large extent as well. This, of course, is based on the film’s script, story, direction and performances. So, are more Kollywood stars/actors ready to step out of their comfort zone and let go of their ‘image’? If the answer is yes, then we can expect more enthralling and exciting films in the times ahead. And a far happier audience and box office success as well. Latha Srinivasan is a senior journalist and film critic based out of Chennai. Views are author's own.
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Prayers with Sujith: PM Modi gets update from TN CM on boy stuck in borewell

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Rescue
The two-year-old child has been trapped in a borewell he fell into since Friday evening.
PTI
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday tweeted his prayers for Sujith Wilson, the two-year-old boy from Tamil Nadu who slipped and fell into a borewell in Trichy district on Friday evening. With rescue efforts spanning four days desperately attempting to rescue Sujith, the Prime Minister spoke to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami on Monday over the phone, inquiring about the child. “My prayers are with the young and brave Sujith Wilson. Spoke to CM @EPSTamilNadu regarding the rescue efforts underway to save Sujith. Every effort is being made to ensure that he is safe. @CMOTamilNadu” the PM tweeted.  Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam had visited the Nadukattupatti village in the wee hours of Monday. He met with the family and consulted with the officials on the progress made in rescuing the child.  My prayers are with the young and brave Sujith Wilson. Spoke to CM @EPSTamilNadu regarding the rescue efforts underway to save Sujith. Every effort is being made to ensure that he is safe. @CMOTamilNadu — Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) October 28, 2019 State Health Minister C Vijayabhaskar has been overseeing rescue efforts along with Principal Secretary, Revenue, JK Radhakrishnan, district collector S Sivarasu and SP Zia Ul Haq. Tourism Minister Vallamandi Natrajan, Minorities Welfare Minister Valarmathi and Transport Minister MR Vijayabaskar are also camping near the village. Karur MP Jothimani who has also been present at the village which falls under her Lok Sabha constituency has called for the Chief Minister to intervene and take a call. She stated that despite good intentions, there has been a delay in making decisions, leading to people being fed false hopes. Over a dozen fire and rescue teams, including the NDRF, SDRF and private experts have been working on the rescue since Friday evening. With ropes and robotic arms yielding no results, an ONGC rig was brought to dig a parallel hole to tunnel through to the child. However, a rocky terrain has posed a challenge to the rescue operation, forcing officials to ditch one of the rigs for a more powerful one provided by L&T. But this too came to a brief halt on Monday, when borewell machines were called in to make five parallel holes to loosen the soil nearby.
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IIT-Madras researchers develop AI model to solve engineering problems

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Artificial Intelligence
The researchers are going to establish a startup to deploy their AI Software called 'AISoft'.
The Indian Institute of Technology, Madras (IIT-M) on Monday said its researchers have developed algorithms that enable novel applications for artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and deep learning to solve engineering problems. The researchers are going to establish a startup to deploy their AI Software called 'AISoft' to develop solutions to engineering problems in varied fields such as in thermal management, semiconductors, automobile, aerospace and electronic cooling applications."We tested AIsoft and used it to solve such thermal management problems. We found it to be nearly million-fold faster compared to existing solutions currently used in the field," said Vishal Nandigana, Assistant Professor, Fluid Systems Laboratory, Department of Mechanical Engineering."Our AI works on any generalised rectilinear and curvilinear input geometry. Our research saves the computational time, which is the bottleneck to solve most engineering problems, Nandigana added. The researchers utilised a data-driven AI and a deep learning model to arrive at solutions for engineering problems after training the AI with data sets.  These prior data sets can be from existing big data in the relevant engineering industry where there are lots of experimental data available.  Also, if data is not available for training the AI, it can be generated using commercially-available CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) software on small independent pieces of the full-blown problem. This idea is new and is only now being looked at by a few research groups across the world. Most of these research groups use Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) or C-GAN (conditional generative adversarial network) to solve engineering problems. They have also developed hardware products using graphics processing unit (GPU) and multi-threading processing to solve thermal management problems in thermal and electronic cooling industries.  Both the software and hardware products are several times faster than commercial numerical method software and open source software in the market.  These algorithms will solve a lot of pressing problems for industries and can also be used for educational purposes.
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TN police book over 300 persons for violating fireworks timing on Diwali

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Law
The number is expected to increase since the current data does not include Tiruppur city and Chennai.
At least 318 persons were booked across Tamil Nadu for bursting fireworks outside of the time limit imposed by the state government on Diwali this year. The government had set 6 am to 7 am and 7 pm to 8 pm as the timings to burst fireworks in the state, the same as last year. According to data from the Tamil Nadu police, Virudhunagar police booked 99 persons for bursting crackers beyond the time limit imposed by the government, which is the highest in the state. Thanjavur, Erode, Theni and Tiruppur City recorded 1 case each on Sunday for bursting fireworks beyond the state-allocated timings. Tiruvallur district recorded 67 cases, Nilgiris district recorded 24 cases and Dharmapuri recorded 17 cases of illegal bursting of firecrackers on Diwali day. While Madurai rural police booked 37 people for bursting crackers beyond the timings, Madurai city police booked 25 cases and Salem city police recorded 34 cases of illegal bursting of fireworks. Tirunelveli rural police booked 11 persons as per the data released by the police. Meanwhile, the data from Chennai and Tiruppur have not been released by the police. The police have also not mentioned the number of persons arrested under these charges. In 2018, over 2,100 cases were registered across Tamil Nadu for bursting crackers outside of the timings set by the state government. 650 persons were arrested and let out on station bail against these cases. On October 23, 2018, the Supreme Court passed an order restricting the bursting of fireworks to a two-hour window between 8 pm and 10 pm for Diwali across the country. However, the Tamil Nadu government moved the top court urging it to modify its order to respect the traditions of the people of Tamil Nadu, who burst crackers in the morning of Diwali. On October 30, 2019 the apex court modified its earlier order directing state governments to fix a time slot for bursting of crackers not exceeding the two-hour time window specified in the earlier order.
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After 4-day rescue battle, dead body of baby Sujith retrieved from borewell

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Rescue
The two-year-old, who was playing near his home in Trichy district, had fallen into the open borewell on Friday evening.
In tragic news for his family and an entire state that awaited his rescue with bated breath, Tamil Nadu’s Sujith Wilson was retrieved dead from the borewell he fell into, on Tuesday. Confirming fears that the boy had been dead for sometime, Principal Secretary J Radhakrishnan told the media that the body had started decomposing.  Speaking to media persons at the site, the senior bureaucrat said, "Around 9: 30 pm, we got a report that a decomposed smell was emanating from the original borewell. We sent a medical team inside. NDRF, SDRF and fire service crack teams went in. They told us that unfortunately the body had highly decomposed. Final observations are ongoing. We have stopped digging." The two-year-old, who had been playing near his home in Nadukattupatti village, Trichy district, slipped and fell into the exposed borewell on Friday. While fire and rescue personnel rushed to the spot, attempts to rescue the child over four days grew increasingly complex as he slipped further down the muddy well. Over a dozen rescue teams including the NDRF, SDRF and private experts were pressed into service. With rock sediments continuing to erode, the boy, who was initially lodged at 26-feet, gradually fell deeper to 85-feet.  The body was retrieved in the wee hours of Tuesday morning. Around 4.30 am, it was taken to the government hospital.  Sujith's cries were last heard on Saturday morning around 5:30 am and for the team that worked to rescue him, it had been a race against time.  On Friday evening, hours after the child was trapped, a distraught Kala Mary, Sujith's mother, was asked to give her whimpering son some confidence. Heart-rending visuals from Nadukattupatti showed the mother looking into the pit and saying, “Don't cry, please don't cry for a little while. I will take you out, Amma will take you out. I'm right here on top.” Sujith, who was then lodged at 26-feet, responded to his mother’s pleas with a soft ‘mmm’. Putting aside her fear, the mother bravely stitched a white cloth bag that rescuers said could help lift her son. A bleary-eyed Britto Arockiaraj, Sujith's father, was relentlessly assisting the rescue personnel around the area and receiving politicians of several parties who came to meet the family. The farmer, who built the borewell in his corn field over seven years ago, was seen blaming himself for his son's accident. The agonising news of the child's death also devastates an entire state that has been glued to its television screens over the Deepavali weekend. Prayers for the child's speedy rescue were held across churches, mosques and temples in Trichy and other districts. Thousands took to social media to amp up pressure on the state government, declaring that they would not be celebrating the festive season until Sujith is safely rescued. Actors, cricketers and other celebrities used the hashtag 'PrayforSujith' on Twitter, expressing their sadness and frustration at the child’s trauma.  Initial efforts to dig a parallel hole on Saturday to rescue Sujith was brought to a halt over rocky terrain. Four separate robotic devices brought in by expert groups led by Manikandan from Madurai, Daniel from Namakkal, Sridhar from Coimbatore, and Venkatesh from Chennai also failed to yield results, with the child being firmly lodged in the borewell. According to government officials present at the site, the machines allowed for ropes to be lowered and tightened around the wrist of the child to pull him out. However, that could not succeed due to wet mud and the inability of the child to grasp the ropes.  A parallel hole was finally drilled on Sunday using an ONGC rig and an L&T rig that later replaced the former. Tamil Nadu Deputy Chief Minister O Panneerselvam visited the family late on Sunday and informed the media that drilling was expected to take until early on Monday morning.
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TN medicos strike enters fifth day, Stalin wants govt to talk

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Protest
Over 16,000 doctors in government hospitals across Tamil Nadu are on a strike since Friday pressing for their demands including pay parity.
Sreedevi Jayarajan
As the government doctors’ strike in Tamil Nadu enters its fifth day on Tuesday, house surgeons also joined the striking medicos on Monday. According to reports, Leader of the Opposition in Tamil Nadu MK Stalin visited the striking doctors and assured them of his support on Monday. The Federation of Government Doctors Association, which is a collective of five service doctors’ groups have been on an indefinite strike since Friday. The striking doctors’ have listed four key demands from the government — periodic salary raise and promotions from the state health department; rectification of all inconsistencies in GO 4(D)2 (the government order implementing the staffing pattern to the hospitals so as to strengthen the healthcare delivery systems. The posts are sanctioned as per the Medical Council of India guidelines) and hiring people according to patient strength; 50% state-wise reservation for PG speciality and super speciality courses; and fourth, transparent counselling while appointing those who have completed their PGs. Since house surgeons also joined the strike on Monday, minor surgeries, non-emergent and elective procedures are being postponed across the state. Leader of the Opposition and DMK chief MK Stalin visited the striking doctors on Monday in Chennai and assured them of his support. Urging the doctors to fight for their rights, he also requested them to desist from putting their lives in danger by going on a fast. Adding that it was painful to see the government is not inviting the doctors for talks, Stalin said that the demands made by the protesting medicos are beneficial to the patients as well. This is not the first time government doctors in Tamil Nadu are going on a strike insisting on their demands of pay parity. On July 10, government medical officers in Trichy, Chennai and Salem organised a day-long hunger strike emphasising their demands. On August 20, the doctors, interns and their families formed a human chain to draw attention to their demands. In September, five doctors went on a fast unto death to force the government to listen to their demands. A few days after that, government doctors across the state held a strike. The state government, at that point in time, formed a committee to review the demands put forth by the doctors within six weeks. However, since even after six weeks and bye-elections in the state got over, there has allegedly been no response from the committee which has forced the doctors to escalate their strike.
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RIP Sujith: TN CM condoles boy’s death, asks citizens to cover all borewells

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Condolence
The body of two-year-old Sujith, who fell into a borewell near his home on Friday evening, was retrieved in the wee hours of Tuesday.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami has condoled the tragic death of Sujith Wilson, the two-year-old who fell into a borewell on Friday and was retrieved dead in Trichy district on Tuesday.  The Chief Minister has expressed his condolences to the parents and family of the child. Sujith was playing at his home in Nadukattupatti village when he accidentally fell into an abandoned borewell on Friday evening. While fire and rescue personnel rushed to the spot, the SDRF and NDRF were also called in to dig a parallel hole to reach the boy.  With rescue efforts desperately trying to reach the boy over four days, Principal Secretary, Revenue, J Radhakrishnan finally declared in the wee hours of Tuesday that the child’s body had started to decompose and then later was retrieved dead.  Stating that he had ordered the ministers and bureaucrats to expend every effort to rescue the child alive, the Chief Minister said, “Minister and officials undertook rescue work day and night based on my orders. With the help of advanced technology, a new, bigger borewell was dug next to the borewell where the child was stuck. On account of hard rocks, the rescue efforts faced several difficulties. Expert teams worked day and night to address these difficulties in order to rescue the child alive. Despite this, the news of the child’s body being retrieved gives me great heartache.” He added that guidelines to be followed when digging a borewell have been established, and that citizens must ensure that the borewells at their fields are covered or closed. “I have ordered all district collectors to check if these rules and regulations are being followed. If there are any lapses in this regard, I have also instructed government officials to take stern action. In order to avoid such regrettable incidents in the future, I ask that the public follow due safety procedures when closing the borewells in their fields,” he said, thanking those involved in the rescue efforts. The Chief Minister is expected to travel to Trichy to meet the grieving family on Tuesday afternoon.
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How Sujith’s remains were finally retrieved 81 hours after he fell into a borewell

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Borewell accident
The two-year-old boy may have been dead for at least 24 hours before his body was removed from the borewell, say officials on the ground.
It was close to 11pm on Monday night and the darkness that surrounded Nadukattupatti in Trichy district was only dispelled by flood lights attached to the residence of two-year-old Sujith Wilson, who had fallen into a borewell on Friday evening. While the additional light source was meant to aid rescue personnel work through the night, a glance in the direction of the beam made it clear that an ominous announcement was soon to come. The two rigs and the borewell machine that were in continuous use over the last 48 hours of the three-day operation were suddenly unmanned. The constant 'thud' that rented the air had made way for deafening silence. While the rigs stood by each other, towering over the area, the borewell machine stood immobile close to the hole being dug parallely to the original well in which Sujith was trapped. For the first time since rescue operations began, government personnel and rescue forces were at a standstill and the frenzied activity was grinding to a halt.  When TNM approached Revenue Minister Udhaykumar who was seated near the parallel well, he confirmed that there was a change in plan. "We are going to change our methodology," he said cryptically, as we walked barefoot to inspect the blades of a rig. When pushed for information he added, "The NDRF and SDRF are discussing another way to bring him out." Earlier in the evening, the Revenue Department had said that the current method that involves digging another 35 feet vertically and then 6 feet horizontally, will take at least another day to complete. The government offered no information on whether the child was alive but maintained that the rescue was 'challenging'. On Saturday morning, Health Minister Vijayabhaskar had said that no movement was detected from the child.  Sources, however, tell TNM that at 12.30am on Tuesday, by the time the child's demise was announced, he had been dead for at least 24 hours. It was stench of the decomposing body that emanated from the borewell into the tent which led to a change in gear of the rescue operations. "We definitely suspected death because the body was covered in mud," says a senior official involved in the rescue. "When we were digging a parallel hole, the body kept slipping further down. And every time he fell from 25 to 60 and then 88 feet, he would have got hit on both sides and been severely injured," he adds. Aware that he will not be brought out alive, the government had begun counselling for the family and attempted to prepare them for the worst. Family members tell TNM that hints of Sujith's death were aplenty from the government on Monday. And when it became clear that even the use of a borewell machine will not lead to a faster removal of the body, officials decided it was time to change tack and formally announce the death."The ministers and NDRF personnel were aware of the plan by the night," says the Revenue Department official. "It didn't make sense after the stench to have any more hope. So, a hook was used to remove him," he adds.  According to the NDRF's Standard Operating Procedure on borewell incident response, this involves using an aluminum wire with a hook to retrieve the child. But when the wire was brought out, only dismembered parts could be lifted out. "When we removed the mud around the body, there were only dismembered parts," says the official. "The body has been damaged by the constant falls," he adds.  Sujith’s remains were finally retrieved after 81 hours at 2.30 am on Tuesday. The mortal remains were then taken to the Manapparai Government Hospital for postmortem before being brought to Pudur where Sujith was lowered into the earth, for the final time.
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Kudankulam nuclear power plant denies cyber attack by North Korean hackers

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Cybercrime
A Twitter user pointed towards data dumps made on VirusTotal, a website that tracks the activities of various viruses that infect systems worldwide.
PC:PTI
Did the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project (KKNPP) in Tamil Nadu face a cyber-attack from hackers based in North Korea? The officials at KKNPP in a press statement have strongly denied that any such cyberattack has taken place. This, after several users on Twitter claimed that a data dump on a virus tracking website suggested that the infamous North Korean hacker group, Lazarus, could have gained administrative access to some of the computers at KKNPP. The tweets by the twitter user @a_tweet_user on October 28 pointed towards data dumps made on VirusTotal, a website that tracks the activities of various viruses that infect systems worldwide. A data dump generally refers to copious amounts of data moved from one system to another. Among the data dumped on the website, cyber security researchers found the user name "KKNPP\\administrator". KKNPP, they claimed referred to computer/computers at the nuclear power plant. This particular system was attacked using a variant of the virus 'DTRACK' claimed to have been developed by Lazarus. R Ramdoss, the Training Superintendent and Information Officer at Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project, denied that any such attack had taken place. He said, "The tweets and all those allegations are baseless. The software in all nuclear power plants in the country is an independent one and not tied to any external network. It is false propaganda. Both power plants are running now and generating power." In a press statement, KKNPP officials stated, "This is to clarify Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project (KKNPP) and other Indian Nuclear Power Plants Control Systems are stand-alone and not connected to outside cyber network and Internet.  Any cyberattack on the Nuclear Power Plant Control System is not possible. Presently, KKNPP Unit-1 and 2 are operating at 1000 MWe and 600 MWe respectively without any operational or safety concerns," On October 19, the second nuclear power unit at KKNPP had stopped power generation at 12:30 am. The reason for stopping the power generation was supposedly stopped due to low generation of steam. The KKNPP mentioned that the power plants were running to rule out any conjecture. The threat of a potential cyber-attack on the Indian cyberspace was first pointed out by the Indian Twitter user Pukhraj Singh. Shortly after the KKNP press release, the techie tweeted saying, "Seeing KKNPP's press release, I would like to add that I notified Lt Gen Rajesh Pant (National Cyber Security Coordinator) on Sep 4. Follow-up emails were exchanged, acknowledging the issue. I would solicit no further enquiries on the matter, requesting privacy." Those working in the domain of cyber-security say the DTRACK virus-  claimed to have been developed by the Lazarus hacker group- was mostly used to steal information about a computer and the network it is connected to. The virus can also give the creator of the virus, administrative control of the infected system and could also be used as ransomware. Though KKNPP has ruled out any interference, Surya, a user interface developer for applications and software based out of Tamil Nadu, points out that it is wiser to be cautious. He agrees that the main nuclear reaction functions are offline systems that are not connected to the internet. "If other sections of the power plant, the generator, the turbines are connected to the network, it is a serious thing if someone gets inside a secure network." The techie pointed out that the virus, when it infects a computer, can take out information like the networks it is connected to, the keylogging (what one types on the keyboard), thus gaining access to passwords. The virus can also collect information on the processes that are running in the system, browsing history, the software functioning in the computer drives. Apart from network information, it would also collect the IP information and the local networks that are connected and the MAC address which is unique to each system. Surya warns that hackers sell such information to interested countries. "Whenever a power plant-related information is shared in the public domain, it is never detailed. The hackers will just say that they have shut down a component or that they are have stopped operations.  The DTRACK can also give administrative controls to the person who has created the virus in North Korea," he says. Read thread:  So #KKNPP tweets are in cybereese and am trying to document things that can be easily understood in plain English.https://t.co/AUQkjsbmse — Srikanth ஸ்‌ரீகாந்த் (@logic) October 29, 2019  
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'Must a life be snatched for you to implement rules?' HC to TN govt over Sujith death

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Law
The court was hearing a petition seeking immediate implementation of Supreme Court guidelines on borewells in the country.
Priyanka Thirumurthy
As Tamil Nadu mourns the death of Sujith, a two-year-old boy who was brought out dead on Tuesday, four days after fell into an abandoned borewell in Trichy district, the Madras High Court has slammed the government of Tamil Nadu for being ‘blood-thirsty’ and not implementing Supreme Court guidelines on the digging of borewells. The court was hearing a petition filed by V Ponraj, seeking the implementation of the Supreme Court order on borewells in the country. “The guidelines issued by the Hon’ble Supreme Court is of preventive nature. The non-compliance of the said guidelines by the government had invited the problem, which directly takes away the fundamental right of the child Sujith which was guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution of India,” read the plea. Explaining the rescue efforts put in by the government and by private persons like Manikandan from Madurai and Sridhar from Coimbatore, Ponraj stated that deploying one method after the other consumed golden hours in the rescue operations. “It clearly shows that the government is not in a position to ascertain the ground reality and is not prepared or equipped with the rescue operations,” read the petition. The petitioner also sought that the court direct the government to furnish an hour-to-hour report about the rescue operations and to immediately implement the Supreme Court guidelines on borewells and the Tamil Nadu Panchayats (Regulation of sinking of wells and safety measures) Rules 2015. During the hearing, the high court bench, consisting of Justice M Sathyanarayanan and Justice N Seshasayee, slammed the state government for waiting for an unfortunate incident to happen before initiating steps to implement something. The judges also remarked that such incidents can be avoided only if every individual acts with social responsibility. Adding that the officials are not inspecting if rules brought in by the government are followed, the court raised several questions regarding the enforcement of rules related to borewells in the state. “Are documents related to the permissions granted to drill borewells in the state maintained?”, “How many borewells have been permitted to be drilled in the state till date?”, “How many borewells are in an abandoned state?”, “What action has been taken on people who have violated the norms?” were some of the questions that the judges asked. The court also came down heavily on media stating that apart from covering the rescue live all the time, the media did not act responsibly. Pointing out that the media did not broadcast information about the dangers of abandoned, open borewells, the judges said that media has a great share of responsibility in creating awareness and hence must try and do that. Ordering the state government to offer compensation for Sujith’s family, the bench ordered the government to respond to its queries before November 21. The Supreme Court had, in 2010, framed guidelines on borewells across the country which included directions on the safety instructions to be followed if one owns a borewell. Installing barbed wire fencing or any other suitable fencing around the borewell, adequate warning signs near the borewells, closing the borewell with caps and filling up the borewell pit with clay, pebbles etc, were some of the guidelines issued by the apex court. The court had also ordered that these guidelines be sent to every state government, which will, in turn, forward it to the district collectors for compliance. 
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TN teen alleges sexual harassment by teacher; her father and church members attack her

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Sexual harassment
A mob including the girl’s father, relatives and people from the church laid siege on the girl’s house as they were angry that she had complained against the church and its teacher.
“They were yelling that they wanted to kill me and my daughter while attacking us,” Lily* tells TNM, her voice quivering. She was on her way to the Ooty Government Hospital on Monday, with her 16-year-old daughter Riya*, who had suffered face and head injuries on Sunday evening after a mob attacked her. Just two days earlier, Riya had filed a police complaint accusing her karate teacher of sexual misconduct, and the priest at her church of neglecting the allegations. Riya had alleged that her karate teacher had touched her inappropriately and made sexually-charged remarks to her, in her complaint to the Gudalur police. Though she had informed Father Johny Elavunkal of St Mary’s Church, Vimalagiri, where the karate classes were held, she claims that the priest took no action in the case. Word of Riya’s accusations against the teacher and priest eventually spread, and triggered a mob of around 60 persons to lay siege on their house in Gudalur on Sunday evening. What’s worse, the group allegedly included her father and his relatives. Allegations of sexual misconduct Riya took karate lessons from Sabu at both her school and at the church which is a part of the Mananthavady Diocese. “One day in May, he touched me inappropriately and made sexual remarks at me at school. I and three other girls complained to the principal of the school and I stopped going to karate classes at school and at church. Though the principal assured us that he would take stringent action, he didn’t do anything about it. He also made the other three girls change their stance on the issue,” Riya tells TNM. Church allegedly tries to protect teacher After Riya stopped going to church for karate classes, Father Johny Elavunkal allegedly asked why she was absent. “I told the Father everything. He assured me that he would take action, but till date no action has been taken against him,” Riya alleged. After Riya’s complaint to the priest was ignored, Riya’s parents decided to escalate the issue and spoke to the parents of other girls at the school who were also victims. “The other parents, however, went and complained to Johny Elavunkal about this, which led to him insulting Riya and her parents in public at a Sunday mass about two weeks ago,” a source close to Riya’s family says, on the condition of anonymity. The Mananthavady diocese, which St Mary’s Church is a part of, has been mired in controversy in past cases as well. In February 2019, Fr Robin Vadakkanchery of the Mananthavady diocese was convicted of raping and impregnating a minor girl in 2016. When the minor child had delivered a baby the priest and others at the church had exerted such pressure on the family that the biological father of the girl made a false claim that he had raped her. Though this was done to let the priest off the hook, he was finally convicted in February 2019. The first police complaint The priest’s public insult pushed Riya and her mother to approach the police with a complaint against the teacher, the school principal and Father Johny Elavunkal. Attack by the Church mob A source close to Riya’s family said that though Riya’s father had initially supported her, he later changed his mind and sided with the church. After word of Riya’s complaint against the priest spread, a mob of men that allegedly included Riya’s father and relatives, forced their way into the home and attacked Riya around 7.30 pm on Sunday. They bolted the door from the inside and physically assaulted Riya, both mother and daughter claim. “When the mob attacked us, they were asking us why we complained against father Johny Elavunkal. They (the mob) had two machetes with which they were coming towards us, but someone stopped them. They were trying to kill us,” recollects Lily. The attack left Riya badly injured and her mother distraught. On Monday, Riya was taken to the Gudalur government hospital after she complained of pain in her ear and head. Doctors there referred her to Ooty Government Hospital due to the severity of the injuries. A copy of the report given by a doctor at Gudalur Government Hospital, Nilgiris states that Riya has injuries on the left side of the head, ear and neck, and has difficulty in hearing in her left ear. The doctor has recommended a consultation with an ENT specialist at Ooty Government hospital. In a second police complaint filed with Gudalur police on Monday, Lily requested police protection for herself and her daughter from the persons who attacked them. The DSP of Gudalur acknowledged the complaint against Sabu Abraham and said that investigation is going on in the case. Meanwhile Gudalur police station told TNM that a few persons who were involved in Sunday's attack have been detained by the police and an FIR is being registered based on Lily's complaint. *Names changed to protect identity Also read: ‘The Church silently influenced the trial’: Spl prosecutor Beena Kaliyathu on Fr Robin case
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The use of untested robotic devices in borewell rescue ops needs re-thinking

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Rescue
Two-year-old Sujith was trapped inside a borewell in Tamil Nadu for 81 hours, before his body was finally retrieved on Tuesday.
PTI
For a tragedy that strikes with such regularity in India, borewell rescues of children have yet to address the vast amount of time spent in employing previously untested methods, otherwise known as robotic devices. Each time a child slips and falls into an open borewell, fire and rescue personnel nearest to the spot are dispatched, the issue escalated to the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), then the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), until a parallel hole is drilled some distance away to tunnel through to the child. And nearly every time, rescue operations press pause and devices developed by private individuals are specifically requested, owing to their ‘technological superiority’.  In the latest case of two-year-old Sujith Wilson, who died after a four-day battle in a borewell in Tamil Nadu’s Trichy district, nearly a dozen experts with varying levels of expertise were called in. Manikandan from Madurai, Daniel from Trichy, Sridhar from Coimbatore, Rouban Kumar from Manapparai, Venkatesh from Namakkal, Senthil from Chennai and Veeramani from Pudukkottai, arrived over the weekend to aid in the rescue operations. According to government officials present at the site, the robotic devices brought by these experts allowed for ropes or robotic arms to be lowered and tightened around the wrist of the child. This was intended to pull him out. However, this failed since the narrow space meant the machine couldn’t reach deep down. These efforts were further complicated by hard terrain, a moist borewell interior, and eroding soil falling on the child. This isn't the first time. In August 2014, when a child was stuck in a borewell in Bagalkot in Karnataka a private expert and his robot was called in. The contraption just ended up dumping some more mud into the bore well. With an unenviably low record of these devices having worked successfully on real missions to rescue children lodged deep in borewells, it is worth asking if time should be spent in testing the efficacy of robotic devices when a life is at stake? Should they not be employed after sufficient research testifies them as fail-safe? Speaking to TNM, Shantha Sinha, former chairperson of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) says, “If it is a well-designed method and has a proven track record, then there is no problem. It's worth trying since it would be better than digging. However, if it is on an experimental basis, these robotic devices should be tried out on inanimate objects, not children. Rescue is always a knee-jerk reaction even though that's not what we expect. So it could be impulsive during contingencies and so it must be tested on inanimate objects first.” The activist and social worker also underlines the importance of preventing such situations in the first place. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one private borewell expert, who was also at the site of Sujith’s rescue, told TNM that a technical certification is a must for these devices to be deployed in dangerous situations. “We will obviously go when the government calls us for help, but not all robotic devices function at the same level of efficiency for every situation. There is no one most effective method. Devices like robotic arms are only able to hold the child by its arms; they cannot securely retrieve the child from depths of 30- 50 feet. When such untested devices are used, it complicates the rescue efforts either by throwing soil at the existing depth on the child or dislodging side soil, sending the child further down,” says the expert. In addition to technical certification, the expert calls for independent scientific evaluations of each of these devices by reputed academic institutions in the country. “The priority should be to use the best method to rescue the child. It should not become a free-for-all where every person claiming to have invented a device is given a chance to try. Time is of the essence in such situations,” points out the expert.  While innovative technology to address borewell rescues is no doubt welcome, with the lives of children at stake, the success rate of these devices should also be made publicly available. TNM has previously investigated claims that these robotic devices have successfully retrieved children. Barring the rescue of a three-year-old in Sankarankovil, Tirunelveli in 2014, these devices have not yielded results. Rescue teams have had to rely on parallel holes or borewells. When asked if the government was aware of any specific instances where the robotic devices had worked in the past, Principal Secretary J Radhakrishnan who was overseeing Sujith’s rescue efforts said, “They have been successful in the past. There are two SOPs— one is a technique where the walls [of the borewell] are weaker and you can clamp the body. This is successful when the hole is wider. But that was not the case here.”  However, with the diameter of the borewell in Sujith’s case being four inches, this was a simple fact that ought to have ruled out the pursuit of uncertain rescue measures. Since most state governments, including Tamil Nadu, are eager to call in these robotic devices each time, why can't they invest money to conduct research, develop and improve these machines?
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